sctovtza
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE TO
Tender Offer Statement under Section 14(d)(1) or 13(e)(1)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. 6)
PORTEC RAIL PRODUCTS, INC.
(Name of Subject Company (issuer))
FOSTER THOMAS COMPANY
(offeror)
a wholly-owned subsidiary of
L.B. FOSTER COMPANY
(parent of offeror)
(Names of Filing Persons (identifying status as offeror, issuer or other person))
Common Stock, $1.00 par value per share
(Title of Class of Securities)
736212101
(CUSIP Number of Class of Securities)
David Voltz
L.B. Foster Company
415 Holiday Drive
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15220
(412)-928-3417
(Name, address, and telephone numbers of person authorized
to receive notices and communications on behalf of filing persons)
with a copy to:
Lewis U. Davis, Jr., Esq.
Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC
One Oxford Centre
301 Grant Street, 20th Floor
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
(412) 562-8800
Calculation of Filing Fee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transaction valuation* |
|
|
Amount of Filing Fee** |
|
|
$114,067,450 |
|
|
$8,133 |
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Estimated for purposes of calculating the amount of the filing fee only, in accordance with Rule
0-11 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange Act). The calculation of
the transaction valuation assumes a purchase price of $11.71 per share and the purchase of
9,741,029 shares of Portec common stock, which
is represented by (i) 9,602,029 outstanding shares of common stock; and (ii) 139,000 shares of
common stock that were issuable with respect to all outstanding options, in each case as provided
by Portec, as of the most recent practicable date. |
|
** |
|
The amount of the filing fee was calculated in accordance with Section 14(g)(3) of the Exchange
Act, and equals $71.30 per million dollars of the transaction valuation amount. |
þ Check the box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the
filing with
which the offsetting fee was previously paid. Identify the previous filing by registration
statement number,
or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
|
|
|
Amount Previously Paid: $8,133
|
|
Filing Party:
L.B. Foster Company and Foster Thomas Company |
Form or Registration No.: Schedule TO-T
|
|
Date Filed: February 26, 2010 |
o Check the box if the filing relates solely to preliminary communications made before the
commencement of
a tender offer.
Check the appropriate boxes below to designate any transactions to which the statement relates:
þ third-party tender offer subject to Rule 14d-1.
o issuer tender offer subject to Rule 13e-4.
o going-private transaction subject to Rule 13e-3.
o amendment to Schedule 13D under Rule 13d-2.
Check the following box if the filing is a final amendment reporting the results of the tender
offer: o
This Amendment No. 6 (Amendment No. 6) amends and supplements the Tender Offer Statement on
Schedule TO originally filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 26, 2010, as
amended (the Schedule TO), by (i) Foster Thomas Company, a West Virginia corporation (the
Purchaser) and a wholly-owned subsidiary of L.B. Foster Company, a Pennsylvania corporation
(Parent), and (ii) Parent. The Schedule TO relates to the offer by the Purchaser to purchase all
of the outstanding shares of common stock, par value $1.00 per share (the Shares), of Portec Rail
Products, Inc., a West Virginia corporation (Portec), at a purchase price of $11.71 per Share,
net to the seller in cash, without interest thereon and less any applicable withholding or stock
transfer taxes, upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in the Offer to Purchase
dated February 26, 2010 (which, together with any amendments and supplements thereto, collectively
constitute the Offer to Purchase) and in the related Letter of Transmittal, copies of which are
filed with the Schedule TO as Exhibits (a)(1)(A) and (a)(1)(B), respectively. Capitalized terms
used and not otherwise defined in this Amendment No. 6 have the meanings assigned to such terms in
the Schedule TO or the Offer to Purchase. This Amendment No. 6 is being filed on behalf of the
Purchaser and Parent. Pursuant to General Instruction F to Schedule TO, the information contained
in the Offer to Purchase, including all schedules and annexes thereto, is hereby expressly
incorporated by reference in answers to Items 1 through 11 of the Schedule TO and is supplemented
by the information specifically provided for herein.
Item 11. Additional Information.
Item 11 (a)(5) of the Schedule TO is hereby amended and supplemented by adding the following
paragraph:
On April 21, 2010, the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania (the Court)
entered an order in the matter captioned In re Portec Rail Products, Inc. Shareholders Litigation
preliminarily enjoining Purchaser from completing the Offer until the Court determines that the
Board of Directors of Portec has cured the breach of fiduciary duties as found by the Court and
disclosed certain material information. A copy of the order is filed as Exhibit (a)(5)(K) hereto,
and is incorporated herein by reference. The foregoing summary is qualified in its entirety by
reference to Exhibit (a)(5)(K).
Item 12. Exhibits.
|
|
|
Exhibit |
|
Exhibit Name |
(a)(5)(K)
|
|
Memorandum and Order of Court in the matter captioned In re Portec Rail Products, Inc.
Shareholders Litigation entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania |
|
|
|
(a)(5)(L)
|
|
Press Release issued April 22, 2010 |
SIGNATURE
After due inquiry and to the best of my knowledge and belief, I certify that the information set
forth in this statement
is true, complete and correct.
|
|
|
|
|
|
L.B. FOSTER COMPANY
|
|
Date: April 22, 2010 |
By: |
/s/ David L. Voltz
|
|
|
|
Name: |
David L. Voltz |
|
|
|
Title: |
Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary |
|
|
|
FOSTER THOMAS COMPANY
|
|
Date: April 22, 2010 |
By: |
/s/ David L. Voltz
|
|
|
|
Name: |
David L. Voltz |
|
|
|
Title: |
Vice President and Secretary |
|
|
|
|
|
Exhibit |
|
Exhibit Name |
(a)(5)(K)
|
|
Memorandum and Order of Court in the matter captioned In re Portec Rail Products, Inc.
Shareholders Litigation entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania |
|
|
|
(a)(5)(L)
|
|
Press Release issued April 22, 2010 |
exv99waw5wk
EXHIBIT (a)(5)(K)
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
OF ALLEGHENY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
|
|
|
|
|
IN RE PORTEC RAIL PRODUCTS,
|
|
x
|
|
|
INC. SHAREHOLDERS LITIGATION
|
|
:
|
|
CONSOLIDATED CIVIL ACTION |
|
|
:
|
|
G.D. 10-3547 |
|
|
:
|
|
G.D. 10-3562 |
|
|
x |
|
G.D. 10-3982 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HONORABLE CHRISTINE A. WARD |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER OF COURT |
COPIES SENT TO:
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Alfred G. Yates, Jr.
Gerald L. Rutledge
LAW OFFICE OF ALFRED G. YATES, JR., P.C.
519 Allegheny Building
429 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Telephone: (412) 391-5164
Counsel for Defendants Portec Rail Products, Inc., Marshall T. Reynolds, John S. Cooper, Louis J.
Akers, Philip E. Cline, Daniel P. Harrington, A. Michael Perry, Douglas V. Reynolds, Neal W.
Scaggs, Philip Todd Shell. Kirby J. Taylor, and Thomas W. Wright
William Pietragallo, II, Esquire
Eric G. Soller, Esquire
Anthony J. Basinski, Esquire
James W. Kraus, Esquire
PIETRAGALLO GORDON ALFANO
BOSICK & RASPANTI, LLP
One Oxford Centre
The Thirty-Eighth Floor
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219
Tel: (412) 263-4346
Counsel for Defendants L.B. Foster Company and Foster Thomas Company
Michael J. Manzo, Esquire
Stanley Yorsz, Esquire
BUCHANAN INGERSOLL & ROONEY PC
One Oxford Centre
301 Grant Street, 20th Floor
Pittsburgh, PA 15219-1410
Tel: (412) 562-8841
MEMORANDUM
I. INTRODUCTION
The shareholder-plaintiffs in this lawsuit seek to enjoin the proposed tender-offer merger
transaction (the Tender Offer) between Porter Rail Products, Inc. (Portec) and Foster Thomas
Company (Foster Thomas), a wholly owned subsidiary of L.B. Foster, Company (Foster), through
which Foster seeks to purchase a controlling 65% interest of outstanding Portec common stock for
the agreed-upon value of $11.71 per share (hereinafter, the Takeover).
Upon the facts presented, this Court is faced with the question of whether Marshall T.
