JACOBS, Justice:
The appellant, Sagarra Inversiones, S.L. ("Sagarra"), a Spanish corporation, is a minority shareholder of Corporación Uniland S.A. ("Uniland"), also a Spanish corporation. Sagarra brought a Court of Chancery action to rescind the sale, by Cementos Portland Valderrivas ("CPV"), of Giant Cement Holdings, Inc. ("Giant"), to Uniland. CPV was the controlling stockholder of both Giant and Uniland. Sagarra purported to sue derivatively on behalf of a wholly-owned Delaware subsidiary of Uniland, Uniland Acquisition Corp. ("UAC"), which was specifically created as the vehicle to acquire Giant. Sagarra claimed that the transaction was unfair and the product of self-dealing and, therefore, a breach of fiduciary duty owed under to UAC under Delaware law by UAC's directors, who were aided and abetted by CPV and Uniland.
The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that Sagarra lacked standing to enforce a claim on behalf of UAC. The Court of Chancery held that Sagarra's standing to sue (specifically, its obligation to make a pursuit demand on UAC's parent company board) was governed by Spanish law, because Uniland— the only entity in which Sagarra owns stock—was incorporated in Spain. Because Sagarra failed to satisfy the demand requirements of Spanish law, the Court of Chancery dismissed Sagarra's action. We uphold the Court of Chancery's reasoning and judgment, and affirm.
Uniland is a business entity formed under Spanish law. CPV, a Spanish entity
Two Uniland subsidiaries were involved in the Giant transaction. The first was Uniland International B.V. ("Uniland B.V."), a Dutch holding company that was wholly owned by Uniland. The second was UAC, a wholly-owned Delaware subsidiary of Uniland B.V. UAC was the acquisition vehicle for the Giant transaction. Thus, and as illustrated by the chart on the following page, within this hierarchy UAC was a third-tier subsidiary of Uniland.
In 2009, Giant and its controlling stockholder, CPV, found themselves in financial distress. To improve its financial picture, CPV attempted to dispose of Giant for $270 million and sought out potential acquirers at that price, but without success.
In September 2010, CPV proposed to Uniland's Board of Directors that Uniland B.V. acquire Giant for $278 million. Sagarra's Board representative opposed CPV's proposal. Presumably in an effort to placate Sagarra, the investment bank, UBS, was retained to perform an independent valuation of Giant. But, CPV later directed UBS to suspend its valuation, and instead provided Sagarra a March 2010 PricewaterhouseCoopers ("PWC") study that valued Giant at $700 million. Sagarra's representative objected to the PWC study as overstating Giant's value. Evidently that objection was not fanciful: UBS later rendered an opinion that an appropriate purchase price would fall within a range between $66 million and $151 million.
CPV eventually ceased its efforts to obtain Sagarra's assent to its proposal and, on December 28, 2010, caused the acquisition of Giant to proceed. The next day, over the opposition of Sagarra's lone Board representative, a majority of Uniland's Board (who represented CPV's interests) approved the transaction at a price of $279 million, payable in installments. On December 30, 2010, a stock purchase agreement ("SPA") was executed to document the terms of the transaction. The record discloses that at least two of the four installment payments required by the SPA have been made; the third payment is scheduled to occur in January 2012.
Sagarra then attempted to halt the Giant transaction in litigation that Sagarra brought in both Spain and Delaware. In January 2011, Sagarra filed a special statutory proceeding in the Spanish courts to nullify the Board's vote approving the acquisition of Giant. According to Sagarra, if that lawsuit ultimately succeeds, then under Spanish law, Sagarra must prosecute a second action to rescind the SPA. Sagarra estimates that these Spanish legal proceedings (including any appeals) may not be finally resolved until 2020.
