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In Re MeadWestvaco Stockholders Litigation
2017 WL 3526326
Del. Ch.
2017
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Background

  • MeadWestvaco and RockTenn negotiated an on-again, off-again stock-for-stock merger of equals announced January 2015 and closed July 2015; MeadWestvaco shareholders received 0.78 shares of the combined company (≈9.1% premium).
  • Eight of nine MeadWestvaco directors were independent; board had Wachtell Lipton and three financial advisors (Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Greenhill), each opined the deal was fair.
  • Negotiations spanned ~9 months; MeadWestvaco twice terminated talks and rejected an initial at-market 0.71 exchange ratio before RockTenn agreed to 0.78; merger agreement included customary deal protections and a $230 million breakup fee.
  • Activist Starboard accumulated a stake and threatened a proxy contest during the period; MeadWestvaco announced a planned spin-off of its specialty chemicals business (to occur after the merger).
  • Plaintiffs (MeadWestvaco shareholders) sued for breach of fiduciary duty (board) and aiding and abetting (RockTenn), alleging directors acted in bad faith and left ~$3 billion of value on the table; plaintiffs took limited discovery and waived disclosure claims before the shareholder vote, which approved the merger with 98% of votes cast.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether plaintiffs pleaded directors acted in bad faith (conscious disregard) in approving the merger Directors "flew blind," failed to value or preserve four non-core assets, and knowingly approved an unfair exchange leaving ~$3B behind Board employed advisors, held multiple meetings over nine months, twice terminated talks, obtained a 9.1% premium, and used customary deal protections; pleadings do not allege extreme facts Dismissed — complaint fails to plead bad faith; conduct does not plausibly show intentional dereliction or an inexplicable decision only explainable by bad faith
Whether Corwin cleansing (stockholder approval) applies Plaintiffs did not rely on Corwin in primary argument (focus on bad faith) Defendants contend overwhelming, informed shareholder approval would cleanse any breach Court found dismissal on bad-faith grounds dispositive and did not reach Corwin analysis
Whether aiding-and-abetting claim against RockTenn is adequately pleaded RockTenn knowingly participated in directors’ breach and caused damages No predicate fiduciary breach adequately alleged; no non-conclusory facts showing RockTenn knew of wrongdoing or colluded Dismissed — aiding and abetting fails for lack of underlying breach and scienter
Whether price/inadequate premium can, by itself, support a bad-faith claim Plaintiffs argue price was so low relative to true value that only bad faith explains it Defendants note fairness opinions, market premium, and absence of other bidders despite long post-signing period Court: price not so egregious or irrational as to support bad-faith inference; mere low premium insufficient

Key Cases Cited

  • Lyondell Chem. Co. v. Ryan, 970 A.2d 235 (Del. 2009) (directors’ decisions must be reasonable, not perfect; extreme facts required to plead bad faith)
  • Corwin v. KKR Fin. Holdings, LLC, 125 A.3d 304 (Del. 2015) (post-closing, fully informed stockholder approval can cleanse fiduciary breaches)
  • Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 812 A.2d 894 (Del. 2002) (motion-to-dismiss standard in fiduciary duty cases: well-pleaded facts accepted and dismissal appropriate only if recovery not reasonably conceivable)
  • White v. Panic, 783 A.2d 543 (Del. 2001) (to state waste or bad-faith claim, decision must be so egregious it could not have been based on a valid assessment of the corporation’s interests)
  • Malpiede v. Townson, 780 A.2d 1075 (Del. 2001) (elements of aiding-and-abetting a breach of fiduciary duty)
  • Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345 (Del. 1993) (business judgment rule presumption: directors acted on informed basis, in good faith, and in honest belief their actions were in the company's best interests)
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Case Details

Case Name: In Re MeadWestvaco Stockholders Litigation
Court Name: Court of Chancery of Delaware
Date Published: Aug 17, 2017
Citation: 2017 WL 3526326
Docket Number: CA 10617-CB
Court Abbreviation: Del. Ch.