HARMAN INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED, v. ILLINOIS NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, аnd BERKLEY INSURANCE COMPANY,
C.A. No. N22C-05-098 PRW CCLD
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
January 7, 2025
Submitted: October 23, 2024; Decided: January 3, 2025; Written Decision Withdrawn, Clarified, and Reissued: January 7, 2025
WALLACE, J.
Upon Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, DENIED.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Jennifer C. Wasson, Esquire, and Carla M. Jones, Esquire, POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Robin L. Cohen, Esquire, Orrie A. Levy, Esquire (argued), and Maria Brinkman, Esquire, COHEN ZIFFER FRENCHMAN & MCKENNA LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiff Harman International Industries, Incorporated.
Kurt M. Heyman, Esquire (argued), and Aaron M. Nelson, Esquire, HEYMAN ENERIO GATTUSO & HIRZEL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Alexander S. Lorenzo, Esquire, Kelsey Kingsberry, Esquire, ALSTON & BIRD LLP, New York, New York,
Robert J. Katzenstein, Esquire, SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Daniel London, Esquire, LONDON FISCHER LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Defendant Federal Insurance Company.
WALLACE, J.
Now before the Court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff‘s Motion for Summary Judgment and DENIES Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.
I. THE PARTIES1
Plaintiff Harman is a Delaware corporation that became a subsidiary of Samsung Electronics America, Inc., in 2017. Defendants Illinois National Insurance Company (“AIG“), Federal Insurance Company (“Chubb“), and Berkley Insurance Company (collectively, with AIG and Chubb, “Insurers“) were Harman‘s insurers at the times relevant to this dispute.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2
A. THE D&O INSURANCE
Harman purchased Directors and Officers (“D&O“) insurance from Insurers
The Policy includes an exclusion6—commonly known as a “Bump-Up Provision“—within the definition of “Loss,” that reads:
In the event of a Claim alleging that the price or cоnsideration paid or proposed to be paid for the acquisition or completion of the acquisition of all or substantially all the ownership interest in or assets of an entity is inadequate, Loss with respect to such Claim shall not include any amount of any judgment or settlement representing the amount by which such price or consideration is effectively increased; provided, however, that this paragraph shall not apply to Defense Costs or to any Non-Indemnifiable Loss in connection therewith.7
B. THE TRANSACTION
On November 14, 2016, Harman and Samsung Electronics America, Inc., “announced they had entered into an Agreement and Plan of Merger.”8 On March 10, 2017, a subsidiary of Samsung, Silk Delaware, Inc., was created for the transaction and “merged with and into Harman” through a reverse triangular merger.9 In the end, both companies survived with Harman “a wholly owned subsidiary of Sаmsung” and, with certain exceptions, “outstanding Harman stock was cancelled and converted into a right to receive . . . cash.”10
C. THE BAUM ACTION AND SETTLEMENT
On July 12, 2017, Patricia B. Baum filed an amended class action complaint against Harman and other parties alleging violations of Sections 14(a) and 20 of the
As part of the Baum plaintiffs’ claims, they averred:
As a direct result of the defendants’ negligent preparation, review and dissemination of the false and/or misleading Proxy, Plaintiff and the class were precluded both from exercising their right to seek appraisal and were induced to vote their shares and accept inadequate consideration оf $112.00 per share in connection with the Acquisition. The false and/or misleading Proxy used to obtain shareholder approval of the Acquisition deprived Plaintiff and the Class of her right to a fully informed shareholder vote in connection therewith and the full and fair value for her Harman shares. At all times relevant to the dissemination of the materially false and/or misleading Proxy, defendants were aware of and/or had access to the true facts concerning Harman‘s value, which was far greater than the $112.00 per share that shareholders received. Thus, as a direct and proximate result of the dissemination of the false and/or misleading Proxy defendants used to obtain shareholder approval of and thereby consummate the Acquisition, Plaintiff and the Class have suffered damage and actual economic losses (i.e., the difference between the price Harman shareholders received and Harman‘s true value at the time of the Acquisition) in an amount to be determined at trial.14
D. INSURERS INVOLVEMENT IN THE BAUM ACTION
On July 20, 2017, AIG sent a letter to Harman acknowledging that the Baum Action was a securities claim covered by the Policy.15 Accordingly, it said it would
It was not until mid-December 2021 that AIG issued another letter denying coverage for any judgment or settlement based on the Bump-Up Provision.17 Chubb and Berkley adopted AIG‘s coverage position.18
In June 2022, the Baum parties entered into a stipulation of settlement for $28 million which was approved by the federal district court.19 The parties said the settlement was to avoid costly continued litigation.20
E. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In its Complaint here, Harman alleges in Count I that the Insurers brеached the Policies by wrongfully excluding the Baum Action settlement from coverage.21 In Count II, Harman seeks a declaration that the Baum Action settlement is covered by the Policy and the Insurers are obligated to indemnify Harman for the settlement.22 Harman also seeks attorney‘s fees and punitive damages.23
Now before the Court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. The Court heard argument on both motions (and their answers to some supplementary questions posed by the Court); all are now ripe for decision.25
III. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
The Parties’ contentions do not vary much, if at all, from their previous dueling applications for dismissal and early summary judgment.