Reynolds, Chairman of Portecs Board of Directors breached his fiduciary duty of care owed to the
corporation and to the shareholders by failing to give due consideration to an over-bid from a
hedge fund communicated to Mr. Reynolds after the announcement of the proposed Takeover. Mr.
Reynolds, in his capacity as Chairman of the Board, did not seek the advice of counsel and never
reported the over-bid to the Board of Directors. Significantly, as well, the Board of Directors
did not undertake any market check or other canvas of the value of Portecs shares prior to
agreeing to the tentative terms of the merger with Foster and recommending to the shareholders that
they accept the proposed tender-offer.
Under the circumstances prevailing herein, this Court finds that Mr. Reynolds did in fact
breach his fiduciary duties, in part, by effectively preventing the entire Board of Directors from
carrying out their own fiduciary duties, because of Mr. Reynolds, lacked requisite material
information. Concomitantly, this Court finds the Board of Directors breached their fiduciary
duties of care by declining to undertake reasonable and practicable steps to maximize shareholder
value in that the Board did not have any process of making itself reasonably informed of the
aforementioned over-hid from the hedge fund, did not give the over-bid due
deliberation, and failed to disclose in any amendment to Portecs Schedule 14D-9 the existence
of this new, potentially more lucrative offer. As a consequence of these derelictions in fiduciary
duty, Portec shareholders remained unaware of a competing suitor for their shares, and thus in this
informational vacuum could not properly assess whether acceptance of the Tender Offer advanced
their best interests.
Additionally, this Court is faced with the issue of whether Portec omitted material
information from the Schedule 14D-9 document that it filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (the SEC) and distributed to its shareholders. A Fairness Opinion prepared by
Portecs financial advisors, Chaffe & Associates, stands as a key component to the Schedule 14D-9
disclosure, as this Fairness Opinion recommended to both the Board and the shareholders that
Fosters tender-offer comported with the accurate, fair-value of Portec. The Fairness Opinion of
Chaffe & Associates became attached to the Schedule 14D-9.
Here, this Court finds a quartet of material omissions in the Fairness Opinion and the
Schedule 14D-9. First, Portec failed to disclose that its management had prepared two sets of
financial projections: a non-disclosed best case projection and the probable case projection.
Chaffe & Associates exclusively utilized this probable case projection in calculated the
Discounted Cash Flow Analysis found within the Fairness Opinion. This Court concludes the failure
to disclose the existence of best case projections and the failure to explain why these
projections were disregarded amounts to a material disclosure omission. Second, Portec failed to
disclose that the Peer Group Analysis employed by Chaffe & Associates in the Fairness Opinion did
not include a control premium, despite the fact that a control premium is consistent with
standard valuation methodologies and despite the fact that 100% of Portecs stock would eventually
be transferred to Foster if the Tender Offer were to be approved. Lastly, Portec
2
materially omitted information concerning Chaffe & Associates Precedent Transaction
Analysis section of the Fairness Opinion. While Chaffe & Associates labeled the information
included in the Precedent Transaction Analysis as being material to its overall opinion expressed
in the Fairness Opinion, the evidence subsequently showed that Chaffe & Associates considered this
information to be bogus and highly questionable. Lastly, the Schedule 14D-9 is silent as to the
existence of the potentially higher bid that the hedge fund communicated to Marshall Reynolds after
the announcement of the proposed Takeover.
For all of the above reasons, this Court is granting plaintiffs motion to enjoin any vote on
the Tender Offer unless and until Portecs Board of Directors has cured the breaches of fiduciary
duty found by this Court and has disclosed all of the omitted information that this Court deems to
be materially to the decision of the shareholders.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs commenced this action following the public announcement of the Takeover.
consolidated action consists of three (3) putative class action complaints seeking to enjoin a
total $112 million dollar tender-offer by Foster for the purchase of Portecs outstanding common
stock at a price $11.71 per share. As provided in an Agreement and Plan of Merger dated February
16, 2010 (the Merger Agreement), the Tender Offer is the first step in the Takeover. Following
acceptance of the Tender Offer, a clean-up merger will ensue by which Foster will acquire any
remaining shares not tendered.
Plaintiffs filed the first two complaints, Harper v. Reynolds, et al., GD 10-3547 and
Gesoff v. Reynolds, et al., GD 10-3562 on February 24, 2010, with the third complaint,
Phillips v. Portec Rail Products, Inc., et al., GD 10-3982 being filed on March 2, 2010.
Plaintiffs filed a motion for expedited discovery and a motion for an order to enjoin the
tender-offer on March 5, 2010. On March 9, 2010, following a status conference attended by all
parties, this Court
3
granted expedited discovery, consolidated all actions, and ordered that a hearing occur on
March 22-23, 2010, three days prior to the initial expiration of the tender-offer. (The
tender-offer has since been extended to April 26, 2010). Defendants initially produced documents
on March 12, 2010 and depositions commenced on March 15, 2010. In all, plaintiffs deposed: Gay
LeBreton, a Managing Director of Chaffe & Associates and the individual who prepared substantially
most of the fairness opinion for Portec; Marshall Reynolds, Chairman of Portecs Board of
Directors; and Kirby Taylor, a member of Portecs Board of Directors and the individual whom Mr.
Reynolds tasked to perform all negotiations with Foster concerning the Tender Offer. Defendants
deposed Scott Phillips, one of the plaintiffs.
Two days of hearings then ensued as scheduled on March 22, 2010 and March 23,
2010.1 Plaintiffs proffered Tara Stephenson (an investment banker) as an expert in
support of their motion. Defendants witnesses included Charles C. Cohen, Esq., Gay LeBreton,
Kirby Taylor, Mark Gleason, CPA, and Alan Schick, Esq.
III. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Portec is a leading manufacturer and supplier of a broad range of rail-related products to the
railroad industry in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. (Ex 3: Form SC TO-T,
(Tender Offer), p. 11). Plaintiffs are shareholders of Portec, a publicly traded, West Virginia
corporation headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Portec has been in business since 1906.
(Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 11). Marshall Reynolds serves as the Chairman of Portecs Board of
Directors. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 8). Other members of the Board of Directors are John S.
Cooper, Louis J. Akers, Philip E. Cline, Daniel P. Harrington, A. Michael Perry, Douglas
|
|
|
1 |
|
The March 22, 2010 hearing transcript will be
cited herein as N.T. 3/22/2010. The March 23, 2010 hearing transcript will
be cited herein as N.T. 3/23/2010. |
4
V. Reynolds, Neal W. Scaggs, Philip Todd Shell, Kirby J. Taylor and Thomas W. Wright.
(Everett Harper Complaint, ¶¶ 14-23).
Foster is a Pennsylvania corporation headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Ex. 3:
Tender Offer, p. 12). Foster Thomas is a West Virginia corporation and a wholly owned subsidiary
of Foster, created solely for the purpose of acquiring Portec. (Ex. 3: Tender Offer at s-v).
Foster is nationwide manufacturer, fabricator and distributor of products and services for the
rail, construction, energy, utility and recreation markets. (Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 12).
A. The Negotiations
On November 18, 2008, Foster purchased, in the open market, 395,000 shares of Portec common
stock for $4.37 per share. (Ex, 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). On November 21, 2008, Foster sent to
Marshall Reynolds a written offer to purchase all the shares of Portec common stock in the range of
$4.90 to $6.00 per share. (N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 229; Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). On December 1,
2008, Mr. Reynolds sent a letter to the President and CEO of Foster, declining the stock-purchase
proposal. (N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 229; Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). Mr. Reynolds does not recall if
he ever informed the Portec Board of Directors of the Foster offer. (Reynolds Deposition, p. 72.).
On April 29, 2009, Foster retained as its investment advisor the firm of Falls River Group (Falls
River). (Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). On June 27, 2009, representatives of Falls River met with
Mr. Reynolds to communicate Fosters continuing interest to acquire Portec. (Ex. 3: Tender Offer,
p. 13; Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 8). On August 28, 2009, Mr. Reynolds directed Kirby Taylor to
contact Foster for the purpose of obtaining further details on the proposed transaction. (N.T.
3/23/2010, p. 148). From September 2009 until early November 2009, Mr. Taylor remained in
communication with Falls River regarding the possibility of Portecs acquisition by Foster. (N.T.
3/23/2010, p. 144; Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). According to the Schedule 14D-9, Portecs Board of
Directors first learned of the contact with Foster on
5
September 10, 2009, even though the approved minutes of the September 10, 2009 meeting do not
memorialize any discussion of this subject. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 8).
