In Re Best Lock Corp. Shareholder Litigation

845 A.2d 1057, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1398580
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 29, 2001
DocketC.A. 16281
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 845 A.2d 1057 (In Re Best Lock Corp. Shareholder Litigation) 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 Best Lock Corp. Shareholder Litigation, 845 A.2d 1057, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1398580 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

Plaintiffs Dennis Wood, Castillian Ventures, Inc., Cardinal Capital Management, James E. Mitchell, Mitchell Partners, L.P., Daniel F. Raider, and Edward McLaughlin assert both fiduciary duty and disclosure claims against defendants Best Lock Corporation (“BLC”), Best Universal Lock Company (“BUL”), and Frank E. Best, Inc. (“FEB”) (each individually a “Best Company” and collectively the “Best Companies”), as well as Walter E. Best Company Inc. (‘WEBCO”) and individual defendants Russell C. Best and Mariea L. Best (the “individual defendants” or the “Bests”). Pending before the Court are defendants’ partial motion to dismiss the *1063 consolidated complaint 1 and plaintiffs’ motion for class certification.

The plaintiffs were minority shareholders of one or more of the Best Companies, all three of which were publicly traded companies incorporated in Delaware. 2 FEB was a holding company with no business operations of its own. FEB’s only substantial asset was a majority interest in BUL. BUL, in turn, was also a holding company with no business operations of its own. BUL’s only substantial asset was a majority interest in BLC. BLC engaged in the business of making door locks, although it also owned, at times, a substantial percentage of FEB. WEBCO was an Indiana corporation that was wholly owned by members of the Best family at all times and that ultimately became wholly owned by Russell and Mariea Best. At the time of the mergers challenged in this action, Russell Best owned all of the outstanding voting shares and Russell and Mariea Best beneficially owned all of the outstanding non-voting shares of WEBCO. Russell Best also personally exercised voting control over FEB and was the President, Chairman of the Board, and CEO of each of the Best Companies. The individual defendants, Russell and Mariea Best, were the only directors of each of the Best Companies at all times relevant to this litigation.

Plaintiffs’ claims arise out of a sale of FEB stock by BLC (the “Challenged Sale”) and out of three interrelated freeze-out mergers of the Best Companies consummated on March 23, 1998 (the “Freeze-Out Mergers”). In the Challenged Sale, BLC, which at the time allegedly owned a majority of FEB voting stock, sold 23,000 shares of FEB to WEB-CO, which was wholly owned by Russell and Mariea Best. This sale reduced BLC’s ownership of FEB to approximately 49.5%. In the Freeze-Out Mergers, three wholly owned subsidiaries of WEBCO merged with and into the three Best Companies. 3 All of the plaintiffs were cashed out in the Freeze-Out Mergers. The surviving entities were subsequently merged with and into WEBCO, which was then renamed Best Lock Corporation.

I. THE CLAIMS

The plaintiffs make many allegations in the 67-page complaint, but ultimately they assert only three claims. 4 In Count I, they allege that Russell and Mariea Best, as well as FEB and BUL, breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty and good faith as *1064 directors and majority shareholders of the Best Companies by engaging in unfair dealing (including providing inadequate disclosure) and paying an unfair price in the Freeze-Out Mergers. The plaintiffs also contend in Count I that the Information Statement was materially false and misleading and that the Bests . favored their own personal financial interests while failing to rely on any protective mechanisms that would have simulated arm’s length bargaining. As a result, the plaintiffs argue, the Freeze-Out Mergers are subject to heightened scrutiny and the plaintiffs are entitled to compensatory and rescissory damages.

In Count II, plaintiffs allege that the Challenged Sale divested the public shareholders of control of BUL and BLC and delivered control to Russell and Mariea Best. This claim is based on the theory that whenever there is a circle of majority ownership among corporations (ie., Corporation A owns a majority of Corporation B, which owns a majority of Corporation C, which, in turn, owns a majority of Corporation A), Section 160(c) of the Delaware General Corporation Law operates to “sterilize” the voting power of all shares in any of the majority-owned corporations owned by any of the other majority-owned corporations. 5 Plaintiffs contend that the Best Companies were so situated during the existence of the Best Lock Partnership (“BLP”) 6 and/or between the dissolution of BLP and the Challenged Sale, as explained more fully below. Consequently, plaintiffs insist, all shares owned by the Best Companies were sterilized under Section 160(c) and the public shareholders, who owned approximately 14% of BUL and approximately 20% of BLC, or a majority of the shares not owned by the Best Companies (la, a majority of the shares still entitled to vote), had control of those two corporations. Because the Challenged Sale broke this interlocked chain of majority ownership by bringing BLC’s ownership interest in FEB down to 49.5%, FEB’s shares of BUL and BUL’s shares of BLC were once again entitled to vote, and Russell and Mariea Best, as controlling shareholders of FEB, regained indirect control of BUL and BLC. Accordingly, plaintiffs assert that Russell and Mariea Best breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty and good faith as directors of BLC in connection with the Challenged Sale by divesting the public shareholders of voting control of BUL and BLC and delivering that control to themselves. Plaintiffs seek compensatory and rescissory damages, a constructive trust over the 23,000 shares of FEB sold in the Challenged Sale, and disgorgement of any profits realized as a result of the Challenged Sale.

Finally, in Count III the plaintiffs allege that Russell and Mariea Best, as directors of the Best Companies, were obliged to seek the “maximum value reasonably attainable” in connection with the Challenged Sale as a result of the Delaware Supreme Court’s holding in Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc. 7 This duty arose, plaintiffs contend, because prior to the Challenged Sale Russell and Mariea Best lacked the voting power to prevent the sale of BLC to a third party. 8 This claim, like Count II of the plaintiffs consolidated complaint, rests on the assumption that Section 160(c) sterilized FEB’s majority interest in BUL and BUL’s majority interest in BLC, resulting in the public shareholders of BUL and *1065 BLC obtaining voting control over those two companies. Because Russell and Mar-iea Best failed to obtain the maximum value reasonably attainable in this “buyout transaction,” plaintiffs seek compensatory and rescissory damages. 9

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Bluebook (online)
845 A.2d 1057, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1398580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-best-lock-corp-shareholder-litigation-delch-2001.