Lebman v. National Union Electric Corp.

414 A.2d 824, 1980 Del. Ch. LEXIS 432
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 17, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 414 A.2d 824 (Lebman v. National Union Electric Corp.) 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
Lebman v. National Union Electric Corp., 414 A.2d 824, 1980 Del. Ch. LEXIS 432 (Del. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

*825 MARVEL, Chancellor:

Plaintiffs, having duly qualified for such form of relief, instituted this action under the provisions of Title 8 Del.C. § 253 and § 262 for an appraisal of the intrinsic value of their shares of stock of National Union Electric Corporation as well as those shares of other stockholders of such corporation who had declined to accept the merger price of $28 a share. Such shares had been eliminated as a result of the merger of its 92% owned subsidiary, National Union Electric, Inc., into the surviving National Union Electric Corporation.

Thereafter, being dissatisfied with the amount fixed by the appraiser as the fair value of their shares of stock, plaintiffs, instead of proceeding directly to a hearing on exceptions to the appraiser’s final report, proceeded to engage in a long drawn-out effort to have the recommendations of the appraiser not only not approved by the Court but to be virtually ignored and ultimately declared to be null and void.

The Court-appointed appraiser having conducted an appraisal hearing, as required by statute, at which he afforded “ * * * a reasonable opportunity to the parties interested to submit to him pertinent evidence on the value of the shares.” (8 Del.C. § 262), thereafter determined that the intrinsic value of such shares of stock, as of the merger date of August 1, 1975, the appropriate date for the evaluation of such shares, was $24.85 a share, a value based on what he deemed to be a proper multiplier and by the exercise of his best judgment as to the correct assignment of weight to the customary several areas of value to be considered, namely, asset value, market value, as well as the earnings value of such shares.

As noted above, instead of then proceeding to seek to have the appraiser’s determination reviewed by this Court on exceptions to such report “ * * * both upon the law and the facts * * *”, as contemplated by the provisions of the then statute, plaintiffs first filed a class action in Texas for the alleged benefit of all former minority stockholders of National Union Electric Corporation, including themselves, which action attacked the basic validity of the merger proceeding here in issue, charging multiple acts of fraud on the part of the defendant in the development and carrying out of the terms of such merger. Similar charges were then leveled against the defendant in this proceeding, and, in addition, alternative relief was here sought by way of a motion to have this case in some manner transferred and consolidated with plaintiffs’ federal action now pending in Texas.

Plaintiffs then filed a motion in this Court in which they sought the dismissal of this appraisal action, or, in the alternative, that it be stayed pending prosecution of the aforesaid Texas suit. Thereupon, on denial, of such motion, plaintiffs, persisting in their efforts to have the present merger proceeding (which they had, as noted above, elected to institute) dismissed, 1 sought to take an interlocutory appeal from the order of this Court to the Supreme Court of Delaware, which appeal was refused. See opinion of this Court of June 19,1979 and order of the Supreme Court of Delaware of August 28, 1979.

This case is now technically before this Court on exceptions to the appraiser’s report, a hearing on such exceptions having been held on December 21,1979. Plaintiffs, at such hearing, while attacking the constitutionality of the short form merger procedure here employed, took the initial position that the appraiser should have found the intrinsic value of their stock to have been $285.52 per share, a value arrived at in large part by the inclusion in such proposed valuation, a sum which the Court-appointed appraiser, in reaching a determination as to the intrinsic value of the shares here in issue, had declined to include in his final report, namely the sum of approximately $250 per share, constituting a possible recovery per share which plaintiffs estimate may result from the successful prosecution *826 of a suit brought on behalf of National Union Electric Corporation against the Japanese manufacturers of the same type of products formerly manufactured by such corporation, namely electrically operated home entertainment devices, such action being based on an anti-trust theory, the gravamen of such action being the contention that as a result of the formation in the late 1960’s of a combination of seven major Japanese manufacturers of transistors, radios and television sets, a conspiracy had been entered into the purpose of which was to fix domestic and other non-American prices for such electrically operated products, thus eliminating competition in the sale of such products in Japan and other non-American markets. Such firms thereafter allegedly implemented a previously agreed upon plan to sell these same products at cut rate prices to consumers in the United States, such latter course of business constituting the alleged illegal act of “dumping” in claimed violation of 19 U.S.C. §§ 160-171. As a result of such business activities on the part of the Japanese a precipitous decline in the sale of what had been National Union Electric Corporation’s main line of production, namely radios and television sets, occurred, and in order to survive such corporation made a change in business to the manufacture of the type of the products made by Admiral Corporation. Plaintiffs contend that because counsel in the case has expressed the view that National Union Electric Corporation may expect to recover the amount above stated in the suit against the Japanese manufacturers that such additional value must be attributed to the shares in issue. However, the appraiser was of the opinion that the views of trial counsel as to the possible outcome of the law suit in question cannot affect the value of the shares here in issue and declined to set any specific value for appraisal purposes on the suit pending against the Japanese manufacturers, the views of counsel being mere speculation as to the possible outcome of such litigation, although, of course, the mere pendency of such action may have had some effect on the market price of such shares. I agree with such conclusion, In re Universal Lubricating Systems, C.A. 3, 150 F.2d 832 (1945). Accordingly, no special value will be given to the shares here in issue solely by reason of the prior pendency of a law suit in the form of a long-pending but so far unproductive anti-trust claim 2 made by National Union Electric Corporation against certain Japanese manufacturers of radios, televisions and the like although, as noted above, it is recognized that the mere pendency of such action may have had some effect on the market value of the shares of stock here in issue.

After casting about without success for a possible purchaser of its shares in the early 1970’s and after first sustaining substantial losses as a result of its discontinuance of the manufacturer of radios and televisions but thereafter making some recovery in earnings as a result of a change in its line of products, National Union Electric Corporation, on June 24, 1974, received an offer from A B Electrolux of Sweden for the purchase of all of its stock at a price of $28 per share.

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Bluebook (online)
414 A.2d 824, 1980 Del. Ch. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lebman-v-national-union-electric-corp-delch-1980.