In Re Resorts International Shareholders Litigation Appeals

570 A.2d 259, 1990 Del. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 26, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 570 A.2d 259 (In Re Resorts International Shareholders Litigation Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 Resorts International Shareholders Litigation Appeals, 570 A.2d 259, 1990 Del. LEXIS 42 (Del. 1990).

Opinion

HORSEY, Justice:

Two Class A and four Class B stockholders (“the objectors”) of Resorts International, Inc. (“Resorts”), a Delaware corporation, contest an “Amended Settlement” of numerous consolidated class actions and derivative lawsuits filed by both Class A and Class B shareholders of Resorts. The shareholder suits encompass two separate takeover transactions. The first transaction involves Donald Trump’s purchase of a controlling interest in Resorts, followed by his unsuccessful attempt to take Resorts private. These events generated fourteen shareholder suits which culminated in a proposed “Original Settlement.” A hearing on the proposed settlement of claims relating to the first transaction was mooted in March 1988 by Merv Griffin’s later successful bid to acquire Resorts through a buy-out of Trump’s interests and a cash tender offer for the remaining publicly owned shares, the second transaction. The Original Settlement was then withdrawn. Claims relating to both transactions were later resolved under a proposed Amended Settlement, subject to the required notice and court approval under Rules 23 and 23.1. At all relevant times, Resorts was a deeply indebted owner of a partially constructed hotel casino complex in Atlantic City, New Jersey, known as “the Taj Ma-hal.”

On August 18, 1988, the Court of Chancery held a hearing on the proposed Amended Settlement. Eight objectors appeared from both Class A and Class B shareholders, making various objections to terms of the Amended Settlement and its preclusion of any opt-out. In a memorandum opinion dated September 7, 1988, the court approved the Amended Settlement and ruled that it should bind all shareholders of Resorts except nontendering Class B shareholders who had timely perfected their statutory appraisal rights. Two groups of shareholder objectors have appealed: David Dion and Fred Lowenschuss, two Class A nontendering/dissenting shareholders who seek to pursue Rab-kin/Cede rights; 1 and Alvin Abrams, Net *262 Worth Partners, Tobias Weiss, and G. Russell Schweiker, four Class B nontendering shareholders who had failed to timely assert appraisal rights [“the Class B Objectors”]. Applying our well-established standard of review, Barkan v. Amsted Indus., Inc., Del.Supr., 567 A.2d 1279 (1989); Selfe v. Joseph, Del.Supr., 501 A.2d 409, 411 (1985), we affirm the court’s rulings on all issues. 2

I

Resorts is a Delaware corporation engaged in the operation of gambling, resort and hotel facilities. Prior to the period relevant to this case, the company had two classes of stock, Class A and Class B, which were alike in all respects except that the Class B shares had one hundred times the voting power of Class A shares. By 1985, Resorts encountered serious financial difficulties. In 1983 the corporation began construction of a new casino, the Taj Ma-hal, an elephantine project intended to be Atlantic City’s largest gambling hotel. Although the cost of construction had initially been estimated at $185,000,000, by mid-1987 the estimated cost had nearly quadrupled to $800,000,000. By then approximately $350,000,000 had been spent and the casino was only forty percent completed. Already burdened by an existing corporate debt of $550,000,000, Resorts found it needed to borrow that much again, or more, to complete the casino.

It was against this background that, on July 21, 1987, Trump purchased from the estate of Resorts’ founder, James M. Crosby, and other family members, 585,067 shares of the Class B common stock at $135 per share at a cost of $78,984,045. Through this private acquisition of what constituted 72.3% of the voting power of Resorts’ outstanding stock, Trump obtained control of Resorts. The three Crosby designees on Resorts’ board of directors then resigned and were replaced by Trump and two of his executives. The remaining three directors of Resorts were outside, independent directors as required by New Jersey law.

Three months later, Trump’s designees on Resorts’ board of directors, with the approval of the three independent directors, authorized Resorts to enter into a “Comprehensive Services Agreement” (“CSA”) with Trump Hotel Corporation (“Trump Hotel Corp”), a New Jersey hotel/casino corporation. Trump Hotel Corp was wholly owned by Donald Trump. The Agreement was intended to strengthen Resorts’ management capabilities through the loan of Trump’s name and Trump Hotel Corp’s management know-how to the Taj Mahal project, then in desperate need of additional financing. Beyond that, the CSA provided that for ten years Trump Hotel Corp would provide Resorts with financial, promotional, planning and development services. In return, Resorts would pay Trump Hotel Corp an annual fee of 1.75% of Resorts’ adjusted gross revenues plus 15% of Resorts’ adjusted net income. Resorts would also pay Trump Hotel Corp 3% of the construction cost of the Taj Ma-hal. 3

Within a month, Trump commenced a tender offer for all remaining Resorts Class B stock at $135 per share. Trump did so to comply with the terms of his agreement with the Crosby estate. By the closing of the offer, January 11, 1988, Trump had acquired 95% of Resorts’ Class B stock, representing 88% of the voting power of all of Resorts' outstanding stock. There then remained outstanding less than *263 five percent of Resorts’ Class B stock and all outstanding Class A stock.

In December 1987, Trump proposed to take Resorts “private” through a squeeze-out merger of the remaining shareholders at $15 per share. At that time the market price of Resorts was $13 per share. Trump’s justification for the proposed merger was his belief that private ownership of Resorts was the only viable alternative for financing and completion of the Taj Mahal. Trump’s announcement triggered the filing of further shareholder suits to block the proposed squeeze-out. However, in mid-January, a special committee of the Resorts’ board, comprised of the three independent outside directors, rejected Trump’s $15 offer as unfair; and Trump withdrew his proposal.

By January 1988, fourteen separate class actions and derivative law suits had been filed by Resorts shareholders against Trump, the directors of Resorts, and Trump Hotel Corp. The suits charged Trump and Resorts’ directors with breach of fiduciary duty and waste of corporate assets in agreeing to the terms of the Comprehensive Services Agreement. The suits also charged Trump with unfair dealing with the minority Class A shareholders in his $15 squeeze-out merger proposal to take Resorts private.

Settlement discussions followed; and on January 31, 1988 the parties (plaintiffs’ Class A counsel and Trump’s representatives) executed a memorandum of understanding intended to settle the pending litigation. The memorandum led to a proposed “Agreement of Merger and Original Settlement,” which Resorts’ special committee and its board of directors approved. In general, it provided that all pending suits would be dismissed in consideration of Trump’s increasing his all-cash tender offer for all remaining Class A and B shares from $15 to $22 per share, followed by a cash-out merger at the same price.

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Bluebook (online)
570 A.2d 259, 1990 Del. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-resorts-international-shareholders-litigation-appeals-del-1990.