BOUCHARD, C.
In this appraisal proceeding, the surviving corporation has moved to dismiss a group of former stockholders, each of whom submitted an appraisal demand but has neither filed an appraisal petition nor joined this proceeding as a named party. Those former stockholders have entered into agreements to withdraw their appraisal demands, effective upon the dismissal of this action as to them, in exchange for shares of the surviving corporation on the condition that they attest to their status as "accredited investors" under the federal securities laws. This settlement proposal was made to the other former stockholders who demanded appraisal, including the named petitioner, but they may not be able to satisfy the accredited investor condition.
The question before the Court is a narrow one: under 8 Del. C. § 262(k), is it "just" for the surviving corporation to settle the appraisal demands of certain non-appearing former stockholders on terms that may not be available to others who sought appraisal. As explained below, I conclude this arrangement is just under the circumstances. Under Delaware law, there is no requirement that all dissenting stockholders must settle on the same terms as non-appearing, dissenting stockholders. In this case, approval of the proposed settlement allows the settling dissenters to decide for themselves how to resolve their claims without depriving the non-settling dissenters of their right to a statutory appraisal remedy. Thus, I grant the motion to dismiss.
On August 29, 2014, PlasmaNet, Inc. ("PlasmaNet" or the "Company"), a Delaware corporation, merged with Free Lotto, Inc. The Company is the surviving corporation in the merger, which gave rise to appraisal rights under 8 Del. C. § 262. The total purchase price in the merger was $1,857,900 minus certain adjustments. After the adjustments, the aggregate consideration split among the 19,307,715 outstanding shares of PlasmaNet common stock was approximately $114,000, or roughly six-tenths of a penny per share.
On December 24, 2014, Christopher D. Mannix ("Petitioner") commenced this proceeding, seeking appraisal of his 1,700 PlasmaNet shares. On February 5, 2015, as required by 8 Del C. § 262(f), the Company filed a verified list of the former PlasmaNet stockholders (forty-eight in total) who purported to exercise their appraisal rights. Included on that list are Robert Altschuler, Lance Lundberg, Gijs Van Thiel, Hoefslag, LLC, and Southgreen Acquisition, LLC (collectively, the "Non-Appearing Dissenters"), who collectively demanded appraisal of 1,788,218 shares of PlasmaNet stock. None of the Non-Appearing Dissenters has joined this proceeding as a named party or filed a separate appraisal proceeding. Excluding the shares of the Non-Appearing Dissenters, Petitioner and other former PlasmaNet stockholders have demanded appraisal of 1,671,250 shares.
The Company and the Non-Appearing Dissenters have entered into a settlement of "all debts, liabilities, and obligations" related to the merger, their demands for appraisal, and this appraisal proceeding.
The Company made the same settlement offer to Petitioner, but Petitioner has not accepted it. The Company also made the same offer to all former PlasmaNet stockholders who properly demanded appraisal and who can attest to being an accredited investor.
On March 13, 2015, the Company moved to dismiss this proceeding, with prejudice, solely as to the Non-Appearing Dissenters. On June 26, 2015, I heard oral argument. On July 8, 2015, the parties completed supplemental briefing.
Petitioner contends that the Company's motion must be rejected under Alabama By-Products Corp. v. Cede & Co.
"Under Delaware law, the appraisal remedy is entirely a creature of statute. . . . The remedy is intended to provide those shareholders who dissent from a merger on the basis of inadequacy of offering price with an independent judicial determination of the fair value of their shares."
The Non-Appearing Dissenters could have filed petitions for appraisal too, but they were not required to do so once Petitioner did. Under 8 Del. C. § 262(e), there need be only one appraisal petition—filed by the surviving corporation or by a former stockholder—to commence an appraisal proceeding and thereby entitle all former stockholders with perfected appraisal rights to receive what the Court determines to be the "fair value" of the corporation's stock.
Because only one petition for appraisal is necessary, the appraisal proceeding has often been described as a version of a class action, in which all members of the class enjoy the fruits of the class representative's labor.
