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Full Opinion
dissenting:
The Court of Chancery generally has broad discretion in fashioning certain equitable remedies.1 Although this might suggest that this Court should defer to the *170Chancellor who ordered one of the most extreme remedies possible â a sale of a financially successful corporation over the objections of one or more of its three stockholders â our review of the Court of Chanceryâs order requires construction of a statute, namely, 8 Del, C. § 226 (âSection 226â). Embedded in this choice of remedy is the question of whether a court-appointed custodian has the power to force the sale of a stockholderâs stock absent that stockholderâs consent. The interpretation of a statute is a question of law which we review de novo.2 My analysis of the statutory scheme suggests that the answer is âno.â Accordingly, I respectfully DISSENT.3
Given that we are faced with a question as to the permissible limits of the Court of Chanceryâs power under Section 226, the flexibility typically afforded the Court of Chancery in fashioning equitable remedies must yield to the more specific principles underlying the relevant statutory provisions and common law interpreting these provisions.4 The first principle concerns the uncontested fact that, in the DGCL, stock is âpersonal propertyâ and is generally subject to traditional property law policies favoring free alienation.5 Generally, *171where the possibility of defeasance of a stockholderâs stock may occur over the stockholderâs objection, those restraints on free transferability and alienation of stock are expressly set forth in the relevant statute. That fact strongly suggests that Section 226 should not be so broadly read as to allow for a forced sale or other divestiture of a stockholderâs stock by mere implication. The second principle is the longstanding, uncontested common law principle that the involvement of the Court of Chancery and court-appointed custodians in a corporationâs business and affairs should be kept to a minimum.6 This longstanding common law view is reflected in the fact that the parties here cannot point to a single case in the history of our Section 226 jurisprudence where a court has ordered a custodial sale of a company over a stockholderâs objections. These specific policies should be the analytical focal point in construing Section 226 and the permissible limits of the trial courtâs power.7
The appellants add a constitutional gloss on appeal that was not raised below, namely, they contend that a forced sale of their stock might well constitute an unconstitutional âtakingâ of their personal property in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and of Article I, Section 8 of the Delaware Constitution. They contend that in order to avoid this potential constitutional problem, Section 226 ought to be construed more narrowly in favor of the implementation of less drastic remedies. The âtakingsâ argument presents novel issues of first impression, which I would not reach.
A holistic reading of the DGCL supports the view that divestiture of a stockholderâs stock may occur over the stockholderâs objection in a number of situations â but only when the relevant statute expressly so provides.8 Examples where a stockholder is forced to give up her shares have one thing in common â the relevant statutory provisions expressly contemplate that situation and provide fair notice that it may occur. Here, Section 226 contains no such express provision or notice of such potential forced divestiture. I know of no situations in the DGCL where a forced sale of stock can occur absent fair notice, and the Majority cites to none. The absence of authority grounded in the statute, the. conceded absence of any similar cases under Section 226, and our common lawâs strong preference for the least intrusive remedies in cases involving court-appointed custodians suggest that the Chancellor went too far too fast in ordering the Modified Auction.
*172I.
