Court of Chancery Issues First Decision Dismissing MultiPlan Claims

Skadden Publication / Insights: Delaware Alert

Faiz Ahmad Arthur R. Bookout Steven J. Daniels Cliff C. Gardner Allison L. Land Joseph O. Larkin Edward B. Micheletti Jenness E. Parker Richard H. West Jennifer C. Voss

On May 31, 2024, the Delaware Court of Chancery issued its first opinion dismissing a “MultiPlan claim” at the pleadings stage. 

As a reminder, a MultiPlan claim is a breach of fiduciary duty claim against directors, officers or controllers of a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) alleging that the fiduciaries interfered with the SPAC stockholders’ ability to exercise their redemption rights in connection with a so-called “de-SPAC” merger. Typically, MultiPlan plaintiffs allege that certain information was omitted from, or misleadingly disclosed in, the proxy statement for stockholder approval of the de-SPAC transaction. 

In dismissing with prejudice the claims alleged in In Re Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. IV Stockholder Litigation, Vice Chancellor Lori Will:

  • Stated that “pleading requirements exist even where [as here] entire fairness applies,” and that alleging a SPAC overpaid for a target is not a MultiPlan claim, it is a derivative claim.
  • Distinguished prior decisions refusing to dismiss MultiPlan claims because the Hennessy plaintiff’s complaint “address[ed] actions by [the target]’s post-closing board — a body made up of directors who were (with one exception) not on the SPAC’s board.”
  • Held that the plaintiff failed to allege that the information purportedly omitted from, or misleadingly disclosed in, the proxy statement was “known or knowable” by directors and officers of the SPAC before the closing of the merger, which meant that there were no well-pleaded allegations of unfair dealing vis-a-vis the redemption right.
  • Recognized that, after the original MultiPlan decision, a host of other “remarkably similar complaints” were filed challenging disclosures in “years-old proxy statements that became problematic only when the combined company underperformed,” and that, as a result, “SPAC lawsuits are ubiquitous in Delaware” even though the overall SPAC market has contracted.

The court reasoned that “[t]o allow this faulty claim to proceed would fuel perverse incentives and invite strike suits.”

This memorandum is provided by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and its affiliates for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This memorandum is considered advertising under applicable state laws.

BACK TO TOP