Joseph v. Shell Oil Co.

498 A.2d 1117, 1985 Del. Ch. LEXIS 388
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 8, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 498 A.2d 1117 (Joseph v. Shell Oil Co.) 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
Joseph v. Shell Oil Co., 498 A.2d 1117, 1985 Del. Ch. LEXIS 388 (Del. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

HARTNETT, Vice Chancellor.

These two cases are purported class actions on behalf of the shareholders of Shell Oil Company (“Shell”). In the first filed Joseph action (Civil Action No. 7450), Joseph and the other plaintiffs, on behalf of a purported- class, have challenged an attempt by Royal Dutch Petroleum Company (“Royal Dutch”) to acquire all the shares of stock of Shell not already owned by it. The plaintiffs attacked both the adequacy of the disclosures in the tender offer materials andthe entire fairness of a proposed two-step transaction beginning with a tender offer to be followed by a short-form merger. Under the challenged transaction SPNV Holdings, Inc. (“SPNV”), a subsidiary of Royal Dutch, seeks to obtain all of the shares of stock of Shell now owned by the minority shareholders. Plaintiff van der Woude in Civil Action No. 7699, while challenging the propriety of the entire transaction, seeks at this time only to enjoin, on behalf of the purported class, the proposed short-form merger. The underlying facts are set forth in Joseph v. Shell Oil Co., Del.Ch., 482 A.2d 335 (1984).

Several motions have been presented in the two competing suits which affect the procedural manner in which these suits will continue. Plaintiffs in the Joseph action are seeking to have the van der Woude action stayed pending the outcome of their action. In response, plaintiff van der Woude has requested that his case be consolidated with the earlier filed Joseph action. I find that the later filed action should be stayed and not consolidated with the first filed suit except that the plaintiffs in that action should be kept informed of the proceedings in the first filed action. Defendant SPNV has moved for dismissal of the van der Woude action on the grounds that an appraisal proceeding is the only proper remedy for the relief sought. That motion must be denied. Defendant Shell Oil Co. has moved to dismiss both complaints as to it on the grounds that no wrongdoing by it is alleged in either complaint. That motion must also be denied *1120 because Shell may be a necessary party to any relief which may be granted.

THE STATUS OF THE LITIGATION

I

A full recitation of the facts would be complicated and repetitious. In order to save time, therefore, only a sketch of the events occurring up to this time will follow.

In January 1984, Shell Petroleum Company Limited, one of the subsidiaries of defendant Royal Dutch Petroleum Company (“Royal Dutch”), announced its intention to merge Shell Oil Company into SPNV. Under that proposal the shares of Shell owned by minority shareholders were to be cashed out for $55 per share. Royal Dutch controls through subsidiaries all the entities involved in the proposed transaction, including Shell. A Special Committee of the Board of Directors of Shell consisting of outside directors was chosen to review the offer and the merger proposal was rejected by the Special Committee in March. No arms length negotiations took place and in April SPNV abandoned its merger proposal and commenced a tender offer at $55 per share which was shortly thereafter increased to $58 per share.

The day after the commencement of the tender offer Shell disclosed that valuations prepared for the Special Committee reflected values of $77 to $91 per share. The shareholders were further informed that the Special Committee had determined the offer to be inadequate but that it was felt that each shareholder should make his own decision. SPNV further announced that it intended to acquire all the shares of Shell and would effectuate a short-form merger cashing out the remaining shares when it obtained 90% of the minority shares.

Pursuant to the May 11,1984, decision of this Court, which found some of the disclosures in the proxy materials to be inadequate, SPNV in June distributed a Supplement to all Shell shareholders and the tendering shareholders were given 20 days in which to rescind their tender. This period for rescission was extended a further 13 days.

Out of the over 78 million shares that were originally tendered, only 363 thousand were withdrawn during the 33 day rescission period. Counting the shares tendered and not rescinded, SPNV has approximately 94.6% of the shares of Shell.

In the June Proxy Supplement SPNV restated that it planned to effectuate a short-form merger if it still held more than 90% of the outstanding shares after the rescission period. In July, after the rescission period had expired, SPNV issued a press release stating, in part, that although it still wished to effect a short-form merger with Shell it would not do so until the issues remaining in the Joseph actions had been decided.

II

Six complaints in the Joseph action were filed in January of 1984 and these actions were consolidated soon thereafter into Civil Action No. 7450 and expedited discovery was granted. After discovery, a hearing was held on the Joseph plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. That motion was granted in part on May 4. Joseph v. Shell Oil Company, supra. Additional discovery is underway and the case has been set down for trial in March of 1985.

The consolidated Joseph complaint alleges numerous breaches of fiduciary duty by the defendants including “a continuing devious, manipulative, fraudulent, coercive, unfair and overreaching plan and scheme being carried out by Royal Dutch to go private by acquiring, one way or the other, for a grossly inadequate price, all shares of Shell owned by the purported class.”

There are also allegations of breach of fiduciary duty for refusing to pay a fair price for the shares, employing coercive tactics, manipulating the market price of Shell stock, making false and misleading statements and omitting to disclose material information.

*1121 The Joseph plaintiffs seek to have the $58 per share tender offer price to be declared inadequate and unfair and seek damages on behalf of tendering stockholders for the difference between $58 per share and a fair price of the shares. They also seek to enjoin the second step short-form merger “except at a fair price as determined by the court.” They further seek an accounting for profits and benefits alleged to have been realized by the defendants. And they seek other damages, costs and counsel fees.

The van der Woude action was filed in August of 1984 and, while the allegations assert virtually the same breaches of fiduciary duty as alleged in the earlier action, there is requested only an injunction against consummation of the short-form merger. Van der Woude claims that the Joseph action and the Joseph plaintiffs do not adequately address this issue.

ON DEFENDANT SPNV HOLDINGS’ MOTION TO DISMISS

III

Defendant SPNV has moved for a dismissal of the van der Woude action for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
498 A.2d 1117, 1985 Del. Ch. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-shell-oil-co-delch-1985.