The Statutory Scheme Suggests that the Court of Chancery Lacked the Power to Order Stockholders to Sell Their Shares
In its current form, Section 226(a) permits the Court of Chancery to appoint a custodian in the event of stockholder deadlock, director deadlock, or abandonment of the corporation:
The Court of Chancery, upon application of any stockholder, may appoint 1 or more persons to be custodians and, if the corporation is insolvent, to be receivers, of and for any corporation when:
(1) At any meeting held for the election of directors the stockholders are so divided that they have failed to elect successors to directors whose terms have expired or would have expired upon qualification of their successors; or
(2) The business of the corporation is suffering or is threatened with irreparable injury because the directors are so divided respecting the management of the affairs of the corporation. that the required vote for action by the board of directors cannot be obtained and the. stockholders are unable to terminate this division; or
(3)The corporation has abandoned its business and has failed within a reasonable time to take steps to dissolve, liquidate or distribute its assets.9
In the case of shareholder deadlock, as here, â[t]he decision to appoint a custodian ... is committed to the [ejourtâs discretionâ and does not require a showing of irreparable injury to the corporation.10
Section 226(b) sets forth the authority of the custodian and states that the custodianâs authority is to continue the business of the corporation and not to liquidate its affairs and distribute its assets:
A custodian appointed under this section shall have all the powers and title of a receiver appointed under § 291 of this title, but the authority of the custodian is to continue the business of the corporation and not to liquidate its affairs and distribute its assets, except when the Court shall otherwise order and except in cases arising under paragraph (a)(3) of this section or § 352(a)(2) of this title.11
In the event of a court-ordered liquidation, the custodian takes custody of the assets of the corporation â not of the stockholderâs stock (which is the stockholderâs personal property).12 Section 159 of the DGCL *173provides that â[t]he shares of stock in every corporation shall be deemed personal property and transferable as provided in Article 8 of subtitle I of Title 6.â13 This Court, in Grimes v. Alteon,14 stated that â[s]hares of stock are â species of property rightâ that is of âfoundational importance to our economic system.â â15
Although the powers of the custodian under Section 226 are defined by reference to Section 291, as this Court has stated, Section 226 powers âare not as unlimited as the powers of a receiver appointed under the general equitable powers of the court, or under the forerunner to the present [Section] 226(a)(1).â16 Nor does Section 291 grant the receiver power over the personal property -of the stockholders, although a receiver may sell the property of the corporation under certain circumstances.17
Review of the relevant statutory scheme suggests that it is unlikely that the General Assembly intended to permit a stockholderâs fundamental personal property rights to be abridged by mere implication. Where the DGCL does so permit restrictions on the stockholderâs free transferability and alienation of her stock, including forced dispositions and transfers of stock ownership, it does so expressly. Examples include Section 251(c) (permitting approval of mergers by a majority of stockholders, such that dissenting stockholders are divested of their stock subject only to appraisal rights under Section 262); Section 273 (authorizing dissolution' of a joint venture owned by two 50% stockholders); and Section 303(a) (involving actions that may be taken in bankruptcy proceedings that are deemed to be unanimous actions of the stockholders).
As to the first of these examples, the DGCL contemplates the conversion of shares when corporations merge.18 Sec*174tion 251 of the DGCL governs mergers. Subsections 251(b) and (c) set forth requirements that a merger agreement must satisfy. Section 251(b)(5), for example, provides that a merger agreement shall state:
The manner, if any, of converting the shares of each of the constituent corporations into shares or other securities of the corporation or resulting from the merger or consolidation, or of cancelling some or all of such shares, and, if any shares of any of the constituent corporations are not to remain outstanding, to be converted solely into shares or other securities of the surviving or resulting corporation or to be cancelled, the cash, property, rights or securities of any other corporation or entity which the holders of such shares are to receive in exchange for, or upon conversion of such shares and the surrender of any certificates evidencing them, which cash, property, rights or securities of any other corporation or entity may be in addition to or in lieu of shares or other securities of the surviving or resulting corporation[.]â19
Section 251(c) requires that the merger agreement required by subsection (b) be submitted to the stockholders at an annual or special meeting âfor the purpose of acting on the agreement.â20 It also sets forth notice requirements. Because the power to merge is expressly conferred by statute, every stockholder of a Delaware corporation accepts his or her shares with notice of these provisions. Though a stockholder might be able to pursue an appraisal action to ensure he or she has received adequate compensation,21 he or she cannot prevent the merger from proceeding on the basis of absence of consent.22 Importantly, it is clear from the express words of the statute that this outcome is a possibility.23
