Dell Response Confirms Need for Court Clarification of Settlement
Dell has responded to last week’s motion for court clarification of
the settlement terms it must offer[1]
all claimants with statements defining a settlement that is clearly
different from what was orally summarized as a basis for the court’s
approval, effectively supporting the need for review of the actual
agreement.
This is the response that Dell filed (“Response”):
Instead of providing a copy of the agreement, Dell has presented a new
explanation of the settlement as a payment to release rights to appeal
only two specified decisions in the case (Response paragraph 5, page
4):
5. The Settling Petitioners had (and have released through the
settlement approved by the Court) two potential appeal issues that
neither Cavan nor any other petitioner or claimant has, to wit, (1)
the claim that the Court erred in its May 11, 2016, opinion, which
disqualified certain petitioners from the appraisal remedy based on
their shares having been voted in favor of the merger,[footnote
reference]
and (2) the claim that the Court erred in its May 31, 2016, order
denying the Settling Petitioners an "equitable award of interest."
The paragraph then states that these two specified grounds for appeal
“have a different value than those belonging to petitioners or
claimants who may contend that the continuous ownership decision was
incorrect,” and that those grounds for appeal are explicitly excluded
from the settlement. In the footnote, Dell further states that there
was no reason to settle rights to appeal a continuous ownership
decision because the five T Rowe Price petitioners that had been
disqualified on that basis had also voted in favor of the merger, and
therefore “if petitioners were to succeed on appeal on the continuous
ownership issue but not on the voting issue, those petitioners would
still be barred from the appraisal remedy.”[2]
Aside from the implausibility of experienced lawyers and an
experienced client agreeing to pay $28 million to settle only two
particular grounds for appeal rather than all possible grounds for
appeal, this October 18 Response definition is clearly inconsistent
with the oral summary of a settlement in the June 27 Conference on
which the Court based its approval.[3]
Counsel for Dell in fact explicitly included the
continuous ownership grounds for appeal in his June 27 explanation of
the settlement to the Court:
[page 3, identifying the parties to the agreement] It is just the
former stockholders who were affected by the continuous ownership
decision of last year, and then the voting rights decision.
[pages 4-5] These are shares that were excluded by the continuous
ownership decision and/or the voting decision of a few weeks ago. And
what we have done is agreed that we will pay those folks in exchange
for releases where they release their appeal rights.
…they will get some modicum of interest, and in exchange, they will be
releasing their appeal rights with respect to continuous ownership and
the voting decision.
Addressing less dramatic inconsistencies, it should be noted that
nothing was found anywhere in the transcript of the June 27 Conference
suggesting that the agreement of Dell to “pay those folks in exchange
for releases where they release their appeal rights” was intended to
provide for something as unconventional as limiting those releases to
a couple of decisions and allowing the T Rowe Price petitioners to
retain rights to appeal all other decisions. And it seems reasonable
for us to assume that if there had been any hint of such a provision
in the transcript, Dell would have made a point of it in their
Response.
However the Court determines what Dell must offer other claimants in
this case, we should expect everyone on all sides to benefit from the
opportunity this controversy has provided to define needed standards
for fair appraisal settlements as an important foundation of long term
corporate stock investment.[4]
GL – October 24, 2016
Gary Lutin
Chairman, The Shareholder Forum
575 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10022
Tel: 212-605-0335
Email:
gl@shareholderforum.com
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