In Re M & F Worldwide Corp. Shareholders Litigation

799 A.2d 1164, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 56, 2002 WL 1009461
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 13, 2002
DocketCiv. A. 18502
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 799 A.2d 1164 (In Re M & F Worldwide Corp. Shareholders 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 M & F Worldwide Corp. Shareholders Litigation, 799 A.2d 1164, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 56, 2002 WL 1009461 (Del. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

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, *1167 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, 1 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, *1168 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. 2

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. 3 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. 4 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. 5 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. 6 Kahn, Struogo, and Harbor Finance collectively own less than 1,000 MFW shares.

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Bluebook (online)
799 A.2d 1164, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 56, 2002 WL 1009461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-m-f-worldwide-corp-shareholders-litigation-delch-2002.