Section 273 applies to joint ventures owned in equal parts by two stockholders and expressly allows for dissolution over the objection of one of them.24 Its purpose is to alleviate a âfundamental deadlockâ by âremoving the need for obtaining a unani*175mous vote[.]â25 Section 273 âcontemplates that the Court of Chancery will enforce an agreed-upon disposition of the assets or, absent such agreement, that the court may order compulsory dissolution of the venture.â26 Thus, Section 273 expressly permits dissolution of a joint venture even if one 50% owner objects. âThe legislature enacted Section 273 to provide a speedy method of dissolving a joint venture corporation when its two 50/50 shareholders are in deadlock.â 27 Section 273(a) provides, in relevant part:
If the stockholders of a corporation of this State, having only 2 stockholders each of which own 50% of the stock therein, shall be engaged in the prosecution of a joint venture and if such stockholders shall be unable to agree upon the desirability of discontinuing such joint venture and disposing of the assets used in such venture, either stockholder may, unless otherwise provided in the certificate of incorporation of the corporation or in a written agreement be-tioeen the stockholders, file with the Court of Chancery a petition stating that it desires to discontinue such joint venture and to dispose of the assets used in such venture in accordance with a plan to be agreed upon by both stockholders or that, if no such plan shall be agreed upon by both stockholders, the corporation be dissolved....28
âAccordingly, the Court may provide relief to a shareholder if (1) the corporation has only two 50% shareholders (2) who are prosecuting a joint venture and (3) who are unable to agree on discontinuing the joint venture.â29 The Majorityâs attempt to bring this case within the ambit of Section 273 ignores the significance of that separate statute â a point acknowledged by the Chancellor, who agreed that Section 273 did not apply.30
Section 303(a) provides that corporate actions taken pursuant to orders of the courts in federal bankruptcy proceedings may be taken âwithout further action by [the corporationâs] directors or stockholdersâ and that â[s]ueh power and authority may be exercisedâ by a representative appointed by the court âwith like effect as if exercised and taken by unanimous action of the directors and stockholders of the corporation.â31 These actions may allow the corporation, for example, to:
amend its certificate of incorporation, and make any change in its capital or capital stock, or any other amendment, change, or alteration, or provision, authorized by this chapter; be dissolved, transfer all or part of its assets, merge or consolidate as permitted by this chapter, in which case, however, no stockholder shall have any statutory right of appraisal of such stockholderâs stock *176....32
In contrast to each of the provisions above, Section 226 contains no language that suggests that a court-ordered custodian has the power to compel a forced disposition of a stockholderâs personal property (stock).
Relatedly, other provisions of the DGCL address restrictions on transfers of stock and also make clear that restrictions must be stated expressly and clearly. For example, restrictions are often utilized in closely held corporations in order to protect the utilization of certain tax treatment. Section 202 sets forth requirements for a valid restriction on the transfers of securities. The restriction must be ânoted conspicuouslyâ on the stock certificate, and it may be imposed in the corporationâs certificate of incorporation or bylaws.33 Also, â[u]nless noted conspicuouslyâ on the stock certificate, such restrictions are âineffective except against a person with actual knowledge of the restriction.â34 Notably, the ânoted conspicuouslyâ and âactual knowledgeâ phrases are derived from the Uniform Commercial Code (the âUCCâ) as adopted in Delaware (to which Section 159 refers) and âshould be interpreted in light of the relevant Code definitions.â35
Although Delaware courts generally have been reluctant to invalidate stock restrictions,36 this approach is âconsistent with the general principle that Delaware corporate law is enabling, and does not impose choices on market participants.â37 âDelaware public policy generally empowers market participants to decide for themselves whether to enter into contracts restricting their right to sell their shares.â38 But a forced transfer, untethered to any express statutory authorization, and absent notice of such possible defeasance, divestiture, or transfer, is counter to the principles of free alienation. The general view that the DGCL is broadly enabling does not undercut the conclusion that Section 226 ought to be construed narrowly by a court to bar a custodianâs sale of a stockholderâs stock absent consent. Rather, the enabling aspect of the DGCL implies an element of consensual structuring of the corporate contract concerning the relevant participants.39
*177To further illustrate the importance attributed to fair notice in the DGCL, in Grimes, this Court identified as one of âtwo fundamental policies of Corporation Lawâ ensuring âcertainty in the instruments upon which the corporationâs capital structure is based.â40 This Court repeated the need for âstrict adherence to statutory formality in matters relating to the issuance of capital stockâ and noted that âDelawareâs statutory structure implements these policies through a 'clear and easily followed legal roadmapâ of statutory provisions.â 41 There, this Court rejected a claim of validity of an oral promise made to a stockholder by the CEO to sell ten percent of the corporationâs future private stock offering to the stockholder. This Court held that Sections 151, 152, 153, 157, 161, and 166 of the DGCL, when read together, âcontemplate board approval and a written instrument evidencing the relevant transactions affecting issuance of stock and the corporationâs capital structure.â42 In the instant case, although factually distinguishable, the same need for â[cjertainty in investor expectationsâ43 suggests a court should not have power to order stockholders to sell their stock to a third party over their objections â without, at least, advance statutory fair notice to stockholders of such a possibility.
