Selwyn Karp v. First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc.

69 F.4th 223
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2023
Docket21-1571
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 F.4th 223 (Selwyn Karp v. First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selwyn Karp v. First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc., 69 F.4th 223 (4th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 21-1571 Doc: 78 Filed: 06/01/2023 Pg: 1 of 22

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 21-1571

SELWYN KARP, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated,

Plaintiff – Appellant,

and

CONSTANCE LAGACE, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated,

Plaintiff,

v.

FIRST CONNECTICUT BANCORP, INC.; JOHN J. PATRICK, JR.; RONALD A. BUCCHI; JOHN A. GREEN; JAMES T. HEALEY, JR.; PATIENCE P. MCDOWELL; KEVIN S. RAY; MICHAEL A. ZIEBKA,

Defendants – Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Richard D. Bennett, Senior District Judge. (1:18-cv-02496-RDB; 1:18-cv-02541-RDB)

Argued: March 9, 2023 Decided: June 1, 2023

Before DIAZ, THACKER, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Thacker and Judge Harris joined. USCA4 Appeal: 21-1571 Doc: 78 Filed: 06/01/2023 Pg: 2 of 22

ARGUED: Juan Eneas Monteverde, MONTEVERDE & ASSOCIATES, PC, New York, New York, for Appellant. Robert R. Long, IV, ALSTON & BIRD, LLP, Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Elizabeth Gingold Clark, Timothy J. Fitzmaurice, ALSTON & BIRD, Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellees. G. Stewart Webb, Jr., Elizabeth C. Rinehart, VENABLE LLP, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc.

2 USCA4 Appeal: 21-1571 Doc: 78 Filed: 06/01/2023 Pg: 3 of 22

DIAZ, Circuit Judge:

Selwyn Karp contends that First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc. and its directors violated

the securities laws by misleading shareholders like him about the true value of their shares

ahead of a stock-for-stock merger. To comply with Section 14(a) of the Securities

Exchange Act of 1934, Karp claims, First Connecticut needed to disclose specific cash-

flow projections—and particularly an earlier, rosier set of projections—in the proxy

statement it circulated to investors.

The district court granted First Connecticut’s motion for summary judgment,

holding that Karp hadn’t shown that (1) the cash-flow projections were material; (2) their

omission caused him any economic loss; or (3) the directors acted negligently in approving

the proxy statement. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

I.

A.

First Connecticut and People’s United Financial, Inc. proposed a merger to their

shareholders in June 2018. Under the merger agreement, First Connecticut shareholders

would receive 1.725 shares of People’s United stock for each share of First Connecticut

stock they held. That exchange ratio reflected an implied cash value of around $32.33 per

First Connecticut share—a 24.3% premium over the stock’s closing price on the day the

merger was announced. First Connecticut’s financial advisor, Piper Jaffray & Co., had

advised the bank’s Board that the merger consideration was fair.

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First Connecticut filed a merger proxy statement with the SEC and disseminated it

to shareholders. The proxy statement ran over 150 pages, including ten pages summarizing

the different financial analyses Piper Jaffray performed in developing its fairness opinion.

One of those analyses was a “discounted cash flow” analysis, which “estimate[d] a range

of the present values of after-tax cash flows that First Connecticut could provide to equity

holders through 2023 on a stand-alone basis.” J.A. 65.63. The proxy statement noted that

Piper had used two years of publicly available earnings estimates in its analysis, and

applied an 8% earnings growth rate to estimate discounted cash flow for several other

years. It didn’t disclose the specific cash-flow figures used in the analysis.

But about seven months earlier, while First Connecticut was exploring a merger

with a different bank, Piper presented another set of cash-flow projections to the Board.

These November 2017 cash-flow projections were more optimistic than the estimates used

for the fairness opinion. But they were prepared without input from the bank’s

management: A Piper director who worked on the earlier projections testified that he

hadn’t consulted First Connecticut on them, and that they weren’t “tied back to anything

but my industry knowledge.” J.A. 1129.

Unaware of the earlier projections, First Connecticut’s shareholders voted to

approve the merger.

B.

Karp, a First Connecticut shareholder, filed a putative class action against First

Connecticut and its individual directors. The operative amended complaint alleges that

First Connecticut and its directors violated Sections 14(a) and 20(a) of the Securities

4 USCA4 Appeal: 21-1571 Doc: 78 Filed: 06/01/2023 Pg: 5 of 22

Exchange Act of 1934, as well as SEC Rule 14a–9, because the proxy statement didn’t

include the cash-flow figures Piper used in its analysis. In Karp’s view, the cash-flow

projections (particularly the November 2017 figures) painted a more optimistic picture of

First Connecticut’s financials—a picture First Connecticut then hid from shareholders,

leading them to undervalue their shares and approve the merger.

1.

Discovery began and the parties hired experts. Karp submitted a report by financial

analyst M. Travis Keath. In the report, Keath stated that the decrease in projected cash

flow between November 2017 and June 2018 (when Piper Jaffray prepared the fairness

opinion) didn’t make sense, since other metrics showed that First Connecticut’s financial

situation was improving. Based on the earlier projections, Keath calculated the fair value

of First Connecticut’s stock to be $35.51 per share—$3.18 more than the merger price.

Keath concluded that the proxy statement’s omission of the projected cash-flow figures

“was an inappropriate omission of information material to the decision facing [First

Connecticut’s] shareholders.” J.A. 794. But in his deposition, Keath clarified that he had

no opinion about whether the omission caused the shareholders any damages.

First Connecticut offered expert opinions from Dr. L. Adel Turki and Jonathan

Foster. Turki, a senior managing director at an economic consulting firm, examined proxy

statements from 44 comparable bank mergers to determine whether they disclosed cash-

flow projections. He found that such projections were included in only one of the 44 proxy

5 USCA4 Appeal: 21-1571 Doc: 78 Filed: 06/01/2023 Pg: 6 of 22

statements. 1 Turki also stated that nondisclosure of the cash-flow projections couldn’t have

caused the shareholders economic harm. People’s United was “willing to walk” if First

Connecticut didn’t accept the $32.33-per-share deal, so disclosing the projections wouldn’t

have resulted in higher merger consideration. J.A. 1269 & n.71 (citing J.A. 1180

(deposition of People’s United CEO)). And considering “contemporaneous market

evidence,” there was “no reason to believe” that disclosure of the projections “would have

caused a majority of First Connecticut shareholders to vote against the Merger.” J.A. 1269.

Foster, the founder of a merger-advisory firm, opined that the First Connecticut

directors acted consistently with industry practice in their review and approval of the proxy

statement. He noted that Board members rarely draft proxy statements, attempt to verify

statements or analyses in them, or evaluate whether financial information (like the cash-

flow projections) should be included.

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