Stuart Grant of Grant & Eisenhofer is a plaintiffs
lawyer whose practice is based in Delaware Chancery Court, so he’s developed a
certain immunity to business-friendly judicial opinions. But Vice-Chancellor Leo Strine Jr.’s decision Tuesday night
to permitMassey Energy to proceed with a shareholder vote on Alpha Natural Resource’s $7billion takeover offer left Grant positively sputtering with outrage.
“This
ruling has me totally disgusted,” he said in an interview Wednesday morning.
“What message is this sending to corporate boards? That there’s no
accountability. What message does it send to shareholders and their lawyers?
Christ, if you can’t win against Massey and [former CEO] Don Blankenship, you
can’t win….These people are just going to walk. This ruling says you can be the
worst CEO, you can violate all the laws you want, then you can arrange a
sweetheart merger and just walk away.”
Those
are strong words, and from a lawyer who’s usually moderate in his public
comments. But after last
week’s hearing on Massey shareholders’ motion for a preliminary injunction
to block the vote on the Alpha deal, Grant said he believed Strine would be
more sympathetic to shareholders than the judge turned out to be in Tuesday’s
ruling, which finds serious flaws in Massey’s evaluation of shareholders’
claims against its directors and officers—including an “awkward” dual role by
the company’s lawyers at Cravath, Swaine
& Moore—but nevertheless allows the shareholder vote to proceed.
As
OTC explained in a
preview of the hearing, Grant and his co-lead plaintiffs counsel crafted a
novel argument to block the Alpha deal, asserting that the merger would let
Massey’s directors and officers off the hook for flagrantly and repeatedly
flouting safety regulations. Massey shareholders had claimed in a 2010
derivative suit that the board and execs owed them upwards of $1 billion for
the value the company lost as a result of its many safety violations, including
the horrific 2010 deathsof 29 workers at a Massey mine in West Virginia. But if
the Alpha deal went through, the plaintiffs lawyers argued, the shareholders’
derivative claims against Massey’s directors and officers would belong to
Alpha—and Alpha would drop them.
Judge
Strine agreed that the shareholders had provided strong evidence of Massey’s
troubling safety record. In fact, he concluded, their derivative suit would
survive a motion to dismiss—no small accomplishment for a derivative claim. But
the judge was less encouraging about whether the shareholders could meet the
high standard of proving that the derivative defendants deliberately breached
their fiduciary duty. “Even as to someone like Blankenship,” Strine wrote,
“there is a distance between pleading a claim of conscious flouting of the law
for the sake of generating profit and proving that claim after a trial.” He
also didn’t buy the shareholders’ damages assessment, which is based on the
drop in Massey’s value after the 2010 mining disaster. “One cannot equate the
offsetting value of the derivative claims with the disaster fall-out,” Strine
wrote.
More
fundamentally, though, the Vice-Chancellor didn’t buy the shareholders’
argument that permitting shareholders to vote on the Alpha deal amounted to
letting directors and officers off the hook. Grant and the other plaintiffs
lawyers asserted that Alpha had no incentive to pursue claims against
individual Massey defendants after the deal closed. For one thing, they
claimed, Alpha had already negotiated a discounted price for Massey because of
Massey’s bad safety record. And for another, Cravath had built indemnification
for Massey defendants into the Alpha merger agreement. If Alpha sued the Massey
directors and officers, the shareholders argued, it would in essence be suing
itself.
Strine
took a hard look at Cravath’s work for Massey—and found Massey’s board and its
Cravath counsel to have been in an “awkward” situation. When shareholders filed
their derivative suit against Massey directors and officers after the 2010 mine
collapse, the defendants brought in Cravath as defense counsel. Then when
Massey began negotiating a deal with Alpha, the board engaged Cravath as a deal
adviser. In the course of advising the board, Cravath offered advice about the
ongoing derivative case, in which the board members were defendants. Strine
concluded Cravath wanted to make sure the board “considered the merger without
regard to its effect on themselves” as defendants in the derivative suit.
But
because Cravath was also defense counsel, Strine wrote, “it was therefore an
awkward source of advice for the board in considering what consideration, if
any, to give to the derivative claims in negotiating a merger.” The board
should have consulted independent counsel, Strine said. Instead, its approach
“fell short of the idea and might even arguably be characterized as a breach of
the duty of care,” he wrote.
Nevertheless,
that didn’t mean there was reason to believe Alpha wouldn’t pursue the
derivative suit, in Strine’s view. “Alpha has to deal with all of the disaster
fall-out and Massey’s unique approach to dealing with regulators,” the
Vice-Chancellor wrote. “This will almost certainly require Alpha to pay
settlements, fines, and remediation costs. To the extent that the direct
actions and Massey result in findings that Massey, as a corporation,
consciously violated the law, Alpha has a rational incentive to shift as much
of that liability to the former Massey directors and officers as can
efficiently and realistically be achieved.” Strine found the deal agreement’s
indemnification provisions, contrary to shareholders’ assertions, doesn’t
extend to “wrongful acts,” and so wouldn’t dissuade Alpha from pursuing the
derivative suit.
Shareholders
lawyer Grant has some problems with Strine’s interpretation. “If you believe
that, you might as well believe in the Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, and the Tooth
Fairy,” he said. “These claims will never see the light of day….You think [the
indemnification provisions] were an accident? You think Cravath didn’t know
just what they were doing? Alpha would be suing itself.”
OTC
reached out to Stuart Gold of
Cravath and Kevin Abrams of Abrams & Bayliss, who argued for
the Massey defendants at last week’s hearing before Strine. Gold sent back an
e-mail declining comment.
(Reporting
by Alison Frankel)