COURT OF CHANCERY
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
ANDRE G. BOUCHARD New Castle County Courthouse
CHANCELLOR 500 N. King Street, Suite 11400
Wilmington, Delaware 19801-3734
Date Submitted: April 27, 2016
Date Decided: June 20, 2016
Kevin R. Shannon, Esquire David L. Finger, Esquire
Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP Finger & Slanina, LLC
1313 North Market Street 1201 N. Orange St., 7th floor
Wilmington, DE 19899 Wilmington, DE 19801
Lisa A. Schmidt, Esquire Kurt M. Heyman, Esquire
Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A. Proctor Heyman Enerio LLP
920 North King Street 300 Delaware Avenue, Suite 200
Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801
R. Montgomery Donaldson, Esquire Paul D. Brown, Esquire
Polsinelli PC Chipman Brown Cicero & Cole, LLP
222 Delaware Avenue, Suite 111 1007 N Orange, Suite 1110
Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801
Jennifer C. Voss, Esquire Peter B. Ladig, Esquire
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher Morris James LLP
& Flom LLP 500 Delaware Avenue, Suite 1500
One Rodney Square Wilmington, DE 19801
Wilmington, DE 19899
RE: In re: TransPerfect Global, Inc.
Civil Action No. 9700-CB
Elizabeth Elting v. Philip R. Shawe, et al.
Civil Action No. 10449-CB
Dear Counsel:
This letter constitutes my decision on the proposed plan of sale concerning
TransPerfect Global, Inc. (“TPG” or the “Company”) recommended by its
In re: TransPerfect Global, Inc., et al.
C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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custodian, Robert B. Pincus, Esquire (the “Custodian”). For the reasons explained
below, the Court accepts the Custodian’s recommendation to proceed with the
Modified Auction (as defined below) with certain modifications discussed below.
I. BACKGROUND
On August 13, 2015, for the reasons explained in a post-trial memorandum
opinion of the same date, the Court appointed the Custodian to oversee a judicially
ordered sale of the Company and, in the interim, to serve as a third director of the
Company. The opinion directed the Custodian to present to the Court “a proposed
plan to sell the Company with a view toward maintaining the business as a going
concern and maximizing value for the stockholders.” 1 The opinion also
specifically requested that the Custodian:
. . . evaluate the viability and the pros and cons of conducting a sale of
the Company (a) in which the bidders would be limited to Shawe and
Elting (individually or as part of a group), such as in a “Texas shoot
out” or some other auction format, (b) in an open auction process that
would include any interested bidders, or (c) in any other format the
Custodian deems practicable in the circumstances of this case, which
could include conducting a public offering to afford stockholders
liquidity or dividing the operating assets of the Company along the
production divisions that Shawe and Elting have separately managed. 2
1
In re Shawe & Elting LLC, 2015 WL 4874733, at *32 (Del. Ch. Aug. 13, 2015).
2
Id.
2
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June 20, 2016
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After his appointment, the Custodian engaged several advisors to assist in
the performance of his duties. The Custodian engaged Houlihan Lokey Capital,
Inc. as a financial advisor to review the Company’s corporate strategy and
financial position, and to assist in identifying and analyzing certain sale
alternatives. The Custodian also engaged Alvarez & Marsal, a management
advisory group, to provide financial and operational services to the Company, and
Grant Thornton to perform an audit assessment and eventually an audit.
On February 8, 2016, the Custodian submitted a proposed plan of sale for
the Company (the “Sale Report”) in which he identified five alternatives he had
identified and considered:
1. Division of Business. A division of the Company into distinct
business units, with those units to be divided between the two
stockholders in an appropriate manner.
2. Initial Public offering. An initial public offering of TPG’s
stock to provide a liquid market for the sale of shares by current
stockholders at the time of the IPO or over time.
3. Sale to Existing Stockholder. The purchase by one stockholder
of the other stockholder’s shares in one of the formats detailed in
[Houlihan Lokey’s report].
4. Broad Auction. A customary broad auction process involving
potential bidders comprised of strategic bidders, as well as financial
bidders, such as private equity funds.
3
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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5. Modified Broad Auction Led by Existing Stockholders. A
modified auction where each stockholder could solicit third-party
investors as partners in an acquisition of TPG, and where the
Custodian could work with outside bidders who are interested in
partnering with an existing stockholder in connection with any
acquisition.3
The Sale Report included a detailed analysis Houlihan Lokey had prepared
evaluating each of these alternatives. The Custodian concluded that, absent a
consensual resolution before implementation of a sale order, “the alternative most
likely to maximize stockholder value while continuing the business as a going
concern (and which can be accomplished in a reasonable time frame)” is the fifth
alternative listed above, namely the “Modified Auction.” 4
The Sale Report explained that the Modified Auction “has the benefit of
permitting each stockholder to bid for control of the Company (alone or in
partnership with a third party), as well as permitting third parties (unaffiliated with
the stockholders) to bid for the Company.” 5 The Sale Report further explained
that “[i]n order to fulfill the Court’s directive of running the sale process,” the
Custodian “would need maximum flexibility without interference from the
3
Sale Report 5-6.