In February 2011, Sagarra filed this action in the Delaware Court of Chancery, purporting to assert both "multi-tier" derivative claims, and two direct claims, all frontally challenging the validity of the Giant transaction. In an August 5, 2011 Opinion and Order, the Vice Chancellor dismissed all of Sagarra's derivative claims on the ground that Sagarra lacked standing under Spanish law to sue derivatively. As for Sagarra's two direct claims, the court held that one was actually derivative in nature, and therefore was dismissed for lack of standing. The other direct claim was dismissed on forum non conveniens grounds, under McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Engineering Co. ("McWane").
Addressing whether Sagarra had standing to assert its claims derivatively, the Court of Chancery determined that Spanish law governed that issue, and that Sagarra lacked standing under Spanish law, which required Sagarra to request the Uniland Board to convene a meeting of its
This appeal followed.
Sagarra's principal claim on this appeal is that the Court of Chancery erred in determining that Spanish law governed the derivative standing requirements applicable to Sagarra. Instead, Sagarra contends, the Court of Chancery should have applied Delaware law, specifically Delaware's presuit demand jurisprudence including its "demand futility" doctrine. Sagarra advances three, somewhat overlapping, reasons for this position. First, Sagarra contends that it is suing to enforce a right possessed by UAC, which is a Delaware corporation. Although Sagarra concedes that UAC is a third-tier subsidiary of the entity in which Sagarra holds stock (Uniland), Sagarra urges that Delaware "tailor[s] ... multi-tier derivative" standing based on "equitable" principles, to "ensure that breaches of duty by directors of a Delaware subsidiary cannot escape judicial review." Second, Sagarra argues that a proper application of the internal affairs doctrine requires the application of Delaware's derivative standing rules, because the right Sagarra seeks to enforce "is not a right created in any way by Spanish law." Rather, that right "arose [under Delaware law] when Uniland SA incorporated a subsidiary in Delaware.... [The] Delaware subsidiary's board [therefore] breached their [fiduciary] duties in effectuating that transaction."
This Court reviews a trial court's grant of a motion to dismiss de novo.
Delaware law has long recognized that a shareholder of a parent corporation may bring suit derivatively to enforce the claim of a wholly owned corporate subsidiary, where the subsidiary and its controller parent wrongfully refuse to enforce the subsidiary's claim directly.
Sagarra's standing to sue derivatively on behalf of UAC must necessarily derive from its ownership of shares of Uniland, because Uniland is the only corporation in which Sagarra owns shares. Without that ownership stake, Sagarra would have no basis to claim standing to sue on behalf of any entity within the Uniland corporate hierarchy. Under Delaware law, a shareholder that holds shares only in a parent corporation must establish its standing to proceed derivatively at the parent level, in order to claim standing to enforce, on the parent's behalf, a claim belonging to that parent's Delaware subsidiary.
On that point our law is settled. As we recently held in Lambrecht v. O'Neal, where "the wholly-owned subsidiary preexisted the alleged wrongdoing ... and the plaintiff owns stock only in the parent... [a demand can] only be made—and a derivative action [can] only be brought—at the parent, not the subsidiary, level."
That brings us to the next issue, which is: what body of standing law applies at the parent company level—the law of Delaware (as Sagarra claims) or of Spain (as the Vice Chancellor held)? That question must be resolved under the governing choice of law principle, which in Delaware is the internal affairs doctrine.
In American corporation law, the internal affairs doctrine is a dominant and overarching choice of law principle.
The presuit demand requirement is quintessentially an "internal affair" that falls within the scope of the internal affairs doctrine. As this Court explained in Aronson v. Lewis, the presuit demand requirement serves a core function of substantive corporation law, in that it allocates, as between directors and shareholders, the authority to sue on behalf of the corporation.
Those "contours of the demand requirement" fall firmly within the gravitational pull of the internal affairs doctrine, and thus are determined by the law of the jurisdiction of incorporation of the entity on whose board a presuit "demand" is required. In this case, the law of Spain governs the presuit demand requirements that Sagarra must satisfy to sue derivatively on Uniland's behalf, to enforce the claim of Uniland's ultimate Delaware subsidiary, UAC.