Kirby Taylor continued to negotiate on behalf of Portec with Foster representatives,
culminating in a November 4, 2009 meeting (N.T. 3/23/2010, pp. 148-149), at which Foster offered to
acquire all outstanding common stock of Portec for $11.00 per share, half of which price would be
in cash, with the remaining half in paid for by Fosters common stock. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p.
9). While Mr. Taylor initially countered with $13.50 per share asking price, his negotiations with
Foster eventually distilled to a difference of between 12 and a quarter and 12 and an eighth, as
concerns the price component of the proposed deal (N.T. 3/23/2010, pp. 160-161, 243). Mr. Reynolds
also insisted that any deal be all cash, rather than a mix of cash and stock, as had originally
been offered by Foster. (Reynolds Deposition, p. 80-81; N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 161-162).
The Board of Directors next held a meeting on December 10, 2009. The minutes from this
meeting strongly suggest that December 10, 2009 constituted the first time either Mr. Reynolds
and/or Mr. Taylor advised the Board of the ongoing discussions with Foster for the possible sale of
Portec which had been proceeding in earnest since at least September 2009. While Mr. Reynolds and
Mr. Taylor testified the Board became aware of Fosters overtures at the September 10, 2009, the
relevant minutes are completely silent on this subject. And, despite Portec contending the
September 10, 2009 meeting minutes inadvertently omitted any mention of Foster, the relevant
language of the minutes from the December 10, 2009 meeting does not appear to be in the nature of
an update to the Board on matters about which they had previously been made aware.
... Mr, Reynolds told the Board that Foster Co. (LBF), a publicly
traded company ... in ... Pittsburgh ..., had contacted him in June,
6
2009 (via a representative) about an interest in buying the Company.
Mr. Reynolds indicated that the interest was general in nature but
that periodically he and Mr. Taylor would have informal discussions
with LBF representatives in which LBF indicated Portecs business
would complement [its] operation, In the late fall, LBF advised Mr.
Taylor that it was more serious about acquiring all of the Company.
At that time Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Taylor had discussions with LBF
representatives to determine the nature of their interest in Portec
and the amount they would be willing to pay for the Company. Mr.
Reynolds asked Mr. Taylor to prepare an analysis of Portecs value
based upon book value, tangible book value and earnings per share.
Mr. Reynolds then asked Mr. Taylor to make a presentation detailing
the indication of interest, where the Company stood with LBF and to
detail the steps that needed to be taken.
(Ex. 6: December 10 board minutes, pp. 4-5).
The Schedule 14D-9 indicates the Board of Directors decided at the December 10, 2009 meeting
that Chaffe & Associates (Chaffe) should be retained to advise the board and render a fairness
opinion in the event Foster intended to go forward with a transaction. Id. Portec formally
engaged Chaffe on January 28, 2010. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p.14). Ms. LeBreton testified Portec
first contacted Chaffe on January 15, 2010. (LeBreton Deposition, p. 12).
By the time the Board of Directors first learned of the impending Foster acquisition (at the
December 10, 2009 meeting), it appears Mr. Kirby and Foster had arrived at the essential terms of
an agreement for the tender-offer, including a price of $12.125 per share in cash (less modest
adjustments for pending environmental liabilities and compensation to Portec executives), without
utilizing the services of an investment bank or without any formal effort to shop the Portec to the
market. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 9; N.T. 3/23/2010, pp. 238-240).
Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Taylor testified to their concern in February 2010 (eight months
after Foster made its first offer) of a high likelihood that Foster might leave the deal if we
were to put the brakes on the transaction and say we wanted to spend a period of time doing a
market check. (N.T. 3/23/2010, pp. 326, 345-346). However, Porter offered no explanation for the
7
lack of a market check or any effort to find an alternative buyer once Foster first proposed
to buy Portec in June 2009 and Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Taylor entered into negotiations with Foster.
(Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 13). Nor did Portec or Foster present an iota of evidence at the hearing
to support the position that Foster would have broken off negotiations or walked away from the deal
in the event Portec sought or received competitive bids in the marketplace.
Prior to agreeing to the share price with Foster, the only effort to ascertain the markets
interest in purchasing Portec stemmed from Mr. Reynolds trying to put out the word to four
investment banks with whom Mr. Reynolds had acquaintances2. (N.T. 3/23/2010, p.
240-241; Taylor Deposition, pp. 54-56; Affidavit of Marshall T. Reynolds, March 26, 2010). When he
testified at the hearing on March 23, 2010, Mr. Taylor had no idea who Mr. Reynolds had
contacted, (N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 241). According to Mr. Taylor, Mr. Reynolds possessed little
experience in selling companies. (Taylor Deposition, p. 26). Plaintiffs expert, Tara Stephenson,
a veteran investment banking professional, testified that this informal word of mouth, without
engaging an investment bank or similar professional, does not constitute what the industry
understands as a market check. (N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 285-286).
Following the December 10, 2009 meeting of the Board of Directors, Mr. Taylor, at the
direction of Mr. Reynolds, agreed to a $0.35 per share downward adjustment in the price of the
tender-offer because of: (1) a pending environmental issue in Troy, New York and; (2) an allowance
for the payment of bonuses to certain executive officers of Portec. (Taylor Deposition, pp.
83-84).
|
|
|
2 |
|
Following the evidentiary hearing, Portec
submitted an affidavit from Mr. Reynolds identifying the investment banks he
contacted as Ferris, Baker Watts, Inc. (Washington, DC and Baltimore), Royal
Bank of Canada (New York, NY), England & Company (New York, NY), and Janney
Montgomery Scott, LLC (Philadelphia, PA). |
8
Foster also agreed that it would pay Mr. Taylor a sum of $350,000 for his services throughout
the negotiations. Mr. Taylor would only receive payment if Portecs shareholders approved the
merger. (Reynolds Deposition, pp. 126-127). The Schedule 14D-9 does not disclose the contingent
nature of Mr. Taylors payment. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 4).
B. The Fairness Opinion and Portecs Schedule 14D-9 Disclosures
On February 26, 2010, the Schedule 14D-9 entitled Solicitation/Recommendation Statement Under
Section 14(d)(9) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 was sent to Portec shareholders of record
together with the Tender Offer. (Ex. 3: Tender Offer, p. 2).
Portecs Board of Directors retained Chaffe as its investment advisor on January 28, 2010,
charging Chaffe with the primary task of opining on the fairness of the price of the Tender Offer,
which, as noted, had already been agreed upon pursuant to the negotiations conducted between Foster
and Mr. Taylor. (LeBreton Deposition, p. 13-14). In the sections below, this Court will recite
certain of the relevant facts presented at the hearing concerning those aspects of the Fairness
Opinion and the Schedule 14D-9 Disclosure which are ultimately germane to this Courts decision to
enjoin the Tender Offer.
The Precedent Transaction Analysis
After preparing the Fairness Opinion, Chaffe, through Ms. LeBreton, made a presentation to the
Board of Directors on February 11, 2010. (Ex. 10: Chaffe February 11, 2010 presentation to Portec
Board, PRP 00547). Comprised within its analysis of the Tender Offer, Chaffe considered the price
of prior acquisitions of companies sharing some similarities with Portec, i.e., precedent
transactions.
The Schedule 14D-9 touts the Precedent Transaction Analysis as one of [t]he valuation
methodologies Chaffe found material to its analysis. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, pp. 17, 19).
However, in a direct contradiction to of representation, Ms. LeBreton testified at the hearing that
9
the precedent transaction analysis did not turn out to be material...it did not turn out to
be material to our conclusion. (LeBreton Deposition, p. 82). According to Ms. LeBreton,
Ultimately we dont rely on this model...because the base data is just not- there isnt enough
good comparable data to make a good judgment based on this model. (Id. at pp. 76-77). Ms.
LeBreton testified she advised the Board of Directors of the bogus nature of this information,
and that consequently Chaffe did not rely on the actually rely on the Precedent Transaction
Analysis in its Fairness Opinion. (N.T. 3122/2010, p. 241; LeBreton Deposition, pp. 77-78).
The Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
Ms. LeBreton explained that Chaffes work on the Fairness Opinion included a Discounted Cash
Flow Analysis. (Id. at 20), which is a form of financial analysis that takes forecasted revenues
and subtracts the cost of goods sold, operating expenses, taxes, and reinvestment required in the
business to develop a free cash flow number for a number of years. The forecasted free cash flow
is discounted back to present value, using the weighted average cost of capital (WACC). (N.T.
