Gilliland v. Motorola, Inc.

873 A.2d 305, 2005 WL 578973, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 4, 2005
DocketC.A. 411-N
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 873 A.2d 305 (Gilliland v. Motorola, 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
Gilliland v. Motorola, Inc., 873 A.2d 305, 2005 WL 578973, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 33 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

I.

In an earlier opinion, this court found that a majority stockholder breached its fiduciary duty by making incomplete disclosures in a notice of short-form merger sent in connection with the second step of a two-step going-private transaction. That opinion left unresolved what relief might be available to remedy this misconduct. The plaintiff, a former stockholder, now moves for an order determining that the proper form of relief is a class-based “quasi-appraisal” on behalf of all stockholders whose shares were exchanged for cash in the freeze-out merger.

As discussed below, the court concludes that a more limited form of “quasi-appraisal” is the appropriate remedy for this case. The court also decides that class certification must await further developments.

II.

A. Background

In January 2003, Motorola, Inc. launched a tender offer for the 26% of Next Level Communications, Inc. that it did not own, offering $1.04 per share. After Next Level sued unsuccessfully to enjoin Motorola’s offer, Motorola raised its offer to $1.18 per share. By the expiration of the tender offer period in April 2003, Motorola had acquired approximately 88% of Next Level. Motorola then converted a portion of its Next Level preferred stock *308 into common stock to increase its common stock ownership to more than 90% and then cashed-out the Next Level minority stockholders pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 253, Delaware’s short-form merger statute.

One year later, Nick Gilliland, sued Motorola and Next Level for breach of the fiduciary duty of disclosure, 1 arguing that the notice sent in conjunction with the short-form merger did not meet the disclosure requirements under Delaware appraisal law. Although the notice met the express statutory requirements, this court concluded, on summary judgment, that the defendants breached their fiduciary duty of disclosure by not providing any disclosure relating to Next Level’s financial condition to the stockholders faced with the decision of whether to take the cash or demand appraisal. 2

Notably, the summary judgment opinion found a breach despite the dissemination of Next Level financial information in connection with the first-step tender offer. 3 That disclosure was itself the subject of scrutiny in injunction actions filed by Next Level and representative plaintiffs in 2003. In denying the preliminary injunction, this court concluded that Motorola’s disclosure documents were neither incomplete nor misleading. 4 The summary judgment opinion acknowledges that, as a result of that extensive disclosure, many, if not most, Next Level stockholders “had no practical need for even the summary information” required by the law. In light of this observation, the court explained its finding of a violation of duty in the following terms:

Nevertheless, it is equally likely that there were other stockholders, neither so well-informed nor so well-equipped, who needed both summary financial and trading information and references to other sources of publicly available data from which complete information could be obtained. Their interests demand protection and support a finding, even in the context of the most fully disclosed “total mix” of information, that a notice given pursuant to section 262 must contain, at a minimum, summary financial and trading data and reference to the publicly available sources from which more complete information is available. 5

B. The Dispute

The plaintiff now seeks a class-wide “quasi-appraisal” remedy for the minority stockholders eliminated in the short-form merger. 6 He argues that all of those stockholders are entitled to receive the difference between the merger price already paid to them and a court-determined fair value of Next Level shares, notwithstanding the fact that many, if not most, of them made an informed choice to forego their appraisal remedy in 2003. The plain *309 tiff contends that this remedy is consistent with Delaware law because this court should act to deprive a controlling stockholder (Motorola) that breached its fiduciary duty of any windfall resulting from that breach. He argues against a simple “redo” remedy designed to afford minority stockholders a second chance to elect appraisal based on 8 Del. C. § 262 because that remedy would not discourage controlling stockholders from behaving as Motorola did here.

The defendants respond that making a class-wide quasi-appraisal remedy available to every Next Level stockholder whose shares were cashed out in the section 253 merger could substantially penalize Motorola and create its own windfall." They point out that a simple “quasi-appraisal” remedy greatly distorts the risk/reward profile of a statutory appraisal action, creating a form of risk-free upside to the putative class. For example, in a true appraisal, all stockholders demanding the remedy are required to retain their shares and risk the possibility of getting less than the merger price. By contrast, the plaintiff proposes that he and all members of the proposed class be allowed to retain the cash already paid for their shares without risk of repayment while pursuing a higher valuation.

The defendants propose a modified form of “quasi-appraisal” that, they say, more fairly mimics the dynamics of the appraisal remedy that was available by statutory right. This proposed remedy has several parts to it. First, the defendants suggest that the minority stockholders be required to opt-in to the quasi-appraisal class by making a demand for appraisal. As part of the opt-in process, the minority stockholders would be required to return a portion (the defendants suggest $.28 per share) of the $1.18 per share paid in the merger. This money would be paid into the Register in Chancery during the pen-dency of the proceeding. Second, the defendants agree not to argue that the fair value of the shares was less than $.90, the amount retained by those class members electing to pursue this remedy. Third, the court would appraise the shares and, depending on the appraisal, award money to either the class or the defendants, or possibly both. If the court appraises the shares at more than $1.18 per share, the minority stockholders would be entitled to all of the escrowed monies, as well as an additional amount the court awards. If the court appraises the shares between $.90 and $1.18, the class and the defendants would split ratably the escrowed monies. And, unless the court’s appraisal is exactly $.90, there would need to be some computation of interest. 7

The defendants also oppose the plaintiffs proposed remedy because, they say, it would reward the plaintiffs delay in filing this action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
873 A.2d 305, 2005 WL 578973, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilliland-v-motorola-inc-delch-2005.