This narrower construction of Section 226 is further supported by examining the special provisions for close corporations in Sections 352 and 353, which also embody concepts of notice and consent, as well as a statutory preference for less drastic, interim remedies to address deadlock situations. For example, Sections 352 and 353 expressly provide for provisional directors in deadlock situations. Section 352 empowers the Court of Chancery, in addition to Section 226, to appoint a custodian for a close corporation in two scenarios. The first is where â[pjursuant to § 351 of this title the business and affairs of the corporation are managed by the stockholders and they are so divided that the business of the corporation is suffering or is threatened with irreparable injury and any remedy with respect to such deadlock provided in the . certificate of incorporation or bylaws or in any written agreement of the stockholders has failed[.]â44 The second occurs where a stockholder has the âright to the dissolution of the corporation under a provision of the certificate of incorporation *178permitted by § 355 of this title.â45 Notably, under Section 355, a stockholder of a close corporation does not have a right of dissolution unless that right is provided in the corporationâs charter. Again, the concepts of fair notice and consent are expressly set forth in the statute. Subsections 355(b) and (c) provide:
(b) If the certificate of incorporation as originally filed does not contain a provision authorized by subsection (a) of this section, the certificate may be amended to include such provision if adopted by the affirmative vote of the holders of all the outstanding stock, whether or not entitled to vote, unless the certifĂcate of incorporation specifically authorizes such an amendment by a vote which shall be not less than 2/3 of all the outstanding stock whether or not entitled to vote.
(c) Each stock certificate in any corporation whose certificate of incorporation authorizes dissolution as peiâmitted by this section shall conspicuously note on the face thereof the existence of the provision. Unless noted conspicuously on the face of the stock certificate, the provision is ineffective.46
As an alternative to appointing a custodian, Section 353(a) provides:
[T]he Court of Chancery may appoint a provisional director for a close corporation if the directors are so divided respecting the management of the corporationâs business and affairs that the votes required for action by the board of directors cannot be obtained with the consequence that the business and affairs of the corporation can no longer be conducted to the advantage of the stockholders generally.47
Additionally, âSection 352(b) expressly invites the [cjourt to opt for the less intrusive remedy of a provisional director as authorized by Section 353 if the [cjourt concludes that such an alternative order would be in the best interests of the corporation. Accordingly, the [cjourt is authorized â and, by virtue of this provision, mildly encouraged â to consider resort to that more limited remedy even if the petition itself makes no application for such relief.â 48
Delaware law also provides for both statutory and equitable dissolution of Delaware corporations, either of which may cause the involuntary divestiture of stockholdersâ personal property interests. Subchapter X of the DGCL details the procedures for dissolution.49 Section 275 provides, in relevant part:
(a) If it should be deemed advisable in the judgment of the board of directors of any corporation that it should be dissolved, the board, after the adoption of a resolution to that effect by a majority of the whole board at any meeting called for that purpose, shall cause notice of the adoption of the resolution and of a *179meeting of stockholders to take action upon the resolution to be mailed to each stockholder entitled to vote thereon as of the record date for determining the stockholders entitled to notice of the meeting.
(b) At the meeting a vote shall be taken upon the proposed dissolution. If a majority of the outstanding stock of the corporation entitled to vote thereon shall vote for the proposed dissolution, a certification of dissolution shall be filed with the Secretary of State pursuant to subsection (d) of this section.
(c) Dissolution of a corporation may also be authorized without action of the directors if all the stockholders entitled to vote thereon shall consent in writing and a certificate of dissolution shall be filed with the Secretary of State pursuant to subsection (d) of this section.50
The dissolution process contemplated by Section 275 is voluntary in that dissolution will only occur if a majority of stockholders either vote in favor of the dissolution or consent of all stockholders to the dissolution is obtained in writing. However, much like a merger under the DGCL, a dissenting stockholder may be involuntarily divested of his or her property interest even if he or she votes against the majority.51 The dissolution statutory scheme contemplates both relinquishment of an interest in personal property and the protective mechanism of a stockholder vote.