3/22/2010, p. 60- 61). WACC is a blend of the cost of equity and the cost of debt. (Id. at p.
61). In calculating Portecs cost of equity, Chaffe used an unsubstantiated 7.4% equity risk
premium instead of the reported market risk premium of 6.47%, thereby potentially inflating the
weighted average cost of capital and diminishing the value of Portecs stock.. (Ex. 33: Stephenson
Supp. Dec., §4).
Moreover, in compiling the Discounted Cash Flow Analysis, Chaffe relied upon budgetary
projections prepared by Portec management. (LeBreton Deposition, 132-134). The Schedule 14D-9
fails to disclose that Portec management prepared two sets of forecasts, one denominated the
probable case scenario, the other the best case scenario. Further, the Schedule 14D-9 does not
disclose that the Discounted Cash Flow analysis contained at page 20
10
of the Schedule 14D-9 exclusively employed the probable case scenario or why the best case
projections were rejected as not reliable. (See Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9).
On the basis of the probable case forecasts, the Schedule 14D-9 states that a Discounted
Cash Flow analysis employing a discount rate of 13.64% results in a per share value of $12.51 and
that a discount rate of 14.22% results in a per share value of $11.33. (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p.
20). However, the best case forecasts, applying a cost of capital or WACC of 13.89% and
otherwise making the same assumptions as Chaffe, results in a discounted cash flow value of $15.09.
(Ex. 33: Stephenson Supp. Dec., §3). It is plaintiffs position that the incorrectly calculated
and overstated WACC in the Discounted Cash Flow Analysis caused Chaffe to substantially undervalue
Portec as an enterprise.
The Peer Group Analysis
A Peer Group Analysis is one of the typical methodologies used when preparing a fairness
opinion. (N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 58). Peer Group Analysis is an analysis of publicly traded
comparable companies that operate within the same industry as the company being analyzed for the
fairness opinion. (Id. at p. 63). In the Peer Group Analysis, one calculates the implied market
value of the peer public companies and their enterprise value. A comparison of the peer
companies financial results is then made to these values. (Id.). The purpose of the Peer Group
Analysis is to calculate a per share minority value for the subject companys stock based on the
valuations of its peers, and then apply a control premium. (Id.). The Portec board presentation
materials do not disclose that the implied values of Porter or any of its peer companies are
derived from the prices of individual shares of stock, which incorporate a minority discount. (Ex.
33: Stephenson Supp. Dec., §5; N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 65-66).
When purchasing a majority of shares, or, as in this case, all of a companys shares, a
control premium is empirically observed. (Ex. 33: Stephenson Supp. Dec., §5; N.T. 3/22/2010,
11
p. 66). The most recent full year of data for such control premiums indicates a median
premium of 36.5%. (Ex. 33: Stephenson Supp. Dec., §5). A control premium is properly used as part
of the analysis when analyzing a merger or acquisition where, as here, the entire company is being
sold. (N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 67). The commonly accepted methodology for observing and measuring
purchase price premiums is to apply a control premium to the Companys stock price five days prior
to the Tender Offer announcement. (Ex. 33: Stephenson Supp. Dec., §5). There is no disclosure in
the Schedule 14D-9 about the use (or lack thereof) of control premiums as part of the Chaffe Peer
Group Analysis. (N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 68).
Plaintiffs expert witness also opined that Chaffe misapplied median peer company valuation
multiples to Portecs financial results, failing to account for the Companys superior financial
results. None of the other peer companies generated gross margins in excess approximately 18%
for the last twelve-month data available as of February 8, 2010. (Id.).
C. The Lack of a Market Check3 and the Deliberations of the Board
of Directors Concerning the Takeover
A market check is essentially a canvas of the market done by or on behalf of a target
company, performed either before or after receiving an offer from a suitor, for the purpose of
determining whether other companies may wish to make a superior offer. At the February 5, 2010
meeting, the Board of Directors considered, but then rejected, conducting a market check to gauge
the price of Portec stock. (N.T. 3/23/2010, pp. 243-244, 325-326). The Schedule 14D-9 discloses,
the board of directors did not consider whether parties other than L.B. Foster would
|
|
|
3 |
|
This Court wishes to emphasizes that it has
not found the decision of the Portec Board of Directors to not conduct a market
check in this instance to constitute a breach of its fiduciary duty. Indeed,
plaintiffs presented no authority that mandates a market check as a matter of
law and this Court has found none. See, Barkan v. Amsted Industries,
Inc., 567 A.2d 1279, 1285-1286 (Del. 1989). However, within the entire context
of the Tender Offer, particularly in light of the over-bid from the hedge fund,
it is important to note the absence of a market check when considering the full
panoply of the information available to the shareholders when assessing the
fair value of the Tender Offer. |
12
be willing or able to enter into a transaction with Portec that would provide value to
Portecs shareholders... (Ex. 1: Schedule 14D-9, p. 13). Portec declined to engage an investment
banker to shop and/or market the company to a wider scope of potential purchasers. (N.T.
3/23/2010, p. 242-243), Alan Schick, Esq. testified, this was not a company ... that ever conveyed
the impression that they were looking to sell themselves. They never put themselves in an auction
mode. (Id. at p. 337). Mr. Schick further testified that Kirby Taylor had told him, Portec was
not looking to sell themselves ... this [the Takeover deal] is something that had just happened.
(Id. at p. 344). According to Mr. Schicks testimony, by at least November 2009, he had
recommended to Mr. Taylor that Portec conduct a market check, (Id. at p. 345). After consulting
with Mr. Reynolds, Mr. Taylor declined this advice. (Id. at 345-346). The Board of Directors
convened a meeting on February 5, 2010 to inform itself on the status of the negotiations with
Foster. On February 11, 2010, Chaffe gave a presentation to the Board of Directors which
communicated the substance of its Fairness Opinion. Following this February 11, 2010 meeting, the
Board approved the Takeover. Thus, the total corporate deliberations approving the Takeover
consisted of two meetings on February 5, 2010 and February 11, 2010. (N.T. 3/23/2010, p. 319).
L.B. Fosters stock rose 13% in the six days following the public announcement of the Takeover.
(Gesoff Complaint, ¶ 12; Ex. 20).
D. The Over-Bid Received by Marshall Reynolds After the Announcement of the
Proposed Takeover
The operative Merger Agreement includes a fiduciary-out clause, which allows Portec to
consider superior offers, if the act of not doing so would result in a violation its fiduciary
duties to its shareholders. (Merger Agreement, p. 37). Following signing of the Merger Agreement
and the public announcement of the transaction, Mr. Reynolds admits to having been approached with
a $12 per share offer by a hedge fund, Ameridan Resources, LLC of Pittsburgh,
13
PA. (Reynolds Deposition, pp. 63-64; Affidavit of Marshall T. Reynolds, March 26, 2010). Mr.
Reynolds did not disclose this offer to the board, (including Mr. Taylor), or to the public. (Id.
at p. 67; Taylor Deposition, p. 148). Mr. Reynolds unilaterally rejected this offer without due
consideration or seeking the advice of counsel or Portecs financial advisors. (Reynolds
Deposition, pp. 63-64).
IV. CONTROLLING LEGAL AUTHORITY
|
A. |
|
Legal Standards for Injunctive Relief |
The standards governing the issuance of a preliminary injunction under Pennsylvania law are
well settled. A party seeking a preliminary injunction must show that: (1) it is likely to
prevail on the merits; (2) an injunction is necessary to prevent immediate and irreparable harm and
cannot be adequately compensated by damages; (3) greater injury would result from refusing the
injunction than from granting it; (4) the injunction will restore the parties to their status prior
to the alleged misconduct; (5) the injunction sought is reasonably suited to abate the offending
activity; and (6) an injunction will not adversely affect the public interest. Overland Enter.,
Inc. v. Gladstone Partners, LP, 950 A.2d 1015, 1020 (Pa. Super. 2008) (citing Summit Towne Ctr.,
Inc. v. Shoe Show of Rocky Mt., Inc., 828 A.2d 995, 1001 (Pa. 2003)).
