Kallick v. Sandridge Energy, Inc.

68 A.3d 242, 2013 WL 2631469, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 8, 2013
DocketNo. CIV.A. 8182-CS
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 68 A.3d 242 (Kallick v. Sandridge Energy, Inc.) 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
Kallick v. Sandridge Energy, Inc., 68 A.3d 242, 2013 WL 2631469, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 63 (Del. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[244]*244OPINION

STRINE, Chancellor.

The incumbent management and board of SandRidge Energy, an oil and natural gas business focusing on domestic exploration and production, face a serious proxy fight. A hedge fund, TPG-Axon (“TPG”), which holds a 7% stake in SandRidge, has launched a consent solicitation to destag-ger SandRidge’s seven-member board by amending the company’s bylaws,1 remove all the directors, and install its own slate.2 TPG claims that SandRidge’s performance has been abysmal during the past six years, resulting in a performance that is extremely poor in comparison to other U.S. oil and gas companies.3 TPG also alleges that, during the same period, San-dRidge’s incumbent board has lavished compensation on the corporation’s CEO, Tom Ward, paying him $150 million despite the company’s subpar performance.4

By its consent solicitation, TPG wishes to seat a new SandRidge board majority that has committed to change the management of the company and explore strategic alternatives for the company, including an asset sale.5 The incumbent board, whose members, along with SandRidge, are the defendants in this action, has resisted the consent solicitation and has energetically campaigned to convince SandRidge’s stockholders not to give consents to TPG. Even further, it has tried to obtain revocations from stockholders who have given TPG consents.6 The incumbent board contends that TPG’s slate is less qualified to run SandRidge than it is because TPG’s nominees lack expertise in “upstream” oil and gas exploration and have no specific experience with the company’s principal asset, a 2.2 million acre oil and gas play in Kansas and Oklahoma (the “Mississippian Play”).7

For present purposes, what is most relevant is that in originally opposing the consent solicitation, the incumbent board warned the stockholders that the election of TPG’s proposed slate would constitute a “Change of Control” for the purposes of SandRidge’s credit agreements simply because it involved the election of a new board majority not approved by the incumbent board, and that such a Change of Control would trigger the requirement in SandRidge’s note indentures that San-dRidge offer to repurchase its existing debt (the “Proxy Put”).8 That is, the in[245]*245cumbent board clearly told stockholders that if they chose to elect a new board majority, the Proxy Put would cause a material economic harm because ■ San-dRidge’s lenders would have the right to put $4.3 billion worth of notes back to the company.

After taking that position, the incumbent board faced this litigation from the plaintiff, Gerald Kalliek, a SandRidge stockholder who supports the TPG consent solicitation. Kalliek argues that the incumbent board is breaching its fiduciary duties by failing to approve the TPG slate, which, under the indentures governing SandRidge’s notes, would mean that the SandRidge stockholders could replace the incumbent board without triggering the Proxy Put. Because the incumbent board has been unable to identify any rational question about the integrity of the TPG slate, about their qualifications to serve as public company directors, or about the propriety of their motives, Kalliek says there is no proper basis for the incumbent board to fail to approve them. At best, the incumbent board believes it is more qualified than the TPG slate, and believes that TPG’s plans for SandRidge are not wise. Such mere differences in policy, says Kalliek, are not a proper basis for failing to approve the TPG slate for purposes of the Proxy Put. Kalliek therefore argues that the incumbent board should be enjoined from soliciting consent revocations until it approves the TPG slate, because otherwise it is able to inequitably exploit its incumbency to pressure voters to keep the directors in office simply to avoid the negative consequences of triggering the Proxy Put.

Since TPG first indicated that it would carry out a consent solicitation at the end of November last year, the incumbent board has wiggled and squirmed in order to avoid dealing with this litigation, or the discretion given it to approve the TPG slate for purposes of the Proxy Put. Facing Kallick’s suit, the incumbent board assented to a schedule culminating in a preliminary injunction hearing. An order scheduling that argument was entered on February 7, 2013.9 But, having warned its stockholders twice in its SEC filings that triggering the Proxy Put would be “extreme” and “risky,” the incumbent board then reversed direction, and stated in an 8-K the very next day that there was no danger posed by the Proxy Put. That was because SandRidge’s debt was trading at prices above the repurchase price set in the indentures, and thus debtholders were not likely to tender at a below-market price.10 The record shows, however, that SandRidge’s debt was trading well above par even when the incumbent board declared that triggering the Proxy Put would be “extreme” and “risky.”11

The incumbent board then sought to cancel the preliminary injunction hearing [246]*246to which they just had assented, claiming that there was no material likelihood of harm to the company in not approving the TPG slate.12 But it failed to decide, one way or the other, whether it approved the TPG slate for purposes of the Proxy Put.13 That remains true as of today. As a default matter, therefore, the incumbent board has left the TPG slate unapproved. Likewise, although the defendants admit that credit markets can move quickly and although the defendants’ estimates of the costs of refinancing the debt keep shifting, the defendants claim that the doubt their own disclosures have created over the consequences of voting for the TPG slate is too insubstantial for the court to worry that the electoral playing field has been unfairly tilted.

In keeping with this state’s public policy of stringent policing of the fairness of corporate elections, this court’s decision in San Antonio Fire & Police Pension Fund v. Amylin Pharmaceuticals made clear that a board deciding whether to approve directors for the purposes of a Proxy Put could not act consistently with its fiduciary duties by simply failing to approve any director candidates who ran against the incumbent slate.14 Rather, the incumbent board must respect its primary duty of loyalty to the corporation and its stockholders and may refuse to grant approval only if it determines that the director candidates running against them posed such a material threat of harm to the corporation that it would constitute a “breach of the directors’ duty of loyalty to the corporation and its stockholders” to “pass[ ] control” to them.15 In other words, unless the incumbent board determined, by way of example, that the rival candidates lacked ethical integrity, fell within the category of known looters, or made a specific determination that the rival candidates proposed a program that would have demonstrably material adverse effects for the corporation’s ability to meet its legal obligations to its creditors, the incumbent board should approve the rival slate and allow the stockholders to choose the corporation’s directors without fear of adverse financial consequences, and also eliminate the threat to the corporation of a forced refinancing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

DSM Holdco, Inc. v. Demoulas
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2026
Todd MacLaughlan v. Ilana Einheiber
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2026
Black v. Brice
W.D. North Carolina, 2025
Coster v. UIP Companies, Inc.
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2023
Sternlicht v. Hernandez
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2023
New Enterprise Associates 14, L.P. v. Rich
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2023
Paul A. Rosenbaum v. CytoDyn Inc.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2021
In re WeWork Litigation
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2020
Pell v. Kill
135 A.3d 764 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2016)
In re: Shawe & Elting LLC
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2015
In re Allergan, Inc. Stockholder Litigation
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2014

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.3d 242, 2013 WL 2631469, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kallick-v-sandridge-energy-inc-delch-2013.