Olenik v. Lodzinski

208 A.3d 704
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 5, 2019
Docket392, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 208 A.3d 704 (Olenik v. Lodzinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olenik v. Lodzinski, 208 A.3d 704 (Del. 2019).

Opinion

SEITZ, Justice:

Nicholas Olenik, a stockholder of nominal defendant Earthstone Energy, Inc., brought class and derivative claims against the defendants challenging a business combination between Earthstone and Bold Energy III LLC. As alleged in the complaint, EnCap Investments L.P. controlled Earthstone and Bold and caused Earthstone stockholders to approve an unfair transaction based on a misleading proxy statement. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on several grounds. They claimed that the proxy statement disclosed fully and fairly all material facts about the transaction, and Earthstone conditioned its offer on the approval of a special committee and the vote of a majority of the minority stockholders. Thus, under Kahn v. M & F Worldwide Corp. , 1 instead of the exacting entire fairness standard of review, business judgment review should apply leading to dismissal.

The Court of Chancery agreed with the defendants and dismissed the case. Two grounds were central to the court's ruling. First, the proxy statement informed the stockholders of all material facts about the transaction. And second, although the court recognized that EnCap, Earthstone, and Bold worked on the transaction for months before the Earthstone special committee extended an offer with the so-called MFW conditions, it found those lengthy interactions "never rose to the level of bargaining: they were entirely exploratory in nature." 2 Thus, in the court's view, the MFW protections applied, and the transaction *707 was subject to business judgment review resulting in dismissal.

While the parties briefed this appeal, we decided Flood v. Synutra International, Inc. 3 Under Synutra , to invoke the MFW protections in a controller-led transaction, the controller must "self-disable before the start of substantive economic negotiations." 4 The controller and the board's special committee must also "bargain under the pressures exerted on both of them by these protections." 5 We cautioned that the MFW protections will not result in dismissal when the "plaintiff has pled facts that support a reasonable inference that the two procedural protections were not put in place early and before substantive economic negotiations took place." 6

The Court of Chancery held correctly that the plaintiff failed to state a disclosure claim. But, the complaint should not have been dismissed in its entirety. Applying Synutra and its guidance on the MFW timing issue-which the Court of Chancery did not have the benefit of at the time of its decision-the plaintiff has pled facts supporting a reasonable inference that EnCap, Earthstone, and Bold engaged in substantive economic negotiations before the Earthstone special committee put in place the MFW conditions. We also find no merit to the defendants' alternative ground for affirmance based on EnCap's supposed lack of control of Earthstone. The Court of Chancery's decision is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

A.

According to the allegations of the complaint, which we accept as true at this stage of the proceedings, nominal defendant Earthstone is an upstream oil and gas company developing domestic oil and gas reserves. EnCap is a Delaware limited partnership operating as a private equity and venture capital firm focusing on domestic oil and gas ventures. EnCap had two holdings relevant to this appeal-Oak Valley Resources, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, which in turn owned a controlling stake in Earthstone; and Bold, a Texas limited liability company controlled by EnCap with substantial undeveloped oil and gas resources in Texas and New Mexico.

Frank Lodzinski founded Oak Valley in 2012, and served as its president and chief executive officer. Lodzinski and EnCap have a history of successful investments in the oil and gas industry. EnCap came to control Oak Valley through a reverse merger when EnCap contributed membership interests in three subsidiaries in exchange for a controlling interest in Earthstone. Lodzinski and three other members affiliated with EnCap made up four of the five Oak Valley board of managers. Affiliates of EnCap had the contractual right to nominate a majority of the Oak Valley board of managers.

From December 2014 through June 2016, EnCap owned more than 50% of Earthstone through its majority membership interest in Oak Valley. After a 2016 reverse merger involving Earthstone and Oak Valley, Oak Valley's ownership interest in Earthstone dropped to 41%. The following chart shows Earthstone's corporate structure post-2016 reverse merger:

*708 After investing in December 2014, EnCap installed new Earthstone management, with Lodzinski as president and chief executive officer. Earthstone also employed several individuals who work for an Oak Valley affiliate. At this point, EnCap and certain of its affiliates "through their direct and indirect ownership may be deemed to share the right to direct the disposition of the Common Stock held by Oak Valley through the EnCap Oak Valley Funds' interest in Oak Valley and EnCap Fund IX's ownership of Bold." 7 In its 10-K report following the 2016 reverse merger, Earthstone stated that it remained a controlled company:

So long as OVR [Oak Valley] continues to control a significant amount of our common stock, OVR will continue to be able to strongly influence all matters requiring stockholder approval, regardless of whether or not other stockholders believe that a potential transaction is in their own best interests. In any of these matters, the interests of OVR may differ or conflict with the interests of our other stockholders. Moreover, this concentration of stock ownership may also adversely affect the trading price of our common stock to the extent investors perceive a disadvantage in owning stock of a company with a controlling stockholder . As of March 1, 2017, OVR controls 9,162,452 shares of our common stock, or 41.1% of the outstanding shares. 8

*709 B.

Turning to the transaction at issue in this appeal, the Earthstone-Bold business combination has its roots in mid-2015 when EnCap began looking for ways to sell Bold or take it public. The plaintiff's theory is that Bold required large capital commitments from EnCap's investment funds to sustain its oil and gas operations. In the summer of 2015, EnCap reached the end of its capital commitments, was hesitant to invest more capital into Bold, and saw problems taking Bold public. 9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 A.3d 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olenik-v-lodzinski-del-2019.