Order lets board vote proceed in CBS dispute

WILMINGTON, Del. -- A Delaware judge on Wednesday ordered a pause in a dispute between CBS and its majority shareholder over control of the company.

Chancellor Andre Bouchard granted CBS a temporary restraining order prohibiting National Amusements Inc. from taking any action to thwart a scheduled board vote today on a dividend that would dilute National Amusements preferred stock voting power from 80 percent to 17 percent, effectively giving CBS independence.

But Bouchard said he was granting the restraining order only to preserve his jurisdiction while he gives the matter further consideration, adding he would rule today on whether the order should remain in effect.

"I've never seen anything quite like what's transpired here in terms of moving parts," Bouchard said.

Earlier Wednesday, barely an hour before the hearing, National Amusements informed the court that it had rewritten CBS' bylaws to require a "supermajority" to approve the dilutive dividend.

That filing came in response to a complaint filed Monday by CBS against National Amusements, led by the daughter of billionaire media mogul Sumner Redstone.

CBS has been fighting pressure by National Amusements to merge with Viacom, which also is controlled by National Amusements.

CBS has alleged that Shari Redstone and National Amusements, in pushing for a merger that CBS has determined is not in its best interests, have tried to undermine the authority of the CBS board and management, led by CEO and Chairman Les Moonves.

CBS, along with a special committee of independent directors formed to consider the merger proposal, asked Bouchard for a restraining order to prevent Shari Redstone and National Amusements from attempting to replace CBS board members or to modify corporate governance documents before any action taken at today's board meeting takes effect.

Meanwhile, CBS has pledged that if the board approves the dividend, it will not issue any shares or cause the dividend to take effect without the judge's consent.

"This is not a nuclear option," CBS attorney Ted Mirvis told Bouchard. "The board meeting is not game over. The board meeting is game on."

Meredith Kotler, an attorney for Redstone and National Amusements, told the judge that CBS has forced her clients' hands in proposing the dilutive dividend, hastily scheduling a board meeting to vote on it, and ambushing National Amusements with a lawsuit seeking to prevent it from exercising its rights.

Kotler said that in trying to prevent National Amusements from forcing a merger with Viacom, CBS wants to strip its controlling shareholder of "all voting power, on anything, for all time."

Business on 05/17/2018

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