4
Id. at 7.
5
Id.
4
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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stockholders, who may stand on both sides of a transaction.” 6 To that end, the
Custodian requested that the sale order implementing the Modified Auction should
provide the following authority and discretion to the Custodian:
(i) complete control of the auction process, including but not limited
to (a) selection of management for presentations and creation of
marketing materials, (b) complete discretion over the content of
marketing materials, (c) determination of “qualified” bidders to
participate, and the requirement and terms of nondisclosure
agreements with bidders, as well as the scope of any bidder diligence
of TPG (and the content of any data rooms), (d) determination of the
number of rounds of bidding and the terms and conditions of any bids,
(e) establishment of restrictions on communications between
stockholders and bidders, and between management and bidders, (f)
selection of a winning bidder based on the Custodian’s reasonable
business judgment, taking into account, among other things, price,
terms, likelihood of consummation and other reasonable determinants,
and (g) execution of all agreements required to affect the proposed
sale;
(ii) retention of financial advisors and other consultants to assist the
Custodian with execution of the auction process;
(iii) implementation of management and key employee incentive
retention plans on behalf of TPG to ensure management continuity
and cooperation during and after the sale process;
(iv) expansion of each selling stockholder’s existing non-compete and
non-solicit arrangements, to include the entirety of TPG and its
subsidiaries; and
6
Id. at 10.
5
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June 20, 2016
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(v) execution and delivery of agreements and other documents on
behalf of each selling stockholder and TPG. 7
The items listed above are referred to hereafter as the “Delegation Provision” and
the fourth item is referred to as the “Non-Compete Provision.”
Elizabeth Elting, who owns 50% of the Company’s shares, did not object to
any aspect of the Sale Report. On March 22, 2015, Philip R. Shawe (“Shawe”) and
Shirley Shawe (“Ms. Shawe”), who own, respectively, 49% and 1% of the
Company’s shares, submitted briefs objecting to certain aspects of the Sale Report.
After the parties were afforded the opportunity to fully brief the issues, a hearing
was held on April 27, 2016, to consider the views of the parties and the Custodian
concerning the Sale Report and the objections.
II. SHAWE’S OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE REPORT.
Although Shawe’s submission was extensive, his objections to the Sale
Report boil down to essentially two key points. I address them in turn.
First, Shawe disagrees with the Custodian’s recommendation to pursue a
Modified Auction that would permit third parties to participate in a sale process
from the outset. Shawe argues that the bidders instead should be limited, at least in
the first instance, to Elting and himself. To be more specific, Shawe advocates a
process that would entail Houlihan Lokey preparing a range of values for the
7
Id. at 10-12.
6
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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Company and the submission of bids by the two competing major stockholders to
acquire the other’s stake in the Company. The stockholders could solicit third
parties to provide equity or debt financing, but third parties would not be able to
bid separately. The highest bid within the prescribed range would win the auction
and, if neither bid fell within that range, a “go-shop” process would occur that
would allow third parties to bid in a second round, while the provisional winner of
the first round (i.e., whoever bid more as between Shawe and Elting) would
receive a matching right.
The Custodian, who has decades of experience in corporate transactions and
whose expertise and independence is unquestioned, disagrees with Shawe’s
proposal and points out several problems with it. To start, the Company
historically has not had an annual budgeting process, it has never created long-term
forecasts, and Shawe and Elting have provided widely divergent estimates of the
Company’s value. There also is no apparent need to create a range of values up
front because, under the Modified Auction, third-party buyers would engage in due
diligence and create their own forecasts. Most importantly, disallowing third-party
bidders in the initial round and imposing a matching right during the “go-shop”
round would reduce competition in the sale of the Company, contrary to the
objective of maximizing stockholder value.
7
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June 20, 2016
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The Court shares the concerns the Custodian has identified. Shawe has not
provided any persuasive explanation how his proposal would better address the
dual goals of maintaining the Company as a going concern and maximizing
stockholder value. Shawe’s proposal instead appears designed to cause needless
delay and to suppress rather than to maximize stockholder value. Accordingly, I
decline to adopt Shawe’s proposal and accept the well-reasoned recommendation
of the Custodian to proceed with the Modified Auction.
Second, Shawe opposes the Non-Compete Provision the Custodian has
recommended to be included in the Delegation Provision. Shawe argues, in
essence, that the Custodian should not have this authority because, unless a person
has been found to have engaged in wrongdoing, the imposition of post-
employment non-competition and non-solicitation obligations on a selling
stockholder would impermissibly deprive that person of a property right without
compensation and of the liberty to pursue the occupation of his or her choice.
Shawe also contends that the two principal stockholders are not currently
contractually restricted in their ability to compete with the Company after leaving
8
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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its employ, 8 and that the goal of maximizing stockholder value in selling the
Company as a going concern should reflect that operative reality.
