WILMINGTON, Del.—A judge in the Delaware federal district court has granted Cooper Tire & Rubber Co.'s petition for dismissal of a securities class action lawsuit stemming from the failure of Cooper's proposed $2.5 billion merger with Apollo Tyres Ltd.
Three investment firms—OFI Risk Arbitrages, OFI Risk Arb Absolu and Timber Hill L.L.C.—filed suit against Cooper in January 2014. The plaintiffs claimed that Cooper deliberately withheld from shareholders the opposition of Chengshan Group—co-owners with Cooper of Cooper Chengshan Tire Co. Ltd. in China—to the merger with Apollo.
The plaintiffs also accused Cooper of concealing that Chengshan Chairman Che Hongzhi wanted to bid on Cooper himself.
Cooper filed a petition to dismiss the class action, arguing that the plaintiffs' allegations were without merit. The Delaware held hearings on the case on March 11, 2015.
In granting Cooper's petition July 1, Judge Richard G. Andrews ruled that the plaintiffs failed to prove their assertions that Cooper and its top executives deliberately committed wrongdoing in failing to provide the information about Chengshan and Che to shareholders.
“Where there is no underlying securities violation, there can be no liability,” Andrews wrote.
Cooper executives could not be reached for comment.