In Re Appraisal of Metromedia International Group, Inc.

971 A.2d 893, 2009 Del. Ch. LEXIS 60, 2009 WL 1110663
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 16, 2009
DocketCivil Action 3351-CC
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 971 A.2d 893 (In Re Appraisal of Metromedia International Group, 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
In Re Appraisal of Metromedia International Group, Inc., 971 A.2d 893, 2009 Del. Ch. LEXIS 60, 2009 WL 1110663 (Del. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

In this consolidated appraisal proceeding, dissenting petitioners seek a judicial determination of the “fair value” of the 7.25% Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock of respondent Metromedia International Group, Inc. (“MIG”). This litigation arises from the August 22, 2007 merger of *896 CaucusCom Mergerco Corp. (“Merger-Sub”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cau-cusCom Ventures, L.P. (“CaucusCom”), with MIG, in which MIG was the surviving entity. The merger occurred after Mer-gerSub had already acquired in a tender offer approximately 77% of MiG’s outstanding common shares. After the tender offer, the merger agreement between MIG, CaucusCom, and MergerSub granted MergerSub the option (referred to as the “Top-Up Option”), which MergerSub exercised, to obtain additional common shares from MIG in order to raise MergerSub’s ownership stake to 90%. The Top-Up Option was followed by a short-form merger under 8 Del. C. § 253 in which the remaining common shares were cashed out, and which led to this appraisal proceeding.

MIG asserts that the highest value of the preferred shares is based on the preferred’s being converted into common shares under the certifícate of designation. According to MIG, the certifícate of designation imposed limitations on the consideration that preferred holders would receive upon conversion, which tops out at $18.07 for each preferred share. In contrast, petitioners rely upon three different valuation approaches, which yield a range of values from $67.50 per share to $79.76 per share. They view their methodologies as vindicated by virtue of their “convergence” on the preferred stock’s $79.76 redemption price under the certificate of designation, even though (as I determine) no redemption has ever occurred.

The case was tried before the Court on December 12, 15, 16, and 17, 2008. This is the Court’s post-trial decision. After considering the record of over 220 exhibits, the testimony of one fact and three expert witnesses, and having weighed all of the evidence, I determine the fair value of MIG preferred shares on August 22, 2007 to be $38.92 for each share. I also award interest on this amount at the statutorily prescribed rate.

I. FACTUAL OVERVIEW

A. MiG’s Business, Pre-Appraisal Date

In September 1997, when MIG issued the preferred shares, MiG’s total enterprise value was approximately $1 billion. MIG owned all or part of telecommunications businesses in fourteen countries throughout Eastern Europe, the republics of the former Soviet Union, and other emerging markets. One of MiG’s holdings was an indirect interest in Magticom, the leading mobile telephone company in the Republic of Georgia. MIG issued the preferred shares at a price of $50 per share, with a 7.25% annual dividend, payable quarterly in cash or common stock.

Until March 15, 2001, MIG had regularly paid quarterly dividends due to the preferred holders under the certificate of designation. At that time, however, it stopped paying dividends 1 because it faced liquidity pressures as a result of slumping performance in its company investments, burdensome overhead expenditures, and a significant outflow of cash as a result of the acquisition and development of its other businesses. These investments substantially depleted MiG’s cash reserves. Following the suspension of its preferred dividend, MIG sold many of its nonessential businesses and significantly reduced its overhead expenditures.

In August 2005, MIG sold its interest in ZAO Peterstar, the leading fixed line tele *897 phone operator in Russia, for $215 million in cash. A portion of the purchase price was used to pay off MiG’s outstanding 10.5% senior notes, and another portion was used to increase MiG’s stake in Mag-ticom to 50.1%. From that point on, from September 2005 through the appraisal date, MIG has had no debt outstanding, and its main asset, Magticom, generated positive free cash flow.

Although MIG had excess cash generated from the sale of its assets, the reduction of its debt, and the dividend revenues it received from its controlling interest in Magticom, it did not resume paying its dividend to the preferred holders. As of the time of the Merger, the accrued and unpaid dividends totaled $121,732,028, or $29.40 for each preferred share.

Since 2005, MiG’s principal asset has been its ownership of 50.1% of the stock of International Telcell Cellular LLC (“ITC”), which owns all the issued and outstanding common stock of Magticom. The remaining ownership stake of ITC was held primarily by Dr. George Jokhta-beridze, a Georgian national who founded Magticom. As of the appraisal date, Mag-ticom maintained an approximately 50% share of the Georgian mobile telephone market and owned interests in three smaller telecommunications companies in Georgia: Ayety TV, a cable television provider, Telecom Georgia, a long-distance transit operator, and Telenet, a highspeed data communication and internet access service provider.

B. The Transaction

Early in 2006, a group of investors expressed interest in purchasing MiG’s share in Magticom. Under Delaware law and MiG’s certifícate of incorporation, a sale of all or substantially all of MiG’s assets required the affirmative vote of a majority of the common shareholders. 2 MIG was advised that, due to its noncompliance with financial reporting requirements, it was prohibited from holding a meeting of its common shareholders to obtain approval of the proposed transaction. In order to effectuate an asset sale without a vote of its common shareholders, MIG proposed to file a voluntary bankruptcy petition and then seek reorganization under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. According to MIG, a bankruptcy petition would not have required a vote by its common shareholders, but it would have to be approved by the preferred holders.

One of the offers MIG received was from Salford Capital Partners Inc. (“Sal-ford”). Salford is a private equity investment management firm that specializes in the former Soviet Union and other Central and Eastern European countries. In October 2006, a consortium of buyers, including Salford, offered to purchase substantially all of MiG’s assets for $480 million.

Because the bankruptcy reorganization required the approval of the preferred holders, MIG sought agreements with large holders of preferred shares as to an allocation of the potential sale proceeds. By October 1, 2006, approximately 80% of the preferred holders had agreed to support MiG’s Chapter 11 plan of reorganization under which they would receive approximately $68 per preferred share, assuming that a transaction with the investor group was completed on the terms described in the letter of intent. Several common shareholders challenged the proposed transaction in this Court. On November 29, 2006, Vice Chancellor Stephen Lamb issued an order enjoining MIG *898 from entering into an agreement to sell all or substantially all of its assets unless such agreement was subject to a vote of the common shareholders.

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