The parties have identified three cases in which this Court has considered
the inclusion of non-compete restrictions as part of a judicially ordered sale of a
corporation. In two of those decisions, the Court declined to impose post-
employment non-competition restrictions in transcript rulings that give recognition
to the concerns Shawe has expressed. 9 The third decision authorized non-compete
restrictions to address threats a 50% stockholder had made while serving as an
employee and fiduciary of the subject company that were viewed as undermining
the sale process in order “to avoid paying [the other 50% stockholder] the value
that a genuine bidding contest . . . would obligate him to pay.” 10
8
It is unclear whether this contention is correct. As noted in the Sale Report, Shawe and
Elting each executed a non-competition agreement, dated August 8, 2000, with
translations.com, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of TPG. Sale Report 11 n.3. It is not
clear from the record, however, whether those contracts remain in place and, if so, what
the nature and scope of the obligations owed under them may be.
9
In re Scovil Hanna Corp., C.A. No. 664-N, at 34-36 (Del. Ch. Apr. 20, 2006)
(TRANSCRIPT) (recognizing that companies are less valuable without non-competes but
“[w]hat you are supposed to do is design a sale process to maximize the value that is
there.”) (emphasis added); In re Supreme Oil Co., C.A. No. 10618-VCL, at 66-67 (Del.
Ch. Apr. 4, 2016) (TRANSCRIPT) (recognizing a liberty and property interest in being
able to compete).
10
Fulk v. Wash. Serv. Assocs., Inc., 2002 WL 1402273, at *12 (Del. Ch. June 21, 2002).
9
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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Having given careful consideration to the arguments presented and the cited
authorities, I agree with Shawe that it would not be appropriate to impose non-
competition or non-solicitation restrictions on a selling stockholder as a condition
of the sale of the Company absent evidence of wrongdoing. It stands to reason that
TPG would be worth more to a buyer if Shawe and Elting were subject to post-
employment restrictions on their ability to compete or to solicit customers and
employees than it would be without those protections, but the purpose of the sale
process is to maximize the value of the Company as it is and not to derive a
hypothetically higher value based on contractual protections the Company may not
currently possess.
I am not persuaded, furthermore, by Elting’s suggestion that the imposition
of such restrictions is justifiable because they would apply reciprocally to Shawe
and Elting. The market may view one person as a greater competitive threat than
the other and thus place a higher value on a non-compete from one rather than the
other. To use a simple example involving two 50-50 stockholders, the market
might place a value of $X on a package of non-competition restrictions for 50%
stockholder A but place of value of $10X on the same package of restrictions for
50% stockholder B. In this scenario, the imposition of reciprocal non-competition
10
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C.A. Nos. 9700, 10449-CB
June 20, 2016
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obligations would represent a disproportionate transfer of value to the Company
from stockholder B.
For the reasons stated, the implementing order will exclude the Non-
Compete Provision. However, the Custodian or any party may seek the
implementation of non-competition or non-solicitation restrictions in the future
upon a showing of good cause to address wrongful conduct in the sale process.
III. MS. SHAWE’S OBJECTION TO THE SALE REPORT
Ms. Shawe joins in Shawe’s objections to the Sale Report except for his
objection to the Non-Compete Provision, as to which she takes no position. She
also contends that a third-party sale would “present a thorny allocation issue”
concerning the derivative claims Shawe previously pressed against Elting, which
were dismissed with prejudice in the August 2015 post-trial memorandum opinion.
I am at a loss to understand the logic of this objection. It is true, as Ms.
Shawe points out, that derivative claims are “corporate assets which would be
relevant to determining fair value.”11 Whatever value these claims theoretically
may have here, however, can be considered and taken into account by anyone who
bids to acquire the Company and the incremental value attributable to such claims,
11
Zutrau v. Jansing, 2014 WL 3772859, at *18 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2014), aff’d, 123 A.3d
938 (Del. 2015), reargument denied (Sept. 17, 2015), cert. denied, 136 S. Ct. 1198
(2016).
11
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June 20, 2016
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if any, would be shared by the stockholders in proportion to their ownership
interests in TPG.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court accepts the Custodian’s
recommendation to pursue the Modified Auction. The Custodian is requested to
confer with counsel for the parties and to submit an implementing order consistent
with this letter decision by July 1, 2016, that (1) includes the Delegation Provision
sought in the Sale Report, except for the Non-Compete Provision, (2) reserves the
right for the Custodian or any party to seek, upon a showing of good cause, the
implementation of post-employment restrictions (among other appropriate relief)
to remedy wrongdoing intended to undermine the sale process, (3) provides that no
final plan for the sale of the Company may be implemented without the approval
of the Court,12 and (4) includes such other provisions as the Custodian deems
appropriate to effectuate the Modified Auction.
12
Shawe’s objections to the Sale Report included a contention that it improperly
delegated power to the Custodian. Shawe Opp. Br. 30-39. In light of the requirement
that the Court approve the implementation of any final sale plan, I view this objection as
moot. See id. at 38 (“To avoid undue delegation, the Court would have to review the
structure and terms of any sale the Custodian might propose before any such sale could
be consummated.”); see also In re Supreme Oil Co., 2015 WL 2455952, at *7 (Del. Ch.
May 22, 2015) (ORDER) (requiring Court approval of implementation of final sale plan).
12
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June 20, 2016
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Sincerely,
/s/ Andre G. Bouchard
Chancellor
AGB/gm
13