Laborers' Local #231 Pension Fund v. Cowan et al
Filing
51
ORDER - MEMORANDUM denying 49 MOTION for Reargument re 43 Order, 42 Memorandum Opinion. Signed by Judge Mark A. Kearney on 7/18/2018. (nmf)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE
LABORERS' LOCAL #231 PENSION
FUND
CIVIL ACTION
v.
NO. 17-478
RORY J. COWAN, et al
ORDER-MEMORANDUM
AND NOW, this 181h day of July 2018, upon considering Defendants' Motion for
reargument (ECF Doc. No. 49) of our July 2, 2018 Order (ECF Doc. No. 43) and finding most of
the present arguments are duplicative from briefing on the motion to dismiss and Defendants
otherwise do not show an intervening change in law, new evidence, or the need to correct a clear
error of law or fact to prevent a manifest injustice, it is ORDERED Defendants' Motion for
reargument (ECF Doc. No. 49) is DENIED.
Analysis
Lionbridge Technologies, Inc.' s board issued a definitive proxy statement to its
shareholders unanimously recommending they approve a going-private merger with HIG
Capital, LLC. The merger agreement provided shareholders $5.75 in consideration for each of
Lionbridge share. In anticipation of issuing the proxy statement, Lionbridge's management team
prepared financial projections for the next two years.
The management team, including
Chairman, CEO, and President Rory J. Cowan and CFO Marc Litz, provided these projections to
financial advisor Union Square Advisors LLC. Union Square relied on, among other things,
these financial projections to prepare extrapolated financial projections and to render the opinion
$5.75 to be fair consideration for a Lionbridge share. In the years leading up to Lionbridge's
merger with HIG, Lionbridge publicly pursued an acquisition growth strategy. Despite publicly
pursuing an acquisition growth strategy, Lionbridge did not incorporate its potential growth
through acquisitions in the financial projections provided to Union Square.
The proxy statement included management's two year projections, Union Square's
extrapolated projections, and Union Square's fairness opinion. Lionbridge's board included a
series of disclaimers in the proxy statement. Lionbridge's board disclaimed (1) the projections
are not predictive of Lionbridge's actual future performance; (2) "The forecasts reflect
assumptions that are subject to change and are susceptible to multiple interpretations and
periodic revisions based on ... any other transaction or event that has occurred or that may occur
and that was not anticipated when the forecasts were prepared."; and (3) "In addition, the
forecasts do not take into account any circumstances, transactions or events occurring after the
dates on which the forecasts were prepared."
Lionbridge's board failed to disclaim the
projections did not incorporate acquisition based growth.
Three days after closing the merger, Lionbridge announced its acquisition of the studio
Exequo. 1 Lionbridge did not mention Exequo or the potential acquisition of Exequo in the proxy
statement. 2 Pension Fund identified a smaller studio than Exequo had a market capitalization of
$400 million on the London Stock Exchange. 3 Lionbridge also alleged the acquisition of a
company the size of Exequo takes several months and as a result, Lionbridge's board knew of
1
ECF Doc. No. 34 at~ 66.
2
Id.
3
Id.
2
the planned acquisition before issuing the definitive proxy statement but failed to disclose it in
the proxy statement. 4
After two shareholder challenges to the merger and disclosures in the proxy statement
and after the shareholders approved the merger, shareholder Laborers' Local #231 Pension Fund
sued Lionbridge, its board, HIG Capital, and HIG's affiliate companies created to complete the
merger under Section 14 and Section 20 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934. Pension
Fund challenged six representations in the proxy statement.
Pension Fund alleged the six
representations are false or misleading because the board failed to disclose in the proxy statement
the projections did not account for acquisition based growth.
We found one of the six
representations to be actionable under Section 14.
The representation surviving dismissal explained at the time Lionbridge's board approved
the merger with HIG, the board believed Union Square's fairness opinion to be a "positive
reason" supporting its decision to approve the merger. We found Pension Fund plead a Section
14 claim because it alleged Lionbridge's board knew the fact the projections did not account for
acquisition based growth, but based on the "positive reason" statement, a shareholder could
conclude Lionbridge placed confidence in Union Square' fairness opinion and Lionbridge
believed Union Square accurately analyzed its potential for future growth. 5
Defendants raise four grounds for reconsideration. A motion for reconsideration may
only be granted where the moving party shows: "(1) an intervening change in the controlling
law; (2) the availability of new evidence that was not available when the court [ruled]; or (3) the
4
Id.~ 67.
5
ECF Doc. No. 42 at p. 18.
