STRINE, Chief Justice:
In a well-reasoned opinion, the Court of Chancery held that the business judgment rule is invoked as the appropriate standard of review for a post-closing damages action
when a merger that is not subject to the entire fairness standard of review has been approved by a fully informed, uncoerced majority of the disinterested stockholders.
For that, and other reasons, the Court of Chancery .dismissed the plaintiffs’ complaint.
In this decision, we find that the Chancellor was correct in finding that the voluntary judgment of the disinterested stockholders to approve the merger invoked the business judgment rule standard of review and that the plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed. For sound policy reasons, Delaware corporate law has long been reluctant to second-guess the judgment of a disinterested stockholder majority that determines that a transaction with a party other than a controlling stockholder is in their best interests.
I. The Court Of Chancery Properly Held That The Complaint Did Not Plead Facts Supporting An Inference That KKR Was A Controlling Stockholder of Financial Holdings
The plaintiffs filed a challenge in the Court of Chancery to a stock-for-stock merger between KKR & Co. L.P. (“KKR”) and KKR Financial Holdings LLC (“Financial Holdings”) in which KKR acquired each share of Financial 'Holdings’s stock for 0.51 of a share of KKR stock, a 35% premium to the unaffected market price. Below, the plaintiffs’ primary argument was that the transaction was presumptively! subject to the entire fairness standard of review because Financial Holdings’s primary business was financing KKR’s leveraged buyout activities, and instead of having employees manage the company’s day-to-day operations, Financial Holdings was managed by KKR Financial Advisors, an affiliate of KKR, under a contractual management agreement that could only be terminated by Financial Holdings if it paid a termination fee. As a result, the plaintiffs alleged that KKR was a controlling stockholder of Financial Holdings, which was an LLC, not a corporation.
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, taking issue with that argument. In a thoughtful and thorough decision, the Chancellor found that the defendants were correct that the plaintiffs’ complaint did not plead facts supporting an inference that KKR was Financial Holdings’s controlling stockholder.
Among other things, the Chancellor noted that KKR owned less than 1% of Financial Holdings’s stock, had no right to appoint any directors, and had no contractual right to veto, any board action.
Although the Chancellor acknowledged the unusual existential circumstances the plaintiffs cited, he noted that those were known at all relevant times by investors, and that Financial Holdings had real assets its independent board controlled and had the option of pursuing any
path its directors chose.
In addressing whether KKR was a controlling stockholder, the Chancellor was focused on the reality that in cases where a party that did not have majority control of the entity’s voting stock was found to be a controlling stockholder, the Court of Chancery, consistent with the instructions of this Court,'looked for a combination of potent voting power
and management control such that the stockholder could be deemed to have effective control of the board without actually owning a majority of stock.
Not finding that combination here, the Chancellor noted:
Plaintiffs’ real grievance, as I see it, is that [Financial Holdings] was structured from its inception in a way that limited its value-maximizing options. According to plaintiffs, [Financial Holdings] serves as little more than a public vehicle for financing KKR-sponsored transactions and the terms of the Management Agreement make [Financial Holdings] unattractive as an acquisition target to anyone other than KKR because of [Financial Holdings]’s operational dependence on KKR and because of the significant cost that would be incurred to terminate the Management Agreement. I assume all that is true. But, every contractual obligation of a corporation constrains the corporation’s freedom to operate to some degree and, in this particular case, the stockholders cannot claim to be surprised. Every stockholder of [Financial Holdings] knew about the limitations the Management Agreement imposed on [Financial Holdings]’s businéss when he, she or it acquired shares in [Financial Holdings]. They also knew that the business and affairs of [Financial Holdings] would be managed by a board of directors that would be subject to annual stockholder elections.
At bottom, plaintiffs ask the Court to impose fiduciary obligations on a relatively nominal stockholder, not because of any coercive power that stockholder could wield over the board’s ability to independently decide whether or not to approve the merger, but because of preexisting contractual obligations with that stockholder that constrain the business or strategic options available to the corporation. Plaintiffs have cited no legal authority for that novel proposition, and I decline to create such a rule.