A. PLAINTIFF‘S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Harman insists that the Bump-Up exclusion does not bаr coverage.26 It says the “Insurers cannot satisfy their burden to establish that all of the Exclusion‘s elements apply here, including that (1) the Baum Action was clearly and unambiguously ‘an acquisition of all or substantially all of an entity‘s assets or ownership,’ (2) the Baum Action settlement [is] ‘related only to the allegation of inadequate consideration’ and (3) the Baum Action settlement ‘represent[ed] an effective increase in consideration.‘”27
Second, Harman claims that the Baum Action settlement amount is covered because it doesn‘t only result from allegations of inadequate deal consideration. Here, Harman relies on the Baum Action‘s claims of violations of Sections 14(a) and 20(a).29 Specifically, it argues that the Baum Action settlement can‘t only reflect inadequate deal consideration because Section 14(a) claims can‘t be used to obtain damages for inadequate deal consideration because standing for that cause of action doesn‘t require that the shareholder receive the deal consideration at issue.30
Third, Harman maintains that the settlement in the Baum Action was not an increase in deal consideration.31 In support, it highlights that the primary reason for settling was to avoid the costs of litigation.32 In Harman‘s view, the settlement
In its last-breath argument, Harman tries to assert waiver and estoppel because of the five years it took the Insurers to raise the exclusion and Harman‘s reliance on the Policy‘s probable coverage during that time.38
B. DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Insurers assert that the Baum Action settlement is not covered under the Policy because it falls under the Bump-Up exclusion.39
Second, Insurers contend that the Bump-Up exclusion applies regardless of whether Harman is the acquired or acquiring entity because the provision applies to any and all “acquisition[s] of all or substantially all the ownership interest in or assets of an entity.”43 Accordingly, to Insurers, the term “entity” used in the Bump-Up provision—given that term‘s plain meaning—is inclusive of any “Named Entity.”44
Third, Insurers assert that the Baum Action alleged inadequate consideration because the Baum complaint requests “the difference between the price Harman
Next, Insurers say the result of the Baum settlement was indeed an increase in consideration for the acquisition.46 They posit here that the settlement price was based, at least in part, upon the “fair value” of Harman stock compared to what the shareholders actually received.47
Lastly, Insurers disclaim Harman‘s waiver and estoppel arguments, saying they fail because any omission about the applicability of the Bump-Up exclusion in its early communication was inadvеrtent, Harman suffered no prejudice as a result, and those doctrines can‘t be invoked to create otherwise non-existent coverage.48
IV. APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS
Summary judgment is warranted only when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”49 To be sure, under this Court‘s rules “a matter should be disposed of by summary judgment whenever an issue of law is involved and a trial is unnecessary.”50 But summary judgment won‘t be granted “if there is a material fact
The Court‘s “well-established standards and rules apply in full when the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.”53 And since these “cross-motions for summary judgment are filed and neither party argues the existence of a genuine issue of material fact, the Court shall deem the motions to be the equivalent of a stipulation for decision on the merits based on the record submitted with them.”54 With all that, the questions before this Court now are questions of law not of fact, and the parties by filing cross motions for summary judgment have in effect stipulated that the issues raised by their motions are ripe for a decision on the merits.55
But where the policy language is indeed ambiguous or conflicting, the Court looks to the “reasonable expectations” of the insured at the time when it entered into the contract just “so far as its language will permit.”60 And ambiguity exists when a
V. DISCUSSION
The parties agree that the underlying Baum Action is subject to coverage.62 The question here is whether the settlement amount, or any part thereof, is carved out of the policies definition of “Loss.”
To even get there, the Court should first take a moment to address Harman‘s suggestion of waiver and estoppel. It‘ll be short pause.