The party seeking a preliminary injunction is not required to establish the claim
absolutely. Boyle by Boyle v. Pennsylvania. Interscholastic Athletic Assn, 676 A.2d 695, 699
(Pa. Commw. Ct. 1996). Rather, the movant need only demonstrate a reasonable likelihood of
success on the merits. Moscatiello v. Whitehall Borough, 848 A.2d 1071, 1074 (Pa. Commw. Ct.
2004).
14
|
B. |
|
West Virginia Law Governs the Substance of This Action With Delaware Law
Providing Persuasive Authority. Consequently, the Board of Directors of Portec Is
Charged With the Revlon Duty of Maximizing Shareholder Value |
Because Portec is a West Virginia corporation, West Virginia law controls the resolution of
all substantive issues. See Beaumont v. ETL Serv. Inc., 1995 WL 876404, at *5 (Pa. Ct.
Com. Pl. Nov. 22, 1995) (ruling that substantive issues concerning a corporation are decided based
upon the law of the state of incorporation). West Virginia statutory law on the subject of
corporate governance and the fiduciary duties of boards of directors is sparse. The West Virginia
Business Corporation Act (WVBCA) states:
(a) Each member of the board of directors, when discharging the duties of a
director, shall act: (1) In good faith; and (2) in a manner the director reasonably
believes to be in the best interests of the corporation.
(b) The members of the board of directors or a committee of the board, when becoming
informed in connection with their decision-making function or devoting attention to
their oversight function, shall discharge their duties with the care that a person
in a like position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances.
W. Va. Code Ann. § 31D-8-830 (West 2010).
West Virginia case law on these issues is equally sparse. The sole reported decision of the
West Virginia Supreme Court relating to the issues before this Court is Persinger v. Carmazzi, 190
W. Va. 683 (1994). Notably, the Persinger court cited to and relied upon Delaware law for its
ultimate holding that boards of directors owe shareholders a duty of fair dealing and fair price,
and [p]art of fair dealing is the obvious duty of candor. See Id. at 689 (citing
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 457 A.2d 701 (Del. 1983)). Thus, at a minimum, the West Virginia Supreme
Court treats Delaware law as strongly persuasive authority on these issues.
Courts across the country cite to the law of Delaware as persuasive authority on issues
relating to the fiduciary duties of boards of directors in the context of corporate mergers and
15
acquisitions. Lees Inns of America, Inc. v. William R. Lee Irrevocable Trust, No.
40A01-0901-CV-47, 2010 WL 908485, *9 (Ind. Ct. App. Mar. 15, 2010); Shenker v. Laureate Educ.,
Inc., 983 A.2d 408, 421 (Md. 2009); Indiana State Dist. Council of Laborers v. Brukardt, No.
M2007-02271-COA-R3-CV, 2009 WL 426237, *9 n.5 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 19, 2009) (Delaware Chancery
Court is recognized as the preeminent business court in the nation); Ehrenhaus v. Baker, No. 2008
WL 5124899, *9 n.19 (N.C. Super. Ct. Dec. 5, 2008) (North Carolina courts frequently look to
Delaware for guidance on questions of corporate governance because of the special expertise and
body of case law developed in the Delaware Chancery Court and the Delaware Supreme Court); In re
Schering-Plough/Merck Merger Litig., C.A. No. 09-cv-1099 (D.N.J. March 26, 2010); Williams v.
Stanford, 977 So.2d 722, 727 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1st Dist. 2008); Welch v. Via Christi Health
Partners, Inc., 281 Kan. 732, 133 P.2d 122, 137, 143 (Kan. 2006); See generally
Michal Barzuza, The State of State Anti-Takeover Law, 95 Va, L. Rev. 1973, 2041 (2009)
(analyzing states treatment of Delaware law in the field of mergers and acquisitions).
In a series of decisions stemming from Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., 506
A.2d 173 (Del. 1986), Delaware courts have held that boards of directors are charged with a duty to
take all reasonable steps to maximize shareholder value.
Although certain states have enacted constituency statutes intended to limit or abrogate
Revlon and its progeny, West Virginia has no such statute. See generally W.
Va. Code § 31D-8-801 et seq. (West 2010); See also Barzuza, 95 Va. L.
Rev, at 2041 (indicating West Virginia does not have any anti-Revlon statute).
Thus, this Court concludes West Virginia law governs the disposition of this matter, as
informed by well-established principles of fiduciary duty law developed in the courts of
16
Delaware. Because West Virginias Supreme Court looks to Delaware precedent, and since West
Virginia lacks any anti-Revlon constituency statute, the principles of Revlon apply in this matter,
with the consequence that the Board of Directors of Portec held the fiduciary obligation to
maximize shareholder value in connection with the Takeover. Portecs own corporate process
expert, Charles Cohen, Esq., confirmed and underscored this point at the hearing by his testimony
that the Board of Directors was required to try to secure the best value available for
shareholders. (N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 190).
V. |
|
ANALYSIS OF WHETHER PLAINTIFFS ARE ENTITLED TO INJUNCTIVE RELIEF |
|
A. |
|
Plaintiffs Are Likely to Succeed on the Underlying Merits of the Claims |
For the reasons set forth below, this Court finds plaintiffs have met their burden of proving
a likelihood of success on the merits of their underlying claims against Portec, only, concerning:
(a) the Boards breach of its Revlon Duty and (b) the material omissions through Portecs
submitted Schedule 14D-9.4
Breach of the Revlon Duty
Under Delaware law, corporate boards owe the shareholders a duty to take all reasonable steps
to maximize shareholder value. This duty is particularly acute in those situations where the
proposed transaction transfers control over the corporate entity. As the Delaware Supreme Court
explained in Paramount Communications, Inc. v. QVC Network, Inc., 637 A.2d 34 (Del. 1994):
|
|
|
|
|
In the sale of control context, the directors must focus on one
primary objective to secure the transaction offering the best value
reasonably available for the stockholders and they must exercise
their fiduciary duties to further that end. The decisions of this |
|
|
|
4 |
|
This Court finds that plaintiffs have not
established any reasonable likelihood of success on their claims that Foster
Thomas and/or Foster aided and abetted the Board of Directors of Portec in
breaching its fiduciary duties. A merger may nevertheless be enjoined based on
breaches of fiduciary duty by the target companys board, regardless of the
lack of wrongdoing by the purchaser. See Paramount, supra;
Netsmart, supra. |
17
|
|
|
|
|
Court have consistently emphasized this goal. Revlon, 506 A.2d at
182 (The duty of the board ... [is] the maximization of the
companys value at a sale for the stockholders benefit.);
Macmillan, 559 A.2d at 1288 ([I]n a sale of corporate control the
responsibility of the directors is to get the highest value
reasonably attainable for the shareholders.); Barkan, 567 A.2d at
1286 ([T]he board must act in a neutral manner to encourage the
highest possible price for shareholders.). See
also Wilmington Trust Co. v. Coulter, 200 A.2d 441, 448
(Del. 1964) (in the context of the duty of a trustee, [w]hen all is
equal ... it is plain that the Trustee is bound to obtain the best
price obtainable). |
Id. at 44.
Delaware courts define a change of control, and explain the rationale for the enhanced
scrutiny underpinning the rule, as follows: When a majority of a corporations voting shares are
acquired by a single person or entity, or by a cohesive group acting together, there is a
significant diminution in the voting power of those who thereby become minority stockholders.
See Paramount, 637 A.2d at 42. In Paramount, the Delaware Supreme Court further elaborated
on the concept of enhanced scrutiny:
|
|
|
|
|
The key features of an enhanced scrutiny test are: (a) a judicial
determination regarding the adequacy of the decision making process
employed by the directors, including the information on which the
directors based their decision; and (b) a judicial examination of
the reasonableness of the directors action in light of the
circumstances then existing. The directors have the burden of
proving that they were adequately informed and acted reasonably. |
Id.
Here, the Takeover contemplates a purchase of the entirety of Portecs outstanding shares in a
two-step transaction. This clearly constitutes a change of control and therefore triggers the
enhanced scrutiny test set forth in Paramount, supra. In accordance with enhanced judicial
scrutiny, the decisions of the Porter Board of Directors do not receive the benefit of the
business judgment rule, such that this Court cannot presume the reasonability of any decision of
the Board
18
of Directors. Rather, the Board of Directors actually bears the burden of proving
that they were adequately informed and acted reasonably. Id. at 43 (emphasis added). Under the
facts set forth in this Memorandum, the Board of Directors fell far short of this burden concerning
its decision to approve the Takeover.
