Dole Says Claims Over $1.6B Deal 'Recklessly
Villainize' CEO
By Matt
Chiappardi
Law360, Wilmington (July 2,
2015, 6:30 PM ET) --
Dole Food Co. Inc. told a Delaware Chancery judge Thursday that
shareholders challenging the $1.6 billion deal to take the company private
are trying to “recklessly villainize” CEO David H. Murdock with
accusations he colluded with
Deutsche Bank AG to sink the company’s share price before buying it
out.
During spirited post-trial arguments in Wilmington, Dole attorney Bruce L.
Silverstein of
Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor LLP said much of the suing
shareholders' case borders on “character assassination,” and that Murdock
is not a schemer who wrested away control of the company on the cheap, as
he is being cast, but a philanthropist whose primary interest is spreading
health and wellness.
Murdock, 92, is “looking to leave a legacy of health and nutrition,”
Silverstein told Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster. “He’s not looking to
leave the earth with the biggest bank account.”
Silverstein argued that suing shareholders are “cherry picking” documents
and then claiming without any context they show some sort of conspiracy
between Murdock and financial adviser Deutsche Bank to set the pieces in
motion for the buyout before revealing the plan to Dole’s board.
During a lengthy presentation to the court, plaintiffs’ attorney Stuart M.
Grant of
Grant & Eisenhofer PA rarely referred to any of the witnesses during
the nine-day trial this past winter that spoke about the documents in
question, and only cast “aspersions and innuendo,” Silverstein contended.
But Grant countered that Dole’s reasoning in the case is “baloney,” and
that the record shows Murdock was deep in talks with the investment bank
about his buyout months before it was proposed, and while it was doing
work for the company.
“I am cherry picking,” Grant said in court. “I’m picking out the documents
that prove this point.”
The shareholders claim that Murdock made a series of moves to prepare for
the buyout of the 60 percent of Dole he didn’t already own, including the
nearly $1.7 billion sale of its Asian business in 2012 to
Japan's
Itochu Corp. and the CEO’s $300 million sale of the Hawaiian island of
Lanai to software mogul Larry Ellison.
The plaintiffs have also claimed Dole’s stock should have been worth more
than the $13.50-per-share buyout price, but its value was depressed by
pessimistic press releases, a suspended $200 million share repurchase
program and an earlier go-private bid at an even lower price.
In court Thursday, Grant argued that Dole’s stock price should have been
valued more than $10 higher, in the neighborhood of $25 per share.
Attorneys for both Dole and Deutsche Bank strongly refuted the
shareholders’ claims Thursday, arguing there was no evidence of the theory
the plaintiffs were positing, and that even if they could show Murdock was
considering a buyout in the past, there’s a huge “chasm of difference”
between that thought and a scheme to sink the company’s value.
“There is no smoking gun,” Silverstein said.
Deutsche Bank argued that the record doesn’t show the investment bank
aided and abetted any alleged breaches by anyone, and the shareholders are
“over-promising and under-delivering” with their claims.
The issues stems back
to the deal that saw Murdock, who had already owned 40
percent of Dole, take the company private in 2013 in a transaction valued
at $1.6 billion including debt.
Several minority shareholders
sued in Delaware Chancery Court over the deal, alleging the
offer undervalued the company and that a series of moves were engineered
to sink the deal price to that level.
The litigation, which consists of a series of consolidated lawsuits, also
includes an appraisal demand by a handful of hedge funds that bought stock
days before the deal closed and are contending they didn’t get fair value
for their shares.
Vice Chancellor Laster refused to throw out the case at the summary
judgment stage and determined there were
genuine issues of fact that needed to be sorted out at trial,
which took place over nine days starting Feb. 23.
In the Chancery Court, trials do not typically include juries and are
presentations of evidence, with post-trial arguments, akin to closing
arguments, taking place sometimes months later.
Vice Chancellor Laster, who is known for often asking questions during
attorney presentations, said little during the proceedings Thursday.
He took the matter under advisement and is expected to issue an opinion in
writing at some point in the future.
The shareholders are represented by Stuart M. Grant, Geoffrey C. Jarvis
and Nathan A. Cook of Grant & Eisenhofer PA, and Kevin G. Abrams, J. Peter
Shindel, Jr., Daniel R. Ciarrocki and Matthew L. Miller of
Abrams & Bayliss LLP, Randall J. Baron, A. Rick Atwood Jr., David T.
Wissbroecker, Edward M. Gergosian and Maxwell Huffman of
Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP, and Marc A. Topaz, Lee D. Rudy,
Michael C. Wagner, J. Daniel Albert and Justin O. Reliford of
Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check LLP.
Dole and the individual defendants are represented by Bruce L. Silverstein
of Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor and Theodore J. Boutrous, Andrea E.
Neuman, Colin B. Davis, Meryl L. Young and William B. Dawson of
Gibson Dunn.
Deutsche Bank is represented by Stephen C. Norman and Matthew F. Davis of
Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP, and David B. Hennes, Stephen M. Juris,
Joshua D. Roth, Jesse Ryan Loffler and Andrew B. Cashmore of
Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP.
The cases are In re: Dole Food Co. Inc. Stockholder Litigation, case
number 8703, and In re: Dole Food Co Inc. Appraisal Litigation, case
number 9079, in the Delaware Court of Chancery.
--Additional reporting by Lance Duroni, Jamie Santo and Sindu Sundar.
Editing by Emily Kokoll.
© 2015, Portfolio Media, Inc. |