At oral argument, there was a suggestion that Ms. Shawe conceded in her Reply Brief that the Court of Chancery had the power to order dissolution or liquidation here and that, a fortiori, the Court could have ordered a sale of the entire company. I did not read Ms. Shaweâs Reply Brief to concede that either dissolution or liquidation would be appropriate here, and, indeed, at oral argument her counsel strongly contended that the references in her Reply Brief were intended to apply *180only when a company is insolvenfy-ra situation unquestionably not present here. I disagree with that suggestion, in any event, since Section 226(b) explicitly establishes . the overarching requirement that âthe authority of the custodian is to continue the business of the corporation and not to liquidate its affairs and distribute its assets.â A dissolution under the circumstances here would be inconsistent with that express statutory requirement.52 No one has seriously argued on appeal that a dissolution, an asset sale, or a liquidation is an option.53 The Majority acknowledges that â[njeither Elting nor Shawe want an asset sale,â which it says could result in âruinous consequences!!.]â54
Other involuntary divestitures outside the corporate arena support the concept *181that express statutory authorization is needed for a court-ordered forced sale to occur. For example, â[ejquity courts have historically upheld the right of a tenant in common to seek a partition of personal property.â55 The partition of real property is contemplated by 25 Del. C. § 721(a), which provides:
When any 2 or more persons hold lands and tenements within this State as joint tenants or tenants in common, or as parceners under the intestate laws of this State, or when any persons hold an interest either in possession or in remainder in lands and tenements within this State, ... any 1 or more of them ... may present a petition to the Court of Chancery .... The petition shall state the facts, describe the lands and tenements so held, and pray partition thereof among the several parties entitled to such lands and tenements according to their several and respective interests.56
âPartition means a severance of interests which are concurrent.â57 âThe purpose of a partition proceeding is to eliminate a present concurrent interest in the same property so that each owner may enjoy and possess his or her interest in severalty.â58 As a general rule, a co-ownerâs right to seek partition of jointly owned property is âalmost absolute, since the right is an incident of common ownership.â59 Importantly, this remedy is part of a statutory scheme that expressly contemplates the relinquishment of some or all of co-ownersâ property interests, including by a court-ordered sale.60
The Court of Chanceryâs decisions appointing a custodian and accepting the Custodianâs recommendation with respect to the Modified Auction contain no textual analysis of the relevant statutory scheme. Instead, the Chancellor relied on two cases, which are distinguishable due to the presence of stockholder consent to the sales in both of those cases. In Bentas v. Haseotes,61 the parties agreed that liquidation was necessary but disagreed on the method that would âmaximize stockholder value.â62 In Fulk v. Washington Service Associates, Inc.,63 the parties âendorse[d]â *182and âsupport[ed]â a custodianâs plan for sale of a corporation pursuant to Section 273, objecting only to certain closing terms.64
Moreover, it is no answer, as Ms. Elting suggests, that Section 394 provides that all corporations agree to make all provisions (including Section 226) part of their respective charters.65 This is a circular argument.66 The question here is what are the limits, if any, of the courtâs power under Section 226? Our statutory scheme should be read harmoniously.67 Reading the statutory scheme harmoniously compels the conclusion that Section 226 does not permit the Court of Chancery to confer upon a custodian the power to sell a corporation over the objection of its shareholders. Thus, I believe that the Court of Chancery erred by ordering the Modified Auction.
II.
