Nathan Owen v. Lynn Cannon

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 17, 2015
DocketC.A. NO. 8860-CB
StatusPublished

This text of Nathan Owen v. Lynn Cannon (Nathan Owen v. Lynn Cannon) 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
Nathan Owen v. Lynn Cannon, (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

NATHAN OWEN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 8860-CB ) LYNN CANNON, BRYN OWEN, ENERGY ) SERVICES GROUP, INC., a Delaware ) corporation, and ESG ACQUISITION CORP. ) (n/k/a Energy Services Group, Inc.), a Delaware ) corporation, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 17, 2015 Date Decided: June 17, 2015

Kenneth J. Nachbar, D. McKinley Measley and Shannon E. German of MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Edward M. McNally, P. Clarkson Collins, Jr., Lewis H. Lazarus, Jason C. Jowers and Patricia A. Winston of MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendants.

BOUCHARD, C. I. INTRODUCTION

In this joint fiduciary duty and appraisal action, Nathan Owen (―Nate‖), formerly

the largest stockholder of Energy Services Group, Inc. (―ESG‖ or the ―Company‖),

challenges a conflicted merger (the ―Merger‖) in which he was cashed-out of ESG in

May 2013, for the right to receive $19.95 per share, or $26.334 million in total. The

Merger was orchestrated by the Company‘s two other largest stockholders: Lynn

Cannon, who replaced Nate as President in August 2009, and Bryn Owen (―Bryn‖),

Nate‘s brother. The Merger price was derived from a valuation that ESG‘s financial

advisor performed based on five-year projections (the ―2013 Projections‖) prepared under

Cannon‘s direction, which projections the Company submitted to a nationally reputable

lender in order to obtain a $25 million credit facility to buy out Nate.

Nate and his financial expert accept the 2013 Projections that formed the basis for

the Merger price, but they argue that the $19.95 per share price is unfair because ESG‘s

financial advisor applied certain incorrect assumptions in its valuation, the most

significant of which is the tax rate applicable to ESG as a Subchapter S corporation.

Applying what he submits are the correct assumptions to the 2013 Projections, Nate

contends that the fair value of his stock was $53.46 million.

Although defendants were content to use the 2013 Projections at the time of the

Merger, they now insist that those projections are not sufficiently reliable to value Nate‘s

stock. Instead, they rely on a valuation based on a set of ten-year projections their

financial expert created in the midst of this litigation. Based on their expert‘s valuation,

which applies a corporate tax rate for ESG that disregards its status as a Subchapter S corporation at the time of the Merger, defendants contend that the fair value of Nate‘s

stock was no more than $21.502 million.

The two primary areas of disagreement between the parties concern which

projections to use for a discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis to value Nate‘s stock as of

the Merger, and whether to tax affect the earnings in that analysis to account for ESG‘s

status as a Subchapter S corporation. In this post-trial opinion, I conclude that it is

appropriate to use the 2013 Projections because they reflected management‘s best

estimate of what was known or knowable about ESG‘s future performance as of the

Merger. I also conclude, consistent with this Court‘s precedents, that it is appropriate to

tax affect the earnings in the DCF analysis given ESG‘s status as a Subchapter S

corporation. Based on these two conclusions, and certain other determinations discussed

below, I find that the fair value of Nate‘s shares was $42,165,920 as of the Merger.

II. BACKGROUND

These are the facts as I find them based on the documentary evidence and

testimony of record.1 I accord the evidence and testimony the weight and credibility that

I find it deserves.

1 The deposition testimony of witnesses is part of the trial record to the extent that testimony was used at trial. In addition, the deposition of ESG‘s controller, Lisa Swift, who did not testify at trial, is part of the record. Tr. of Oral Arg. 202-03. Objections to any testimony or joint exhibits are overruled to the extent that testimony or exhibits are used in this opinion.

2 A. The Parties

Plaintiff and Petitioner Nathan Owen was the President of ESG until his removal

in August 2009, and a director of the Company until the Merger. Before the Merger,

Nate held 1,320,000 shares of ESG stock, which were cancelled in the Merger in

exchange for the right to receive $19.95 per share in cash, or $26.334 million in total.

Nate currently resides in Maine.

Defendant Lynn Cannon served as a director of the ESG and as President ―pro

tem‖ after Nate‘s removal as President.2 Before the Merger, Cannon held 1,218,750

shares of ESG stock. In connection with the Merger, Cannon became President of ESG.

Defendant Bryn Owen, Nate‘s brother, is a Vice President and director of ESG.

Before the Merger, Bryn held 1,098,750 shares of ESG stock.

Non-party Felimon Gurule is the Vice President of Information Technology at

ESG. Before the Merger, Gurule held 112,500 shares of ESG stock.

Respondent Energy Services Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation based in

Norwell, Massachusetts, provided services to the retail energy industry. At all relevant

times before the Merger, Nate, Cannon, and Bryn were the three members of the

Company‘s board of directors, and Nate, Cannon, Bryn, and Gurule were stockholders of

the Company. In connection with the Merger, Cannon, Bryn, and Gurule transferred

their ESG stock to Defendant ESG Acquisition Corp. (―Acquisition Corp.‖), a Delaware

corporation, in exchange for an equal amount of Acquisition Corp. stock. In the Merger,

2 Trial Tr. (―Tr.‖) 152 (Cannon).

3 ESG merged with and into Acquisition Corp., which is now known as Energy Services

Group, Inc.3 Unless noted otherwise, I refer to Energy Services Group, Inc. and

Acquisition Corp. interchangeably as ―ESG‖ or the ―Company,‖ and I refer to Cannon,

Bryn, and Acquisition Corp. as ―Defendants.‖

B. The Formation of ESG

In the mid-1990s, Nate started a website- and intranet-development company

called IC Solutions, which was the predecessor to ESG.4 Bryn joined IC Solutions and

reported to Nate.5 In the late 1990s, one of the country‘s first retail energy providers,

which are known as ―REPs,‖ engaged IC Solutions to create a software solution to

manage its electronic data interchange, or EDI, in order to participate in the retail

electricity market. Other REPs also approached IC Solutions for a similar service.6

EDI is the data interchange system that REPs use to schedule and deliver

electricity.7 REPs operate in states that have deregulated retail electricity that permit

competition with the incumbent utility. REPs arbitrage what they term ―headroom‖: the

difference in price between the electricity that they can buy at wholesale prices through

short-term contracts and the electricity bought by incumbent utilities through long-term

3 Pre-Trial Stip. and Order (―Pre-Trial Stip.‖) ¶ II.A.2. 4 Tr. 668-69 (Nate). 5 Id. 622, 625-26 (Bryn), 669 (Nate). 6 Id. 668-69 (Nate), 601 (Bryn). 7 JX 336 (Weigand Report) at 8-9.

4 contracts.8 Historically, the price of natural gas, a primary source to generate electricity,

has been highly volatile, which creates opportunities for headroom.9 For example, when

natural gas prices drop, REPs can buy electricity at lower wholesale prices than

incumbent utilities that are locked into long-term contracts and thereby sell electricity at

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