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Showing 290 posts in Fiduciary Duty.

Supreme Court Clarifies Stockholder Ratification Law

Posted In Directors, