OPINION
STRINE, Vice Chancellor.
The present motion comes before me as a result of a proposed settlement in this case, which involves a challenge to the purchase of defendant Mafco Holdings, Inc.’s (“MAFCO”) 83% stake in Panavision, Inc. by M & F Worldwide Corp. (“MFW”). MAFCO is owned by defendant Ronald 0. Perelman, who through MAFCO also owned 35% of MFW before the Panavision transaction. The central allegation of the plaintiffs’ case is that the purchase was unduly favorable to MAFCO, to the unfair detriment of MFW and its public stockholders.
Following the first week of trial in that action, plaintiffs Kimberly Kahn, Robert Struogo, and Harbor Finance Partners (collectively, the “Participating Plaintiffs”) entered into a Stipulation of Settlement with defendant MAFCO and defendant members of the MFW board of directors.
That settlement is opposed by plaintiffs Furtherfield Partners, L.P., Robotti & Co., Inc., and Ravenswood Investment Co., L.P. (collectively, the “Objector Plaintiffs” or “Objectors”). All of the Participating and Objector Plaintiffs were named plaintiffs in complaints filed in this consolidated action. From its inception, this action has been primarily a derivative action, with other ancillary claims pled as class claims. In this regard, the principal remedy sought by all plaintiffs from the start was rescission, a remedy tied to the core derivative claim of unfair dealing.
In this motion, the Objectors have moved to disqualify the five plaintiffs’ law firms (the “Participating Firms”) participating in the stipulation of settlement, on grounds of conflict of interest. That is,
the Objectors contend that the Participating Firms cannot ethically support a settlement of this action when that settlement is opposed by the Objectors.
In this opinion, I deny the Objectors’ motion to disqualify. Because this case was pled as a representative action from the beginning, the duties of the Participating Firms were to MFW and its public stockholders generally, and not particularly to the named plaintiffs. By choosing to file a representative action, the named plaintiffs sought to utilize the greater leverage of representing MFW and others to obtain relief beneficial to themselves. Therefore, the named plaintiffs assumed a different relationship with their counsel than exists in an individual action. In a representative action of this sort, plaintiffs’ counsel is required to act in the best interests of the company and its public, stockholders, and is entitled to present a settlement in good faith - even if that settlement is opposed by some of the named plaintiffs - so long as plaintiffs’ counsel discloses that there is dissension among the plaintiffs’ ranks and helps the court implement a process whereby the dissenters may present their views to the court. Here, the Participating Firms promptly informed the court of the Objectors’ opposition to the proposed settlement, and helped the Objectors find counsel to present their objections. Therefore, the Objectors face no prejudice from the Participating Firms’ presentation of the settlement. By contrast, disqualifying the Participating Firms would leave MFW and the public stockholders with no champion to present the proposed settlement. The interests of justice are therefore best served by denying the Objectors’ motion.
I.
Factual Background
A.
MAFCO Proposes That MFW Acquire Its Stake In Panavision, Generating Several Derivative Suits
MFW is the world’s largest producer of licorice flavoring, primarily for use by the tobacco industry. Although MFW’s growth prospects are apparently limited, as of the autumn of year 2000, the company had little debt and excellent cash flows. When the underlying dispute began in November of 2000, control of MFW allegedly rested in the hands of defendant Perelman. Perelman is the sole shareholder of MAFCO,
which owns 35 percent of the shares of MFW. In addition, eight of the eleven members of MFW’s board then in place were current or former employees of entities controlled by Perelman.
In 1998, MAFCO acquired its super-majority interest in Panavision, a company that designs and manufactures high-end camera lenses for the movie industry. After a couple of years of rising debt and allegedly poor performance at Panavision, MAFCO proposed that MFW acquire its 83% stake in Panavision for $190 million, or $26 per share, plus a to-be-negotiated premium in November, 2000. Even without the premium, the price MAFCO sought was quadruple the price at which Panavision’s minority shares then traded in the public markets. Not only that, Pa-navision was stumbling under a heavy debt burden, which its own cash flows could not service, posing a risk that the company would become insolvent in the very near future.
The proposed Panavision deal spawned a multitude of suits
on behalf of MFW
seeking an injunction to prohibit consummation of the deal, as well as damages. That proposal, alleged the derivative complaints,
was merely a self-dealing scheme to benefit Perelman at the expense of MFW shareholders. That is, Perelman allegedly sought to obtain badly needed cash from MFW on unfair terms to secure his investment in Panavision, which threatened to become extinct if the latter company went into bankruptcy.
The first entity to file a derivative suit was Objector Furtherfield, which at the time of filing claimed to own more than 55,000 MFW shares. Its complaint, dated November 14, 2000, was brought on behalf of MFW against Perelman and the other members of the MFW board of directors. The action was filed by the New York firm of Harnes Keller, L.L.P. (“Harnes Keller”), with Rosenthal Monhait Gross & Goddess (“Rosenthal Monhait”) serving as Delaware counsel.
Other derivative claims followed. On November 28, 2000, Objectors Robotti and Ravenswood together brought an action against the MFW board seeking essentially the same relief as Furtherfield.
At the time of filing, Rabotti and Ravenswood were represented by the Law Office of J. James Carriero of East Elmherst, New York, and in Delaware by Rosenthal Mon-hait.
Three additional shareholders with smaller holdings also entered the fray after announcement of the Proposed Transaction. On November 17, 2000, Participating Plaintiff Kahn, represented by Garwin Bronzaft Gerstein
&
Fisher, LLP of New York (“Garwin Bronzaft”) and Rosenthal Monhait in Delaware, filed a derivative suit.
Three days after Kahn’s filing, Participating Plaintiff Struogo, represented by Wechsler, Harwood, Halebian
&
Feffer, LLP, of New York (‘Wechsler Harwood”) and Rosenthal Monhait in Delaware, also filed suit on behalf of MFW.
On November 27, 2000, Participating Plaintiff Harbor Finance, represented by The Brualdi Law Firm of New York (“Brualdi”) and in Delaware by Rosenthal Monhait, brought a similar action.
Kahn, Struogo, and Harbor Finance collectively own less than 1,000 MFW shares.
While the timing of the filing of the derivative actions differed slightly, the plaintiffs were in full agreement as to the appropriate relief. In each instance - in language so similar as to be almost boilerplate - the plaintiffs sought the same two remedies: an order enjoining consummation of the deal, as well as an award of damages to compensate MFW for any loss it had suffered as a result of the proposed transaction and the defendants’ alleged breaches of fiduciary duty.
B.
The Panavision Transaction is Consummated, Giving Rise to Class Action Claims and Consolidation by the Court; the Vannini Complaint Is Filed
Meanwhile, on November 21, 2000, .the MFW board of directors created a special committee consisting of three putatively independent directors. The committee deliberated for several months, and on April 19, 2001, MFW announced the purchase of PX Holding’s entire block of Panavision common stock at $17.75 per share (the “Panavision Transaction”). Taking into account its prior MFW stock ownership, the Transaction resulted in MAFCO obtaining indirect control of approximately 58 percent of MFW’s voting stock. In
conjunction with the Transaction, Perelman and MFW also executed a “keepwell” letter, under which Perelman and the entities he owned agreed to pay certain existing Panavision debt obligations if, in the good-faith judgment of the MFW board, Panavision itself could not meet them. In exchange, Perelman would receive certain consideration spelled out in the keepwell letter, which was on terms more favorable to MFW than could be achieved in the equity or debt markets.
On April 25, 2001, Furtherfield filed an amended complaint (the “Furtherfield Amended Complaint”), asserting three claims arising out of the Panavision Transaction.
Count I asserted a derivative claim for breach of fiduciary duty in connection with Perelman’s alleged self-dealing and the board’s failure to ensure that the Panavision Transaction was entirely fair. In Count II, a claim was asserted both individually
and on behalf of the clans of all MFW shareholders
alleging dilution of stock ownership and voting rights. Count III, also a class action and an individual claim, asserted in the alternative that to the extent Perelman was not already the controlling shareholder of MFW before the Panavision Transaction, its ef-fectuation transferred control to him, triggering Revlon
duties on the part of the defendants. The defendants, asserts the Amended Complaint, breached those duties by failing to maximize shareholder value in connection with that alleged transfer of control.
