ROBERT STROUGO, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated, Plaintiff, v. AARON P. HOLLANDER, STANLEY J. HILL, JOSEPH J. LHOTA, ITSIK MAARAVI, and FIRST AVIATION SERVICES, INC., Defendants.
C.A. No. 9770-CB
IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
Date Submitted: March 11, 2015; Date Decided: March 16, 2015
BOUCHARD, C.
OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
This action involves determining whether a Delaware corporation‘s non-reciprocal fee-shifting bylaw (the “Bylaw“) applies to a former stockholder‘s challenge to the fairness of a 10,000-to-1 reverse stock split (the “Reverse Stock Split“) that the corporation undertook at the behest of its Chief Executive Officer and controlling stockholder in order to take the company private.
On May 30, 2014, defendant First Aviation Services, Inc. (“First Aviation” or the “Company“) completed the Reverse Stock Split, which had the effect of involuntarily cashing out the plaintiff. Four days later,
The defendants, First Aviation and its directors, argue that the Bylaw is not only facially valid, but also enforceable here. According to the defendants, unless the plaintiff obtains “a judgment on the merits that substantially achieves, in substance and amount, the full remedy sought,” then the plaintiff (and presumably his counsel) will be liable for the defendants’ legal fees incurred in this case. In addition to challenging the Reverse Stock Split, the plaintiff amended his complaint to challenge the Bylaw.
The question of whether the Bylaw is facially valid under Delaware law is not presently before the Court. Rather, the plaintiff has moved for partial judgment on the pleadings that the Bylaw does not apply in this case because it was adopted after the Reverse Stock Split had been consummated.
In this opinion, I conclude based on principles of contract law that the Bylaw does not apply to this case because it was adopted after the plaintiff was cashed out of the Company by operation of the Reverse Stock Split. More specifically, I hold that changes made to the Company‘s bylaws after the plaintiff was cashed out are not binding on him for the same reason that a non-party to a contract is not bound by the terms of that contract. I also conclude that
II. BACKGROUND1
A. The Parties
Defendant First Aviation, a Delaware corporation based in Westport, Connecticut, provides repair, overhaul, and related services to the aviation industry. In 2007, First Aviation became a non-SEC reporting company. As of October 24, 2011, First Aviation‘s shares traded on the OTC US Market stock exchange.2
Defendants Aaron P. Hollander, Stanley J. Hill, Joseph J. Lhota, and Itsik Maaravi were the four directors of the Company (collectively, the “Board,” and with First Aviation, the “Defendants“) at all relevant times. Hollander was the Chairman of the Board and the Company‘s Chief Executive Officer. As of June 2013, individually and through two entities he controlled,3 Hollander owned approximately 45.5% of the Company‘s common equity and 64.5% of its Common A voting stock. Hollander “maintained control over the day to day operations of the Company and had managerial
Plaintiff Robert Strougo (“Plaintiff“) was a stockholder of the Company at all relevant times until the consummation of the Reverse Stock Split. Plaintiff brings this putative class action individually and on behalf of all other First Aviation stockholders, excluding Defendants and their affiliates, who were “freezed out” in the Reverse Stock Split.5
B. First Aviation Announces, and then Completes, the Reverse Stock Split
On May 16, 2014, the Company announced that it had established a Special Committee of the Board, consisting of Lhota and Hill, to analyze a potential reverse stock split transaction.6 That same day, the Company announced that the Board approved the Reverse Stock Split, which consisted of a 10,000-to-1 reverse stock split at a pre-split price of $8.40 per share.7 Both members of the Special Committee held enough First Aviation stock at the time to remain stockholders of the Company following the Reverse Stock Split.8
On May 30, 2014, the Reverse Stock Split was completed.9 The effect of the Reverse Stock Split was to eliminate the interests of Plaintiff and the putative class and thereby make First Aviation a privately owned company. After the Reverse Stock Split, Hollander and the entities he controlled remained stockholders of the Company.