Sagarra's final argument is that that rule should be set aside in this specific
When Sagarra took ownership of its Uniland shares, it did so with presumed knowledge that its ownership interest was subject to the legal rights conferred, and the restrictions imposed, by the Spanish legal regime.
For the above reasons, the judgment of the Court of Chancery is affirmed.
First, the Hamilton Partners court—presumably addressing a supposed contrary suggestion in Lambrecht—asserts that where a corporation is acquired in a reverse triangular merger, "[p]ost-merger, only the board of directors of the subsidiary has statutory authority over the [corporation's] derivative claim[s]." Id. at 1204-05 (citing 8 Del. C. § 141(a)) (emphasis in original). That statement, as phrased, is incorrect. Although the subsidiary's board has the sole statutory authority to decide whether or not to cause the subsidiary to assert the acquired claim directly, it is not accurate to say that the board has exclusive post-merger authority "over the derivative claim." By definition a derivative claim implicates the equitable right of a shareholder to assert the claim on the subsidiary's behalf. The subsidiary's board has the statutory "authority to choose whether [or not] to pursue the litigation," Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d 779, 786 (Del. 1981) (emphasis added), but in the derivative context that authority is not exclusive, because where a shareholder has legitimate standing to proceed derivatively, the board's managerial decision not to sue will "not [be] respected." Id.
Second, and relatedly, Hamilton Partners implies that Lambrecht stands for the "statutorily incorrect" proposition that a parent corporation may assert (post-merger) a subsidiary's claim directly. 11 A.3d at 1205 (stating that a parent corporation in a triangular merger "does not receive the right to sue as a result of the merger and cannot assert directly the right of the subsidiary"). Lambrecht stands for no such proposition: it states only that the parent, as a practical matter and by virtue of its 100% control, can cause its wholly owned subsidiary to enforce its claim directly. Lambrecht, 3 A.3d at 288 (describing the "direct exercise of ... 100 percent control").
Third, Hamilton Partners, citing Lewis v. Anderson, 477 A.2d 1040 (Del. 1984), suggests that because the acquired claim is a statutory "asset" of the subsidiary and is subject to the subsidiary's board's managerial authority, the parent has no property interest in that claim. Hamilton Partners, 11 A.3d at 1204 (asserting that Lambrecht "is inaccurate to cite a `legal precept, confirmed in Lewis v. Anderson ... that as a result of [a reverse triangular] merger, [the acquired subsidiary's] claim becomes the property of [the parent] as a matter of statutory law."). That suggestion misreads Lewis, where this Court stated that "[t]he Chancellor ruled that plaintiff [shareholder's]... underlying claim [post-merger] thereby became the exclusive property right of [the subsidiary] and its sole shareholder, [the parent corporation]. We agree...." 477 A.2d at 1042 (emphasis added).
The "parent-has-no-property-interest" conclusion that Hamilton Partners attributes to Lewis, is also a non-sequitur. In Lewis, after the triangular merger the resulting subsidiary became the sole statutory "owner" of the acquired corporation's claim. But that fact did not (nor could it) operate to negate or extinguish any interest in that claim that the corporate parent (as 100% owner of the resulting subsidiary) acquired. Post-merger, the parent had an indirect property interest or right in that claim that it did not have before the merger. See Buechner v. Farbenfabriken Bayer Aktiengesellschaft, 154 A.2d 684, 686-87 (Del. 1959) (describing parent corporation's property interest in subsidiary's corporate assets as an "indirect interest" which creditors of parent cannot reach directly, absent fraud). The significance of the subsidiary's exclusive ownership of the claim—for double derivative standing purposes—is not that it negates any property interest of the parent. Rather, its significance is that the parent's indirect property interest in the claim is subject to the subsidiary's board's discretionary power to decide whether to enforce that claim. But, even so, as we recognized in Lambrecht (and the Court of Chancery recognized in Hamilton Partners), as a practical matter the parent can always use its 100% controlling position to cause the subsidiary to enforce its claim, even though that claim is, statutorily speaking, the "property" of the subsidiary.