In Re Volcano Corporation Stockholder Litigation

143 A.3d 727, 2016 WL 3583704, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 30, 2016
DocketCONSOLIDATED C.A. NO. 10485-VCMR
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 143 A.3d 727 (In Re Volcano Corporation Stockholder 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 Volcano Corporation Stockholder Litigation, 143 A.3d 727, 2016 WL 3583704, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99 (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Vice Chancellor.

The plaintiffs in this action are former public stockholders of a company that was acquired for $18 per share in an all-cash merger. Just five months prior, the target company had declined an offer of $24 per share from the same acquiror. After the companies announced the merger, the plaintiffs brought this action against the target company’s board of directors and its financial advisor. The gist of the plaintiffs’ complaint is that the board breached its fiduciary duties in approving, the merger and the financial advisor, motivated by its. own conflicts of interest, aided and abetted those breaches. Both the board and the financial advisor moved to dismiss the complaint under Court of. Chancery Rule 12(b)(6).,

The defendants argue, among other things, that stockholders representing a majority of the target company’s outstanding shares expressed their fully informed, uncoerced, disinterested approval of the merger. As such, according to the defendants, the business judgment rule standard of review irrebuttably applies to the plaintiffs’ allegations and .insulates the merger from a challenge on any ground other than waste, which the plaintiffs fail to allege.. As further explained in this Opinion, I agree with the defendants and, therefore, grant their motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).

I. BACKGROUND 1

A. Parties

Plaintiffs Melvin Lax, Melissa Gordon, and Mohammed Munawar (“Plaintiffs”) *730 were common • stockholders of Volcano Corporation (“Volcano” or the “Company”) at all relevant times.

Defendants R. Scott Huennekens, Rier-an T. Gallahue, Lesley H. Howe, Siddhartha Radia, Alexis V. Lukianov, Ronald A. Matricaria, Leslie V. Norwalk, and Daniel J. Wolterman were members of Volcano’s board of directors (the “Board”) at the time of the complained-of mérger. Huen-nekens also served as the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”).

Defendant Goldman, Sachs & Co. (“Goldman”) is a New York-based investment banking firm. Goldman served as Volcano’s financial advisor in connection with the merger. The Board and Goldman, together, are referred to as “Defendants.”

Nominal Defendant Volcano was a San Diego-based Delaware corporation and “the global leader in intravascular imaging for coronary and peripheral applications[ ] and physiology.” 2 Volcano’s shares were listed on the NASDAQ under the symbol “VOLC,” 3

Non-party Philips Holding USA Inc. is a Delaware corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Roninklijke Philips, N.V. (together with Philips Holding USA Inc., “Philips”). 4 Philips is an Amsterdam-based Dutch technology' company that focuses on healthcare, consumer lifestyle, and lighting products. Philips’s stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol PHG.

B. Facts

1. Volcano issues convertible notes and enters into hedge transactions with Goldman

In 2012, Volcano sought to raise funds through a convertible note offering. To that end, the Company entered into an underwriting agreement (the “Underwriting Agreement”) with Goldman and J.P. Morgan Securities LLC (“J.P. Morgan” and, together with Goldman, the “Underwriters”) on December 4, 2012. Pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement, Volcano agreed to sell $400 million of 1.75% Convertible Senior Notes due in 2017 (the “Convertible Notes”) and, at the option of the Underwriters, up to an additional $60 million of those Convertible Notes. The Underwriters exercised that option on December 5, 2012 and issued the full $460 million of Convertible Notes (the “Convertible Note Issuance”). The Convertible Note Issuance closed on December 10, 2012.

*731 The $460 million of Convertible Notes was convertible into approximately 14:01 million shares of Volcano common stock at $32.83 per share under the circumstances described in the Convertible Notes’ indenture. Because the Board was concerned about the potentially dilutive effect on Volcano’s common stockholders if the Convertible Notes’ holders sought to exercise their conversion rights, the Company also entered into a series of hedging transactions with the Underwriters 5 (the “Call Spread Transactions”). To mitigate that equity dilution risk, the Call Spread Transactions were intended to (1) increase the effective conversion premium and (2) reduce the effective dilution of the Convertible Note Issuance.

The Call Spread Transactions addressed these dual objectives through the two separate transactions between Volcano' and the Underwriters that comprised the Call Spread Transactions. In the first transaction, Volcano paid $78,085,344 to purchase from the Underwriters call options (the “Options”) for 14.01 million shares of Volcano common stock at an initial strike price of $32.83 (the “Option Transaction”). Because the Option Transaction gave Volcano the ability to repurchase the same number of shares that the Convertible Notes could be converted into at a strike price equal to the conversion price of .the Convertible Notes, Volcano could ensure that the total number of its shares outstanding would remain static.

In the second transaction, the Underwriters paid $46,683,206 to purchase from Volcano warrants (the “Warrants”) for 14.01 million shares of Volcano common stock at an initial strike price of $37.59 (the “Warrant Transaction”). The Warrant Transaction partially offset the cost to Volcano of the Option Transaction and effectively raised the conversion price of the Convertible Notes from $32.83 to $37.59. As a result of the Call Spread Transactions, therefore, the Convertible Notes likely would not have had any dilutive effect until Volcano’s common stock reached a price of $37.59'per share.

Goldman sold 65% of the Options under the Option Transaction and purchased 65% of the Warrants under the Warrant Transaction. J.P. Morgan sold and purchased the other 35%. The-.Options were set to expire on December 1, 2017, the same day that the Convertible Notes matured. The Warrants were set to expire over a 120-business day period beginning in March 2018, Alternatively, both the Options and the Warrants would terminate immediately upon the consummation of certain change in control transactions that required redemption of the Convertible Notes, including a cash-out merger. In the event of such a transaction, the Underwriters would pay Volcano the Options’ fair value, and Volcano would pay the Underwriters the-Warrants’fair value.

2. The Board explores merger options

In January 2014, as part of the Company’s general business development outreach, Huennekens had meetings with two companies (“Company A” and “Company B”) regarding their respective interests in a strategic transaction with Volcano. Af-terwards, Volcano and the companies entered into confidentiality agreements, and Volcano’s senior management gave presentations to each of the companies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A.3d 727, 2016 WL 3583704, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-volcano-corporation-stockholder-litigation-delch-2016.