The Common Law Rule of Judicial Restraint Regarding Custodial Powers Suggests a More Limited Remedy
Similarly, the policies of judicial restraint embedded in our common law underlying Section 226 suggest that the Modified Auction Orderâs forced sale provision goes too far. Historically, âthe common law generally disdained judicial relief of any kind with respect to a solvent but deadlocked corporation.â68 Though the pre-1967 iteration of Section 226 vested in the Court of Chancery the discretion to appoint receivers of and for deadlocked corporations, the court was hesitant to interfere in the business of deadlocked but solvent companies.69 This Court has observed that the General Assemblyâs intent *183with respect to the 1967 revisions âwas to ease the onerous burden of proof under the prior case law which made the appointment of a receiver for a solvent corporation almost hopeless, despite a potentially permanent shareholder-deadlock.â70
But even so, this Court has determined that â[t]he involvement of the Court of Chancery and its custodian in the corporationâs business and affairs should be kept to a minimum and should be exercised only insofar as the goals of fairness and justice, as stated [in Giuricich], require.â71 Consistent with this sentiment, at least since the 1967 revisions, the parties have pointed to no case in which the Court of Chancery has exercised its power under Section 226 to order that a company be sold over stockholder objection.72 Although cases exist in which the Court of Chancery has authorized a custodian to sell a deadlocked corporation pursuant to Section 226, such authorization has been granted only upon agreement by stockholders that a sale was appropriate. In particular, the cases on which Ms. Elting relies nearly universally involved situations where the stockholders consented to a sale.73 For example, in Fulk,74 a stockholder sought relief under Section 273, and a court-appointed custodian recommended a sale process in which one stockholder would buy the otherâs fifty percent share.75 With the exception of certain details,76 the parties âendorse[d]â and âsupport[ed]â the custodianâs plan.77 Likewise, in Bentas,78 the Court of Chancery ordered that a corporation be auctioned only after two stockholder factions submit*184ted competing proposals to liquidate the company. More recently, in EB Trust v. Information Management Services, Inc.,79 the parties to a Section 226 proceeding âagreed that a sale of 100% of the stock of the [c]ompany is the best means of maximizing value for the benefit of the stockholders[.]â80 Similarly, in In re Supreme Oil Company,81 âthe parties agreed [in a Section 226 action] that a sale of 100% of the stock of the [c]ompany or the buy-out of [one of two competing stockholder groups], as the case may be, may be the best means of maximizing value for the benefit of the stockholders.â82
Stockholder consent has a significant effect on the extent to which a remedy intrudes upon a corporationâs business and affairs. The existence of consent by stockholders to a sale alters the dynamic with respect to the Court of Chanceryâs exercise of its discretion in those cases. Almost by definition, if there is consent, there is less âintrusion.â83
Cases in which the Court of Chancery has appointed custodians for solvent corporations support a narrowly tailored, incremental approach to the custodianâs power. For example, in Miller v. Miller,84 the Court of Chancery rejected a fifty-percent stockholderâs attempt to secure appointment of a custodian to divide or liquidate a corporation, reasoning that â[t]he mere existence of an even stockholder split does not, by itself, authorize dissolution of the corporation or the sale of its only asset through the appointment of a custodian under 8 Del. C. § 226, at least without more.â85 Instead, the custodianâs âpowers should be tailored as narrowly as possible because judicially-supervised interference with the ordinary operation of a corporation should be kept to a minimum.â86 The court appointed a custodian for a two-year term to âbreak material deadlocksâ between the two equal stockholders, âresolve operational deadlocks[,]â and âseek to resolve the impasse over the future ofâ the corporation.87 It explicitly instructed the custodian not to âsell or divideâ the corporationâs assets.88
The Court of Chanceryâs decisions in Bentas89 illustrate the principle that the court should minimize its intrusion in the business of the corporation â and actually attempt (not merely consider and reject) *185less intrusive remedies. There, four stockholder-directors, who owned the corporation in equal shares, were divided into two factions. After one faction sought appointment of a custodian, the Court of Chancery initially declined to appoint a custodian, and instead ordered a stockholdersâ meeting pursuant to Section 211 to determine whether the stockholders were deadlocked.90 As a result of the meeting, two family directors were elected, and the remaining two family directors did not receive the requisite votes and became holdover directors.91 The court thereafter appointed a custodian, reasoning that the circumstances, including the holdover directorsâ history of exercising ânegative controlâ over the company by defeating quorum at board meetings,92 implicated a âconcern that [Section] 226(a)(1) is designed to remedy, namely, a stockholder deadlock that would âpermit control of the corporation to remain indefinitely in the hands of a self-perpetuating board of directors.â â93
As to the scope of the appointment, the defendants sought authorization for the custodian either to divide the companyâs assets into two corporations, âcause the corporation to purchase the plaintiffsâ interest in the [c]ompany[,]â or, âfailing either of the above described alternatives, sell the [c]ompany to a third party, structured either as an asset or stock sale.â94 The plaintiffs advocated a role in which the custodian would âinvestigate potential solutions to resolve the deadlock among the stockholders; to recommend such solutions to the stockholders; and in the event no proposal is acceptable to . all of the stockholders, to recommend liquidation of the [e]ompany to the [c]ourt.â95 The court favored the plaintiffsâ approach and concluded that it was âmore appropriate to empower the custodian to explore any and all alternatives that might result in a mutually agreed solution to the current shareholder deadlock.â96