C. First Aviation‘s Board Adopts the Bylaw
On June 3, 2014, the First Aviation Board adopted the Bylaw, which provides, in its entirety:
Section VII.8. Expenses for Certain Actions. In the event that (i) any current or prior stockholder or anyone on their behalf (collectively a “Claiming Party“) initiates or asserts and [sic] claim or counterclaim (collectively a “Claim“), or joins, offers substantial assistance to or has a direct financial interest in any Claim against the Corporation or any director, officer, assistant officer or other employee of the Corporation, and (ii) the Claiming Party (or the third party that received substantial assistance from the Claiming Party or in whose Claim the Claiming Party has a direct financial interest) does not obtain a judgment on the merits that substantially achieves, in substance and amount, the full remedy sought, then each Claiming Party shall be obligated jointly and severally to reimburse the Corporation and any such director, officer, assistant officer or employee for all fees, costs and expenses of every kind and description (including, but not limited to, all reasonable attorneys’ fees and other litigation expenses) that the parties may incur in connection with such Claim.10
Defendants assert that the Bylaw was modeled on the non-reciprocal fee-shifting bylaw of a non-stock member corporation that was the subject of the Delaware Supreme Court‘s decision in ATP Tour, Inc. v. Deutscher Tennis Bund.11 There was no public announcement informing First Aviation‘s stockholders that the Board had adopted the Bylaw.12 According to Defendants, Plaintiff and his counsel were first informed of the Bylaw “shortly after this lawsuit was filed.”13
D. Procedural History
On June 16, 2014, Plaintiff initiated this action. On September 24, 2014, Plaintiff filed the Amended Complaint, which asserts five causes of action: breach of fiduciary duty against the Board (Count I); breach of fiduciary duty against Hollander as the Company‘s de facto controlling stockholder (Count II); a challenge to the Bylaw as invalid and unenforceable under
On October 7, 2014, I granted Plaintiff‘s request to move for summary judgment on Counts III-V challenging the Bylaw and to stay Counts I-II pending resolution of the summary judgment motion. I entered a stipulated order to that effect on October 17, 2014.
On October 24, 2014, Defendants filed the Answer. On November 25, 2014, I granted Plaintiff‘s request to move for partial judgment on the pleadings on the discrete issue as to whether the Bylaw applies to this lawsuit given the timing of its adoption. I entered another stipulated order to that effect on December 2, 2014.
Briefing on the motion for partial judgment on the pleadings was completed on February 13, 2015. On March 11, 2015, I heard oral argument on the motion.
III. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard
A plaintiff‘s motion for judgment on the pleadings under Court of Chancery Rule 12(c) must be denied unless, accepting as true all well-pled facts admitted in the answer and drawing all reasonable inferences from those facts in the defendant‘s favor,14 “no material issue of fact exists and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”15 The proper interpretation of an unambiguous contract or statute is a question of law that is appropriately
B. The Parties’ Contentions
Before summarizing the parties’ positions, it is worth pausing to consider some of the implications of the Bylaw and what is not presently before the Court.
At its heart, this case concerns a transaction in which a controller stockholder with admitted “managerial supremacy”17 received differential treatment. As such, the entire fairness standard presumably would apply to Plaintiff‘s breach of fiduciary duty claims challenging the Reverse Stock Split.18 By definition, every member of the putative class of stockholders who was cashed out in the Reverse Stock Split received less than $84,000 in that transaction (i.e., 10,000 shares x $8.40 per share). As a practical matter, therefore, applying the Bylaw in this case would have the effect of immunizing the Reverse Stock Split from judicial review because, in my view, no rational stockholder—and no rational plaintiff‘s lawyer—would risk having to pay the Defendants’ uncapped attorneys’ fees to vindicate the rights of the Company‘s minority stockholders, even though the Reverse Stock Split appears to be precisely the type of transaction that should be subject to Delaware‘s most exacting standard of review to protect against fiduciary misconduct.19
This reality demonstrates the serious policy questions implicated by fee-shifting bylaws in general, including whether it would be statutorily permissible and/or equitable20 to adopt bylaws that functionally deprive stockholders of an important right: the right to sue to vindicate their interests as stockholders.21
Defendants raise essentially three points in opposition. First, they argue that “by becoming a stockholder of a Delaware corporation, [Plaintiff] implicitly consented to the board‘s authority to unilaterally amend [the Company‘s] bylaws at any time,” meaning that applying the Bylaw in this case would not be inconsistent with Delaware contract law.24 Second, Defendants assert that, under the DGCL and Delaware corporate law, the Board had the authority to amend the Company‘s bylaws “and apply them against stockholders . . . , even where doing so, as here, may impact pre-amendment conduct.”25 Thus, according to Defendants, Plaintiff‘s argument about “former” stockholders is nothing more than a veiled attempt to resurrect the vested rights doctrine that Delaware courts long ago rejected. Finally, they contend that applying the Bylaw is not contrary to public policy because, even though the Bylaw governs claims that accrued before its adoption, it would be applied here to a case filed after its adoption.
