Onti, Inc. v. Integra Bank

751 A.2d 904
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1999
DocketConsolidated C.A. 14514
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 751 A.2d 904 (Onti, Inc. v. Integra Bank) 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
Onti, Inc. v. Integra Bank, 751 A.2d 904 (Del. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

This is an 'appraisal and entire fairness action arising from the cash-out mergers (the “Cash-Out Mergers”) of Onco-Tech, Inc. (“OTI”) and eight other companies that owned cancer treatment facilities (the “Eight Centers”). I must decide the value of the companies at the time of the mergers.

I. BACKGROUND

On January 31, 1986, Mobil Diagnostic, Inc. (“MDI”), a company owned by A. Jerome DiGiacobbe, Jr. (“DiGiacobbe”), Calvin F. Zontine, and Gerald W. Weaver (collectively the “Individual Counterclaim-ants,” and with MDI, the “Counterclaim-ants”), entered 'into a joint venture with Oncology Services, Inc. (“OSI”), a company wholly owned by Douglas R. Colkitt (“Colkitt”) (together with Jerome D. Der-del (“Derdel”), and Raymond J. Caravan (“Caravan”), and with OTI, EquiMed, Inc., EquiVision, Inc., and the Treatment Center Companies (defined below)), (the “Counterclaim Defendants”). Conflicts developed between the parties to the venture, and they entered a consent decree (the “Consent Decree”) on January 31, 1988. Pursuant to the Consent Decree, fifteen cancer treatment centers were transferred to OTI, a company owned sixty percent by Colkitt and forty percent by the Individual Counterclaimants.

In 1993, assets of ten of these fifteen cancer treatment centers were transferred in exchange for stock in ten new companies (the “Treatment Center Companies”), and the stock was distributed to OTI’s shareholders. Pursuant to a writ of garnishment, OTI, either correctly or incorrectly (depending on which side tells the story — it is not important to this decision), *907 issued the Counterclaimants’ shares to In-tegra Bank (“Integra”).

On August 30, 1995, OTI and the Eight Centers (of the ten Treatment Center Companies) completed the Cash-Out Mergers. The Counterclaimants’ forty percent interest was determined to be worth $6,040,000, based on a valuation performed by Hempstead & Co., Incorporated (the “Hempstead Valuation”). 1 ONTI, Inc. (“ONTI”) was the surviving company in the OTI Cash-Out Merger, and the Eight Centers were survived by the New Treatment Companies. Subsequently, the New Treatment Companies merged with Colkitt Oncology Group (“COG”), a company owned primarily or entirely by Colkitt, and COG subsequently (in February 1996) merged with EquiVision, Inc. (“EquiVision”), a public company owned thirty percent by Colkitt, resulting in EquiMed, Inc. (“EquiMed”), a public company (the “EquiMed Transaction”). (I will address further details of the background to the transaction as necessary in the analysis below.)

The case was originally filed by ONTI and the New Treatment Companies (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) against the Individual Counterclaimants and Integra (collectively, “Defendants”), seeking a declaration that the Cash-Out Merger consideration of $6,040,000 was entirely fair to the minority stockholders and a declaration as to who were the proper parties entitled to receive the consideration in the Cash-Out Mergers or to demand appraisal. Counterclaimants later filed counterclaims against the Counterclaim Defendants alleging unfair dealing and breach of contract, as well as appraisal actions against ONTI and the New Treatment Companies, seeking approximately $53 million for their share of the Eight Centers. Integra Bank also filed appraisal actions against the New Treatment Companies, but not against ONTI. The Court tried these actions on a consolidated basis between May 11 and May 28, 1998.

II. APPRAISAL CLAIM

The parties disagree about virtually everything in this case, a circumstance that complicates my effort to resolve this matter. Based on Counterclaimants’ reliance on it in their post-trial brief, however, I believe I can base my appraisal of the companies on the Hempstead Valuation, modifying it where appropriate by the primary adjustment claims asserted by Coun-terclaimants.

A. Law of an Appraisal Case

The focus of an appraisal proceeding is not a wide one: “[I]n a section 262 appraisal action, the only litigable issue is the determination of the value of the appraisal petitioners’ shares on the date of the merger, the only party defendant is the surviving corporation and the only relief available is a judgment against the surviving corporation for the fair value of the dissenters’ shares.” 2 Therefore, I will focus on the methods and data relied upon by the parties to arrive at their calculations of the fair market value of the shares cashed-out in the Cash-Out Mergers, “and the extent to which the expert witnesses, their methods, and their sources of information” affect the accuracy of those calculations. 3

*908 B. Counterclaimants’ Objections to the Hempstead Valuation . .

In determining the value of the shares to be appraised, the Hempstead Valuation considered three methods: a Market-Based Approach, an Earnings-Based Approach, and an Asset-Based Approach. Ultimately it decided on the Earnings-Based Approach for its final valuation. 4 Richard Ruback (“Ruback”) analyzed the Hempstead Valuation for Counterclaim-ants and made several adjustments. 5 For simplicity’s sake, I base my analysis on the structure employed by Ruback in reviewing the Hempstead Valuation.

1. Stock Market Value

Ruback first calculated the fair value of the Eight Centers looking at the market price of EquiVision on the date of its announced merger with COG. 6 The Hemp-stead Valuation vehemently objects to this approach, saying “the EquiMed transaction [i.e., the merger of EquiMed with COG] provides no relevant information which would affect our analysis of the fair value of the Cancer Centers as of August 22, 1995.” 7 Its reasoning is that even if this Court were to factor in the value of the EquiMed stock, adjustments must be made because “the shares of common stock in EquiMed issued in the EquiMed Transaction to COG’s shareholders were restricted shares, and such shares must be valued, if at all, in a manner reflecting the reality of the lack of immediate marketability of those shares.” 8

Ruback’s valuation looks at two separate market prices, the closing price of EquiVision on September 7, 1995, the first trading day after it announced its plan to merge with COG ($7,125, adjusted to $14.25 based on a subsequent 1 for 2 reverse stock split), and the closing price of EquiMed on February 5, 1996, the first trading day after the merger of EquiVision and COG and the creation of EquiVision ($15.50). Ruback, noting that these values were consistent, took the smaller of them (perhaps to be conservative) — the $14.25 on the day of the announcement — and multiplied it by the 20,783,633 adjusted shares of EquiMed that COG shareholders would receive in the merger, to arrive at a valuation of $296.2 million.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
751 A.2d 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onti-inc-v-integra-bank-delch-1999.