Lyle Stoneman v. United Nebraska Bank

577 N.W.2d 271, 254 Neb. 477, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 103
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1998
DocketS-96-941
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 577 N.W.2d 271 (Lyle Stoneman v. United Nebraska Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyle Stoneman v. United Nebraska Bank, 577 N.W.2d 271, 254 Neb. 477, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 103 (Neb. 1998).

Opinion

Connolly, J.

The issue in this appeal presents the question of whether the minority shareholders of a banking corporation who are “cashed out” via merger have a right to receive fair value for their shares, notwithstanding bank minority shareholders’ exclusion from Neb. Rev. Stat. § 21-20,138 (Reissue 1997). We conclude that bank shareholders do indeed have such a right, and we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Lexington State Bank & Trust Co. (LSB&T), then a Nebraska banking corporation, was a subsidiary of Lexington Bancshares, Inc. (LBI), then a Nebraska holding company, which owned 88.5 percent of LSB&T’s issued and outstanding shares. United Nebraska Bank (UNB), also a Nebraska banking corporation, was a wholly owned subsidiary of United Nebraska Financial Company (UNFC), another Nebraska holding company. UNB, LBI, UNFC, and LSB&T are the appellants in the instant case. Harold P. Stuckey, acting as president of both LSB&T and LBI, contacted UNB regarding the sale of LBI. UNB’s parent corporation, UNFC, submitted an offer to LBI, which resulted in two stock purchase agreements, an “Agreement for Purchase of Preferred Shares of Lexington Bancshares, Inc.” (preferred share agreement) and an “Agreement for Purchase of Common Shares of Lexington Bancshares, Inc.” (common share agreement).

*480 1. Stock Purchase Agreements

The preferred share agreement was between UNFC and the holders of LSB&T’s preferred shares. UNFC’s purchase of LBI’s preferred shares was to occur contemporaneously with UNFC’s purchase of LBI’s common shares, and all conditions precedent under the common share agreement were to be met or waived by LBI prior to closing.

The common share agreement was between UNFC and certain individuals, including Lexington Bank and Trust Co., trustee of LSB&T’s employee stock ownership plan. In the common share agreement, UNFC agreed to purchase all of LBI’s common shares, conditioned upon the closing of the purchase of LBI’s preferred shares and the “obtaining [of] all necessary regulatory approvals including approval for [UNFC] to merge [LSB&T] into its [sic] subsidiary bank.”

In addition, UNFC agreed to purchase 439.01 shares of LSB&T’s common stock owned by Stuckey for $470,713, payable at closing, which would yield $1,072 a share. Stuckey was also to be paid “an amount equal to any cash recoveries by [LSB&T] of the principal amount of and interest on a loan by [LSB&T] ... in the principal amount of $156,000, which loan was charged off in full by [LSB&T].” Finally, the common share agreement required Stuckey to execute an agreement not to compete, for which Stuckey would be compensated in the amount of $450,000.

Upon the closing of the sale of LBI’s common shares and Stuckey’s 439.01 shares in LSB&T, UNFC would control all but 8.4 percent of LSB&T’s issued and outstanding shares. Although the common share agreement clearly contemplated a merger and provided for the purchase of Stuckey’s minority shares in LSB&T, it made no provisions concerning LSB&T’s remaining minority shareholders.

The purchase price of LBI’s shares provided for in the common share agreement was based upon LSB&T’s equity capital.

The value of [LSB&T] shall be determined by adding to the amount of [LSB&T’s] equity capital... the amount of $8,250,000, provided that [LSB&T’s] equity capital... is not less than $8,800,000. The value of [LSB&T] as thus computed shall be divided by the total number of shares of *481 [LSB&T] common stock issued and outstanding, which shall then be multiplied by the number of [LSB&T] shares owned by [LBI] to determine the value of the [LSB&T] shares owned by [LBI].

(Emphasis supplied.) Application of the above formula resulted in a value of approximately $1,217.86 per LSB&T share.

2. Merger Agreement

In yet another separate agreement, LSB&T agreed to merge with UNB, which merger was to occur contemporaneously with the consummation of the stock purchase agreements. The merger was to proceed in three steps. First, the stock purchase agreements would be executed. Second, LBI would merge with UNFC with LBI surviving, resulting in LBI acquiring all of UNB’s outstanding voting shares. Third, UNB and LSB&T would merge, with UNB as the survivor, and LBI would change its name to UNFC. Upon completion of the third step, all outstanding voting shares of LSB&T were to be canceled, with the minority shareholders receiving $700 per share in cash, and each share of common stock owned by LBI was to be converted into 1.91 shares of UNFC’s common stock. The above transactions would result in UNFC’s being a one-bank holding company, with UNB as its wholly owned subsidiary.

These transactions effected a “cash-out” merger, which left the minority shareholders with no equity in the resultant corporation. A cash-out merger may be accomplished without regard to the wishes of the minority shareholders and forces them to accept cash for their shares rather than stock in the newly merged business, thus giving the majority 100-percent control. Such mergers are variously referred to as “cash-outs,” “takeouts,” “squeeze-outs,” and “freeze-outs.”

3. Department’s Approval

The stock purchase agreements and the merger agreement required the approval of the Nebraska Department of Banking and Finance (Department) prior to their consummation, pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 8-157(3) (Supp. 1995) and 8-1502 (Reissue 1997). UNFC submitted a notice of acquisition and control to the Department, pursuant to § 8-1502, to obtain approval for the stock purchase agreements. The Department *482 gave notice to UNFC that it had no objection to the change in control that would result from UNFC’s purchase of LBFs stock. Upon receiving the above notice, UNFC submitted an application for merger to the Department. In response to the application for merger, several minority shareholders (appellee minority shareholders) submitted a protest and petition for declaratory ruling to the Department. They included Lyle Stoneman, since deceased and substituted for by Michael Alesio; Virginia Ann Hanson, sole beneficiary of the Maurice Braithwait Trust; and First Gothenburg Bancshares, Inc., a Nebraska corporation. They protested the value they would receive for their LSB&T shares under the merger application and requested a hearing on the matter. UNB (not UNFC) filed an answer to the protest, and the appellee minority shareholders responded with a brief in support of their position. UNB then filed a reply brief.

The Department issued an order simultaneously approving the merger application and denying the appellee minority shareholders a hearing. The Department noted that it considers the “fundamental fairness” of a merger to the minority shareholders as a factor when deciding whether to approve a merger application.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 N.W.2d 271, 254 Neb. 477, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyle-stoneman-v-united-nebraska-bank-neb-1998.