Change of Control Special Committee: Breathing Life into CNX

23 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2011 Last revised: 12 Sep 2011

See all articles by Samuel C. Thompson, Jr.

Samuel C. Thompson, Jr.

The Pennsylvania State University (University Park) – Penn State Law

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Date Written: April 6, 2011

Abstract

Notwithstanding the excellence of the Delaware judiciary, the multiple standards of review under Delaware law for reviewing the actions of a target’s directors involved in a merger or acquisition transaction are cumbersome, a source of needless litigation, and economically inefficient. Consequently, the Delaware General Corporation Law ("DGCL") should be amended to permit the shareholders of a corporation to adopt a provision requiring that if the corporation becomes a target of a bona fide acquisition proposal, the board of the corporation must petition the Delaware Court of Chancery for the appointment of an independent, disinterested, and knowledgeable special committee of the board (a "Change of Control Special Committee"). This Committee would have complete power over the acquisition transaction. At the discretion of the Delaware Court of Chancery, a member of the current board could be appointed to the Change of Control Special Committee.

All decisions of the Change of Control Special Committee, including any decision to employ, maintain, or terminate a poison pill, would be subject to the deferential business judgment rule standard of review. As a consequence, litigation involving the actions taken by the Committee would be rare, if not essentially eliminated, because it could be expected that the decisions made by the Committee would be in the interest of the target’s shareholders. As a practical matter, the role of the Court of Chancery in such transactions would be moved from the back-end to the front-end, because the Chancery Court’s determination of the independence, disinterestedness, and competence of the board members would be made on an ex ante as opposed to an ex post basis.

This type of amendment to the DGCL is consistent with the concept of this statute as an "enabling" law, permitting shareholders to adopt provisions that the shareholders determine are in their interests. Also, adoption of this proposal would breathe life into the suggestion in CNX of Vice Chancellor Laster of the Delaware Court of Chancery to apply the business judgment standard of review to freezeout mergers if a "unified standard" (i.e. an independent committee and a majority of minority vote) is satisfied. The proposed statutory language is in the Appendix to the article. This article builds on my 2007 article in the ABA’s Business Lawyer entitled: The Missing Link in Sarbanes-Oxley: Enactment of the "Change of Control Board" Concept, or Extension of the Audit Committee Provisions to Mergers and Acquisitions (The Business Lawyer, Vol. 63, 81-114, November 2007).

Suggested Citation

Thompson, Jr., Samuel C., Change of Control Special Committee: Breathing Life into CNX (April 6, 2011). Delaware Journal of Corporate Law (DJCL), Forthcoming, The Pennsylvania State University Legal Studies Research Paper No. 12-2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1813964

Samuel C. Thompson, Jr. (Contact Author)

The Pennsylvania State University (University Park) – Penn State Law ( email )

Lewis Katz Building
University Park, PA 16802
United States

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