A. NEITHER ESTOPPEL NOR WAIVER ARE AVAILABLE.
Harman‘s attempts to invoke waiver and estoppel are ineffective. This Court doesn‘t recognize coverage via estoppel.63 Why? Because “[a]s a general rule, a party cannot invoke estoppel to create an insurance contract where none exists and it cannot operate to bring within a policy‘s coverage property, risks or losses which the policy‘s terms expressly or otherwise exclude.”64 The same principle applies to waiver.65 But even were estoppel or waiver available, there is no record evidence
Accordingly, waiver and estoppel aren‘t available to Harman to end the examination necessary here.
B. THE BUMP-UP EXCLUSION DOES NOT APPLY; THE SETTLEMENT IS COVERED BY INSURERS’ POLICIES.
As a norm, a bump-up exclusion “is construed narrowly and any ambiguity in [it] will be interpreted in favor of the insured.”67
For this Bump-Up to exclude any settlement or portion thereof: (1) the settlement must be related to an underlying acquisition; (2) inadequate deal price must be a viable remedy that was sought for at least one claim in the Baum Action; and (3) the settlement, or a portion of the settlement, must represent an effective increase in consideration.68 Beyond debate, any bump-up provision like that here
1. The Samsung-Harman transaction was “an acquisition of all or substantially all of an entity‘s assets or ownership.”
The Court already established that the term “an entity” within the provision isn‘t ambiguous; it includes the “Named Entity“—i.e., Harman.69 This means that an underlying transaction involving Harman could trigger the exclusion. But, for that to happen, the Court must first resolve whether the underlying transaction between Harman and Samsung was an acquisition as contemplated by the operative Policy language.70 Via either of two distinct routes, the Court arrives to find it was.
a. Under the Policy‘s plain language, the transaction was an “acquisition of all or substantially all the ownership interest in or assets of” Harman.
To reiterate, for this “Loss” to be excluded it must—among other qualifications—derive from a ”Claim alleging that the price or consideration paid . . . for the acquisition or completion of the acquisition of all or substantially all the ownership interest in or assets of [Harman] [wa]s inadequate.”71
For the purposes of the insuring (and excluding) language here, a reverse triangular merger is—in its plainest terms—an acquisition that is effectuated, in part, via a mеrger mechanism.74 An “acquisition” in the corporate transactions context is defined as a “takeover of one corporation by another if both parties retain their legal existence after the transaction.”75 While, a merger is “the absorption of one
First, Harman merged with Silk; Harman completely absorbed Silk and Silk ceased to exist independently. Then, Harman was acquired by Samsung because Harman became a 100% owned subsidiary that retаined its independence as a legal entity. In sum, the transaction was an acquisition that used a merger as the means to complete Samsung‘s acquisition of all or substantially all the ownership interest of Harman.
Accordingly, the transaction between Harman and Samsung was an acquisition under the plain language of the provision.78
b. Based on its characteristics, too, the Samsung-Harman transaction was an “acquisition.”
This Court has previously articulated some factors for determining whether a
By these measures, too, the transaction between Harman and Samsung was—in Policy terms—an acquisition even though labeled a “Merger Agreement.”83 First, Harman retained its own legal existence after the transaction with Samsung owning 100% of its shares.84 Second, only Harman shareholders voted on the Agreement,
Accordingly, the transaction effectuated by the Agreement between Harman and Samsung is an acquisition. Harman retained separate legal existence, only Harman shareholders voted, and the transaction was commonly referred to, even by Harman, as an acquisition.
So regardless of the analytical route taken, one arrives at the same point: the transaction complained-of in the Baum Action was for Policy purposes an
2. Damages for inadequate deal price were not a viable remedy requested in the Baum Action.
Next, the Court must detеrmine whether “any amount of . . . [the challenged] settlement represent[s] the amount by which [the at-issue transaction] price or consideration is effectively increased.”89 But, for a settlement to represent such, the underlying “Claim” must actually allege inadequate consideration. Without a cognizable request to remedy inadequate deal price, it hardly seems possible that a settlement of the action could represent an effective increase in deal price. So, for the exclusion to apply, inadequate deal price must be a viable remedy that was sought for at least one claim in the Baum Action.90
Previously, the Court expressed that the Baum Action settlement must be related only to the allegation of inadequate consideration for the settlement to fall under the Bump-Up exclusion. This would еxclude the entirety of the settlement as a covered “Loss” the relief the Insurers sought at the pleading stage. Put another
That said, in the circumstance of a settlement, to determine whether any part thereof might be deemed to represent the amount by which a transaction price or consideration is effectively increased the Court must look to whether (1) any relief sought was due to inadequate consideration and (2) that was indeed a viable cognizable remedy under the claims pled. So, at the outset, Insurers must establish the Baum Action plaintiffs requested a remedy for inadequate deal price for at least one claim, and that was a form of relief permitted for the claim alleged.
