Lillis v. AT&T CORP.

896 A.2d 871, 2005 WL 5750582, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 26, 2005
DocketC.A. 717-N
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 896 A.2d 871 (Lillis v. AT&T 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
Lillis v. AT&T CORP., 896 A.2d 871, 2005 WL 5750582, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

I. 1

A. Background

The plaintiffs, former owners of options to purchase shares in AT&T Wireless Services, Inc. (‘Wireless”), bring this suit against Wireless and AT&T Corp., seeking to be compensated for the value of their options, which were canceled when Wireless merged with Cingular Wireless Corporation. The plaintiffs formerly were officers and directors of MediaOne Group, Inc., a broadband telecommunications company, or of U S WEST, Inc., the former parent corporation of MediaOne, that AT&T purchased. Pursuant to the Amended MediaOne Group, Inc. 1994 Stock Plan (the “1994 Plan”), and as part of their compensation, the plaintiffs received stock options (the “MediaOne Options”) from MediaOne and/or U S West.

After AT&T acquired MediaOne, AT&T exchanged the MediaOne Options for new options in AT&T (the “AT&T Options”), which had an equivalent value to the Me-diaOne Options. When AT&T spun off Wireless, its former subsidiary, the AT&T Options were adjusted, and the plaintiffs were granted new options in both (the new, smaller) AT&T and in Wireless (the “Wireless Options”). The Wireless Options (like all previous options) were partly in-the-money and partly out-of-the-money.

The plaintiffs allege that the out-of-the-money Wireless Options were rendered worthless as a result of the Cingular/Wireless merger. SpecificaUy, upon exercise, the Wireless Options were converted to the right to receive the consideration Cin-gular paid for the Wireless common stock. Unexercised Wireless Options were then canceled. 2 Obviously, out-of-the-money options went unexercised and were canceled for no consideration.

The plaintiffs contend that the Me-diaOne Options, and therefore the Wireless Options, were governed by four sepa *874 rate agreements, and that the cancellation of their out-of-the-money Wireless Options violated these agreements. 3 This contention centers on the 1994 Plan, paragraph XVIII(A), which provides that, in the event of

“any consolidation, combination, ... recapitalization, ... split-off, spin-off, combination of shares, exchange of shares or other like change in capital structure, the number or kinds of shares or interests subject to an Award and the per share price or value thereof shall be appropriately adjusted ... at the time of such event, provided that each Participant’s economic position with respect to the Award shall not, as a result of such adjustment, be worse than it had been immediately prior to such event.”

The plaintiffs argue that this paragraph of the 1994 Plan requires AT&T and/or Wireless to compensate them for the loss of their out-of-the-money Wireless Options and that such compensation should be equal to the economic value of all of their Wireless Options before the Cingu-lar/Wireless merger, minus any cash payment received in the merger. 4

The reason this is so, they say, is that in connection with the MediaOne/AT&T Merger Agreement, AT&T agreed that it, and its subsidiaries (including Wireless), would “honor the terms of all ... Me-diaOne Benefit Arrangements,” defined to include the 1994 Plan, and that no changes to the 1994 Plan would be made unless expressly permitted by its terms. The plaintiffs contend that this is exactly what happened in the MediaOne/AT&T merger and in the spin-off of Wireless from AT&T. When AT&T acquired MediaOne, the plaintiffs received the AT&T Options, which, they contend, were equivalent in value to the MediaOne Options they surrendered. Similarly, in June of 2001, when AT&T spun-off Wireless, AT&T and Wireless granted the plaintiffs the Wireless Options, and the adjusted AT&T options. According to documents Wireless filed with the SEC, the value of this mix of options was “intended to retain the same intrinsic value of the options immediately before and after the adjustment.” In fact, the complaint alleges that AT&T credited Wireless with over $200 million of additional value at the time of the spin-off to ensure that Wireless would honor AT&T’s obligation to the option holders.

B. The Defendants’Answers

In its answer, AT&T broadly admits many of the allegations contained in the complaint. Below are just some of the numerous admissions of AT&T in its answer:

• Paragraph 2 admits that “AT&T expressly promised to preserve the value of the Options, including in connection with future mergers or changes in control, in connection with its acquisition of MediaOne.”
• Paragraph 3 admits that “cancellation of the Options would leave the option holder in a worse off position.”
• Paragraph 5 admits that “Both AT&T and Wireless assured Plaintiffs that the new Wireless Options would continue to be governed by the 1994 Plan and the Individual Agreements.”
*875 • Paragraph 7 admits that ‘Wireless (i) had an obligation to preserve the value of the options it had granted if Wireless chose to pursue any merger or other extraordinary transaction and (ii) Wireless took action that affected the value of the Plaintiffs’ options.”
• Paragraph 34 admits that “Defendants believed that Plaintiffs’ Options — even Plaintiffs’ out-of-the-money Options— had significant value.”

In contrast to AT&T, Wireless’s answer admits nothing of consequence. Instead, it denies knowledge of many of the substantive factual allegations in the complaint. The court discusses the relevance of such denials below.

C. The Rule 12(c) Motion And The Defendants’ Responses

After receiving the defendants’ answers, the plaintiffs moved for judgment on the pleadings, pursuant to Rule 12(c). In its answering brief, AT&T again admitted many of the allegations in the complaint. A few of these numerous admissions are repeated below.

• “AT&T intended that the Option Exchange preserve the value held by the holders of AT&T options so that that value was not adversely impacted by AT&T’s split-off of Wireless. As Plaintiffs note in their Complaint, Wireless’s registration statement filed with the SEC acknowledged that Wireless assumed a portion of the obligation AT&T had to its option holders and that AT&T gave consideration with a value of approximately $200 million to Wireless to take on that obligation.” 5
• “AT&T took steps, including giving Wireless consideration with a value of approximately $200 million, to ensure Wireless would preserve the value of the Adjusted Wireless Options after the split-off, when Wireless would be an independent company and no longer under the control of AT&T.” 6

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Bluebook (online)
896 A.2d 871, 2005 WL 5750582, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillis-v-att-corp-delch-2005.