Three years later, the custodian filed a report âconcluding that liquidation was necessary and desirable,, and recommending an auction of the [c]ompanyâs assets as a single package or as a series of asset packages.â97 The parties submitted .competing proposals, with each side arguing that âits proposal for liquidating the [c]om-pany is the best way to maximize stockholder value.â98 The defendants sought division of the companyâs operating assets into two corporations, with one belonging to each of the two factions, but the custodian and the plaintiffs favored an auction.99 âThe [plaintiffs preferred] to sell the entire [cjompany as a means of liquidation, but they also proposed a plan to partition the assets, since they knew the defendants would oppose a sale.â100 Because the parties did not desire a trial, the court determined that âonly an auction [would] provide reliable informationâ about the value *186of the company.101 The Court of Chancery ordered an auction âto resolve the issues posed by the two pending motionsâ and determine âwhether a viable market for the [cjompany (or any of its lines of business) exists, and whether a sale of the entire [cjompany will generate bids that reflect the [cjompanyâs intrinsic value.â102 The court indicated that, should the auction âfail[ ] to attract any bidders ..., the [cjourt is free to decline to approve any sale, and to order a division of the assets according to the defendantsâ plan, or some other plan.â103 Thus, although the court ordered an auction of a solvent corporation in Bentas, it did so by degrees, exhausting less intrusive remedies first. Further, all stockholders agreed that liquidation was necessary and that the Company could not continue in its existing form.
The case law applying Section 226 therefore supports the view that the sale of the Company, absent stockholder consent, is too drastic a measure, and that the trial court should consider implementation of remedies on an incremental basis.104
III.
In View of the Above, the Court of Chanceryâs Remedy Here Was, at a Minimum, Too Extreme and Was Not Authorized by the Statute
In deciding whether to exercise its discretion to appoint a custodian and, if so, for what purpose, the Court of Chancery believed it had three options.105 First, it could deny Sitingâs request for a custodian altogether âand leave the parties to their own devices.â106 The court did not find this option viable, however, because it found that TransPerfectâs management was in a state of âcomplete and utter dysfunction[,Jâ and âit would be unjust to leave Elting with no recourse except to sell her 50% interest in the Company.â107 In particular, the court remarked that Elting would have difficulty selling her shares for a âfair priceâ due to Shaweâs actions.108
Second, the court recognized that it could âappoint a custodian to serve as a third director or some form of tie-breaking mechanism in the governance of the Company.â 109 Such an appointment would complete the full board of directors as contemplated by TransPerfectâs bylaws, which provide for three directors.110 The court believed, however, that doing so âwould enmesh an outsider and, by extension, the [cjourt into matters of internal corporate governance for an extensive period of time.â111 Noting that Shawe and Elting *187are ârelatively youngâ and could continue in their positions with TransPerfect âfor decades[,]â the court felt that it was ânot sensible for the [cjourt to exercise essentially perpetual oversight over the internal affairs of the Company.â112
Third, the court considered appointing a custodian to sell the company, an alternative that the court recognized was âunusualâ but, in its view, not unprecedented.113 However, as noted above, the cases relied on by the Chancellor in support of his decision were Bentas,114 in which the court ordered a sale only as a last resort, and Fulk,115 a Section 273 case in which the parties âhad come to agree that the corporation needed to be dissolved.â116
The Court of Chancery thus appointed a custodian who had previously served as mediator to the parties.117 The court directed the custodian to âoversee a judicially ordered sale of the Company.â118 The accompanying Order demonstrates that any stockholder not purchasing the Company may be required to sell his or her shares.119 The court also directed the custodian, â[i]n the interim,â to âserve as a third director with the authority to vote on any matters on which Shawe and Elting cannot agree and which rise to the level that [the Custodian] deems to be significant to managing the Companyâs business and affairs.â120
In my view, the Court of Chancery failed to narrowly tailor the scope of the custodianâs authority, which contemplates the possibility that each stockholder be a seller. The court could have appointed a third director, as provided for in the companyâs bylaws, similar to the appointments made in Miller and Bentas. Although the Chancellor considered this option and appointed the custodian as an âinterimâ tiebreaker until the Modified Auction could be completed, he rejected this solution out of concern that the court would be involved in TransPerfectâs affairs for too long.121 *188The Chancellor did not consider the possibility of appointing a custodian for a period of time or expanding the Board to include independent directors.122 If these less drastic remedies failed, the custodian could petition the court for more drastic relief as in Bentas. But absent consent, however, I do not believe a forced sale is a statutorily authorized option.
