Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co.

56 A.3d 1072, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 93, 2012 WL 5257252
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 4, 2012
DocketCivil Action No. 7102-CS
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 56 A.3d 1072 (Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co.) 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
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co., 56 A.3d 1072, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 93, 2012 WL 5257252 (Del. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Chancellor.

I. Introduction

This case presents interesting questions regarding the meaning of confidentiality agreements entered into by two industry rivals at a time when both were intrigued by the possibility of a friendly merger and when neither wished to be the subject of an unsolicited offer by the other or a third-party industry rival.

May one of the parties — especially the one who evinced the most concern for confidentiality and who most feared having its willingness to enter into merger discussions become public — decide that evolving market circumstances make it comfortable enough to make a hostile bid for the other and then without consequence freely use and disclose publicly all the information that it had adamantly insisted be kept confidential? In this decision, I conclude that the answer to that question is no and that, consistent with Delaware’s pro-cont-ractarian public policy, the parties’ agreement that the victim of any breach of the confidentiality agreements should be entitled to specific performance and injunctive relief should be respected.

Here, I find that, although the confidentiality agreements did not include an express standstill, they did bar either party from:

• Using the broad class of “evaluation material” defined by the confidentiality agreements except for the consideration of a contractually negotiated business combination transaction between the parties, and not for a combination that was to be effected by hostile, unsolicited activity of one of the parties;
• Disclosing either the fact that the parties had merger discussions or any evaluation material shared under the confidentiality agreements unless the [1076]*1076party was legally required to disclose because: (i) it had received “oral questions, interrogatories, requests for information or documents in legal proceedings, subpoena, civil investigative demand or other similar process”1; and (ii) its legal counsel had, after giving the other party notice and the chance for it to comment on the extent of disclosure required, limited disclosure to the minimum necessary to satisfy the requirements of law; or
• Disclosing information protected from disclosure by the confidentiality agreements through press releases, investor conference calls, and communications with journalists that were in no way required by law.

The breaching party engaged in each of these contractually impermissible courses of conduct. Because the victim of the breach has sought a temporally reasonable injunction tailored to the minimum period of time that the breaching party was precluded by the confidentiality agreements from misusing the information it had received or making disclosures that were not legally required in the sense defined in the confidentiality agreements, I grant the non-breaching party’s request, which has the effect of putting off the breaching party’s proxy contest and exchange offer for a period of four months.

II. Factual Background

As the introduction indicates, this is an M & A case that turns on the meaning of confidentiality agreements between the parties. The plaintiff and counterclaim-defendant in this case is Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., a North Carolina corporation headquartered in Raleigh. Martin Marietta is the second largest domestic participant in the aggregates industry. That industry mines large rocks and similar materials, and processes them into materials for roads, buildings, and other infrastructure. The defendant and counterclaim-plaintiff is Vulcan Materials Company, the largest domestic aggregates business. Vulcan is a New Jersey corporation headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama.

On December 12, 2011, Martin Marietta launched an unsolicited exchange offer in which it seeks to purchase all of Vulcan’s outstanding shares (the “Exchange Offer”). The Exchange Offer is conditioned on the receipt of tenders from 80% of the Vulcan shareholders,2 and contains a waivable condition that “Vulcan ... have entered into a definitive merger agreement with Martin Marietta with respect to the proposed transaction that is reasonably satisfactory to Martin Marietta and Vulcan” 3 (the “Merger Condition”). Martin Marietta is offering 0.5 of a Martin Marietta share for each Vulcan share, which was a premium of 18% to the average exchange ratio based on closing share prices for Martin Marietta and Vulcan for the 80-day period ended December 9, 2011.4 To create a Vulcan board more receptive of its offer, Martin Marietta also launched a proxy contest, seeking to elect four new members to Vulcan’s classified board at Vulcan’s upcoming annual meeting, which is scheduled to occur on June 1, 2012 (the “Proxy Contest”).

Vulcan’s board did not react enthusiastically to Martin Marietta’s overture and made clear that it believed that Martin Marietta’s conduct violated confidentiality [1077]*1077agreements between the companies. On the same day that it launched its hostile bid, Martin Marietta brought this suit to obtain a declaration that nothing in the confidentiality agreements bars the Exchange Offer and Proxy Contest. Vulcan responded with litigation over the same issue in federal court in Alabama, where it is headquartered, despite the fact that the confidentiality agreements are governed by Delaware law and that the primary confidentiality agreement contains both a Delaware choice of law and a choice of forum provision.5 Eventually, it was agreed that this case would proceed first, ahead of both the Alabama action and fiduciary duty and securities cases pending in New Jersey.

Thus, the plaintiff here, Martin Marietta, seeks a declaration that it is not liable. The natural plaintiff, Vulcan, is the defendant, and it has filed counterclaims seeking a determination that Martin Marietta has breached its contractual obligations to Vulcan by improperly using and publicly disclosing information in aid of the Exchange Offer and Proxy Contest and that Martin Marietta should be temporarily enjoined from proceeding with both.

As I discuss the parties’ claims, I will focus on Vulcan’s claims because that is the more natural way to evaluate what is in issue. .

A. A Brief Overview Of The Contractual Dispute

To make more relevant my recitation of the factual background, it is useful to frame the basic contractual dispute between the parties. In the spring of 2010, the CEOs of Martin Marietta and Vulcan began discussing a potential merger. In the interest of keeping their discussions confidential, Martin Marietta and Vulcan entered into a non-disclosure agreement, dated May 3, 2010 (the “NDA”). A few weeks later, in order to facilitate an analysis of the antitrust implications of a merger, the companies also entered into a common interest, joint defense and confidentiality agreement, effective as of May 18, 2010 (the “JDA,” and together with the NDA, the “Confidentiality Agreements”). The NDA and the JDA broadly define materials subject to protection as “Evaluation Material”6 and “Confidential Materials,”7 respectively. In this opinion, I will refer to both as “Evaluation Material,” except when it is necessary to distinguish between the two.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A.3d 1072, 2012 Del. Ch. LEXIS 93, 2012 WL 5257252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-marietta-materials-inc-v-vulcan-materials-co-delch-2012.