The Baum Action alleged violations of Sections 14(a) and 20(a) of the
A cured inadequate deal price isn‘t the remedy for Section 14(a) and Section 20(a) claims because by the very nature of a Section 14(a) (and Section 20) claim, plaintiffs could not have sought “a revised appraisal of the equity they sold . . .“.94 As only violations of Sections 14(a) and 20(a) of the
3. The Baum Action settlement does not represent an effective increase in consideration.
What‘s more, for a settlement to represent an effective increase in consideration, the settlement must be for the actual purpose of “bumping up” the value of the deal.96 In some cases, it may be possible for the Court to separate claims within a settlement agreement.97 The Court may determine that some portions of the settlement are related to the deal price, while other portions are not—it‘s not an all-or-nothing analysis. But only the amount of the settlement related to curing the deal price may be excluded from coverage under the Policy languаge.
To determine what a settlement represents, the Court can‘t just look to the relief sought in the underlying action; it should look, too, to the record evidence98 to discern the bases of the settlement. So, the Court will examine the Baum Action settlement here to do so and consider: (1) the language of the settlement; (2) indications that the settlement amount represents compensation for an inadequate
On the record developed—which the Insurers say is now adequate to resolve the issue—thе Court cannot find that any part of the Baum Action settlement represents an amount by which the transaction price or consideration is effectively increased.
Looking first at the language of the Baum Action‘s Stipulation of Settlement, Harman expressly denies any wrongdoing and liability.99 It states that the reason for settling “was based solely on the conclusion that further conduct of the Litigation would be protracted and expensive . . . and that it would be beneficial to avoid costs, uncertainty, and risks inherent to any litigation, especially in complex cases like this Litigation.”100 This accords with the other evidence in the record.
At the time of the settlement, the Baum Action was still in the early stages of litigation with only minimal discovery completed.101 Harman estimated that defense costs for continuing the Baum Action would have been about $25 to $30 million.102
As well, if the parties intended for the settlement to represent compensation for an inadequate deal price, then one would expect that the settlement amount would have been in some way commensurate with the difference between the shares’ acquisition price of $112 and their true value.105 But there‘s been no evidence presented on the true value of the shares. And the Court shouldn‘t be left to speculate thereon and how it is reflected as any part of the settlement—let alone its whole—when there is ample counter evidence that the full settlement amount truly represents the actual cost of litigation had the cаse proceeded.
But if left to engage in such speculation, the settlement amount seems grossly inadequate as compensation for an inadequate deal price. There were 69,883,605 shares of Harman common stock.106 The parties interpret the Baum complaint to
One more thing. The composition of the Baum Action class doesn‘t support a finding that the settlement represents an effective increase in consideration. As already discussed, the Baum Action alleged violations of Sections 14(a) and 20(a) of the
In the Baum Action, the settlement class included only former Harman
But this forced interpretation is not supported by the exclusion‘s language which must be narrowly construed.111 At bottom, Bump-up excludes amounts of a settlement that must “represent” the increase in deal consideration—plaintiffs alleging that they were only indirectly impacted by the inadequate consideration isn‘t enough.112 To be true to the exclusion‘s language, any portion of a settlement amount excised from “Loss” must be limited to injury incurred at the actual time of the acquisition. Anything more would be too tenuously related to be deemed a “bump-up” in acquisition consideration.
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff Harman‘s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and Defendant Insurers’ Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Paul R. Wallace
Paul R. Wallace
Notes
Q. Both Samsung and Harman survived the transaction, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. As a result of the transaction, Samsung acquired all shares in Harman, correct?
A. Samsung acquired the newly issued shares that -- that Harman issued at the -- I think they were 10,000.
Q. So as a result of the transaction, Samsung went from owning zero percent of Harman to owning 100 percent of Harman, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And then Harman‘s public shares -- publically-held shares were cancelled and converted into the right to receive cash. Is that right?
A. Yes. That‘s my understanding.
. . . .
Q. Yeah. So Harman‘s prior public shareholders’ ownership in Harman ceased to exist as a result of the transaction?
A. Yeah. In the completion of the transaction, correct.
Q. I‘m sorry, let me be clearer. What did the 25 to $30 million represent?
A. It was the estimate of the cost were we have to move forward with the case through trial, discovery – which really had not started – and potential appeal, although really focusing on discovery and trial.
Q. Correct. And you never investigated that; right? You never asked anybody?
A. No. We did not ask who the holders of record were upon the closing of the transaction that the class members who were holders as of the time of the merger to vote whether or not they still held by the time of closing. No, we didn‘t do that.