C. Plaintiff is Entitled to Judgment on the Pleadings Because the Board Adopted the Bylaw after the Reverse Stock Split
As explained above, the narrow question before the Court is whether, as a matter of law, the Bylaw applies to Plaintiff‘s lawsuit given that it was adopted after the Reverse Stock Split had been consummated. Neither side has identified any controlling precedent, and both Plaintiff and Defendants describe this issue as one of first impression.26 In my opinion,
“Corporate charters and bylaws are contracts among a corporation‘s shareholders[.]”27 “[T]he rules that govern the interpretation of statutes, contracts, and other written instruments apply to the interpretation of corporate charters and bylaws.”28 “The bylaws of a corporation are presumed to be valid, and the courts will construe the bylaws in a manner consistent with the law rather than strike down the bylaws.”29
My analysis of whether the Bylaw applies in this action begins with two provisions of the DGCL:
The bylaws may contain any provision, not inconsistent with law or with the certificate of incorporation, relating to the business of the corporation, the conduct of its affairs, and its rights or powers or the rights or powers of its stockholders, directors, officers or employees.
The relevant language of those statutes here is that, under Section 109(b), First Aviation‘s bylaws “may contain any provision, not inconsistent with law . . . , relating to . . . the rights or powers of its stockholders.”
A fundamental principle of Delaware contract law is that “only parties to a contract are bound by that contract.”31 In his opinion in Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corp.32 upholding the facial validity of a forum selection bylaw, then-Chancellor Strine observed that, for a corporation whose charter authorizes the board to amend its bylaws unilaterally, those bylaws are, in effect, an “inherently flexible” contract between the corporation and its stockholders.33 As explained in Chevron, “an essential part of
This conclusion does not mean that a stockholder whose interest is eliminated is no longer subject to any of the corporation‘s bylaws. One of the plaintiffs’ arguments in Chevron was that the language of the forum selection bylaws at issue would have regulated where former stockholders—such as those cashed out in a short-form merger pursuant to
Then-Chancellor Strine rejected this hypothetical, “as-applied” challenge and the broader framework of Delaware law it implied. Specifically, he postulated in dicta that “it is not the case that a bylaw in effect at the time that a stockholder‘s internal affairs claim arose cannot bind that stockholder simply because the transaction she is challenging resulted in her no longer being a stockholder.”35 Instead, the bylaws in effect at the effective time of a cash-out transaction would continue to bind a stockholder who challenges that transaction post-closing “because her right to sue continues to be based on her status as a stockholder.”36
Delaware law permits former stockholders to challenge the fairness of a transaction by which their equity interests in the corporation are cashed out,37 such as Plaintiff‘s action here. In determining the bylaw provisions that should apply to a lawsuit initiated by a former stockholder challenging the terms of a cash-out transaction, I hold that the governing bylaws are those in effect when the former stockholder‘s interest as a stockholder was eliminated. After that date, a former stockholder is no longer a party to the corporate contract and thus not subject to any bylaw amendments occurring after his or her interest as a stockholder was eliminated.
