Shareholder Representative Provision Precludes Discovery From Selling Shareholders

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Fortis Advisors LLC, v. Allergan W.C. Holding Inc. addressed defendant Allergan’s request for an order requiring the former stockholders of Oculeve, Inc. to participate in discovery as real parties in interest and to be subject to trial subpoenas as parties.  In the alternative, Allergan sought to compel the stockholders’ agent, plaintiff Fortis Advisors LLC,  referred to as Fortis or Shareholder Representative, to procure and produce documents and testimony from the stockholders.

Ultimately, Fortis, as Shareholder Representative, asserted Allergan materially breached the Merger Agreement by failing to make an Enhanced Product Labeling Milestone payment, and by failing to use commercially reasonable and good faith efforts to achieve the Enhanced Product Labeling Milestone before March 31, 2018.

Allergan served its initial document requests, which defined “Sellers” as each of the sellers named in Schedule I to the Merger Agreement, together with certain related parties.  The definition included over fifty individual selling stockholders. Fortis objected to the requests on the basis that they were directed to the ‘Sellers’ who were not parties to the litigation.

The Merger Agreement appointed Fortis as the stockholders’ “sole, exclusive, true and lawful agent, representative and attorney-in-fact of all Sellers . . . with respect to any and all matters relating to, arising out of, or in connection with, this Agreement.” In particular, Allergan agreed that Fortis would “act for the Sellers with regard to all matters pertaining to the . . . Contingent Payments,” including the Enhanced Product Labeling Milestone. The Merger Agreement did not empower Fortis to compel stockholder participation in litigation; rather, it appointed Fortis to litigate in the stockholders’ stead.

According to the court, the contractual appointment of a shareholder representative to bring certain actions makes that representative the real party in interest in those actions. This structure is helpful to both buyers and sellers, as it “enables each side to resolve post-closing disputes efficiently.” Buyers also benefit from the fact that the structure makes a judgment against the representative binding on all the stockholders, eliminating the risk of inconsistent judgments. The opinion states the court has been reluctant to disregard the clear contractual authority of a stockholders’ representative at the behest of a party.

The court held the Merger Agreement specified Fortis was to act for the sellers with regard to all matters pertaining to the Contingent Payments. Allergan consented to the shareholder representative structure as formulated in the Merger Agreement, which did not include the discovery rights it sought to enforce, and which limited itself to the enumerated rights. The fact that the Merger Agreement did not give Fortis control over the stockholders and their discovery was not Fortis’s “fault” or “problem”—it was a result that Allergan bargained for.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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