The Furtherfield complaint, however, was not intended in any way to be solely a pleading on behalf of Furtherfield. While Counts II and III of the Amended Complaint rather cursorily asserted “individual” claims, the complaint also sought certification of a class of all MFW stockholders other than the defendants and their affiliates as to those counts. The fact that the Furtherfield Amended Complaint seeks rescissory damages on behalf of MFW,
as well as “an order certifying Counts II and III of this action as class claims on behalf of the class,”
clearly suggests that Fur-therfield (and the other named plaintiffs) did not intend to litigate those claims solely for their own benefit.
This reality was made even more clear the next day. On April 26, 2001, at all of the plaintiffs’ urging, the court issued an Order consolidating all of the pending cases under the caption
In Re MFW Worldwide Corp. Shareholders Litig.,
Consolidated Civil Action No. 18502-NC (the “Consolidated Action”). That Order of Consolidation made the Furtherfield Amended Complaint the operative complaint in the Consolidated Action - that is, for the plaintiffs in all the consolidated cases. In its order, the court also designated Harnes Keller as plaintiffs’ lead counsel, and Rosenthal Monhait as Delaware liaison counsel. The Order also established a Plaintiffs’ Committee of the Whole comprised of Harnes Keller, Garwin Bronzaft, Wechsler Harwood, Brualdi, and Lowey Dannenberg.
C.
The Consolidated Action Proceeds to Trial; the Participating Plaintiffs and Defendants Forge a Stipulation of Settlement
The case moved rapidly to an expedited trial so that plaintiffs could press for rescission while that remedy remained practicable. After exhaustive and intensive discovery, trial in the Consolidated Action began on January 14, 2002 and continued through January 18. The trial was to resume on Monday, January 28; in the interim week, however, settlement negotiations ensued. While the Objector Plaintiffs (ie., Furtherfield, Robotti, and Ravenswood) claim that they were not informed that those negotiations were taking place, the weight of the record evidence is heavily to the contrary and strongly suggests that the plaintiffs’ lead counsel regularly consulted with the Objectors.
Indeed, Furtherfield’s principal officer, Daniel Breen, admitted in recent testimony that he was personally kept apprised of settlement negotiations by trial attorneys from Harnes Keller
before, during, and after trial.
.
At the very least, it is safe to say that Breen was informed of the possibility of a settlement no later than Friday, January 18, 2002.
On January 25, 2002, the Participating Plaintiffs and Firms reached an agreement in principle to settle the case. Two days later, the Participating Firms and defendants’ counsel informed the court of the proposed agreement, and obtained an adjournment of trial. At that time, the Participating Firms advised the court that the Objector Plaintiffs would likely oppose the settlement. Demonstrating its knowledge of the key terms of the proposed agreement, Furtherfield (through Breen) sent the court a letter on January 28, 2002, adamantly objecting to the proposed agreement.
Despite the likely objections of Further-field and the other Objectors, the Participating Plaintiffs and Firms entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”) with the defendants on February 7, 2002. On February 21, 2002, the Participating Plaintiffs entered into a formal Stipulation of Settlement with all the defendants.
That Stipulation provides for, among other things, the establishment by defendants (but not MFW itself) of a $12 million Settlement Fund.
Any holders of MFW common stock on April 19, 2001 who continue to hold shares through the date of the Settlement Hearing (except defendants and Perelman affiliates) would be entitled to cash consideration in the amount of the lesser of (i) $2.15, multiplied against the shareholder’s “Qualifying Shares”
(i.e.,
those of MFW common stock for which valid claims have been submitted), or (ii) $12 million divided by the shareholder’s “Valid Claims Number”
(ie.,
the number of shares of MFW common stock held by the shareholder).
Any shares of MFW stock sold between April 19, 2001 and the settlement hearing would be excluded from these payments; that is, only shares held continuously by the same holders between
April 19, 2001 and the settlement hearing carry with them the $2.15 right.