The unilateral rejection of a potentially superior offer communicated after approval of the
Takeover serves as perhaps the best example of the Board of Directors derogation of its obligation
to maximize shareholder value. Improper rejection of potential superior bids by a member of
management or by a companys board in order to steer a transaction in a desired direction is an
obvious breach of fiduciary duty. Netsmart, 924 A.2d 199. In Netsmart, the court enjoined a
merger because of the boards failure to engage in any logical efforts to examine the universe of
possible strategic buyers and to identify a select group for targeted sales overtures, thereby
breaching its Revlon duty. The necessity of the Board of Directors to have knowledge of other
potential suitors and transactions is underscored and illuminated by the written opinion of
Portecs expert, Charles Cohen, Esq., who explained the directors fiduciary duty of care in the
following fashion:
|
|
|
|
|
The assessment of ... the duty of care is generally recognized to
be process-oriented. That is to say: whereas an automobile driver
who makes a mistake in judgment as to speed or distance may normally
be deemed in breach of [a] duty of care, a corporate director who
makes a mistake in judgment as to business or economic conditions
will virtually never be deemed in breach of the duty of care, absent
palpable failure to engage in the process of becoming reasonably
informed and giving due deliberation to the matter at hand. |
Cohen, Expert Opinion, p. 2, emphasis added.
Pursuant to the evidence, facts and testimony offered at the hearing, this Court finds the
palpable failure to which Mr. Cohen refers. The Chairman of the Board of Directors, Mr.
Reynolds, decided, on his own, without the input of counsel or any advisors, to refrain from
19
advising the Board of the existence of this offer. Consequently, Mr. Reynolds denied the
Board of Directors any opportunity to give this very serious matter due deliberation or to become
reasonably informed about the potentially competing offer. Clearly this runs afoul of the
fiduciary duties with which the Board is charged, in that Mr. Reynolds effectively threw a veil of
secrecy upon the overtures of the hedge fund, thereby squelching consideration of bids from any
entities other than Foster. See Citron v. Fairchild Camera & Instrument Corp., 569 A.2d
53, 66; See also Lyondell Chem., 970 A.2d at 243; McMullin v. Beran, 765 A.2d 910,
918 (Del. 2000) (finding that the board of directors must be especially diligent in the context
of an entire sale in seeking to secure the best value for shareholders).
Faced with such facts,
this Court must enjoin the Takeover until the Portec Board of Directors
has cured the breach of its fiduciary duty of care. See QVC Network, Inc. v. Paramount
Communications, Inc., 635 A.2d at 1245, affd, 637 A.2d 34 (Del. 1994) (enjoining the
transaction where the board could not have reasonably concluded the offer was calculated to ensure
the best value to shareholders).
Furthermore, the Board of Directors cannot explain away its failure to consider the
potentially competing bid by pointing to the language of the Merger Agreement. True, Section 8 of
the Merger Agreement includes preclusive deal protection provisions such as a standstill provision,
a no-shop clause and a termination fee provision.5 However, that same section also
specifically contains a fiduciary-out clause granting permission for the Board to consider any
superior post-agreement bids falling within the ambit of its fiduciary duty. The presence of such
|
|
|
5 |
|
Plaintiffs advance the argument in their
filings that these provisions in the Merger Agreement establish a de facto
breach of fiduciary duty, though it is unclear how much plaintiffs pursue this
argument since elicited virtually no testimony on it at the hearing. In any
event, this Court agrees with Portecs expert witness, Charles Cohen, Esq., who
opined that such provisions are not illegal, but rather are standard and
customary in mergers and acquisitions. See also In re 3Com
Shareholder Litigation, 2009 WL 5173804 (Del. Ch. 2009) (court upheld no
solicitation provision and termination fee where termination fee represented
4% of the equity value of the merger). |
20
a fiduciary-out clause makes the Boards failure to even consider the $12 bid from the hedge
fund all the more egregious and deleterious to the interests of Portecs shareholders.
Finally, this Court is not persuaded by Defendants unsubstantiated denigration of the $12
post-announcement bid from the hedge fund as a so-called offer. This convoluted argument to
attempt minimize and sweep under the rug this very significant point is adequately summarized from
Fosters Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
|
|
|
|
|
Plaintiffs ... argue that a hedge fund offered $12 per share after
the ... announcement, but this so-called offer was never even
reduced to the formality of a letter. Moreover, the $12 figure was
subject to due diligence and the possibility or likelihood of being
reduced, especially in light of events concerning the Troy facility
and the Niagara Mohawk litigation Finally, considering the hedge
fund confirmed it would not go any higher than $12 per share in any
event, the so-called $12 offer would not yield a greater amount per
share to the Portec shareholders than Fosters offer. (NT 2 Taylor
at 249:4-250:10; Reynolds Dep. At 170:20-171:6). |
Id., p. 25 at footnote 9.
There are many problems with the above characterization, not the least of which is the lack of
support in the record. This Court has read the referenced pages of Mr. Reynolds deposition and
Mr. Kirbys testimony and cannot understand how these sweeping conclusions can be drawn therefrom.
Additionally, Defendants argument as to the likelihood of a reduction in the $12 offer is
contradicted by the simple fact that the bid from the hedge fund occurred after submission
of Portecs Schedule 14D-9, which clearly disclosed the environmental liabilities associated with
Portecs New York holdings. Logically, any bid coming in after the Schedule 14D-9 presumably
comprised some consideration of the information contained within that document.
21
The Disclosure Claims
A stockholders option to accept or reject a tender offer is, of course, necessarily based on
whether he has before him all the facts necessary to make an informed decision. Joseph v. Shell
Oil Co., 482 A.2d 335, 341 (Del. Ch. 1984). When faced with a vote on a proposed merger,
shareholders are entitled to an accurate description of the process utilized by the board in
deciding to support a merger, as well as an explanation on the reasons underpinning the boards
decision. Nagy v. Bistricer, 770 A.2d 43, 59 (Del. Ch. 2000). The duty of disclosure requires
that directors disclose fully and fairly all material information within the boards control.
Skeen v. Jo-Ann Stores, Inc., 750 A.2d 1170, 1172 (Del. 2000).
Under Delaware law, an omitted fact is material if a reasonable stockholder would consider it
important in a decision pertaining to his or her stock. If including the omitted fact would
significantly alter the total mix of information available to stockholders, that fact is material.
In re 3Com Shareholders Litigation, 2009 WL 5173804, *1 (Del.Ch. 2009). Omissions are considered
material if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider them
important in deciding how to vote. Skeen, 750 A.2d at 1172. However, materiality does not
require proof of a substantial likelihood that disclosure of the omitted facts would have caused
the reasonable investor to change his vote. Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., 493 A.2d 929, 944 (Del.
1985).
Moreover, as concerns the services performed by Chaffe, the investment bank, under Delaware
law, the valuation work performed by an investment bank must be accurately described and
appropriately qualified. In re 3Com Shareholders Litigation 2009 WL 5173804, *3 (Del.Ch. 2009).
22
After considering the facts adduced at the hearing under the above legal standards, this Court
finds four material disclosure omissions in the Schedule 14D-9 filed by Portec, which appear to
alter and obfuscate the total mix of information available to shareholders.
First, the Schedule 14D-9 offers the shareholders no information concerning the alternative
purchase offer of $12 per share that Mr. Reynolds received from the hedge fund, but which he
rejected without even consulting the Board of Directors. Accordingly, the collective actions and
inactions of the Board of Directors and Marshall Reynolds deprived the shareholders of information
about a potentially superior offer. It is thus readily apparent to this Court that the existence
of the $12 offer is a material fact that must be disclosed. See Paramount, 637 A.2d at
48-49 (finding the existence of a competing offer to be a material omission).
Second, the Schedule 14D-9 omits any disclosure that Chaffes Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
contained within its fairness opinion relied exclusively upon Portecs managements probable
case financial projections and accorded no weight to its best case projections, notwithstanding
the fact that the best case projections were created by management for use in its budget process.
