In re Morton's Restaurant Group, Inc. Shareholders Litigation

74 A.3d 656, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 188, 2013 WL 4106655
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 23, 2013
DocketC.A. No. 7122-CS
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 74 A.3d 656 (In re Morton's Restaurant Group, Inc. 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 Morton's Restaurant Group, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, 74 A.3d 656, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 188, 2013 WL 4106655 (Del. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Chancellor.

I. Introduction

After receiving substantial discovery, both before and after abandoning an attempt to enjoin a tender offer and second-step merger between a corporation and an arm’s-length purchaser, the plaintiffs in this case filed a second amended complaint (the “Complaint”).1 The defendants have moved to dismiss the Complaint. The key facts pertinent to the pending motion are drawn, as they must be, from the Complaint and the documents it incorporates.2 In connection with the transaction, the plaintiffs have received substantial discovery, including depositions that must be considered as fully incorporated into the Complaint given the plaintiffs’ extensive use of them.3 More importantly, the Cona-[659]*659plaint is largely based on pervasive references to the company’s Schedule 14D-9 Recommendation Statement (the “Recommendation Statement”) filed in connection with the tender offer, and that document must also be considered as having been incorporated in the Complaint as well.4 Indeed, the plaintiffs themselves essentially conceded at oral argument that the Complaint makes pervasive use of the Recommendation Statement.5 In recognition of the latter reality, the plaintiffs made some further concessions about the fundamental facts of the process that led to the transaction whose fairness they challenge.6 As important as what the Complaint alleges and incorporates by reference is what the Complaint does not contain. As will be seen, the Complaint is devoid of, among other things, well-pled facts compromising the independence of a supermajority of the board, challenging the adequacy of the board’s market check, or suggesting that any bidder received favoritism.

In this decision, I apply the relevant procedural context, by considering only the Complaint and the documents it incorporates, and construing the well-pled facts [660]*660in favor of the plaintiffs in order to determine whether the Complaint states a conceivable claim.7 I may only grant the motion if the “plaintiff would not be entitled to recover under any reasonably conceivable set of circumstances.”8 But, importantly, I am only required to accept those reasonable inferences that flow “logically” from the non-conclusory facts pled in the Complaint, and I am not required to accept “every strained interpretation of the allegations proposed by the plaintiff[.]”9

The Complaint, as fully incorporated, reveals the following undisputed course of events. Morton’s Restaurant Group (“Morton’s”) is a chain of high-end steakhouses.10 Until 2012, it was a public company listed on the NYSE.11 Its former private equity sponsor, Castle Harlan, Inc. (“Castle Harlan”), held 27.7% of its stock and placed two of its executives on the board, one of whom served as de facto chairman of the board.12 The remainder of the ten member board was comprised of one insider, the CEO Christopher Artini-an, and seven directors who qualified as independent under the NYSE rules and were not employees of Castle Harlan.13

In January 2011, Castle Harlan allegedly suggested that Morton’s consider selling itself and the board of Morton’s agreed.14 After a nine-month search process involving a full market check for a buyer, Morton’s eventually entered into a merger agreement (the “Merger Agreement”) with Fertitta Morton’s Restaurants, Inc. and Fertitta Morton’s Acquisition, Inc. (collectively “Fertitta”), both of which are wholly owned by subsidiaries of Landry’s, Inc., on December 15, 2011. The terms of the Merger Agreement provided that the stockholders would receive $6.90 per share, which represented a 83% premium over Morton’s closing market price15 and a 41.9% premium to the weighted average price of the stock for the three-year period before the announcement of the transaction.16 All of the stockholders were to receive the same per share consideration, i.e., the control premium was shared rat-ably with all the stockholders.17

The plaintiffs, former stockholders of Morton’s, have attacked the transaction, alleging in their Complaint that Castle Harlan, acting in its own self-interest, caused the board of Morton’s to sell the company “quickly,” without regard to the long-term interests of the public shareholders.18 Although the plaintiffs now do not dispute that every likely buyer was [661]*661contacted,19 that Castle Harlan benefited from the transaction pro rata with the other stockholders, that a majority of the board, who were independent and disinterested, approved the transaction following a broad search for buyers in a process lasting nine months, that the winning bidder had no ties to a board member of Morton’s or Castle Harlan, that Fertitta made the highest binding offer, and that over 90% of the stockholders tendered their shares, the plaintiffs say that despite these facts, the Complaint cannot be dismissed because the transaction is subject to entire fairness review. According to the plaintiffs, the mere presence of a controlling stockholder in a transaction — regardless of whether the controller receives anything different from the other stockholders — triggers entire fairness review. Therefore, in an attempt to sustain their Complaint, the plaintiffs allege, but without the support of particular facts, that Castle Harlan was a controlling stockholder that dominated the company’s board of directors.20

In addition, the plaintiffs claim that the sale to Fertitta is subject to entire fairness review by suggesting that Castle Harlan had a conflict of interest because it had a unique liquidity need that caused it to push for a sale of Morton’s at an inadequate price.21 The plaintiffs say that the company’s eight directors unaffiliated with Castle Harlan acquiesced in Castle Harlan’s plan and approved a lowball transaction because they were willing to put the liquidity needs of the company’s controller, Castle Harlan, above their fiduciary duties to the stockholders of Morton’s.22 As such, the plaintiffs claim that the board breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty.23 The Complaint further alleges that the buyer (Fer-titta) and the company’s two financial ad-visors (Jefferies and KeyBanc) conspired with the board and Castle Harlan to sell Morton’s cheaply, and thus aided and abetted the board’s breach of fiduciary duty.24

But the plaintiffs’ attempt to invoke entire fairness scrutiny fails on two levels. First, they point to no authority under Delaware law that a stockholder with only a 27.7% block and whose employees comprise only two out of ten board seats creates a rational inference that it was a controlling stockholder. Under our Supreme Court precedent in decisions like Kahn v. Lynch Communication Systems,

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.3d 656, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 188, 2013 WL 4106655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mortons-restaurant-group-inc-shareholders-litigation-delch-2013.