McGowan Investors LP v. Frucher

392 F. App'x 39
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
Docket07-3980
StatusUnpublished

This text of 392 F. App'x 39 (McGowan Investors LP v. Frucher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGowan Investors LP v. Frucher, 392 F. App'x 39 (3d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

AMBRO, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the enforceability of a release that was negotiated as part of a court-approved settlement in a related state court action. That settlement released not only state law claims, but also federal claims that could not have been brought in state court. On appeal, the appellants argue that this settlement is not entitled to full faith and credit in federal court. For the reasons that follow, we disagree- and thus affirm the judgment of the District Court.

I. FACTS

Until recently, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange was structured as a mutual organization with 505 “seats,” each of which provided to designated “seat owners” both equity ownership and the right to trade. In October 2003, the Exchange proposed a demutualization plan to its seat owners. This plan was outlined in an Information Memorandum, which included analysis by an independent financial advisor, Keefe Bruyette & Woods (“KBW”). The Memorandum included KBWs conclusion that the “viability of [the Exchange] in its current operating structure [was] questionable,” and that demutualization was the Exchange’s best long-term option. S.A. 23-24. In addition, prior to the demutualization vote the Exchange told its seat owners that it would later seek additional investments in the Exchange. In November 2003, the seat owners approved the demu-tualization plan, and the Exchange began to demutualize.

Under the plan, the seat owners received 100 shares of Exchange common stock for each seat that they had previously owned. The Exchange also considered various strategic options to bolster its long-term viability. For instance, Archipelago Holdings, LLC offered $50 million to acquire the Exchange outright — an offer that was rejected. Instead, the Exchange pursued six separate transactions with so-called “Strategic Investors” be *42 tween June 2005 and August 2005. 1 As a result of these transactions, the Strategic Investors obtained shares that totaled 45% of the outstanding common stock in the Exchange. Each Strategic Investor also received a warrant that would increase its ownership stake in the Exchange if the latter met certain performance goals. The Strategic Investors each met these benchmarks and thus increased their overall ownership in the Exchange to 89.4%. In August 2005, the Exchange also announced a tender offer to purchase common stock at $90,000 per 100-share block. None of the appellants sold any of their shares under the tender offer.

In the end, the seat owners were left with approximately 10% of the Exchange’s common stock and a smaller amount of the Exchange’s equity per share than they had prior to demutualization. In addition, the seat-owner appellants allege that they had “less than they would have had if the more advantageous deals had been accepted by the Board.” Appellants’ Br. 8-9.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This is the second class action brought by stockholders of the Exchange. The two class actions were filed eight days apart— one in Delaware state court and one in federal court. Both challenges involve a similar set of underlying facts, similar defendants, and similar proposed remedies. The state court action settled, and the federal action is before us on appeal. Since the enforceability of the state court settlement turns on the relationship between these two suits, we outline each in turn.

A. The State Court Action

The first class action was filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery in June 2006 by a different named plaintiff, who was represented by different counsel than is now before us. That plaintiff asserted state law fiduciary claims against the Exchange, its Board, and the Strategic Investors. These claims were based on alleged breaches of fiduciary duties by the Board members in approving the transactions with the Strategic Investors, as well as allegations that the Strategic Investors induced the Board’s alleged breaches. The plaintiffs sought rescission of the underlying transactions (or, alternatively damages). In addition, after the Strategic Investors exercised their performance-based warrants, the plaintiffs added a claim based on a violation of the Exchange’s Certificate of Incorporation.

In March 2007, the Delaware Court of Chancery certified a settlement class of “all Class A common stockholders of the [Exchange] on April 20, 2005, and their transferees or successors in interest.” In June 2007 (and on the eve of trial), the parties settled. The parties and the Vice Chancellor outlined the settlement in a Memorandum of Understanding. The specific terms of the settlement were negotiated over the next two months.

Per the settlement, the defendants agreed to the following: 1) the Strategic Investors agreed to return 14% of their shares; 2) the CEO of the Exchange agreed to cancel 14% of his restricted stock; 3) the Exchange agreed to pay $17.1 million into a settlement fund; and 4) the plaintiff class obtained protections against future stock dilution. As part of the negotiations, the Exchange agreed to provide an additional $3.1 million to sweeten the deal and to secure “a release to the broadest extent possible under law.”

*43 In exchange, the plaintiffs agreed to a release that covered all claims arising out of or relating to

the subject matter of [the state court] [a]ction, and including without limitation any claims (whether or not asserted) in any way related to: (i) Demutualization; (ii) the Exchange’s decision to reject a business combination with Archipelago; (iii) the Exchange’s consideration of any merger, acquisition, joint venture, business combination, initial public offering, or other strategic initiatives or transactions involving the Exchange as an alternative to a business combination with Archipelago or the Strategic Investments; (iv) the Tender Offer; (v) the value or valuations of the Exchange done in connection with (iii); (vi) any question of Board or management compensation and Board reorganization pri- or to December 31, 2006; and/or (vii) the Strategic Investments (including expressly any alleged violations of Article TV of the Exchange’s Certification of Incorporation).

S.A. 75-76. The proposed settlement was subject to a bifurcated approval process whereby the Chancery Court considered the fairness of the settlement before analyzing the proposed allocation plan.

After receiving notice of the proposed settlement, several class members filed objections. One group of objectors included the appellants in our case (represented by the same counsel now before us). 2 These objectors offered several challenges to the settlement, including that: 1) the Chancery Court lacked the power to release the federal claims at issue in the present action; 2) the release itself extended to claims that were not at issue in the state court action; 3) the settlement inadequately compensated the class members for their federal claims; 4) the settlement failed to provide adequate notice to absent class members; and 5) class counsel and the class representatives inadequately represented absent class members. 3

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Bluebook (online)
392 F. App'x 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-investors-lp-v-frucher-ca3-2010.