Kentucky Supreme Court rejects shareholder level discounts
Stites & Harbison, PLLC, Client Alert, March 6, 2012
The recent decision by the Kentucky Supreme Court in Shawnee Telecom Resources, Inc., successor by merger to Shawnee Technology, Inc. v. Kathy Brown establishes important precedent for determining fair value in dissentersâ rights actions. The decision outlines the factors that may be taken into account and holds that shareholder level discounts may not be applied in the determination of the fair value of a dissenting shareholderâs shares. With this decision, the Kentucky Supreme Court aligned Kentuckyâs position relative to the valuation of dissenters shares with the majority of jurisdictions by rejecting shareholder level discounts.
Certain transactions undertaken by Kentucky corporations trigger statutory dissentersâ rights. Those transactions, set forth in KRS 271B.13-020, include mergers, share exchanges, sales of all or substantially all of a corporationâs assets, conversion of a corporation into a limited liability company, certain amendments of the articles of incorporation of a corporation, and other business combinations. If such a transaction is undertaken, a shareholder may dissent and obtain payment of the âfair valueâ of his, her or its shares. KRS 271B.13-010(3) defines âfair valueâ as âthe value of the shares immediately before the effectuation of the corporate action to which the dissenter objects, excluding any appreciation or depreciation in anticipation of the corporate action unless exclusion would be inequitable.â If a shareholder believes he, she or it is being offered less than âfair valueâ for the shares following consummation of the transaction giving rise to the right to dissent, the shareholder may object, thereby potentially giving rise to a fair value proceeding.
Kentuckyâs legal standards for determination of âfair valueâ have developed through a series of decisions. Among the points at issue in Shawnee Telecom Resources were shareholder level discounts, such as marketability or control discounts, the use of which had been previously considered by the Kentucky Court of Appeals in Ford v. Courier Journal Job Printing Co., 639 SW2d 553 (Ky. App. 1982). In Ford v. Courier Journal Job Printing Co., the Kentucky court upheld the use of minority and marketability discounts in a âfair valueâ proceeding.
The Shawnee case arose from the merger of Shawnee Technology, Inc. (âShawnee Techâ), a Kentucky corporation, into Shawnee Telecom Resources, Inc. (âShawnee Telecomâ), also a Kentucky corporation. Under the merger, one of Shawnee Techâs shareholders, Kathy Brown (âMs. Brownâ), would receive cash for her shares, making the transaction a âcash out mergerâ authorized by KRS 271.B.11-010. The merger triggered Ms. Brownâs dissentersâ rights and she demanded âfair valueâ for her shares. Shawnee Tech disputed the claimed value of Ms. Brownâs shares and brought an action in Fayette Circuit Court for an appraisal of the shares.
Ms. Brown and Shawnee Tech offered competing expert testimony as to the value of Ms. Brownâs shares. Shawnee Techâs valuation consultant used a series of valuation techniques and, following his enterprise valuation analysis, discounted Ms. Brownâs proportionate interest to account for the absence of a ready sales market for Ms. Brownâs shares of the closely-held Shawnee Tech.
Ms. Brownâs valuation expert did not disagree generally with the valuation techniques used by Shawnee Techâs consultant, although he did object to certain adjustments made to the factors underlying the valuation. Importantly, he maintained that the marketability discount should not apply because the value being sought was not the market value of the shares but rather the proportionate interest of the shares in Shawnee Techâs total value as a going concern. Based upon this opinion and the other valuation discrepancies, he concluded that Ms. Brownâs shares had a considerably higher valuation.
The Master Commissioner to whom the appraisal was referred by the trial court made a number of rulings but, based upon the precedent of Ford v. Courier Journal Job Printing Co., he approved the use of a marketability discount. His ruling was upheld by the trial court. Both parties appealed. On appeal, Ms. Brown argued that the Commissioner and trial court erred by allowing the marketability discount in the fair value calculation. A unanimous panel of the Court of Appeals agreed with Ms. Brown, holding that a marketability discount was inappropriate in a fair value proceeding under the dissentersâ rights statutes and should not have been applied to the fair value determination of Ms. Brownâs shares. The Supreme Court granted discretionary review to consider the question of fair value under Subtitle 13 of the Business Corporation Act.
The Supreme Court considered the continuing viability of a marketability discount in a dissentersâ rights appraisal action. The Court gave considerable attention to the development of the appraisal remedy, noting that it was designed to serve as an anti-oppression mechanism âto protect minority shareholders from majority overreaching.â The Court specifically addressed the use of marketability discounts and the justification for their application: âUnder statutes such as KRS 271B.11-010 and KRS 271B.6-040, which authorize mergers and reverse stock splits the effect of which is to âcash outâ a minority shareholder, a lack of liquidity is not the minority shareholderâs concern.â Rather âit is the amount that the shareholder will receive for an investment that is being usurped.â The Court observed a broad consensus that fair value in the context of a dissenters rights transaction was widely understood to be not a hypothetical price at which the dissenting shareholder might sell his or her particular shares, but rather as the dissenterâs proportionate interest in a company as a going concern. Based on this rationale, the Court determined that shareholder level discounts, such as discounts for a lack of control or a lack of marketability, were not appropriate and may not be applied, overruling the contrary holding of the Kentucky Court of Appeals in Ford v. Courier Journal Job Printing Co.
The Court concluded that âfair valueâ is a shareholderâs proportionate interest in the value of a company as a whole and as a going concern. The Court discussed at length the valuation of a company as a going concern: âThe value of the going concern may be determined by any valuation technique generally recognized in the business financial community and shown to be relevant to the circumstances of the particular company at issue.â The Court recognized that enterprise wide discounts may be appropriate in certain circumstances: âEntity level discounts, where justified, are appropriate because they are factors that affect the intrinsic value of the company as a wholeâŚ.An entity level discount must be based upon particular facts and authority germane to the specific company being valued.â The Court even noted a list of potentially appropriate entity-wide discounts, such as a key manager discount, a limited customer supplier based discount, a trapped in capital gains discount, an environmental liability discount, a pending litigation discount, a portfolio discount, a small size discount or a privately held company discount.
The Kentucky Courtâs decision in Shawnee Telecom Resources is important to any entity engaged in a transaction that triggers dissentersâ rights. The holding offers clear guidance on factors that may, and may not, be taken into account in determining fair value of an interest in a company in what are often highly contentious circumstances.