Textron Inc. v. Acument Global Technologies, Inc.

108 A.3d 1208, 2015 Del. LEXIS 41, 2015 WL 307770
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 23, 2015
Docket204, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 A.3d 1208 (Textron Inc. v. Acument Global Technologies, Inc.) 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
Textron Inc. v. Acument Global Technologies, Inc., 108 A.3d 1208, 2015 Del. LEXIS 41, 2015 WL 307770 (Del. 2015).

Opinion

STRINE, Chief Justice:

I. INTRODUCTION

Textron, Inc. appeals from a judgment by the Superior Court holding that the company is not entitled to reimbursement from its former fastening manufacturing business, now known as Acument Global Technologies, Inc. (“Acument”), for paying certain pre-closing contingent liabilities in the United States. 1 The Superior Court’s opinion centered on the meaning of a “tax benefit offset” provision in the parties’ Purchase Agreement under which Acument was required to reimburse Textron if Acument received a “tax benefit” related to the contingent liabilities. The Superior Court rejected Textron’s interpretation of *1210 the Agreement that Acument only needed to be hypothetically able to take advantage of a tax benefit to trigger the offset, in the sense that any step-up in Acument’s tax basis constituted a benefit even if the overall effect of the transaction was tax-neutral because of an off-setting step-down. Tex-tron claims not to appeal that aspect of the Superior Court’s ruling, but argues that even if the tax benefit has to be actual rather than merely hypothetical, the Superior Court erred by not finding that Acument actually enjoys the right to tax benefits. Textron contends that its payment of the pre-closing liabilities constitutes a tax benefit because the payments automatically increase Acument’s tax basis under U.S. tax law.

But, as Acument points out, the increase in Acument’s basis is fully offset by a simultaneous decrease because Textron, not Acument, paid the liabilities per the parties’ Agreement. In other words, the Agreement, taken as a whole as it must be, guaranteed that Acument would not receive a net tax benefit simply because Tex-tron made a required indemnification payment. Accordingly, Textron’s argument that Acument has received a tax' benefit triggering Textron’s right to reimbursement is without merit, as the total effect of Textron’s payments is tax-neutral.

Similarly, Textron’s second and related claim that the Superior Court erred in “redefining” the required tax benefit to mean only a “deduction” rather than any “reduction” is meritless. The Superior Court made clear that it intentionally used the term “deduction” in the opinion solely to reflect the language used by both parties to describe what the Purchase Agreement required. The Superior Court also limited its determination that the required tax benefit must be a deduction to the claims that are specific to this case, and thus did not prejudice Textron’s right to receive offsets for unrelated non-deduction reductions. We therefore affirm the judgment below.

II. BACKGROUND 2

A. The Parties

Textron is a $12 billion Delaware corporation that operates in a wide variety of industries, including aircraft manufacturing, defense, and related financial services. 3 In 2006, Textron sold its global fastening manufacturing business segment to a subsidiary of a private equity firm, Platinum Equity, LLC, 4 which renamed the'business from Textron Fastening Systems to Acument. 5 Platinum Equity was founded in 1995, and has since acquired *1211 more than 150 companies across many industries. 6 For sake of simplicity, we refer to the parties involved as Textron and Acument, and only reference Platinum Equity when the distinction between Platinum Equity and Acument is relevant.

B. The Sale Process

In 2005, Textron decided to sell its global fastening systems business segment through a two-stage competitive auction. In the first stage, potential buyers who signed a nondisclosure agreement were granted access to due diligence. In the second stage, Textron selected a subset of potential buyers to participate in an auction. Platinum Equity made an initial bid of $900 million in early March 2006.

As Textron continued discussions with other potential buyers in the spring of 2006, 7 Textron and Platinum Equity negotiated price and various provisions of the proposed Purchase Agreement. The Purchase Agreement was based on a bid draft crafted by Textron before it identified specific potential buyers. In the draft, Tex-tron agreed to indemnify the buyer for certain pre-closing liabilities (“Losses”), including those related to tax in § 4.6(h)(ii), specified breaches by Textron in § 6.1(b)(i-ii), environmental issues in § 6.1(b)(iii), and retained litigation in § 6.1(b)(iv). But under § 6.1(d), the buyer was required to “reduce[]” any loss to Textron by reimbursing it for insurance proceeds, payments by third parties, or — most relevant to this litigation — “(iii)(C) any Tax Benefit of the [buyer] attributable to such Loss.” 8 “Tax Benefit” is later defined in the Agreement as:

the present value of any refund, credit or reductiqn in otherwise required Tax payments, including interest payable thereon, which present value shall be computed as of the Closing Date or the first date on which the right to the refund, credit or other Tax reduction arises or otherwise becomes available to be utilized ... assuming that such refund, credit or reduction shall be recognized or received in the earliest possible taxable period (without regard to any other losses, deductions, refunds, credits, reductions or other Tax items available to such party). 9

Asserting that § 6.1(d)(iii)(C) was “very seller friendly” and risked requiring an offset even when it had not accrued “actual tax savings [that] year,” Platinum Equity first proposed eliminating the provision. 10 Textron rejected that change. Platinum Equity then proposed changing the definition of “Tax Benefit” to “actual tax savings ... in the first taxable year in which an item is properly includible in a tax return.” Textron again rejected the suggestion. But these proposed revisions were among many made by Platinum Equity during the negotiations process, and the Superior Court determined that that neither party considered the scope of the tax benefit offset to be a material issue. 11 The relevant provisions in the final contract thus remained materially unaltered from the *1212 bid draft. 12 After extensive negotiations about a number of issues, including responsibility for outstanding contingent liabilities, the parties agreed on a final purchase price of $630 million ^nd executed the Purchase Agreement on August 11, 2006. 13

C. Tax Issues

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Bluebook (online)
108 A.3d 1208, 2015 Del. LEXIS 41, 2015 WL 307770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textron-inc-v-acument-global-technologies-inc-del-2015.