After carefully analyzing the pled facts and the relevant precedent, the Chancellor held:
[TJhere ' are no well-pled facts from which it is reasonable to infer that KKR could prevent the [Financial Holdings] board from freely exercising its independent judgment in considering the proposed merger or, put differently, that KKR had the power to exact retribution by removing the [Financial Holdings] directors from their offices if they did not bend to KKR’s will in their consideration of the proposed merger.
Although the plaintiffs reiterate their position on appeal, the Chancellor correctly applied the law and we see no reason to repeat his lucid analysis of this question.
II. The Court of Chancery Correctly Held That The Fully Informed, Un-coerced Vote Of The Disinterested Stockholders Invoked The Business Judgment Rule Standard Of Review
On appeal, the plaintiffs further contend that, even if the Chancellor was correct in determining that KKR was not a controlling stockholder, he was wrong to dismiss the complaint because they contend that if the entire fairness standard did not apply, Revlon
did, and the plaintiffs argue that they pled a
Revlon
claim against the defendant directors. But, as the defendants point out, the plaintiffs did not fairly argue below that
Revlon
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STRINE, Chief Justice:
In a well-reasoned opinion, the Court of Chancery held that the business judgment rule is invoked as the appropriate standard of review for a post-closing damages action
when a merger that is not subject to the entire fairness standard of review has been approved by a fully informed, uncoerced majority of the disinterested stockholders.
For that, and other reasons, the Court of Chancery .dismissed the plaintiffs’ complaint.
In this decision, we find that the Chancellor was correct in finding that the voluntary judgment of the disinterested stockholders to approve the merger invoked the business judgment rule standard of review and that the plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed. For sound policy reasons, Delaware corporate law has long been reluctant to second-guess the judgment of a disinterested stockholder majority that determines that a transaction with a party other than a controlling stockholder is in their best interests.
I. The Court Of Chancery Properly Held That The Complaint Did Not Plead Facts Supporting An Inference That KKR Was A Controlling Stockholder of Financial Holdings
The plaintiffs filed a challenge in the Court of Chancery to a stock-for-stock merger between KKR & Co. L.P. (“KKR”) and KKR Financial Holdings LLC (“Financial Holdings”) in which KKR acquired each share of Financial 'Holdings’s stock for 0.51 of a share of KKR stock, a 35% premium to the unaffected market price. Below, the plaintiffs’ primary argument was that the transaction was presumptively! subject to the entire fairness standard of review because Financial Holdings’s primary business was financing KKR’s leveraged buyout activities, and instead of having employees manage the company’s day-to-day operations, Financial Holdings was managed by KKR Financial Advisors, an affiliate of KKR, under a contractual management agreement that could only be terminated by Financial Holdings if it paid a termination fee. As a result, the plaintiffs alleged that KKR was a controlling stockholder of Financial Holdings, which was an LLC, not a corporation.
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, taking issue with that argument. In a thoughtful and thorough decision, the Chancellor found that the defendants were correct that the plaintiffs’ complaint did not plead facts supporting an inference that KKR was Financial Holdings’s controlling stockholder.
Among other things, the Chancellor noted that KKR owned less than 1% of Financial Holdings’s stock, had no right to appoint any directors, and had no contractual right to veto, any board action.
Although the Chancellor acknowledged the unusual existential circumstances the plaintiffs cited, he noted that those were known at all relevant times by investors, and that Financial Holdings had real assets its independent board controlled and had the option of pursuing any
path its directors chose.
In addressing whether KKR was a controlling stockholder, the Chancellor was focused on the reality that in cases where a party that did not have majority control of the entity’s voting stock was found to be a controlling stockholder, the Court of Chancery, consistent with the instructions of this Court,'looked for a combination of potent voting power
and management control such that the stockholder could be deemed to have effective control of the board without actually owning a majority of stock.