3
need to correct a clear error of law or fact or to prevent manifest injustice." 6 "Because federal
courts have a strong interest in the finality of judgments, motions for reconsideration should be
granted sparingly." 7
A.
Lionbridge, its board, HIG, and HIG's affiliates disagree with our factual findings and
argue the proxy statement disclosed the projections excluded future transactions. They raised the
same argument in their motion to dismiss. They acknowledge the disclaimer accompanying the
projections ·explains the forecasts reflect assumptions subject to change and susceptible to
multiple interpretations based on, among other things, transactions or events not anticipated
when the forecasts were prepared. Based on this statement, we found a reasonable shareholder
could conclude the projections included future transactions, including acquisitions, Lionbridge
anticipated at the time its management created the projections. Defendants again cite to the
immediately following sentence explaining the forecasts do not take into account any
circumstances, transactions or events occurring after the date Lionbridge prepared the
projections. Defendants argues the first sentence read in context with the second only allows for
the interpretation the projections excluded all future transactions, even if anticipated at the time
management created the projections.
The second statement does not change the first statement. The first statement explains
the projections reflect assumptions which may be subject to change based on, among other
things, transactions or events not anticipated at the time Lionbridge created the projections. The
6
Max's Seafood Cafe ex rel. Lou-Ann, Inc. v. Quinteros, 176 F.3d 669, 677 (3d Cir. 1999)
(citation omitted).
7
Cont'/ Cas. Co. v. Diversified Indus., Inc., 884 F. Supp. 937, 943 (E.D. Pa. 1995); see also Dist.
Del. Local Rule 7.1.5.
4
second statement warns shareholders the projections do not account for events taking place after
Lionbridge created the projections. Meaning the projections are only as current as the date
Lionbridge created them. The statements are not inconsistent. Disclaiming the projections do
not take into account future transactions which actually occur is not the same as disclaiming the
projections do not incorporate anticipated transactions. Lionbridge could not include actual
future transactions at the time it created the projections because Lionbridge cannot predict the
future. Lionbridge could only account for anticipated transactions and told shareholders it did
so. The proxy statement did not disclose the projections excluded anticipated transactions.
B.
Lionbridge, its board, HIG, and HIG's affiliates argue Pension Fund failed to allege they
excluded material anticipated acquisitions from the projections.
They argue Pension Fund
therefore did not allege the omission of acquisition based growth from the projections is
material. They raised the same argument in their motion to dismiss.
Pension Fund alleged Lionbridge announced the acquisition of the studio Exequo just
three days after shareholders approved the merger and the merger closed. Pension Fund alleged
Lionbridge did not disclose the Exequo merger in the proxy statement. Pension Fund identified a
smaller studio than Exequo had a market capitalization of $400 million. Lionbridge alleged an
acquisition of this size takes several months and therefore, Lionbridge's board knew of the
planned acquisition before issuing the definitive proxy statement but failed to disclose it in the
proxy statement.
Questions of materiality "have traditionally been viewed as particularly
appropriate for the trier of fact," unless the alleged omissions or misstatements "are obviously so
5
unimportant" to allow us to find them immaterial as a matter of law at the motion to dismiss
stage. 8
Pension Fund alleges materiality. Pension Fund alleged the proxy omitted the fact the
projections did not account for acquisition based growth.
Pension Fund alleged Lionbridge
failed to disclose the Exequo acquisition which closed just days after finalizing the merger.
Although Pension Fund does not allege the exact value of the Exequo transaction, it alleges facts
suggesting the transaction could be valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars' range. At this
preliminary stage, we cannot find omission of acquisition based growth from the projections to
be "obviously so unimportant" and immaterial as a matter of law.
c.
Third, Lionbridge, its board, HIG, and HIG's affiliates argue the representation the board
believed Union Square's fairness opinion to be a "positive reason" supporting its decision to
approve the merger is a statement of fact, not opinion, and Pension Fund does not allege the
board did not actually believe the fairness opinion to be "positive reason" supporting the merger.
They raised the same argument in their motion to dismiss.
Under SEC Rule 14a-9, it is unlawful to omit a material fact in a proxy statement which
makes a statement in the proxy false or misleading. 9 The statement at issue is a statement of
opinion. Even if we assumed the statement at issue is a statement of fact, Pension Fund alleged
an omission of fact which rendered the statement false or misleading. Pension Fund alleged the
projections provided by Lionbridge to Union Square did not incorporate anticipated growth
through its acquisition strategy. Lionbridge provided Union Square and Union Square relied on
8
EP Medsystems, Inc. v. Echocath, Inc., 235 F.3d 865, 872 (3d. Cir. 2000) (citation omitted).
