Blank v. Belzberg

858 A.2d 336, 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 64, 2003 WL 21434126
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 18, 2003
DocketC.A. No. 19567
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 858 A.2d 336 (Blank v. Belzberg) 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
Blank v. Belzberg, 858 A.2d 336, 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 64, 2003 WL 21434126 (Del. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

I.

The plaintiff in this action is Barry Blank, who is the owner of 349,300 shares of Westminster, Capital, Inc. Blank brought this action on behalf of himself and the class of persons who owned Westminster common stock between April 18, 2002 and June 21, 2002, and their successors in interest, assignees or transferees (other than the defendants). The defendants are Westminster, William Belzberg, Hyman Belzberg, Keenan Behrle, Bruno [338]*338DiSpirito, Roy Doumani, Barbara C. George, and Fred Kayne. Each of the individuals named as a defendant was a director of Westminster at the relevant time.

The action concerns a series of transactions by which Westminster acquired a substantial portion of its common shares held by persons other than William Belz-berg, Hyman Belzberg, Keenan Behrle (the “Management Shareholders”) and their affiliates. In the first of these transactions, Westminster paid $2.80 per share to buy a large block of common shares from Gibralt Capital Corp., an entity controlled by Samuel Belzberg, William and Hyman’s brother. Immediately thereafter, Westminster made the first of two self-tender offers to its public stockholders, also priced at $2.80 per share. As a result of these offers, it purchased an additional 1,593,022 shares of its common stock, or approximately 70% of the shares held by the class. Taken together, these issuer repurchases caused the Management Shareholders’ ownership interest in Westminster to increase from just over 50% to approximately 85%. Blank did not tender his shares in the tender offer, and as a result of the combined issuer repurchases, Blank’s 349,300 shares now represent more than 6% of the shares outstanding.

On April 19, 2002, Blank filed a complaint alleging that the self-tender was part of an unlawful scheme to freeze-out the public minority at an unfair price. The complaint asserts that the Management Group’s “domination of the Company’s corporate affairs resulted in the tender offer being made which will eliminate public ownership of Westminster and increase the ownership interests of the [Management] Group-all at a value to the Westminster stockholders substantially below the fair or inherent value of the Company.” The' complaint then challenges the price at which the self-tender offer was to be made as unfair and alleges that the result of the proposal would be to deny the public stockholders “their right to share proportionately in the true value of Westminster’s valuable assets, profitable business, and future profits and earnings.” The original complaint did not contain any allegations regarding any of the disclosure documents filed by Westminster in connection with the proposed tender offer.

On April 29, 2003, the court heard and denied the plaintiffs motion for expedited proceedings because that motion was largely premised on allegations of fact relating to disclosures that had not yet been incorporated into a pleading. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint; nevertheless, it was not until May 8, 2002 that the renewed motion for expedited proceedings was brought before the court. At that time, the court denied the relief and refused to schedule the motion for preliminary injunction since the tender offer was then due to close on May 16, 2002 and, the court concluded, the plaintiff had not acted with sufficient diligence in pursuing his claim for injunctive relief.

The court made no determination relating to the merits of the amended complaint, which charged that the issuer tender offer was structurally coercive for, among other reasons, the absence of any proposal for a second-step transaction. Instead, stockholders were allegedly being forced to tender by the threat of either (i). being frozen into an illiquid minority position in a corporation whose shares were no longer listed or traded on a national securities exchange, or (ii) being frozen out in a later transaction at an unfair and inadequate price. The amended complaint also challenged the candor and completeness of the company’s tender offer materials.

[339]*339Following the tender offer, Blank and his attorneys engaged in lengthy and, ultimately, fruitful settlement negotiations with the defendants. Under the terms of the Stipulation of Settlement dated January 7, 2003, the defendants will be required to do the following: (i) pay the class members who tendered an additional $.20 per shares for each share tendered; (ii) buy Blank’s 349,300 shares at $3 per share, and (iii) consummate a short-form merger in which the remaining shares of Westminster common stock are converted into the right to receive $3 per share in cash. Each of these payments will be reduced, pro rata, to account for the plaintiffs counsels’ reasonable fees and expenses, as may be awarded by the court.

On January 13, 2003, the court entered a Scheduling Order approving the form of Notice to be sent to the class members. That notice informed class members of information relating to the nature of the action and the terms of the proposed settlement. It also disclosed that plaintiffs counsel intended to apply for an allowance of fees and expenses in the amount of $125,000. The Notice was disseminated and resulted in the filing of one objection, by Mr. Fred Lowenschuss (the “Objection”). Lowenschuss objects to the settlement and to the request by the plaintiffs counsel to be awarded their fees and expenses out of the amounts payable to the class.

II.

The Objection focuses on a claimed conflict of interest between or among those members of the class who tendered, Blank (who has agreed to sell), and the other minority shareholders who have neither tendered nor consented to sell. Lowen-schuss first argues that there is a conflict within the class between those who tendered and those who did not. The basis for this argument, apparently, is that “the officers and directors who are defendants in this action have at all times steadfastly asserted to all shareholders that the legal action brought by Barry Blank is totally without merit.” Presumably, since those claims are said to be non-meritorious, there is no reasonable basis for Westminster to agree to pay an additional $.20 to those who tendered. Lowenschuss also argues that, because Blank did not tender his shares, he cannot represent those who did. Finally, he argues that the proposed short-form merger is the result of collusion between Blank and the defendants and is “designed to take the company private on behalf of the insider officers and directors at the expense of the objecting shareholders.” In this connection, he argues that the proposed settlement is “a new tender offer” and that he cannot assess the fairness of that offer since he has not yet received all of the information that will be disseminated to stockholders in connection with the proposed short-form merger in the event the court approves the proposed settlement.

III.

Delaware courts have long favored the voluntary settlement of complex corporate litigation.1 The job of the court in reviewing a proposed settlement is to ascertain that its terms are fair and reasonable.2 Without deciding the merits of the case, the court must consider the na[340]*340ture of the claims asserted, the possible defenses and the factual circumstances, and then apply its own business judgment to determine whether the proposed settlement is fair.

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Bluebook (online)
858 A.2d 336, 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 64, 2003 WL 21434126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blank-v-belzberg-delch-2003.