Kemp v. Angel

381 A.2d 241, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 7, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 381 A.2d 241 (Kemp v. Angel) 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
Kemp v. Angel, 381 A.2d 241, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130 (Del. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

MARVEL, Chancellor.

Plaintiffs, who are admittedly stockholders of the defendant Aid, Inc., sue derivatively for the alleged benefit of such corporation as well as on the alleged behalf of a class of stockholders consisting of persons other than themselves who are holders of Class A common stock of Aid, Inc., excluding, of course, the defendants Ina Corporation and Ina Capital Corporation against which relief is sought.

According to the complaint herein, the individual defendants are directors of Aid, Inc., certain of them being also officers of such corporation, the defendant Burdge also being executive vice president of the defendant Ina Corporation. It is alleged that such board was at all times here relevant dominated by the defendant Ina Corporation by reason of the latter’s ownership of more than a majority of the voting stock of Aid, Inc.

The complaint goes on to contend that Ina Corporation, as part of a plan improperly to eliminate plaintiffs and those other stockholders of Aid, Inc. on behalf of whose benefit they sue, caused to be formed a wholely owned subsidiary of Ina Corporation, namely Ina Capital Corporation, for the purpose of furthering the ultimate wrong complained of, namely the merging of Aid, Inc. into Ina Capital Corporation, such proposed transaction constituting the last step in a premeditated course of action designed fraudulently to eliminate the interests of the minority stockholders of Aid, Inc. in their corporation “ * * * for a grossly inadequate consideration * * ”.

Aid, Inc. is engaged principally, both on its own and through subsidiaries, in the ownership and operation of health care facilities, principally acute care hospitals and skilled nursing homes. Beginning in 1969 and continuing thereafter, according to the complaint, the defendant Ina Corporation, a *242 broad based financial services company engaged principally in the insurance business as well as in capital investment but also involved in the operation of various health facilities, began to acquire shares of Class A common voting stock of Aid, Inc. As a result Ina Corporation had become the owner of 893,046 such shares of Aid, Inc. as of January 23, 1976, said shares constituting approximately 56% of the outstanding voting shares of such corporation, thereby acquiring the means to dominate and control the business affairs of Aid, Inc.

Next, on January 23, 1976, Ina Corporation made a public offer to purchase any and all of the 702,470 shares of Class A common stock of Aid, Inc. remaining in public hands, the price offered to those tendering such shares being $7.00 per share. As a result of such offer, additional shares of Aid, Inc. were acquired by the offerer in an amount sufficient to increase Ina Corporation’s interest in the voting shares of Aid, Inc. to approximately 85%.

Thereafter, in April 1977 Ina Corporation converted 300,000 shares of the Class B 1 common stock of Aid, Inc. held by it into 600,000 shares of Class A common stock of such corporation as a result of which Ina ' Corporation’s ownership of voting shares of such corporation was increased to approximately 90.6%.

On October 12,1977, it was announced by the management of Ina Corporation that it proposed to merge Aid, Inc. into Ina Corporation’s wholely owned subsidiary, Ina Capital Corporation, under the provisions of 8 Del.C. Section 253, the terms of such proposed short form merger providing that if such merger were to be consummated, the result would be that less than 10% minority stockholders of Aid, Inc., would be forcibly eliminated from their corporation in return for which exclusion they would receive the sum of $14.00 for each share of Ina Corporation stock owned by each such stockholder.

The complaint alleges that the scheme complained of, namely the elimination of the interests of the minority stockholders of Aid, Inc. in such fashion was premised on false representations which failed to disclose material facts allegedly germane to such scheme, namely (1) that the aforesaid offer for tenders of stock, followed by a merger, was part of a previously devised plan, the sole purpose of which was to bring about the elimination of the minority stockholders of Aid, Inc. for a grossly inadequate cash payment without serving any good faith business purpose, (2) that defendants falsely represented to minority stockholders of Aid, Inc., in connection with the aforesaid offer for tenders of their stock, that Ina Corporation had no plans at that time to liquidate Aid, Inc., merge it with another corporation, or to make any major change in its business or corporate structure, (3) that in connection with the offer to buy the stock of minority holders of Aid, Inc., in response to tenders of such stock, what were actually the bright prospects of such corporation were falsely presented by thereby concealing the actual facts concerning such prospects, (4) that there was a failure adequately to disclose the intentions of members of the board of directors of Aid, Inc. and of Ina Corporation concerning their proposed intentions in response to the offer for tenders of their Aid, Inc. stock, and (5) that there was a failure adequately to disclose to minority stockholders of Aid, Inc. that it was reasonably foreseeable that the revenue, book value and income of such corporation having increased, were destined to increase further, it being alleged that revenues of Aid, Inc. for 1976 and annualized revenues for 1977 had increased 27% and 70% respectively over those of 1975, that net income of such corporation for 1976 and annualized net income for 1977 had increased 48% and 129% respectively over 1975 and that the book value per share of the Class A stock of such corporation as of December 31, 1975 was $11.73, while as of June 20, 1977, the book value of such *243 shares of Ina, Inc. had risen to $15.40, an increase of 31%. 2

Having sought temporary injunctive relief against the consummation of such proposed merger, a temporary restraining order to such effect was entered on November 1, 1977 in order to preserve the status quo, and this is the opinion of the Court on the return of a rule to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue in conformity with the provisions of the outstanding restraining order.

In response to plaintiffs’ charges that inasmuch as the defendants against whom relief is sought “ * * * stand on both sides of the transaction * * * ” such insiders “ * * * bear the burden of establishing its entire fairness * * * ” which must “ * * * pass the test of careful scrutiny by the courts * * * ” Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corporation, Del.Supr., 33 Del.Ch. 293, 93 A.2d 107 (1952), the defendants against whom relief is sought stress the anomaly of the build up of Aid, Inc. by Ina Corporation, particularly as a result of the acquisition of the Beverley health facilities following the latter’s offer for tenders of Aid, Inc. stock, if, in fact, it was the set intention of the management of Ina Corporation, dating from the time of such offer for tenders of stock, to eliminate the minority stock of Aid, Inc. by merger. Significantly, the price offered for tenders was $7.00 per share while the price offered in the proposed merger now under attack is $14.00 per share.

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Bluebook (online)
381 A.2d 241, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemp-v-angel-delch-1977.