Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v. Benihana, Inc.

891 A.2d 150, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 191, 2005 WL 3753046
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 8, 2005
DocketCivil Action 550-N
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 891 A.2d 150 (Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v. Benihana, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v. Benihana, Inc., 891 A.2d 150, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 191, 2005 WL 3753046 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiff, Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. (“BOT”), seeks rescission of an agreement between Defendants Benihana Inc. (“Ben-ihana” or the “Company”) and BFC Financial Corporation (“BFC”) to issue $20 million of Benihana preferred stock to BFC *155 (the “BFC Transaction” or “Transaction”). BOT’s complaint asserts that: (1) the BFC Transaction violated 8 Del. C. § 151 and Benihana’s Certificate of Incorporation by granting BFC shares with preemptive rights and is therefore void as ultra vires; (2) eight of Benihana’s nine directors, namely, John E. Abdo, Norman Becker, Darwin Dornbush, Max Pine, Yoshihiro Sano, Joel Schwartz, Robert B. Sturges and Takanori Yoshimoto (collectively, “Director Defendants”) breached their fiduciary duties of loyalty and care in approving the BFC Transaction; (3) the BFC Transaction had an improper primary purpose to dilute BOT’s interest in Benihana and entrench certain Director Defendants; (4) the BFC Transaction should receive entire fairness review and fails such review; and (5) BFC aided and abetted the Director Defendants in their actions. Additionally, BOT seeks damages for costs it incurred in a proxy contest that allegedly would have been unnecessary if the BFC Transaction had not occurred. If the Court does not rescind the BFC Transaction, BOT seeks compensatory damages.

BOT filed its Complaint on July 2, 2004, along with motions for expedited proceedings and a preliminary injunction. The Court granted in part the request for expedited proceedings. Trial was held from November 9 through 15, 2004. 1 This Opinion reflects the Court’s post-trial findings of fact and conclusions of law.

For the reasons stated below the Court finds as follows: (1) the Board had authority under Benihana’s Certificate of Incorporation and the applicable provisions of the DGCL to issue the preferred stock with preemptive rights that is the subject of the BFC Transaction; (2) a majority of the informed, disinterested and independent directors approved the transaction; (3) the directors did not have an improper purpose of entrenchment; (4) the directors did not breach their fiduciary duties of loyalty and care; and (5) the BFC Transaction was a valid exercise of the Board members business judgment. Accordingly, the Court will deny BOT’s claims for relief and enter judgment in favor of Defendants.

I. FACTS 2

A. The Parties

Rocky Aoki founded BOT in 1963 as a New York corporation. BOT owns and operates Benihana restaurants outside the continental United States and owns intellectual property interests in the Benihana name and trademarks. Rocky Aoki also founded nominal Defendant Benihana. Benihana was incorporated on December 6, 1994 as a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Florida; it operates and franchises Benihana restaurants within the continental United States. BOT has been a controlling stockholder of Benihana since its incorporation. 3

*156 Initially, Rocky Aoki owned 100% of BOT and thereby indirectly controlled Benihana. In 1998, after he pled guilty to insider trading charges unrelated to Ben-ihana, Rocky Aoki put his 100% ownership interest of BOT into, the Benihana Protective Trust (the “Trust”) to avoid regulatory problems regarding Benihana’s liquor licenses stemming from his status as a convicted felon. Defendant Dornbush, a trusted friend and the family attorney, advised Rocky Aoki in that matter. The trustees of the Trust are Rocky Aoki’s three children, Kana Aoki Nootenboom (“Kana Aoki”), Kyle Aoki and Kevin Aoki, and, until recently, Defendant Dornbush. The directors of BOT are Kaná Aoki, Defendant Dornbush, and until recently, Kevin Aoki and Defendant Yoshimoto. Kevin Aoki also serves as a vice president of marketing and a director of Benihana. 4

Benihana has two classes of common stock outstanding, common stock (“Common Stock”) and Class A common stock. Benihana has 3,018,979 shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding. Each share of Common Stock entitles its holder to one vote. Additionally, Benihana has 6,134,225 shares of Class A common stock issued and outstanding, with each share having 1/10 vote. The holders of Class A common stock have the right to elect 25% of the Benihana Board of Directors, rounded up to the nearest whole director. 5 The holders of the Common Stock elect the remaining directors. 6

BOT owns 50.9%, or 1,535,668 shares, of Benihana’s Common Stock and 2%, or 116,754 shares, of Benihana’s Class A common stock. Before the BFC Transaction, BOT also had 50.9% of the Common Stock voting power. The Transaction caused a decrease in BOT’s voting power in two steps: first to 42.5% and then to 36.5%.

Since June 2003, Benihana has had a nine member board of directors (the “Ben-ihana Board” or “Board”). Defendants Abdo, Becker, Dornbush, Pine, Sano, Schwartz, Sturges and Yoshimoto are all directors of Benihana. The Benihana Board is classified; the holders of Class A common stock elect three directors, and the holders of Common Stock elect six directors. Each year the stockholders elect one third of the directors for three year terms, including one director elected by Class A common stockholders.

Defendant BFC is a publicly traded Florida corporation with its principal place *157 of business in Florida. BFC is a holding company for various investments, including a 55% controlling ownership interest in Levitt Corporation, which in turn has a 37% ownership interest in Bluegreen Corporation. BFC invests in companies they like and can understand and that have managements that BFC admires as having a high degree of integrity and character. 7 BFC does not get involved in the management of the companies they invest in or frequently change boards of directors or management. 8 Abdo’s job at BFC is to identify opportunities for investments in companies that are run by people BFC would admire. 9

At all times material to this case, Abdo was a director and the vice chairman of BFC and owned approximately 30% of its stock. He and BFC Chairman, Alan Le-van, together control BFC. 10 Abdo also serves as president of Levitt Corporation and vice chairman of the boards of directors of both Levitt and Bluegreen.

Abdo has long had an interest in Beniha-na. 11 He was appointed to the Board in 1991 as an independent director. 12 On the day he was nominated to the Board he purchased 10,000 shares of Benihana stock. 13 He subsequently purchased more Benihana stock. 14

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891 A.2d 150, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 191, 2005 WL 3753046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benihana-of-tokyo-inc-v-benihana-inc-delch-2005.