9
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-9.
6
the projections created by Lionbridge in rendering its fairness opinion. Pension Fund alleged
sufficient facts Lionbridge's board knew the projections provided to Union Square did not
incorporate potential growth through its acquisition growth strategy and therefore did not believe
Union Square's fairness opinion is a positive reason supporting the merger.
The Defendants argue even if the statement is an opinion and can be assessed under
Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers Dist. Council Constr. Indus. Pension Fund, 10 Pension Fund does not
allege the opinion did not fairly align with information the board had at the time it rendered the
opinion. They argue Pension Fund alleged and the proxy statement explained it is Lionbridge's
management team, not the board, which created the projections provided to Union Square. They
argue Pension Fund does not allege the opinion does not fairly align with information held by the
board.
Defendants ignore Pension Fund's allegation Mr. Cowan acted as Lionbridge's chairman
of the board, president, and CEO during the time Lionbridge negotiated with HIG, worked with
Union Square in obtaining a fairness opinion, and solicited Lionbridge shareholders' vote to
approve the merger. 11 Mr. Cowan is part ofLionbridge's management team and board. Pension
Fund also alleges Mr. Cowan worked directly with Lionbridge CFO Mr. Litz in preparing the
financial projections included in the proxy statement. 12 At this preliminary stage, Pension Fund
sufficiently alleged Lionbridge's board, not just its management team, held information which
did not align with information a reasonable investor could have taken from the statement of
opinion Union Square's financial analysis is a "positive reason" supporting the board's decision
10
--
U.S.--, 135 S. Ct. 1318 (2015).
11
ECF Doc. No. 34atii15.
12
Id. ii 24.
7
to approve the merger. At this preliminary stage, Pension Fund sufficiently pleads a material
omission which rendered the opinion statement the board believed Union Square's fairness
opinion, which relied on Lionbridge's projections, to be a positive reason supporting its decision
to approve the merger false or misleading.
D.
Fourth, Lionbridge, its board, HIG, and HIG's affiliates cite our July 2, 2018
Memorandum 13 explaining a reasonable investor could take from the "positive reason" statement
the board believed Union Square accurately analyzed Lionbridge's potential for future growth.
They argue this statement is inconsistent with our holding Pension Fund did not allege the
projection numbers to be false or misleading based on the disclaimer language the projections are
not predictive of actual results.
They argue an investor's belief Union Square accurately
analyzed potential future growth is synonymous with saying investors could have believed Union
Square's fairness opinion and financial projections to be predictive of actual results.
Defendants are wrong in their characterization of our explanation of what information a
reasonable investor could take from the "positive reason" statement. We found a reasonable
investor could take Lionbridge 's board believed Union Square accurately analyzed its potential
for future growth and Lionbridge 's board placed confidence in Union Square's analysis. 14 We
did not find a reasonable investor could believe Union Square accurately analyzed Lionbridge's
potential growth based on the "positive reason" statement.
Stating a shareholder could take the board believed Union Square analyzed Lionbridge's
potential for future growth with accuracy based on all material information, including potential
13
ECF Doc. No. 42.
14
Id. at p. 18.
8
growth through acquisitions, is not the same as stating the board believed Union Square's
analysis to be predictive of future results. In the first statement, the investor believes the board
provided Union Square with all material information to allow Union Square provide the most
accurate fairness opinion based on information available at the time. Pension Fund alleged the
board omitted material information - potential growth through acquisitions - in its projections
provided to Union Square and as published in the proxy statement. The disclaimer the projection
numbers are not predictive of actual results does not address the belief a reasonable investor
could take the board placed confidence in Union Square's analysis and opinion. A financial
advisor can provide an accurate fairness opinion and financial projections based upon all
material input data provided by a company's board, yet the fairness opinion and financial
projections may not actually be predictive of actual results.
Defendants argue we are opening floodgates for potential liability on ''the most standard
of standard proxy statement language."
They argue our holding would make the "positive
reason" statement actionable whenever a shareholder alleges the financial advisor's fairness
opinion is flawed in any way. This is not what we held. The "positive reason" statement is
actionable here specifically because Pension Fund alleged the board had material information
which it did not disclose to its shareholders and which may be contradictory to what a reasonable
investor could believe based on the opinion statement. We appreciate the board disclaimed the
projections are not predictive of actual results, but Pension Fund alleged the board did not
9
disclaim its failure to include acquisition based growth in the projections which would allow the
jury to find the statement the board believed Union Square's fairness opinion to be a "positive
reason" supporting its decision to approve the merger materially false or misleading.
10
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