The Proposed Settlement also has two other features. The first is that it modified the “keepwell” agreement between Perelman and MFW to confer MFW’s decision-making authority under that agreement to a special committee of its independent directors. The second notable feature of the Proposed Settlement is that it entitles MFW the right to buy $37.7 million in Panavision notes from MAFCO and its affiliates at a steep discount to market.
In exchange for these benefits, the Class Plaintiffs would agree to settle not only the Consolidated Action,
but also any potential claims arising out of the purchase, by certain defendants or their affiliates, of publicly traded Panavision 9 5/8 percent Senior Subordinated Notes (the “Panavision Note Claims”). Under the Stipulation, all parties “shall make best efforts to obtain the dismissal of the Consolidated Action ... with prejudice as to all defendants and against the plaintiffs and all members of the Class.”
Further, the Stipulation provides that the defendants will not object to a request by the Participating Firms for $2.75 million in attorney’s fees.
D.
The Court Orders That for Purposes of Settlement, the Consolidated Action Shall Proceed as a Class Action; The Objector Plaintiffs Move to Disqualify the Participating Firms
The period after the Stipulation of Settlement was entered did not pass altogether smoothly. The Objectors made their opposition to the Proposed Settlement plain, as well as their ire with the Participating Firms. Nonetheless, a schedule was set to permit the Objectors to find new counsel, who would have adequate time to present an objection to the Proposed Settlement as well as a motion for the Objectors to be named as class representatives.
To facilitate a determination on these issues, this court issued an Order setting the date for a settlement hearing for May 13, 2002. That Order, among other things, held that “[f]or purposes of this settlement only, and preliminarily, for purposes of this Order, the Consolidated Action shall be maintained and proceed as a class action, pursuant to Rules 23(a), 23(b)(1), and 23(b)(2) of the Rules of Court, without the right of Class members to opt out.”
Further, the Order designated (as a preliminary matter) the Participating Plaintiffs as Class representatives on behalf of all persons or entities who held MFW common stock from April 19, 2000 through the date of the settlement hearing, other than the defendants and affiliates of Perelman. The Order also designated Harnes Keller as the Participating Plaintiffs’ lead counsel, and Rosenthal Monhait as Participating Plaintiffs’ liaison counsel.
II.
The Basis For The Objectors’ Motion To Disqualify
The Objector Plaintiffs were able to procure new counsel to present their objections and other motions.
Through their
counsel, they have filed this motion to disqualify the Participating Firms. The premise for the motion is based on the assertion that the Proposed Settlement is “unacceptable to [the Objector] Plaintiffs.”
Since, the Objectors say, no class had been certified as of the time of the Stipulation of Settlement, the Participating Firms were bound to treat the Objectors as if they were pressing solely individual claims. Because the Objector Plaintiffs had voiced their disapproval regarding the proposed settlement, and because the Participating Firms “knew their clients’ position yet continued to act in direct violation of the [Objector] Plaintiffs’ directives and best interests,”
the Participating Firms allegedly breached their fiduciary duties to the Objector Plaintiffs and “ignored the conflict of interest they created when negotiating and advocating a settlement against their clients[’] wishes”
when they chose to align themselves with the Participating Plaintiffs. Thus, the Objector Plaintiffs argue that the Participating Plaintiffs’ attorneys violated Delaware Rules of Professional Conduct (“DRPC”) 1.2, 1.7, and 1.9, and should be disqualified.
Further, they argue that under DRPC 1.10, the disqualification of these attorneys must be imputed to their respective firms.
As a secondary argument, the Objectors contend that the Participating Firms’ alleged failure to consult adequately with the Objectors before deciding to support the Proposed Settlement is, in itself, adequate grounds .for disqualification.
I now explain why I reject each of these arguments.
III.
The Participating Firms’ Support for a Settlement Opposed by the Objectors Does Not Support Their Disqualification in the Absence of Unfair Prejudice to the Objectors
The Objectors’ motion fails primarily because it seeks to import rules designed for individual actions into the very different realm of representative litigation. There is no question that the Participating Firms could not seek to settle this case if the case involved claims solely seeking relief for the Objectors.
But this is not that sort of
case at all.