Not finding that combination here, the Chancellor noted:
Plaintiffs’ real grievance, as I see it, is that [Financial Holdings] was structured from its inception in a way that limited its value-maximizing options. According to plaintiffs, [Financial Holdings] serves as little more than a public vehicle for financing KKR-sponsored transactions and the terms of the Management Agreement make [Financial Holdings] unattractive as an acquisition target to anyone other than KKR because of [Financial Holdings]’s operational dependence on KKR and because of the significant cost that would be incurred to terminate the Management Agreement. I assume all that is true. But, every contractual obligation of a corporation constrains the corporation’s freedom to operate to some degree and, in this particular case, the stockholders cannot claim to be surprised. Every stockholder of [Financial Holdings] knew about the limitations the Management Agreement imposed on [Financial Holdings]’s businéss when he, she or it acquired shares in [Financial Holdings]. They also knew that the business and affairs of [Financial Holdings] would be managed by a board of directors that would be subject to annual stockholder elections.
At bottom, plaintiffs ask the Court to impose fiduciary obligations on a relatively nominal stockholder, not because of any coercive power that stockholder could wield over the board’s ability to independently decide whether or not to approve the merger, but because of preexisting contractual obligations with that stockholder that constrain the business or strategic options available to the corporation. Plaintiffs have cited no legal authority for that novel proposition, and I decline to create such a rule.
After carefully analyzing the pled facts and the relevant precedent, the Chancellor held:
[TJhere ' are no well-pled facts from which it is reasonable to infer that KKR could prevent the [Financial Holdings] board from freely exercising its independent judgment in considering the proposed merger or, put differently, that KKR had the power to exact retribution by removing the [Financial Holdings] directors from their offices if they did not bend to KKR’s will in their consideration of the proposed merger.
Although the plaintiffs reiterate their position on appeal, the Chancellor correctly applied the law and we see no reason to repeat his lucid analysis of this question.
II. The Court of Chancery Correctly Held That The Fully Informed, Un-coerced Vote Of The Disinterested Stockholders Invoked The Business Judgment Rule Standard Of Review
On appeal, the plaintiffs further contend that, even if the Chancellor was correct in determining that KKR was not a controlling stockholder, he was wrong to dismiss the complaint because they contend that if the entire fairness standard did not apply, Revlon
did, and the plaintiffs argue that they pled a
Revlon
claim against the defendant directors. But, as the defendants point out, the plaintiffs did not fairly argue below that
Revlon
applied and even if they did, they ignore the reality that Financial Holdings had in place an exculpatory charter provision, and that the transaction was approved by an independent board majority and by a fully informed, uncoerced stockholder vote.
Therefore, the defendants argue, the plaintiffs failed to state a non-exculpated claim for breach of fiduciary duty.
But we need not delve into whether the Court of Chancery’s determination that
Revlon
did not apply to the merger is correct for a single reason: it does not matter. Because the Chancellor was cor.rect in determining that the entire fairness standard did not apply to the merger, the Chancellor’s analysis of the effect of the uncoerced, informed stockholder vote is outcome-determinative, even if
Revlon
applied to the merger.
As to this point, the Court of Chancery noted, and the defendants point out on appeal, that the plaintiffs did not contest the defendants’ argument below that if the merger was not subject to the entire fairness standard, the business judgment standard of review was invoked because the merger was approved by a disinterested stockholder majority.
The Chancellor
agreed with that argument below, and adhered to precedent supporting the proposition that when a transaction not subject to the entire fairness standard is approved by a fully informed, uncoerced vote of the disinterested stockholders, the business judgment rule applies.
Although the Chancellor took note of the possible conflict between his ruling and this Court’s decision in
Gantler v.
Stephens,
he reached the conclusion that
Gantler
did not alter the effect of legally required stockholder votes on the appropriate standard of review.
Instead, the Chancellor read
Gantler
as a decision solely intended to clarify the meaning of the precise term “ratification.”
He had two primary reasons for so finding. First, he noted that any statement about the effect a statutorily required vote had on the appropriate standard of review would have-been dictum because in
Gantler
the Court held that the -disclosures regarding the vote in question — a vote on an amendment to the company’s charter — were materially misleading.