A separate provision of the appraisal statute, 8 Del. C. § 262(k), sets forth the ways in which the right to appraisal may cease. Within sixty days after the effective date of the merger, a non-appearing dissenter (i.e., a former stockholder who demanded appraisal but neither commenced nor joined an appraisal proceeding as a named party) can unilaterally withdraw its appraisal demand and accept the terms offered in the merger. After this sixty day period, the surviving corporation must consent to the withdrawal. The requirement of corporate consent reflects a "legislative intent" to give the surviving corporation the "correlative right to obtain [the dissenter's] stock upon payment therefor—a right subject to be defeated only by the occurrence of one of the . . . events specified in the statute [i.e., 8 Del. C. § 262(k)]."
Once a petitioned is filed, the procedural requirements are different. Within the sixty-day period, a non-appearing dissenter may still unilaterally withdraw its appraisal demand, and corporate consent is still required thereafter. But, after the sixty-day period, "no appraisal proceeding in the Court of Chancery shall be dismissed as to any stockholder without the approval of the Court, and such approval may be conditioned upon such terms as the Court deems just."
In Alabama By-Products, the Delaware Supreme Court held that a stockholder cannot withdraw its demand for appraisal "without strict compliance with the appraisal statute."
Alabama By-Products was plainly concerned about the specter of a "buy off," which is a concern inherent in the settlement of representative litigation. As the Court recently explained in In re Activision Blizzard, Inc. Stockholder Litigation,
As seen in Raynor v. LTV Aerospace Corp.,
In my view, the concerns regarding the settlement of representative litigation, discussed in Alabama By-Products and Activision and applied in Raynor, do not apply here, where the surviving corporation seeks to settle the appraisal demands of non-appearing dissenters. "As a general proposition, Delaware law favors settlements."
For this type of settlement, the analogy between the appraisal proceeding and the class action holds true. In In re Winchell's Donut Houses, L.P. Securities Litigation,
Approval of the settlements (and the dismissal with prejudice of the Non-Appearing Dissenters) will have no legal effect on Petitioner's standing in this proceeding or on the ability of other former PlasmaNet stockholders who have demanded appraisal to continue to rely on Petitioner to litigate this proceeding. Petitioner has not presented any evidence suggesting that the settlement terms, which take into account the Company's limitations under the securities laws, are coercive to the Non-Appearing Dissenters or to other former PlasmaNet stockholders. Nor has Petitioner cited any authority that would preclude non-appearing dissenters from accepting a settlement unless the petitioner and all other non-appearing dissenters also are offered—and are able to accept—a settlement on the same terms. Thus, assuming for the sake of argument that PlasmaNet's settlement offer cannot be accepted by all non-appearing dissenters, that factor is not a persuasive reason in my opinion to preclude the Company from settling with the Non-Appearing Dissenters.
Petitioner's argument that the proposed settlement would undercut the economics of this appraisal proceeding (by reducing the number of shares in play and thus the potential aggregate recovery in this action) does not make the proposed settlement unjust in my view. When Petitioner filed his appraisal petition, he was the first former PlasmaNet stockholder to do so. Petitioner and his counsel thus voluntarily accepted the risk that this appraisal proceeding might be limited to 1,700 PlasmaNet shares. Even if Petitioner expected, as was suggested at oral argument, that other former PlasmaNet stockholders had demanded appraisal,
I also reject Plaintiff's post-hearing request that I must require either (i) that the Company provide to the Non-Appearing Dissenters a Court-approved statement of the claims, the defenses, and the litigation alternative to settlement; or (ii) that any settlement communications occur exclusively through Petitioner's counsel, based on Chancellor Allen's decision in Winchell's Donut Houses.
In my judgment, the proposed settlements are just and thus satisfy the standard set forth in 8 Del. C. § 262(k) for the reasons explained above. Accordingly, the Company's motion to dismiss is GRANTED.