This constitutes a material non-disclosure, which must be remedied to enable the shareholders to
have an adequate fund of knowledge when voting on the approval of the Tender Offer. See
Netsmart, 924 A.2d at 201 (failure to disclose financial advisors decision to place little weight
on a particular projection deemed to be a material omission, as it did not reasonably advise the
stockholders of their managements best estimates of future profits). See also
Simonetti Rollover IRA v. Margolis, C.A. No. 3694-VCN, 2008 WL 5048692, *10) (June 27, 2008) (The
key assumptions made by a banker in formulating an opinion are of paramount importance to the
stockholders).
23
Third, this Court finds the Precedent Transactions Analysis contained within the fairness
opinion attached to the Schedule 14D-9 to be fatally flawed. Chaffe identified the Precedent
Transactions Analysis as a material consideration in the Schedule 14D-9. Yet, at the hearing,
Ms. LeBreton admitted that this analysis was not only not material, but was, in fact, by
her own words, bogus. Accordingly, thus Court must conclude that the Schedule 14D-9 patently
misrepresents the reliability of the Precedent Transaction Analysis, which was one of three
analyses identified in the Schedule 14D-9 as supporting Chaffes fairness opinion. Requiring the
shareholders to rely upon financial information characterized by the corporations own investment
banker as bogus constitutes a material disclosure omission which must be remedied through
injunctive relief.
Lastly, the Peer Group Analysis undertaken by Chaffe as set forth in the fairness opinion
and the Schedule 14D-9 runs afoul of disclosure standards. Although Chaffe presented this analysis
as buttressing its finding that the Takeover constituted a fair deal to the shareholders, it
neglected to disclose that this analysis departed from standard valuation methodologies by failing
to include a control premium in calculating the value of Portecs shares, since the Takeover
contemplated the acquisition of the entirety of the corporation, i.e., a transfer of control.
See Robert F. Reilly & Robert P. Schweihs, Handbook of Advanced Business Valuation
262 (McGraw-Hill 2000) (The analyst should adjust reported stock trading prices of the publicly
traded companies for the ownership control premium that would have been paid if one desired to buy
the entire company, or at least a controlling ownership interest in it.); See also
Shannon P. Pratt, Robert Reilly & Robert P. Schweihs, Valuing a Business 360 (4th ed. 2000)
(... it is a common valuation procedure to recognize [ownership control of a business] by
reference to the addition of an ownership premium). The addition of a control premium to any
24
valuation analysis is not only a recognized and widely used methodology within the mergers and
acquisition arena, but has been a factor frequently considered by the courts. See
Rapid-American Corp. v. Harris, 603 A.2d 796, 807 (Del. 1992) (reversing trial courts failure to
apply control premium in appraisal proceeding); Gotham Partners, L.P. v. Hallwood Realty Partners,
L.P., 817 A.2d 160, 177 (Del. 2002) (control premium should have been added to the value of the
partnership units where the acquisition served to entrench the general partners overall control of
the partnership); Paramount, 635 A.2d at 1273 n. 50 (the opportunity for shareholders to receive a
superior control premium is sufficient grounds to constitute irrevocable harm and justifies
granting an injunction).
It is not the role of this Court to take umbrage with Chaffes professional judgment, no
matter how peculiar, of eschewing the recognized and standard valuation practice of adding a
control premium. However, since the departure from the control premium methodology has the
inherent tendency of undervaluing the target stock and may cause the shareholder to question the
reliability of the fairness opinion, the absence of a control premium is a material omission
which should have been disclosed to Portecs shareholders. See, UOP, 457 A,2d at 712.
Beyond the four disclosure omissions cited herein as supporting the request for injunctive
relief, plaintiffs raised a laundry list of other items which they contend should have appeared in
the Schedule 14D-9, including Chaffes utilization of an erroneous Standard Industrial Code (SIC)
in the Discounted Cash Flow Analysis; the fact that Kirby Taylor stood to receive a contingent
$350,000 payment upon the shareholders approval of the Takeover; and the failure of Kirby Taylor
and Marshall Reynolds to have informed the Board at the September 10, 2009 of Fosters interest in
purchasing Portec. While, observing that the best practice may be for such matters to be
addressed in the Schedule 14D-9, this Court, absent controlling legal authority, is
25
not in the position to quibble with the Board of Directors regarding every decision over what
to disclose, particularly where the information at issue seems to this Court to not materially
affect the overall content of the message being conveyed to the shareholders. And, importantly, a
mere disagreement with the fairness opinion is a matter that can be adequately addressed by an
appraisal action. See In re 3Com Shareholders Litigation 2009 WL 5173804, *7 (Del.Ch.
2009).
|
B. |
|
Irreparable Harm Will Be Suffered Absent Injunctive Relief |
This Court concludes there to be two separate bases upon which plaintiffs can support their
contention that they will suffer irreparable harm should the Takeover not be enjoin. First,
whenever an important voting decision like a choice of whether to accept a tender-offer is
potentially based on inadequate disclosures, irreparable harm is present. Second, irreparable harm
will also be found whenever a corporate director or board fails to take reasonable steps to
maximize shareholder value. Having met their burden of proving irreparable harm consequent to the
breaches identified above, the shareholders, contrary to the position taken by Portec, are not
limited to an appraisal remedy under West Virginia law.
Irreparable Harm Stemming from the Inadequate Disclosures
Under Delaware law, a material disclosure violation typically creates per se irreparable harm
because the approval of a transaction by uninformed or misinformed shareholders, and the resulting
consummation of that transaction, cannot be adequately remedied by an award of damages. In re
3Com Shareholders Litigation 2009 WL 5173804, *1 (Del.Ch., 2009). When stockholders face an
important voting decision [based] on inadequate disclosures a threat of irreparable harm exists.
In re Netsmart, 924 A.2d at 207; See also ODS Techs. L.P. v. Marshall, 832 A.2d 1254, 1262
(Del. Ch. 2003). Where, as here, material deficiencies exist in the disclosure documents
recommending shareholder action (e.g., the fairness opinion), courts routinely hold injunctive
relief to be an appropriate remedy. See, e.g., Gilmartin v. Adobe
26
Resources Corp., C.A. No. 12467, 1992 Del. Ch. LEXIS 80, at *43 (Del. Ch. Apr. 6, 1992)
([t]he right to cast an informed vote is specific, and its proper vindication in this case
requires a specific remedy such as an injunction, rather than a substitutionary remedy such as
damages.); Eisenberg v. Chicago Milwaukee Corp., 537 A.2d 1051, 1062 (Del. Ch. 1987)
(shareholders right to make informed decision requires a specific remedy for which damages would
be neither meaningful nor adequate).
Irreparable Harm Arising from the Boards Failure to Maximize Shareholder Value
Where the process of review of a proposed transaction by a board is uninformed, tainted or
ineffectual, courts have recognized the necessity for injunctive relief. See Paramount,
637 A.2d at 51; Kumar v. Racing Corp. of America, Inc., No. 12,039, 1991 Del. Ch. LEXIS 75 (Del.
Ch. Apr. 26, 1991) (injunction appropriate where plaintiffs demonstrated breach of duty of care);
Phillips v. Insituform of North America, Inc., 1987 Del. Ch. LEXIS 474, at *33 (Del. Ch. Aug. 27,
1987) (a preliminary injunction is the conventional remedy when a shareholder establishes that a
proposed merger is likely to be found to be in violation of . . . the boards fiduciary
obligations). See also Sealy Mattress Co. v. Sealy, Inc., 532 A.2d 1324, 1335
(Del. Ch. 1987); Joseph v. Shell Oil Co., 482 A.2d 335 (Del. Ch. 1984). Where, shareholders are
potentially deprived of receiving more valuable consideration from a competing offer, they will
suffer irreparable harm absent an injunction. See Netsmart, 924 A.2d at 208 (where the
refusal to grant an injunction presents the possibility that a higher, pending, rival offer might
go away forever, courts have found a possibility of irreparable harm.).
Courts have frequently found injunctive relief to be appropriate where, as here, the process
leading to approval of a sale of control has been flawed by the directors breach of their
obligation to obtain the highest value reasonably available. See Paramount, 637 A.2d at
43-47. Moreover, where a change in corporate control is at stake, a board has a fiduciary duty to
27
maximize the companys value at a sale for the stockholders benefit. Revlon, 506 A.2d at
182; Paramount, 637 A.2d 34 (The consequences of a sale of control impose special obligations on
the directors of a corporation. In particular, they have the obligation of acting reasonably to
seek the transaction offering the best value reasonably available to the stockholders.).
