Malone-Diller court case hinges on duty

Fri Mar 7, 2008 11:44am EST
 
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By Michele Gershberg - Analysis

NEW YORK (Reuters) - When John Malone and Barry Diller face off in court next week, their dispute will hinge on whether Diller owes his highest allegiance to all shareholders of IAC/InterActiveCorp as its chief executive, or to the controlling investor, Liberty Media, whose trust he holds.

Diller is chairman and CEO of Internet conglomerate IAC (IACI.O) and holds the proxy for Liberty's (LINTA.O) 62 percent voting control in the company. Malone's Liberty owns about 30 percent of IAC, but has majority control through a second class of super-voting shares.

The two sides filed dueling lawsuits over who will control four of IAC's largest units under a proposed spin-off, with trial scheduled to begin in Delaware Chancery Court on Monday.

Many on Wall Street believe it would have been in the best interest of both parties to settle well in advance, as IAC shares have slid more than 20 percent since the legal battle began in late January.

But with no apparent settlement in the works, two of the media industry's biggest personalities face a novel predicament based on their proxy agreement, which lies at the heart of their battle after more than a decade of working together.

"I can't see how he could serve both those masters at the same time," said Beth Young, a senior research associate at the Corporate Library, referring to Diller.

"There is a potential conflict of interest embedded in that arrangement," she said. "If you are the CEO, your paramount responsibility has to be to the company and shareholders."

The deal was first conceived to allow Diller, a former film and television impresario, to build and control a network of media and Web assets with the backing of cable mogul Malone.

That alliance began to weaken as IAC's shares shed their value over the last several years and Malone sought a way to shore up his investment.

IAC proposed in November that it focus on its fast-growing Web media businesses and spin off of the HSN shopping network, LendingTree mortgage site, Ticketmaster box office service and Interval time-share exchange.

A SIMPLE ARGUMENT

The full-blown dispute erupted in January when Diller proposed to eliminate the super-voting shares for the spun off units, arguing a single-tier share structure would make them more attractive for new investors to buy into the companies.

Liberty opposed ceding control over these businesses just because they have been carved into separate entities. It could cite previous experience on that claim, as a similar spinoff of IAC travel site Expedia (EXPE.O) in 2005 preserved Liberty's voting control after it became a separate public company.

"The Liberty argument is a fairly simple argument, which is that Diller is obligated to act in ways that are consistent with the views and the interests of what is after all the majority shareholder of the company," said Thomas Dewey, a lawyer who specializes in governance issues and advises boards at Dewey Pegno & Kramarsky LLP. "It's always better to have a simple argument."

While Diller maintains he had not taken concrete steps to act on the proposal, Liberty contends that he violated their proxy agreement by showing his intent to vote its shares against Liberty's interests.  Continued...

 
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