In Re Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder Litigation

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 31, 2024
DocketC.A. No. 2022-0571-LWW
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder Litigation (In Re Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder 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 Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder Litigation, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN RE HENNESSY CAPITAL ) ACQUISITION CORP. IV ) C.A. No. 2022-0571-LWW STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION )

OPINION

Date Submitted: February 27, 2024 Date Decided: May 31, 2024

P. Bradford deLeeuw, DELEEUW LAW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Robert C. Schubert & Willem F. Jonckheer, SCHUBERT JONCKHEER & KOLBE LLP, San Francisco, California; Counsel for Plaintiff Paul L. White Jr.

Kevin R. Shannon, Christopher N. Kelly & Daniel M. Rusk IV, POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; James W. Ducayet, Heather Benzmiller Sultanian & Thomas H. Collier, SIDLEY AUSTIN LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Counsel for Defendants Daniel J. Hennessy, Greg Ethridge, Nicholas A. Petruska, Bradley Bell, Richard Burns, Juan Carlos Mas, Gretchen W. McClain, James F. O’Neil III, Peter Shea, Hennessy Capital Partners IV LLC & Hennessy Capital LLC

WILL, Vice Chancellor Among more memorable phenomena, 2020 and 2021 were marked by a

special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) frenzy. Experienced investors and

celebrities alike sponsored SPACs with the promise of huge returns. SPAC public

stockholders believed they had unique exposure to private companies and the chance

to redeem their investments at cost if presented with a bad deal. Hundreds of

companies went public in record time through de-SPAC mergers.

As the dust of SPAC mania settled, a sobering picture emerged. Early-stage

companies strained to adapt to the demands of being exchange listed and struggled

to remain viable amid economic headwinds. The stocks of many de-SPACed

companies fell well below the $10 initial public offering price—the same price

available to redeeming stockholders. Some companies filed for bankruptcy.

Feeling duped, public stockholders who had not redeemed sought recourse

through litigation. In the January 2022 MultiPlan decision, this court sought to

ensure that the fiduciaries of a SPAC taking the Delaware corporate form fulfilled

their duties to public stockholders. The court’s focus was on the redemption right,

which is a key protection so long as public stockholders can freely exercise it on an

informed basis. These principles were confirmed in subsequent decisions where

motions to dismiss were likewise denied under the entire fairness standard of review.

The success of a few cases begat a host of others. Though the SPAC market

has contracted, SPAC lawsuits are ubiquitous in Delaware. Remarkably similar

1 complaints accuse SPAC directors of breaching their fiduciary duties based on flaws

in years-old proxy statements that became problematic only when the combined

company underperformed.

Poor performance is not, however, indicative of a breach of fiduciary duty.

Conflicts are not a cause of action. And pleading requirements exist even where

entire fairness applies.

The plaintiff, a SPAC public stockholder who chose not to redeem, has lost

sight of these fundamentals. He asserts that the SPAC’s sponsor and directors

breached their fiduciary duties by touting an outdated business model that the target

had decided to scrap. But his claims rest on post-closing developments. The

two-step inference he asks me to draw—that the target made changes sooner and

that the SPAC’s board knew—is belied by the plaintiff’s own allegations and the

documents incorporated into his complaint.

Irrespective of the standard of review, the plaintiff has failed to plead a

reasonably conceivable breach of fiduciary duty claim against the SPAC’s

fiduciaries. It cannot fairly be inferred that the defendants withheld knowable

information material to public stockholders deciding whether to redeem or invest in

the combined company. To allow this faulty claim to proceed would fuel perverse

incentives and invite strike suits. The action is dismissed.

2 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Unless otherwise noted, the following facts are drawn from the plaintiff’s

Verified Supplemented Amended Class Action Complaint (the “Complaint”) and

the documents it incorporates by reference.1

A. Hennessy’s Formation and Sponsor

In August 2018, Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV (“Hennessy”) was

formed as a Delaware corporation to function as a special purpose acquisition

company.2 A SPAC is a publicly traded corporation intended to effectuate a business

combination (or de-SPAC merger) with a private operating company that enables

1 Verified Suppl. Am. Class Action Compl. (Dkt. 59) (“Compl.”); see City of Birmingham Ret. & Relief Sys. v. Good, 177 A.3d 47, 51 n.3 (Del. 2017) (“The Court of Chancery may [] rely on the allegations of the complaint and documents referred to or incorporated by reference.”) (citation omitted); Omnicare, Inc. v. NCS Healthcare, Inc., 809 A.2d 1163, 1167 n.3 (Del. Ch. 2002) (“The court may take judicial notice of facts publicly available in filings with the SEC.”). Citations in the form “Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. __” refer to exhibits to the Transmittal Affidavit of Daniel M. Rusk, IV in Support of Defendants’ Opening Brief in Support of Their Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Verified Amended Class Action Complaint. Dkt. 19. Citations in the form “Defs.’ Reply Br. Ex. __” refer to exhibits to the Transmittal Affidavit of Daniel M. Rusk, IV in Support of Defendants’ Reply Brief in Support of Their Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Verified Amended Class Action Complaint. Dkt. 26. Certain exhibits were produced in response to a pre-suit demand under 8 Del. C. § 220. 2 Compl. ¶ 67. 3 the target to go public.3 Hennessy’s certificate of incorporation set a deadline of 18

months to consummate a business combination or liquidate.4

Hennessy’s sponsor was defendant Hennessy Capital Partners IV LLC (the

“Sponsor”).5 Defendant Daniel J. Hennessy served as the SPAC’s Chairman and

Chief Executive Officer. He was also the managing member of defendant Hennessy

Capital LLC (“Hennessy Capital”) that was, in turn, the managing member of the

Sponsor.6 Hennessy was Daniel Hennessy’s fourth (and not last) SPAC.7

At the SPAC’s formation, the Sponsor purchased 7,187,500 Hennessy Class

B shares (the “Founder Shares”) for an aggregate purchase price of $25,000 (or

$0.003 per share).8 The Founder Shares would represent 20% of the SPAC’s

3 Prior decisions of this court detail the typical structure and governance features of a SPAC. See In re MultiPlan Corp. S’holders Litig., 268 A.3d 784 (Del. Ch. 2022); Delman v. GigAcquisitions3, LLC, 288 A.3d 692 (Del. Ch. 2023). The de-SPAC “merger” is technically a series of business combinations between the SPAC’s merger subsidiaries and the target resulting in an operating company becoming a subsidiary of the SPAC. MultiPlan, 268 A.3d at 793 n.4. 4 Compl. ¶ 8; see also Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. 1 (“Prospectus”) 2. This deadline was later extended. Compl. ¶ 12. 5 Compl. ¶¶ 5, 48. 6 Id. ¶¶ 5, 39; see also Prospectus 1 (defining the “sponsor” as “Hennessy Capital Partners IV LLC, a Delaware limited liability company and an affiliate of Daniel J. Hennessy, [the] Chairman and Chief Executive Officer”). 7 Compl. ¶ 39. 8 Id. ¶ 69; Prospectus 12-13.

4 outstanding shares after its initial public offering.9 If Hennessy completed a business

combination, the Founder Shares would automatically convert to shares of Class A

common stock on a one-for-one basis.10

Daniel Hennessy, through the Sponsor, selected the SPAC’s initial directors

and officers. Hennessy’s eight-member board of directors (the “Board”) included

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In Re Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder Litigation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hennessy-capital-acquisition-corp-iv-stockholder-litigation-delch-2024.