By summarily rejecting a potentially superior $12 initial offer from a hedge fund without any
due deliberation or disclosure to the shareholders, Portecs Board of Directors (principally
through the actions of Marshall Reynolds) prevented market forces from being allowed to operate
freely to bring the targets shareholders the best price available for their equity. Revlon, 506
A.2d at 184. Thus, Portecs failure to take all reasonable steps to maximize shareholder value
constitutes a likely irreparable injury to the shareholders, who may forever relinquish their right
to a fair process and a fair price absent injunctive relief.
Shareholders Are Not Limited to an Appraisal Remedy
Preliminarily, this Court observes that Portecs own corporate process expert, Charles
Cohen, testified as to his opinion that the shareholders in this case were not exclusively limited
to an appraisal remedy. (N.T. 3/22/2010, p. 193).
What is more, under West Virginia law (which is controlling here), an appraisal is only an
exclusive remedy once a corporate transaction is completed. The statutory scheme also
carves out an exception from the appraisal remedy those instances where material misrepresentations
have been foisted upon the shareholders. See W.Va. Code §31D-13-1302(d). Moreover, the West
Virginia law does not contain any specific provisions as to exclusivity. Persinger, 190
W. Va. at 691 (emphasis added). The Persinger court emphasized that dissenters rights are
ordinarily... the exclusive remedy for a dissenting shareholder in the absence of a showing of
fraud, unfairness, or illegality. Id. (emphasis added.) Thus, where, as here, plaintiffs have
shown a likelihood of success on the merits of their claims of breach of fiduciary
28
duty, as well as their claims regarding the inadequacy of the corporate disclosures,
clearly, there is no basis to limit there rights to an appraisal after the Takeover.
C. The Balance of the Hardships Favors Granting Injunctive Relief
The failure of Portecs Board of Directors to fulfill its fiduciary duties by making adequate
disclosures to the shareholders and by taking reasonable steps to maximize shareholder value (i.e.,
consider the overbid from the hedge fund) have the innate potential of forever depriving Portec
shareholders of their opportunity, and right, to act in an informed manner over their decision
whether to approve the Takeover and leaving them irreparably harmed by a fatally flawed process,
causing them to question the adequacy of the consideration offered for their shares.
Indeed, since this may prove to be the only chance for the shareholders to obtain optimal
value for their shares and since the shareholders will be relegated to an appraisal remedy once the
Takeover is consummated, this Court must find that greater injury would result from refusing the
injunction than from granting it. In this same vein, this Court is of the strong opinion that the
narrow relief granted in its accompanying order is narrowly tailored to abate and correct the
offending activity, and can be expeditiously accomplished by Portec in a manner that will neither
jeopardize Portecs financial condition nor the overall prospects of a deal with Foster, once, of
course, the Portec Board of Directors has adequately explored and deliberated over any competing
bids. Consequently, the order of this Court, after completion, shall restore the parties to the
positions and status which they should have enjoyed before this dispute; that being shareholders
prepared to act upon adequate and necessary information and a Board of Directors that has complied
with its fiduciary obligations while presiding over a transaction presenting a change in corporate
control.
29
The time element of the Takeover also augurs in favor of granting injunctive relief. Here,
the closing date of the Tender Offer has already been delayed at least thirty (30) days from the
initial March 25, 2010 date because the United States Department of Justice has requested
additional information about the Takeover pursuant to the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvement
Act of 1976, 15 U.S.C. §18a. And it is the understanding of this Court that the Department of
Justice may seek additional time before it blesses the Takeover. Thus, there is no indication
before this Court that either Portec or Foster will suffer significant injury from this Courts
enjoining of the Tender Offer until such time as proper disclosures have been made and the Portec
Board of Directors has cured its breach of fiduciary duties.
VI. THE INJUNCTION BOND
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1531(b) requires the imposition of a bond in the
connection with the entry of any preliminary injunction. However, courts are vested with
discretion over the amount of the bond. In this particular case, this Court is persuaded that the
bond should be nominal, which, given circumstances of the parties will be set at $2,500. The
setting of a nominal bond herein is consistent with the practice of the Delaware courts in similar
shareholder derivative actions. See, e.g., Solar Cells, Inc. v. True North
Partners, LLC, 2002 WL 749163 (Del. C. 2002); Simonetti Rollover IRA v. Margolis, 2008 WL 2588577
($10,000 bond imposed for injunction of vote on a $1.4 billion merger).
VII. CONCLUSION
In accordance with the foregoing, an appropriate order granting the Motion for Preliminary
Injunction follows.
|
|
|
|
|
Dated: April 21, 2010 |
BY THE COURT:
|
|
|
/s/ Christine A. Ward, J.
|
|
30
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
OF ALLEGHENY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
|
|
|
|
|
IN RE PORTEC RAIL PRODUCTS, INC.
|
|
x |
|
|
SHAREHOLDERS LITIGATION
|
|
:
|
|
CONSOLIDATED CIVIL ACTION |
|
|
:
|
|
G.D. 10-3547 |
|
|
:
|
|
G.D. 10-3562 |
|
|
x
|
|
G.D. 10-3982 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HONORABLE CHRISTINE A. WARD |
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, to wit, this 21st day of April, 2010, pursuant to Rule 1531 of the Pennsylvania Rules
of Civil Procedure and other provisions of applicable law and upon consideration of Plaintiffs and
Defendants Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and respective briefs and responses
thereto and after a two day hearing, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that Plaintiffs
Motion for Preliminary Injunction is GRANTED as follows:
1. Defendants and their agents, pending a final order after a trial on the merits, are hereby
preliminarily enjoined from completing the Tender Offer in connection with the Agreement and Plan
of Merger dated February 16, 2010 pursuant to which Foster Thomas Company is to acquire all of the
issued and outstanding shares of Portec Rail Products, Inc. (Portec) at a purchase price of
$11.71 per share or until this Court determines that the board of Portec has cured the breach of
fiduciary duties as found by this Court and has disclosed the information found by this Court to be
material.
31
2. A status conference in this matter is hereby scheduled for April 30, 2010 at 9:30 a.m., in
Courtroom 820 of the City County Building, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to respond to any questions
regarding the relief granted in thus order.
3. It is further ORDERED that Plaintiffs are to file a bond with the Allegheny County
Department of Court Records, Civil Division, in the amount of $2,500 by the 23rd day of April,
2010, pursuant to Pa.R.Civ.P. 1531(b), pending the final determination of this matter and that the
injunction shall not take effect until Plaintiffs file the required bond with security approved by
the Court.
|
|
|
|
|
|
BY THE COURT:
|
|
|
/s/ Christine A. Ward, J.
|
|
32
exv99waw5wl
EXHIBIT (a)(5)(L)
L.B. Foster and Portec Rail Products Announce Preliminary Injunction Enjoining Tender Offer
PITTSBURGH, PA (April 22, 2010) L.B. Foster Company (L.B. Foster, Nasdaq: FSTR) and Portec Rail
Products, Inc. (Portec, Nasdaq: PRPX) today announced that on April 21, 2010 the Court of Common
Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania issued a preliminary injunction enjoining the completion of
L.B. Fosters tender offer to acquire all of Portecs issued and outstanding common stock. L.B.
Foster and Portec are reviewing the Courts opinion with their advisors to determine a future
course of action.
L.B. Foster Company is a leading manufacturer, fabricator, and distributor of products for the
rail, construction and utility and energy markets with approximately 30 locations throughout the
United States.
Established in 1906, Portec has served both domestic and international rail markets by
manufacturing, supplying and distributing a broad range of rail products, rail anchors, rail
spikes, railway friction management products and systems, rail joints, railway wayside data
collection and data management systems and freight car securement systems. Portec also manufactures
material handling equipment for industries outside the rail transportation sector through its
United Kingdom operation. Portec operates through its four global business segments: Railway
Maintenance Products (Salient Systems), Shipping Systems, Portec Rail Nova Scotia Company in Canada
(Kelsan friction management, rail anchor and spike products), and Portec Rail Products, Ltd. in the
UK (material handling and Coronet Rail products). Portec Rail Products is headquartered in
Pittsburgh, PA.
|
|
|
|
|
Contact information:
|
|
L.B. Foster:
|
|
Portec Rail Products, Inc. |
|
|
David Voltz (412) 928-3431
|
|
Rich Jarosinski |
|
|
dvoltz@lbfosterco.com
|
|
(412)782-6000 X4230 |