Second, the Chancellor doubted that the Supreme Court would have “overrule[d] extensive Delaware precedent, including Justice Jacobs’s own earlier decision in
Wheelabrator,
which involved a statutorily required stockholder vote to consummate a merger” without “expressly stat[ing] such an intention.”
On appeal, the plaintiffs make
Gantler
a central part of their argument, even though they did not fairly present this point below. They now argue that
Gantler
bound the Court of Chancery to give the informed stockholder vote no effect in dé-termining the standard of review. They contend that the Chancellor’s reading of
Gantler
as a decision focused on the precise term “ratification” and not a decision intended to overturn a deep strain of precedent it never bothered to cite, was incorrect.
The plaintiffs also argue that they should be relieved of their failure to argue this point fairly below in the interests of justice.
Although we disagree with the plaintiffs that this sort of case provides a sound basis for relieving a sophisticated party of its failure to present, its position properly to the trial court, even if we agreed it would not aid the plaintiffs. No doubt
Gantler
can be read in more than one way, but we agree with the Chancellor’s interpretation of that decision and do not accept the plaintiffs’ contrary one. Had
Gantler
been intended to unsettle a longstanding body of case law, the decision would likely have said so.
Moreover, as the Chancellor noted, the issue presented in this case was not even squarely before the Court in
Gantler
because it found the relevant proxy statement to be materially misleading.
To erase- any doubt on the part of practitioners, we embrace the Chancellor’s well-reasoned decision, and the precedent it cites to support an interpretation of
Gantler
as a narrow decision focused on defining a specific legal term, “ratification,” and not on the question of what standard of review applies if a transaction not subject to the entire fairness standard is approved by an informed, voluntary vote of disinterested stockholders. This view is consistent with well-reasoned Delawáre precedent.
Furthermore, although the plaintiffs argue that adhering to the proposition that a fully informed, uncoerced stockholder vote invokes the business judgment rule would impair the operation of Unocal
and
Revlon,
or expose stockholders to unfair action by directors without protection, the plaintiffs ignore several factors. First,
Unocal
and
Revlon
are primarily designed to give stockholders and the Court of Chancery the tool of injunctive relief to address important M & A decisions in real time, before closing. They were not tools designed with post-closing money damages claims in mind, the standards they articulate do not match the gross negligence standard for director due care liability under
Van Gorkom,
and with the prevalence of exculpatory charter provisions, due care liability is rarely even available.
Second and most important, the doctrine applies only to fully informed, uncoerced "stockholder votes, and if troubling facts regarding director behavior were not disclosed that would have been material to a voting stockholder, then the business judgment rule is not invoked.
Here, however, all of the objective facts regarding the board’s interests, KKR’s interests, and the negotiation process, were fully disclosed.
Finally, when a transaction is not subject to the entire fairness standard, the
long-standing policy of our law has been to avoid the uncertainties and costs of judicial second-guessing when the disinterested stockholders have had the free and informed chance to decide on the economic merits of a transaction for themselves. There are sound reasons for this policy. When the real parties in interest — the disinterested equity owners — can easily protect themselves at the ballot box by simply voting no, the utility of a litigation-intrusive standard of review promises more costs to stockholders in the form of litigation rents and inhibitions on risk-taking than it promises in terms of benefits to them.
The reason for that is tied to the core rationale of the business judgment rule, which is that judges are poorly positioned to evaluate the wisdom of business decisions and there is little utility to having them second-guess the determination
of impartial decision-makers with more information (in the case of directors) or an actual economic stake in the outcome (in the case of informed, disinterested stockholders). In circumstances, therefore, where the stockholders have had the voluntary choice to accept or reject a transaction, the business judgment rule standard of review is the presumptively , correct one and best facilitates , wealth creation through the corporate form.
For these reasons, therefore; we affirm the Court of Chancery’s judgment, on the basis of its well-reasoned decision.