C & J Energy Services, Inc. v. City of Miami General Employees'

107 A.3d 1049, 2014 Del. LEXIS 602, 2014 WL 7243153
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 19, 2014
Docket655 & 657, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 107 A.3d 1049 (C & J Energy Services, Inc. v. City of Miami General Employees') is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C & J Energy Services, Inc. v. City of Miami General Employees', 107 A.3d 1049, 2014 Del. LEXIS 602, 2014 WL 7243153 (Del. 2014).

Opinion

STRINE, Chief Justice:

I. INTRODUCTION

This is an expedited appeal from the Court of Chancery’s imposition of an unusual preliminary injunction. 1 City of Miami General Employees’ and Sanitation Employees’ Retirement Trust (“the plaintiffs”) brought a class action on behalf of itself and other stockholders in C & J Energy Services, Inc. (“C & J”) to enjoin a merger between C & J and a division of its competitor, Nabors Industries Ltd. (“Na-bors”). The proposed transaction is itself unusual in that C & J, a U.S. corporation, will acquire a subsidiary of Nabors, which is domiciled in Bermuda, but Nabors will retain a majority of the equity in the surviving company. To obtain more favorable tax rates, the surviving entity, C & J Energy Services, Ltd. (“New C & J”), will be based in Bermuda, and thus subject to lower corporate tax rates than C & J currently pays.

To temper Nabors’ majority voting control of the surviving company, C & J negotiated for certain protections, including a bye-law 2 guaranteeing that all stockholders would share pro rata in any future sale of New C & J, which can only be repealed by a unanimous stockholder vote. C & J also bargained for a “fiduciary out” if a superior proposal was to emerge during a lengthy passive market check, an unusual request for the buyer in a change of control transaction. And during that market check, a potential competing bidder faced only modest deal protection barriers.

Although the Court of Chancery found that the C & J board harbored no conflict of interest and was fully informed about its own company’s value, the court determined there was a “plausible” violation of the board’s Revlon duties 3 because the board did not affirmatively shop the company either before or after signing. 4 On that basis, the Court of Chancery enjoined the stockholder vote for 80 days, despite finding no reason to believe that C & J stockholders — who must vote to approve the transaction — would not have a fair op *1053 portunity to evaluate the deal for themselves on its economic merits.

The Court of Chancery’s order also required C & J to- shop itself in violation of the merger agreement between C&J and Nabors, which prohibited C&J from soliciting other bids. The order dealt with this issue by stating “[t]he solicitation of proposals consistent with this Order and any subsequent negotiations of any alternative proposal that emerges will not constitute a breach of the Merger Agreement in any respect.” 5

But the Court of Chancery did not rely on undisputed facts showing a reasonable probability that the board had breached its fiduciary duties when it imposed this mandatory, affirmative injunction. Instead, it is undisputed that a deal with Nabors made strategic business sense and offered substantial benefits for C & J’s stockholders. Moreover, the order stripped Nabors of its contractual rights even though the Court of Chancery did not make any finding that Nabors was an aider and abettor, or even a finding that there was a reasonable probability of a breach by C & J’s board that Nabors could have aided and abetted.

We assume for the sake of analysis that Revlon was invoked by the pending transaction because Nabors will acquire a majority of New C & J’s voting shares. But we nonetheless conclude that the Court of Chancery’s injunction cannot stand. A preliminary injunction must be supported by a finding by the Court of Chancery that the plaintiffs have demonstrated a reasonable probability of success on the merits. 6 The Court of Chancery made no such finding here, and the analysis that it conducted rested on the erroneous proposition that a company selling itself in a change of control transaction is required to shop itself to fulfill its duty to seek the highest immediate value. ' But Revlon and its progeny do not set out a specific route that a board must follow when fulfilling its fiduciary duties, and an independent board is entitled to use its business judgment to decide to enter into a strategic transaction that promises great benefit, even when it creates certain risks. 7 When -a board exercises its judgment in good faith, tests the transaction through a viable passive market check, and gives its stockholders a fully informed, uncoerced opportunity to vote to accept the deal, we cannot conclude that the board likely violated its Revlon, duties. It is too often forgotten that Revlon, and later eases like QVC, 8 primarily involved board resistance to a competing bid after the board had agreed to a change of control, which threatened to impede the emergence of another higher-priced deal. No hint of such a defensive, entrenching motive emerges from this record.

Furthermore, the Court of Chancery’s unusual injunction cannot stand for other important reasons. Mandatory injunctions should only issue with the confi *1054 dence of findings made after a trial or on undisputed facts. 9 Such an injunction cannot strip an innocent third party of its contractual rights while simultaneously binding that party to consummate the transaction. 10 To blue-pencil a contract as the Court of Chancery did here is not an appropriate exercise of equitable authority in a preliminary injunction order. That is especially true because the Court of Chancery made no finding that Nabors had aided and abetted any breach of fiduciary duty, and the Court of Chancery could not even find that it was reasonably likely such a breach by C & J’s board would be found after trial. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Chancery is reversed.

II. FACTS

A The Competing Contentions of the Parties

This expedited case has come before us without a formal opinion from the Court of Chancery making detailed fact findings under the standards that govern a preliminary injunction. We therefore are required to craft our own factual recitation in the first instance as to most aspects of the process. Our recitation will reflect this reality and our reluctance to make initial findings of fact on issues that were not fully developed below and that did not motivate the Court of Chancery to issue an injunction.

To frame our discussion of the facts, it is useful to set forth the basic contending positions of the parties. The plaintiffs argue that C & J’s board entered into a change of control transaction without recognizing that it was doing so. With the mindset that it was acquiring an asset, the board never conducted an active market check to see if there were other buyers for C & J.

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Bluebook (online)
107 A.3d 1049, 2014 Del. LEXIS 602, 2014 WL 7243153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-j-energy-services-inc-v-city-of-miami-general-employees-del-2014.