In Re Staples, Inc. Shareholders Litigation

792 A.2d 934, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 79, 2001 WL 640377
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 5, 2001
DocketCiv. A. 18784
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 792 A.2d 934 (In Re Staples, 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 Staples, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, 792 A.2d 934, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 79, 2001 WL 640377 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

In this opinion, the court considers a motion to enjoin a June 11, 2001 vote on a reclassification of the common stock of Staples, Inc. (the “Reclassification”). By the vote, the Staples board hopes to eliminate the company’s tracking common stock, which tracks the performance of the company’s e-commerce operations, Staples.com. The Reclassification involves the exchange of Staples.com stock for shares of the company’s traditional common stock, so-called “Staples RD” shares. The Staples.com shares are being valued at $7 per share in the Reclassification. The Reclassification requires the affirmative votes of both the Staples RD shareholders and the Staples.com shareholders, as separate classes.

As originally announced, the transaction would have included an exchange of Staples.com shares by the Staples boai'd members, who had paid $3.25 for each of their shares. In the face of intense criticism, the Staples board decided not to participate in the transaction, and instead traded in their Staples.com shares for the price they paid for them, without interest. In addition, the Staples board traded in their unexercised Staples.com options for no consideration.

Not satisfied with this roll-back, the plaintiffs — who own Staples RD stock— seek a preliminary injunction against the procession of the Reclassification. They contend that the Reclassification remains tainted by the Staples directors’ self-interest and is based on an inflated valuation of the Staples.com stockholders that is unfair to Staples RD holders. The stockholder plaintiffs also argue that the Staples board has failed to disclose all the material facts necessary for the Staples RD stockholders to vote on the Reclassification in an informed manner, and raise certain other arguments.

After evaluating the numerous arguments made by the parties, the court concludes that it will not review the substantive fairness of the proposed Reclassification as a basis for awarding an injunction. The Staples RD and Staples.com stockholders are being afforded the opportunity to decide the fairness of the matter for themselves. Therefore, a pre-emptive decision by the court to take the matter out of their hands is unwarranted.

Because, however, the proxy statement does not fully and fairly disclose all material facts relevant to the Reclassification vote, a preliminary injunction will issue to permit the defendants to make corrective and supplementary disclosures. This necessary delay will also permit the defendants to set a new record date, because their original attempt to set a record date did not comply with 8 Del. C. § 213.

I. Factual Background

A. The Creation Of Staples, com

Staples is a retailer specializing in the provision of office supplies. Staples launched Staples.com in November 1998 to capitalize on the opportunities presented to retailers by the internet and in response to internet initiatives by rivals, Office Depot and Office Max. The company selected one of its stand-out executives, Jeanne Lewis, to head the new internet business.

*938 Staples.com complemented Staples’ existing business, which was centered on its stores and catalog sales, by enabling customers to buy from Staples over the internet. This internet capability also provided Staples customers with access to a greater variety of products than could be kept in inventory in stores. While Staples.com was a far more aggressive move into “e-tailing” than Staples had theretofore made, Staples.com did absorb Staples’ pre-exist-ing internet businesses, which had been designed to serve targeted elements of Staples’ customer base.

A year later, the Staples board decided to create a series of Staples common stock that would track the performance of Staples.com. This decision came near the height of internet fervor, a time when established, profitable companies like Staples were having trouble retaining employees and exciting investors who were bedazzled by the limitless opportunities that seemed to exist in the cyberspace economy.

The Staples board believed that the creation of a tracking stock would highlight its internet efforts and provide Staples.com employees with options that linked their remuneration to the upside-potential of an “e-tailer.” The tracking stock also provided the opportunity for Staples to raise venture capital specifically for Staples.com and the future chance to bring the Staples.com tracking stock to market in an initial public offering (“IPO”).

The Staples board sought approval for the creation of the tracking stock at the company’s November 1999 stockholders meeting via an amendment to the company’s certificate of incorporation. The tracking stock proposal involved numerous complex elements, the most important of which follow:

• The tracking stock would be a new form of Staples common stock and would vote equally with the rest of Staples common stock.
• The existing Staples common stock became identified with the part of Staples known as “Staples RD”, which stands for the “retail and delivery” sides of the business. The “Staples RD stock” was to reflect the performance of Staples’ delivery operations (excluding e-commerce), stores, and catalog sales, as well as the value of Staples’ retained interest in Staples.com.
• The Staples.com tracking stock was to reflect solely the performance of Staples.com. In the event that Staples were to decide to pay dividends — an eventuality the proxy said was unlikely — Staples.com tracking stock holders would have access to dividends based on what could be legally paid if Staples.com were a separate company.
• It was contemplated that Staples would, as noted above, keep a retained interest in Staples.com that would provide Staples RD holders with a large share of any benefits flowing from the success of the internet side of the business. This retained interest was to be set by the Staples board of directors before its initial issuance of Staples.com tracking shares. Upon the occurrence of certain events, the retained interest would automatically be adjusted by operation of the certificate of incorporation.
• Staples retained the authority to exchange Staples RD stock for the Staples.com tracking stock at a-premium to fair market value that started at 25% and declined to 15% over a period set forth in the certificate (the “Repurchase Option”).

Along with the certificate amendment, the Staples board asked the stockholders *939 to approve amendments to the company’s compensation plans to permit the company to issue Staples.com shares and options under those plans. At the meeting, the Staples stockholders approved all the proposals related to the Staples.com tracking-stock.

B. The Initial Shares Of Staples.com. Are Issued

The day of the November, 1999 stockholders’ meeting, the Staples board also fixed the retained interest of Staples in Staples.com at 200,000,000 shares, and granted options for 28,303,304 shares to Staples directors and employees.

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Bluebook (online)
792 A.2d 934, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 79, 2001 WL 640377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-staples-inc-shareholders-litigation-delch-2001.