Flood v. Synutra International, Inc.

195 A.3d 754
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 9, 2018
Docket101, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 195 A.3d 754 (Flood v. Synutra International, Inc.) 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
Flood v. Synutra International, Inc., 195 A.3d 754 (Del. 2018).

Opinion

Accordingly, we affirm.

I.

This case comes before us from a dismissal of the plaintiff's complaint by the Court of Chancery. 7 The relevant pled facts can be summarized briefly. Liang Zhang and entities related to him controlled 63.5% of Synutra International Inc.'s stock. 8 In January 2016, Zhang proposed to take Synutra private by acquiring the rest of the stock he did not control. 9 In an initial letter, Zhang proposed purchasing the remaining shares at $5.91, but he did not include a requirement that the sale be conditioned on the approval of a special committee and an affirmative vote of a majority of the minority stockholders. 10 To assist him in the proposed merger, Zhang retained Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP. 11 Although Davis Polk was traditionally Synutra's corporate counsel, Synutra's CFO agreed to waive Davis Polk's conflicts of interest before the Board met to discuss Zhang's proposed merger. 12

One week after Zhang issued his proposal, the Board met and formed a Special Committee. 13 Before the meeting, the Board "agreed that it would not substantively evaluate" Zhang's proposal. 14 Although Davis Polk now represented Zhang, it advised the Board at this meeting on its fiduciary duties. 15 The Board understood that Davis Polk represented Zhang, but nevertheless "requested the attendance ... of representatives of Davis Polk who frequently advised [the Board] because those representatives were not involved in Davis Polk's representation of [Zhang]." 16 The plaintiff does not allege that any negotiations occurred at this meeting. 17 Rather, the only substantive action the plaintiff alleges was taken at the meeting was the decision to establish the *758 Special Committee. 18 Indeed, the proxy, which plaintiff incorporated into his complaint by reference, says that the Board did not discuss the substance of Zhang's proposal at the meeting. 19 Specifically, the proxy states that, at the January 21, 2016 board meeting, the "board of directors agreed that it would not substantively evaluate the January 14 Proposal at this meeting and that Davis Polk's advice to [the] board of directors would be limited to reminding the directors of their fiduciary duties under Delaware law and advising [the] board of directors on establishing a special committee to evaluate and, if appropriate, negotiate the January 14 Proposal." 20 The plaintiff pleads no facts to the contrary.

Two weeks after the initial offer, and only one week after the Special Committee was formed, Zhang sent a second letter to the Special Committee stipulating that he would not proceed with the transaction unless it was approved by the Special Committee and approved by the holders of a majority of the voting stock not controlled by Zhang. 21 No negotiations had commenced as of that time; the Special Committee had not met and the complaint is devoid of any facts suggesting that the Special Committee and Zhang had engaged in any economic negotiations. 22 In fact, the plaintiff's complaint makes clear that:

• the Special Committee did not engage its own investment bank or counsel until after this point; 23
• the Special Committee declined to engage in price negotiations until its banker could do due diligence and obtain projections; 24 and
• the price negotiations did not begin until seven months after Zhang's second offer conditioning any merger on both Special Committee and majority-of-the-minority approval. 25

Thus, the plaintiff does not allege any negotiations or other meetings occurred before Zhang's second offer, which conditioned the take-private offer on MFW 's dual requirements.

To highlight this reality, it is useful to underscore the chronology of the facts the complaint outlines. After receiving Zhang's second offer-proposing the same price as the first offer-on January 30, 2016, the Special Committee hired Houlihan Lokey and Cleary Gottlieb as its independent financial and legal advisors. 26 Houlihan began discussions with management regarding the company's financial projections. On March 22, 2016, Houlihan met with the company's CFO to discuss what was needed for Houlihan to advise the Special Committee. 27 The next day, the *759 Special Committee met, received an update from Houlihan, and discussed Davis Polk's preparations of an initial draft of the merger agreement. 28 Houlihan received the company's financial projections on April 22, 2016, met with the company's management on April 28, 2016 to discuss the projections, and provided the Special Committee with "preliminary financial discussion materials" on June 3, 2016. 29

The Special Committee met again on July 20, 2016 and decided to have Houlihan initiate a market check. 30 None of the 25 potential bidders Houlihan contacted were interested, which is not surprising given Zhang's 63.5% voting control and the lack of any promise that he was a willing seller. 31

In August 2016, management provided Houlhian with updated, lower projections. 32 Houlihan provided an updated financial analysis to the Special Committee on September 8, 2016. 33 At that meeting, after seven months of analysis and consultation with its advisors, the Special Committee authorized Houlihan to negotiate a higher price with Zhang. 34 The next day, Houlihan met with Zhang, and Zhang agreed to increase his offer to $6.05 per share. 35

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A.3d 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flood-v-synutra-international-inc-del-2018.