Here, the Bylaw was adopted on June 3, 2014, after the Reverse Stock Split was consummated on May 30, 2014. Thus, applying the analysis set forth above, the Bylaw cannot apply to Plaintiff, who was no longer a stockholder of the Company when the Bylaw was adopted, or to this action. In my opinion, it is immaterial that the Board adopted the Bylaw before Plaintiff filed suit on June 14, 2014, because
Defendants cite Aveta Inc. v. Cavallieri38 for the proposition that Plaintiff should be estopped from asserting that he is not subject to the Bylaw. In Aveta, the Court held that “[a] non-signatory to a contract will be estopped from arguing that a dispute-resolution provision does not apply when the non-signatory ‘consistently maintain[s] that other provisions of the same contract should be enforced to benefit him.‘”39 The estoppel principle outlined in Aveta is inapposite here because Plaintiff is not picking and choosing which bylaws of the Company apply to him or this action. Rather, Plaintiff‘s interest as a former stockholder of the Company remains subject to all the Company‘s bylaws as of the effective time of the Reverse Stock Split—which did not include the
Bylaw. Thus, I conclude based on principles of contract law that the Bylaw does not apply in this case.40
Additionally, in my view, the fact that the Board maintained the authority under
stockholders when the bylaw was adopted is beyond the scope of Section 109(b) and, therefore, inconsistent with Delaware law.42
Other provisions of the DGCL support this interpretation of the implicit limitations of Section 109(b). For example, under
Conversely, Section 109(b) is in stark contrast to the language of
the person is or was a director” of the corporation.46 As Section 145 demonstrates, the General Assembly knows how to refer to the rights or powers of former corporate actors, but the General Assembly elected not to do so in Section 109(b) with respect to the rights and powers of investors whose equity interests in the corporation have been eliminated. In my opinion, to interpret “stockholders” in Section 109(b) to permit a corporation to enforce a bylaw against a former stockholder who was not a stockholder when that bylaw was adopted would be the equivalent of reading “or former” and “or was” out of Section 145, contrary to basic principles of statutory construction.47 The only reasonable interpretation of Section 109(b), in my view, is that it does not permit Defendants to apply the Bylaw against Plaintiff, who was no longer a stockholder of the Company when the Board adopted the Bylaw.
In support of their position, Defendants rely on the Delaware Supreme Court‘s decisions in ATP and United Technologies Corp. v. Treppel,48 as well as this Court‘s decisions in Chevron and City of Providence v. First Citizens BancShares, Inc.49 None of these cases controls here because none of them addressed whether a bylaw adopted after
a stockholder‘s interest has been eliminated applies in a lawsuit initiated by that former stockholder.50
For example, in ATP, which Defendants advance as their strongest authority, the Delaware Supreme Court addressed several certified questions of law as to whether a non-stock member corporation had the authority under the DGCL to adopt a non-reciprocal fee-shifting bylaw. The corporation was trying to enforce that bylaw in a federal lawsuit filed by current members.
litigation in federal court was filed by then-current members, this type of as-applied challenge was never presented in ATP.
Similarly, the challenges to forum selection bylaws in Chevron and First Citizens were not initiated by former stockholders, and neither case considered the application of a bylaw adopted after a stockholder‘s interest had been eliminated. Rather, the plaintiffs in both cases were stockholders of their respective corporations when the boards unilaterally adopted the forum selection bylaws, when they filed suit, and when this Court issued those decisions.
Finally, United Technologies concerned a Section 220 action filed by a current stockholder of a Delaware corporation. There, the Delaware Supreme Court reiterated the holding of Chevron that where a corporation‘s governing documents allow directors to amend the bylaws unilaterally, the rights or powers of a stockholder may be regulated by a bylaw (such as a forum selection bylaw) that is adopted by the board after the investor first became a stockholder.53 The Supreme Court in United Technologies did not discuss the issue here: the application of a bylaw adopted after a stockholder‘s interest in the corporation had been eliminated.
Contrary to Defendants’ protestations, my conclusion does not resurrect or tacitly endorse the vested rights doctrine. The vested rights doctrine is the theory that a stockholder has a vested right to proceed under the bylaws in effect when the stockholder acted in reliance on them, even if the board subsequently exercised its authority to unilaterally amend the bylaws in a manner detrimental to that stockholder. In Kidsco, Inc. v. Dinsmore,54 the Court rejected the vested rights doctrine, concluding that, “where a corporation‘s by-laws put all on notice that the by-laws may be amended at any time, no vested rights can arise that would contractually prohibit an amendment.”55 Delaware courts have repeatedly cited Kidsco for this proposition.56
In my view, nothing in this opinion alters that settled law because this case does not implicate the traditional vested rights doctrine. Plaintiff is not arguing—nor could he under Kidsco and its progeny—that the Bylaw is inapplicable to his lawsuit because he acted in detrimental reliance on the Company‘s bylaws in effect before the Bylaw was adopted. Instead, Plaintiff contends that the Bylaw is inapplicable
In sum, the Bylaw does not apply here because the Bylaw was adopted after Plaintiff‘s equity interest in the Company was eliminated. Additionally, the Bylaw does not apply here because Section 109(b) of the DGCL does not authorize a bylaw that regulates the rights or powers of a stockholder whose equity interest in the corporation had been eliminated before the bylaw was adopted.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff‘s motion for partial judgment on the pleadings is GRANTED.58
IT IS SO ORDERED.
BOUCHARD, C.