From the start, all of the plaintiffs, including the Objectors, stated representative claims. In particular, the plaintiffs sought to represent MFW in a derivative capacity. Therefore, the initial complaints all sought as their primary relief either an injunction to stop the Panavision Transaction from occurring, or rescission if it was consummated. Secondarily, the initial complaints sought monetary damages to
MFW.
As a result, the Objectors’ disavowal of the representative nature of this case is, to put it as mildly as possible, mistaken. And none of the later pleadings changed the representative nature of the case. At most, those later pleadings added the additional representative feature that the plaintiffs were also seeking relief on behalf of a class of MFW stockholders, other than the defendants, and other MAFCO affiliates. The relief that was sought in connection with these class claims was, however, no different from that sought by prosecution of the derivative claims: the plaintiffs - especially the Objectors - principally sought rescission, or damages to MFW.
The nature of all the plaintiffs’ claims is important. Having stated derivative claims on behalf of MFW, the plaintiffs and their counsel took on a responsibility to act in the best interests of MFW, and not just themselves. This reality is reflected in the requirement that any dismissal of the complaints had to be approved by the court, per Court of Chancery Rule 23.1.
The reason for this requirement is to avoid collusive settlements, whereby particular plaintiffs use the leverage of a derivative action to obtain preferential payments for themselves in exchange for a settlement leaving the company and its other stockholders with less value or nothing at all.
Here, the Objectors’ contention that they were not pressing a representative action is made hardest to embrace by the premise of their objection to the Proposed Settlement. In the Objectors’ view, the Panavision Transaction was so egregious that only a remedy of rescission would make MFW and its public stockholders whole.
Were they seeking only to advance their own interests, however, it is difficult to conceive how the Objectors could obtain rescission. Such a remedy would have profound effects on MFW and all of its public stockholders, and would involve the undoing of a contract to which MFW was a direct party. That is, an order of rescission would be the classic example of an
equitable remedy awarded on a meritorious derivative claim of unfair dealing.
From the start, therefore, the Objectors’ most central claim of unfair dealing belonged to MFW, not to them individually.
Similarly, their class claims were filed on behalf of all MFW stockholders unaffiliated with the defendants or MAFCO. Although it is regrettable that the issue of class certification was not resolved before trial,
that factor does not diminish the reality that the Objectors were pressing the case as a class action, and thereby had assumed a duty to those on behalf of the proposed class whose interests they sought to vindicate.
By assuming unto themselves the leverage that came with the pleading of class claims, the plaintiffs - and their counsel - also accepted a responsibility to act on behalf of the proposed class with fidelity.
Concomitant with this responsibility, the named plaintiffs gave up the right to dictate the outcome of the action unilaterally.
Instead, any resolution of the
action would also depend, to some extent, on whether their counsel agreed (and ultimately, on the court’s approval).
Most relevantly for present purposes, the named plaintiffs were operating in a context in which it was possible that their counsel might take a different view of the advisability of settlement, and act on that view in the face of their objections. This is so because counsel owed a duty to act in good faith on behalf of all intended beneficiaries of the representative action, and not simply at the direction of the named plaintiffs.
Because representative litigation must be conducted on behalf of a large group of beneficiaries who almost by definition cannot all appear personally before the court, the disqualification rules governing purely individual actions do not make sensible public policy when imported into the representative context.
The primacy those rules rightly place on the decision-making authority of named plaintiffs in the individual context is ill-suited for representative
actions, because those rules would permit named plaintiffs to hold the other beneficiaries of representative actions hostage to their whims by forcing counsel to bend to the will of the named plaintiffs or be disqualified.
To avoid a counter-productive structure of this kind, prior precedent makes clear that counsel in a derivative and/or class action may present a proposed settlement over the objections of the named plaintiffs. The mere fact that the counsel takes a different view on the advisability of a settlement than the named clients does not, in itself, constitute grounds for disqualification. As Judge Friendly stated in the derivative case of
Saylor v. Lindsley,
[Djespite the seeming incongruity, ... the assent of the plaintiff (or plaintiffs) who brought a derivative stockholder’s action is not essential to a settlement; a contrary view would put too much power in a wishful thinker or a spite monger to thwart a result that is in the best interests of the corporation and its stockholders.
