01/25/2011 11:33:00 AM EST
Court in Air Products Case Addresses Motion to Compel and Motion in Limine

In Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. v. Airgas, Inc.,
et al., Del. Ch., C. A. No. 5249-CC, read letter ruling here,
the Court of Chancery on January 20, 2011 addressed: (i) Air Products' motion
to compel Airgas's compliance with the Court's July 13, 2010 Amended Order
Governing the Protection and Exchange of Confidential Information; and (ii)
Airgas's motion in limine to preclude Air Products from offering evidence to
support the position that $70 is its "best and final" offer. A
supplemental evidentiary hearing is scheduled to start on January 25, 2011. Prior
blog posts regarding the many Delaware rulings and related developments in this
case over the last year or more are available here.
This summary was prepared by Kevin F. Brady of Connolly
Bove Lodge & Hutz LLP.
AIR PRODUCTS' MOTION TO COMPEL
In its motion to compel, which related to supplemental discovery regarding Air
Products' increased $70 offer for Airgas and the Airgas board's rejection of
that offer, Air Products argued that Airgas's use of the "Litigators' Eyes
Only" ("LEO") designation at depositions and on documents produced was
overbroad and prejudicial to Air Products. Air Products asked the Court
to order Airgas to immediately: (i) review the recently-taken deposition
transcripts of all Airgas witnesses and remove the LEO designation on testimony
relating to non-LEO topics; (ii) produce non-LEO versions of the minutes of
Airgas board meetings that took place between October 21, 2010, and
December 21, 2010 redacting only such information that was properly designated
as LEO under the Protective Order; and (iii) re-review any documents produced
in response to the Court's recent orders and make good faith confidentiality
re-designations.
The Court noted that as a general matter, while Airgas had the burden to show
that their LEO designations were appropriate and should be sustained, as a
practical matter, because of Air Products' behavior of asking questions about
LEO material throughout the depositions, Airgas was forced to designate large
sections of transcripts as LEO. The Court ordered Air Products to send to
Airgas the deposition transcripts it wanted reviewed with notations to show
what sections it believed were properly designated LEO and Airgas would get 5
hours to respond. With respect to the second request, Airgas agreed that
it would review the appropriate minutes and produce non-LEO versions of the
minutes. The Court ordered that done by 5 p.m. on January 22, 2011.
With respect to third request, the Court ordered Airgas to produce a non-LEO
version of a letter from an Airgas institutional investor shareholder to the
Airgas board, expressing its view as to Airgas's value. Airgas argued
that the letter was "a confidential communication with a large shareholder of
Airgas regarding the shareholder's view of value in a sale transaction, the
disclosure of which would give Air Products information that could unfairly
assist it in the formulation of its takeover strategy in approaching that
shareholder with respect to the shareholder's investment decision." Airgas
further argued that it was "properly designated LEO because it reflect[ed] a
shareholder's privately held views of the value of Airgas in a sale
transaction-information that bears on the value of Airgas and on Airgas's
strategy in a proxy contest." The Court stated that it did not think that
that document should be designated as LEO and that the letter was "irrelevant
to the core issue" before the Court. The Court also noted that "[a]n
institutional shareholder's privately held views and non-exhaustive analyses on
the "fair value" of Airgas based on publicly-available information, though, are
just that-privately held views by a shareholder based on information that can
be accessed by others. The letter in no way provides a fairness opinion or is
'even intended to be a substitute for a full fairness review,' nor does it
purport to provide the type of valuation of Airgas that a financial advisor would
provide."
AIRGAS'S MOTION IN LIMINE
Airgas moved to preclude Air Products from offering evidence in support of its
assertion that $70 per share is its "best and final" offer. Because Air
Products had refused to produce internal analyses or valuations that the Air
Products board relied upon in reaching the decision to make the $70 offer,
Airgas argued that Delaware law precludes Air Products from offering any
evidence supporting its determination to make this its "best and final" offer.
The Court noted that it was "the Airgas board's burden to defend the decision
to maintain the rights plan-a defense that will require the board to
demonstrate the existence of a threat to corporate policy or effectiveness and
the reasonableness of the board's response to that threat. Delaware decisions
involving the "sword and shield" concept have precluded a party from shielding
evidence from an opposing party and then relying on the evidence at trial to
meet its burden of proof on an issue central to the resolution of the parties'
dispute." In denying the Airgas motion, the Court stated:
Air Products' internal views and assumptions about (or analyses of) the value
of Airgas, whether on a standalone basis or in combination with Air Products,
are not central to any question that I must resolve in the context of this
litigation. Whether the Airgas board honestly and in good faith believed the
$70 offer presented a "threat" depends upon what the Airgas board knew at the
time it made that determination; it cannot be based upon what the Air Products
board knew about Air Products' own internal valuations of Airgas, either alone
or in combination with Air Products. .... Air Products is not required to
demonstrate the fairness of its offer; nor is it required to demonstrate that
its offer is less than, equal to, or greater than what it has independently and
internally determined is the value of Airgas. Having publicly announced that
its $70 offer is its "final" offer, however, Air Products has now effectively
and irrevocably represented to this Court that there will be no further
requests for judicial relief with respect to any other offer (should there ever
be one).
Read more Delaware business
litigation case summaries and commentary on Delaware
Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog, a blog hosted by Francis G.X.
Pileggi, of Fox Rothschild LLP.