IV.
In conclusion, my construction of Section 226 takes account of property rights and due process protections because I believe these concepts are embedded in the relevant statutory framework. This is evident in Section 159âs express statement that stock is personal property, and in the other provisions of our statutory framework that provide clear and express notice in situations where defeasance of that property right might occur. That is why, in reading our statutory scheme harmoniously, it is compelling not to imply the power of the Court to issue an order that can result in defeasance of these rights over the objections of the owners. In cases where the stockholders do not object, then there is no such potential infringement and the court would not be so limited in fashioning a remedy that invokes a sale or transfer of their shares. This reading of Section 226 is consistent with the longstanding policy of strictly limiting the powers of court-appointed custodians.
The Majority Opinion now puts stockholders on notice, at least prospectively, that in deadlock situations where a custodian is appointed pursuant to Section 226, a sale to a third party over the objections of stockholders is a potential permissible outcome, even for a thriving business. This âjudicially created noticeâ now accomplishes what is expressly stated in other provisions of the DGCL and other statutes where defeasance of property rights is possible. These stockholders, however, appear to be stuck with this unanticipated outcome.123
. The Court of Chancery has broad discretion, for example, in fashioning a remedy for a fiduciary violation, and the propriety of such a remedy is ordinarily reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Berger v. Pubco Corp., 976 A.2d 132, 139 (Del. 2009) (en banc). But, here, there were express findings post-trial that there were no breaches of fiduciary duty. See, e.g., In re Shawe & Elting LLC, 2015 WL 4874733, at *34 (Del. Ch. Aug. 13, 2015) (âIn sum, the asserted acts of misconduct committed by Shawe that Elting has identified â although disturbing and contrary to expected norms of behavior â do not establish the very high level of fiduciary misconduct resulting in harm to the Company or its stockholders (in their capacity as stockholders) necessary to *170impose the remedy of equitable dissolution.â). Instead, the Court of Chancery was fashioning a remedy pursuant to Section 226, where this Court has held that the intrusion into the business of the corporation must be kept to a minimum. See Giuricich v. Emtrol Corp., 449 A.2d 232, 240 (Del. 1982).
. Corvel Corp. v. Homeland Ins. Co. of N.Y., 112 A.3d 863, 868 (Del. 2015); see also N. River Ins. Co. v. Mine Safety Appliances Co., 105 A.3d 369, 380-81 (Del. 2014) ("[W]e do not defer to the trial court on embedded legal conclusions and review them de novo." (citations omitted)), as revised (Nov. 10, 2014).
. Much of the Majority Opinion addresses the Court of Chancery's power to appoint a custodian â a proposition that is not seriously contested by anyone here. Rather, it is tire Modified Auctionâs forced sale provisions that are chiefly at issue. As to that main issue, the Majority declines to formally address the key statutory arguments on the grounds of waiver. Instead, they offer several pages of pure dicta on the issue. I believe that the statutory arguments are fairly encompassed within Shaweâs explicit argument below â that the Court of Chancery should not order a sale under Section 226, Clearly, Section 226 and its proper scope have been a central focus all along. Given that fact, I do not see how a statutory analysis credibly can be avoided. See, e.g., N. River, 105 A.3d at 382-83 (rejecting a Rule 8 challenge and allowing additional reasoning to be presented' in support of a "broader issueâ that had been raised); Mundy v. Holden, 204 A.2d 83, 87 (Del. 1964) ("[Wjhen the argument is merely an additional reason in support of a proposition urged below, there is no acceptable reason why in the interest of a speedy end to litigation the argument should not be considered.â (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
. See, e.g., STAAR Surgical Co. v
Case Information
- Court
- State Court (Atlantic Reporter)
- Decision Date
- February 13, 2017
- Citation
- 157 A.3d 152
- Status
- Precedential