City Capital Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Interco Inc.

551 A.2d 787, 1988 Del. Ch. LEXIS 144, 1988 WL 135441
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 1, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 10105
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 551 A.2d 787 (City Capital Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Interco 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
City Capital Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Interco Inc., 551 A.2d 787, 1988 Del. Ch. LEXIS 144, 1988 WL 135441 (Del. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

ALLEN, Chancellor.

This case, before the court on an application for a preliminary injunction, involves the question whether the directors of Inter-co Corporation are breaching their fiduciary duties to the stockholders of that company in failing to now redeem certain stock rights originally distributed as part of a defense against unsolicited attempts to take control of the company. In electing to leave Interco’s “poison pill” in effect, the *790 board of Interco seeks to defeat a tender offer for all of the shares of Interco for $74 per share cash, extended by plaintiff Cardinal Acquisition Corporation. The $74 offer is for all shares and the offeror expresses an intent to do a back-end merger at the same price promptly if its offer is accepted. Thus, plaintiffs’ offer must be regarded as noncoercive.

As an alternative to the current tender offer, the board is endeavoring to implement a major restructuring of Interco that was formulated only recently. The board has grounds to conclude that the alternative restructuring transaction may have a value to shareholders of at least $76 per share. The restructuring does not involve a Company self-tender, a merger or other corporate action requiring shareholder action or approval.

It is significant that the question of the board’s responsibility to redeem or not to redeem the stock rights in this instance arises at what I will call the end-stage of this takeover contest. That is, the negotiating leverage that a poison pill confers upon this company’s board will, it is clear, not be further utilized by the board to increase the options available to shareholders or to improve the terms of those options. Rather, at this stage of this contest, the pill now serves the principal purpose of “protecting the restructuring” — that is, precluding the shareholders from choosing an alternative to the restructuring that the board finds less valuable to shareholders.

Accordingly, this case involves a further judicial effort to pick out the contours of a director’s fiduciary duty to the corporation and its shareholders when the board has deployed the recently innovated and powerful antitakeover device of flip-in or flip-over stock rights. That inquiry is, of course, necessarily a highly particularized one.

In Moran v. Household International, Inc., Del.Supr., 500 A.2d 1346 (1985), our Supreme Court acknowledged that a board of directors of a Delaware corporation has legal power to issue corporate securities that serve principally not to raise capital for the firm, but to create a powerful financial disincentive to accumulate shares of the firm’s stock. Involved in that case was a board “reaction to what [it] perceived to be the threat in the market place of coercive two-tier tender offers.” 500 A.2d at 1356. In upholding the board’s power under Sections 157 and 141 of our corporation law to issue such securities or rights, the court, however, noted that:

When the Household Board of Directors is faced with a tender offer and a request to redeem rights, they will not be able to arbitrarily reject the offer. They will be held to the same fiduciary standards any other board of directors would be held to in deciding to adopt a defensive mechanism, the same standard they were held to in originally approving the Rights Plan. See Unocal, 493 A.2d at 954-55, 958.

Moran v. Household International, Inc., Del.Supr., 500 A.2d at 1354. Thus, the Supreme Court in Moran has directed us specifically to its decision in Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co., Del.Supr., 493 A.2d 946 (1985) as supplying the appropriate legal framework for evaluation of the principal question posed by this case. 1

In addition to seeking an order requiring the Interco board to now redeem the Company’s outstanding stock rights, plaintiffs seek an order restraining any steps to implement the Company’s alternative restructuring transaction.

For the reasons that follow, I hold that the board’s determination to leave the stock rights in effect is a defensive step *791 that, in the circumstances of this offer and at this stage of the contest for control of Interco, cannot be justified as reasonable in relationship to a threat to the corporation or its shareholders posed by the offer; that the restructuring itself does represent a reasonable response to the perception that the offering price is “inadequate;” and that the board, in proceeding as it has done, has not breached any duties derivable from the Supreme Court’s opinion in Revlon v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., Del.Supr., 506 A.2d 173 (1986).

I turn first to a description of the general background facts. The facts necessary for a determination of the issue relating to the stock rights are, however, set forth later with particularity. (See pp. 795-796).

I.

Interco Incorporated.

Interco is a diversified Delaware holding company that comprises 21 subsidiary corporations in four major business areas: furniture and home furnishings, footwear, apparel and general retail merchandising. Its principal offices are located in St. Louis, Missouri. The Company’s nationally recognized brand names include London Fog raincoats; Ethan Allen, Lane and Broyhill furniture; Converse All Star athletic shoes and Le Tigre and Christian Dior sportswear. The Company’s sales for fiscal 1988 were $3.34 billion, with earnings of $3.50 a share. It has approximately 36 million shares of common stock outstanding. 2

The Company’s subsidiaries operate as autonomous units. Rather than seeing the subsidiaries as parts of an integrated whole, the constituent companies are viewed by Interco management as “a portfolio of assets whose investment merits have to be periodically reviewed.” (Salig-man Dep. at 12). Owing to the lack of integration between its operating divisions, the Company is, in management’s opinion, particularly vulnerable to a highly leveraged “bust-up” takeover of the kind that has become prevalent in recent years. To combat this perceived danger, the Company adopted a common stock rights plan, or poison pill, in late 1985, which included a “flip-in” provision.

The board of directors of Interco is comprised of 14 members, seven of whom are officers of the Company or its subsidiaries.

The Rales Brothers’ Accumulation of In-terco Stock; The Interco Board’s Response.

In May, 1988, Steven and Mitchell Rales began acquiring Interco stock through CCA. The stock had been trading in the low 40’s during that period. Alerted to the unusual trading activity taking place in the Company’s stock, the Interco board met on July 11,1988 to consider the implications of that news.

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Bluebook (online)
551 A.2d 787, 1988 Del. Ch. LEXIS 144, 1988 WL 135441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-capital-associates-ltd-partnership-v-interco-inc-delch-1988.