Sealy Mattress Co. of New Jersey v. Sealy, Inc.

532 A.2d 1324
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 24, 1987
DocketCiv. A. 8853
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 532 A.2d 1324 (Sealy Mattress Co. of New Jersey v. Sealy, Inc.) 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
Sealy Mattress Co. of New Jersey v. Sealy, Inc., 532 A.2d 1324 (Del. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBS, Vice-Chancellor.

This individual and derivative action was filed by minority stockholders of Sealy, Incorporated (“Sealy”), a Delaware corporation, on February 13, 1987, to enjoin a proposed cash-out merger of Sealy into a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ohio-Sealy Mattress Manufacturing Company (“Ohio-Sealy”), Sealy’s majority stockholder. Sealy is one of the nation’s leading manufacturers and distributors of bedding products, and is over 93% owned by Ohio-Sealy. The plaintiffs, who collectively own the remaining 6.1% of Sealy’s stock, are its sole minority stockholders. 1 Under the terms of the proposed merger, Sealy is to be merged into Sealy Merging Corporation, a second-tier subsidiary of Ohio-Sealy, 2 and all shareholders other than Ohio-Sealy (i.e., the plaintiffs) are to receive $178.46 cash— representing Sealy’s book value as of December 31, 1986 — for each share of their Sealy stock.

Upon filing this action, the plaintiffs sought a preliminary and permanent injunction against consummation of the merger. Expedited discovery was conducted during the week of February 15, 1987, and a hearing on the preliminary injunction motion was scheduled for February 23, 1987, one day before the stockholders’ meeting at which the merger was to be approved. 3 In response, the defendants postponed the stockholders’ meeting for the purpose of discussing settlement. Settlement was not achieved, and the plaintiffs *1327 advised the defendants that they (the plaintiffs) intended to press their motion for a preliminary injunction. The defendants then announced that the merger would again be deferred, this time for the stated reason that Ohio Mattress intended to complete a public offering of its stock. They announced also that the stockholders’ meeting would also be postponed until further notice. 4

On February 27,1987, the plaintiffs filed a motion for an allowance of attorneys’ fees and expenses. The defendants opposed that motion on the grounds, inter alia, that no benefit had been achieved by the plaintiffs’ efforts, because the merger had not been abandoned. The defendants also filed, and the parties subsequently briefed, a motion to dismiss the amended complaint. 5 On May 14,1987, the day after this Court heard argument on the fee application motion, the defendants informed the plaintiffs and the Court that a stockholders meeting to approve the merger would be convened on July 21, 1987. The plaintiffs then renewed their motion for a preliminary injunction. Further expedited discovery and briefing followed, and oral argument on the preliminary injunction motion took place on July 7, 1987.

This is the decision of the Court on the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction.

I. The Facts

To understand the issues presented, it is necessary to discuss the facts at somewhat greater than normal length. The material facts are essentially uncontested.

Sealy’s principal business consists of manufacturing bedding products. Until recently, Sealy also derived revenues from a network of licensee organizations located in different states. The licensees manufactured and marketed bedding products under the Sealy tradename. With the exception of Ohio-Sealy, the Sealy licensees were also Sealy’s stockholders. Until late 1986 when Ohio-Sealy acquired majority control of Sealy, the following entities owned Sealy stock in the following percentages:

New York-Sealy 18.66%

Kansas City-Sealy 3.34%

Illinois-Sealy 16.35%

Connecticut-Sealy 14.96%

Maryland-Sealy 8.51%

Memphis-Sealy 15.59%

Virginia-Sealy 2.83%

Michigan-Sealy 11.95%

New Jersey-Sealy Group 6.19%

Howard Haas 6 1.62%

100.00%

For the previous 16 years, Ohio-Sealy had been involved in antitrust litigation against Sealy and certain of its licensees in the United States District Court located in Chicago, Illinois. Ohio-Sealy charged Sealy and the defendant licensees with having violated the federal antitrust laws in various respects. Michigan-Sealy, a licensee, was also a plaintiff in certain of those actions. On June 14, 1986, Ohio-Sealy obtained a verdict of $27 million against Sealy, plus a separate verdict of $50 million against Sealy and certain Sealy licensees that collectively owned about 58% of Sealy’s stock. 7 Michigan-Sealy obtained a separate verdict of $45 million against Sealy alone. The antitrust defendants then filed post-trial motions attacking the antitrust judgments. In response, Ohio-Sealy and Michigan-Sealy pressed for an order requiring the licensee defendants to post appropriate security as a condition of their pursuing post-judgment relief.

Shortly after the June, 1986 verdicts, Ohio-Sealy filed new antitrust litigation against Sealy and the defendant licensees. That new litigation, combined with the $122 million of judgments, became material in *1328 ducements for the antitrust licensee defendants to sell their businesses (including their stock holdings in Sealy) to Ohio-Sealy. Accordingly, a series of negotiations between the licensees and Ohio-Sealy, followed by sales of the licensees’ business to Ohio-Sealy, took place during the last quarter of 1986.

Specifically, during the fall of 1986, New York-Sealy negotiated a sale of its business (including New York-Sealy’s 18% stock interest in Sealy) to Ohio-Sealy at a price representing book value. Thereafter in December, 1986, the remaining antitrust defendant licensees (Illinois-Sealy, Connecticut-Sealy, and Maryland-Sealy), plus Kansas City-Sealy, which was not a defendant, reached agreement with Ohio-Sealy to sell their businesses. The consideration was an overall, single lump sum for all of the businesses, which sum would be allocated among the sellers as they collectively agreed. Those acquisitions gave Ohio-Sealy an additional 43.16% of Sealy’s outstanding stock which, when combined with previous stock purchases, made Ohio-Sealy the 77.41% owner of Sealy. Ohio-Sealy then purchased the Bluefields, Virginia-Sealy licensee, and later the stock of Howard Haas, Sealy’s then-President. Those acquisitions brought Ohio-Sealy’s stock ownership of Sealy up to approximately 82%.

All of the sales of the licensees’ businesses to Ohio-Sealy took place against the backdrop of both the Damoclean $122 million antitrust judgments and the prospect of continued antitrust litigation. As stated, the Sealy stock owned by each of the acquired licensees was included among the assets sold to Ohio-Sealy. The price paid by Ohio-Sealy for the licensees’ respective bedding businesses was, in each case, negotiated. However, in all cases Ohio-Sealy insisted upon allocating book value to the acquired licensee’s Sealy stock.

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Bluebook (online)
532 A.2d 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sealy-mattress-co-of-new-jersey-v-sealy-inc-delch-1987.