In adopting the same rule for class actions, the United States Court of Appeals, speaking through Chief Judge Becker, noted in
Lazy Oil Co. v. Witco Corp.:
In many class actions, one or more class representatives will object to a settlement and become adverse parties to the remaining class representatives (and the rest of the class). If, by applying the usual rules on attorney-client relations, class counsel could be easily disqualified in these cases, not only would the objectors enjoy great ‘leverage,’ but many fair and reasonable settlements would be undermined by the need to find substitute counsel after months or even years of fruitful settlement negotiations.
For that reason, the
Lazy Oil
opinion held that in the class action context, once certain class representatives object to a settlement negotiated on their behalf, “class counsel may continue to represent the remaining class representatives and the class, as long as the interest of the class in continued representation by experienced counsel is not outweighed by the actual prejudice to the objectors of being opposed by their former counsel.”
In adopting this more flexible approach, the federal courts have been cognizant of the high level of judicial involvement in representative actions. This involvement provides protection to all of the plaintiffs, and diminishes the need for a rigid application of disqualification rules designed for individual actions.
The balancing approach adopted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
Lazy Oil
is a sensible way to deal with the uncomfortable situation that exists when counsel seek to present a settlement over the objection of the named plaintiffs.
It recognizes that the named plaintiffs have legitimate interests that might dictate disqualification in particular circumstances, while acknowledging the right to effective counsel of the larger class whose rights are implicated by the representative litigation. This method of addressing these issues is also in keeping with the most recent Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers.
Applying that approach here, I conclude that the interests of MFW stockholders unaffiliated with the defendants weigh heavily in favor of permitting the Participating Firms to present the Proposed Settlement. The Participating Firms conducted thorough discovery in pursuit of a rescission and damages remedy on behalf of MFW and/or the proposed class. They prosecuted a full week of trial. They are therefore in the position to give the court a reasoned and factually well-supported recitation of the reasons that they believe a settlement is in the best interests of MFW and the proposed class. By contrast, disqualifying the Participating Firms would deprive the Participating Plaintiffs, MFW, and the proposed class - as well as the court - of the views of the lawyers who have done all the work on their behalf to date. That result is not in the interests of justice.
This is especially so given the lack of prejudice to the Objectors. The record is clear that the Participating Firms gave the Objectors information about the Proposed Settlement in a timely enough fashion to permit them to inform the court rapidly of their dissent. In addition, the Participating Firms helped the Objectors find other counsel to present the objections and encouraged the court to set a schedule that would permit them to file well-articulated objections. In this respect, the record in this case is so well-developed that the Objectors’ new counsel were in the advantageous position of having a rich body of evidence from which to make the case that the plaintiffs’ claims were too strong to be
compromised for the consideration offered by the Proposed Settlement.
In this same vein, I also reject the Objectors’ argument that the Participating Firms should be disqualified because they allegedly did not consult adequately with the Objectors before deciding to support the Proposed Settlement. As mentioned previously, the weight of the record evidence heavily contradicts the Objectors’ position on this question. Nonetheless, I concede there might be a disputed fact about the adequacy of those consultative efforts.
But, even if it were the case that the Participating Firms’ conduct was deficient in that regard, that fact alone would not support disqualification. The Participating Firms clearly gave the Objectors timely enough information about the Proposed Settlement to permit them to make an informed decision whether to support the Settlement, and to locate and have alternative counsel present an objection .on their behalf. Therefore, the Participating Firms fulfilled the key task of ensuring that the court could evaluate all the views of the beneficiaries of this representative action, and not just those of the proponents of the settlement. Since the litigation itself can therefore proceed with no prejudice to the Objectors, it is not sensible to hold a mini-trial to determine whether the Participating Firms committed some breach of their professional duties that does not compromise the integrity of this proceeding. If the Objectors wish, they can seek to hold the Participating Firms accountable for any such, breach by filing a disciplinary complaint.
Condusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Objectors’ Motion to Disqualify is hereby DENIED. IT IS SO ORDERED.