Penton Business Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 9, 2018
DocketCA 2017-0487
StatusPublished

This text of Penton Business Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC (Penton Business Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC) 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
Penton Business Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

EFiled: Jul 09 2018 01:16PM EDT Transaction ID 62217937 Case No. 2017-0847-JTL IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

PENTON BUSINESS MEDIA HOLDINGS, ) LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2017-0847-JTL ) INFORMA PLC and INFORMA USA, ) INC., ) ) Defendants. ) ) ) INFORMA PLC and INFORMA USA, ) INC., ) ) Counterclaim-Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) PENTON BUSINESS MEDIA HOLDINGS, ) LLC, ) ) Counterclaim-Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: May 11, 2018 Date Decided: July 9, 2018

William M. Lafferty, John P. DiTomo, Coleen Hill, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Craig S. Primis, Erin C. Johnston, Matthew S. Brooker, KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, Washington, District of Columbia; Attorneys for Plaintiff/Counterclaim-Defendant.

Kevin R. Shannon, Christopher N. Kelly, Jaclyn C. Levy, POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Anthony M. Candido, Robert C. Myers, Benjamin A. Berringer, CLIFFORD CHANCE US LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Defendants/Counterclaim-Plaintiffs.

LASTER, V.C. Informa PLC and Informa USA, Inc. (jointly, the “Buyer”) purchased Penton

Business Media Holdings, Inc. (the “Company”) from Penton Business Media Holdings,

LLC (the “Seller”). The transaction was governed by an Agreement and Plan of Merger

dated September 15, 2016 (the “Merger Agreement”).

The Merger Agreement contained complex provisions addressing how the value of

transaction-related tax benefits would be allocated between the Buyer and the Seller. Those

provisions incorporated a dispute resolution mechanism that called for the parties to submit

disputes to an independent accounting firm. The Merger Agreement stated that the

accountant “shall be acting as an accounting expert only and not as an arbitrator.”

Disputes arose, but the parties could not agree on procedures for submitting the

disputes to the accountant. The Seller wanted to provide the accountant with term sheets

and other extrinsic evidence to support its position. The Buyer contended that the

accountant could not consider extrinsic evidence.

The Seller filed this lawsuit. Invoking the doctrine of procedural arbitrability, the

Seller seeks a declaration that the accountant has authority to determine what information

it can consider. Alternatively, the Seller seeks a declaration that the accountant can consider

extrinsic evidence. The Buyer filed a counterclaim. The Buyer contends that because the

accountant is an expert and not an arbitrator, arbitral doctrines are irrelevant, and the court

must decide the issue as a matter of contract interpretation. The Buyer seeks a declaration

that the accountant cannot consider extrinsic evidence, along with other equitable relief.

The parties filed cross motions for judgment on the pleadings. This decision holds

that the Merger Agreement calls for an expert determination, which is a third-party dispute

1 resolution mechanism distinct from arbitration. Although some jurisdictions do not

recognize the distinction, Delaware does. When parties have opted for an expert

determination, doctrines like substantive and procedural arbitrability do not apply.

Although parties could give an expert the authority to interpret a contract, here they did

not. Instead, the court must interpret the contract to determine what the accountant can

consider. In this case, the plain terms of the Merger Agreement bar the accountant from

considering extrinsic evidence.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On a motion for judgment on the pleadings, the facts are drawn from the operative

pleadings and the documents they incorporate by reference. When evaluating cross motions

for judgment on the pleadings, the facts for purposes of each motion must be viewed in the

light most favorable to the non-movant. In this case, the relevant facts are undisputed.

A. The Term Sheets

In summer 2016, the parties began discussing a potential transaction. On July 6, the

Buyer sent the Seller a term sheet that included a section addressing tax matters. The Seller

contends that the term sheet supports its position in the underlying dispute.

After further negotiations, the parties circulated a revised term sheet on July 19,

2016. It too contained a section on tax matters. The Seller believes that it too supports its

position in the underlying dispute.

B. The Merger Agreement

The parties entered into the Merger Agreement and announced it on September 15,

2016. It called for the Company to merge with a wholly owned subsidiary of the Buyer,

2 with the Company as the surviving entity (the “Merger”). The purchase price comprised

$1.46 billion in cash and $100 million in Buyer equity.

On the same day that the parties announced the Merger, the Buyer announced a

rights offering to finance the transaction. The offering circular contained information that

the Seller contends supports its position in the underlying dispute.

C. The Tax Provisions

Section 5.2 of the Merger Agreement contains a complex mechanism for

apportioning tax deductions and other tax benefits that the Company could claim as a result

of the Merger. The parties grouped the benefits into three categories: (i) benefits applied to

pre-Merger periods, (ii) benefits applied to post-Merger periods, and (iii) benefits that

remained unapplied as of a set date. The first two categories are pertinent to this case.

Section 5.2(a)(i) governed the allocation of tax benefits for periods ending on or

before the closing date of the Merger (the “Pre-Closing Periods”). This decision therefore

calls it the “Pre-Closing Section.” It directed the Buyer to pay the Seller an amount equal

to any refund that the Company received because of tax benefits that the Company applied

to a Pre-Closing Period. Critically for the underlying dispute, the Seller only would receive

a payment equal to the refund. The Seller would not be entitled to receive a portion of the

value of the tax benefits that were utilized to reduce the Company’s tax liability except to

the extent they resulted in a refund.

Section 5.2(a)(ii) governed the allocation of tax benefits for periods that ended after

closing, with the final post-closing period ending on December 31, 2017 (the “Post-Closing

Periods”). This decision therefore calls it the “Post-Closing Section.” It deployed the

3 defined term “Transaction Tax Benefits,” which included “any reduction in the

[Company’s] Tax liability” for any Post-Closing Period.1 It directed the Buyer to pay the

Seller an amount equal to 40% of any Transaction Tax Benefits that the Company realized

during a Post-Closing Period. Unlike the Pre-Closing Section, the Post-Closing Section did

not require a refund. The Post-Closing Section required a payment equal to the reduction

in the Company’s tax liability even if the Company did not receive a refund.

The different formulas for calculating the payment to the Seller meant that if the

Buyer could allocate benefits to Pre-Closing Periods rather than Post-Closing Periods, then

the Buyer could pay less to the Seller. A particular tax benefit might generate the same

dollar-value reduction in potential tax liability for either a Pre-Closing or a Post-Closing

Period, but the Buyer would only pay for the benefit in a Pre-Closing Period to the extent

it resulted in a refund; for a Post-Closing Period, the Buyer would always make a payment

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Penton Business Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penton-business-media-holdings-llc-v-informa-plc-delch-2018.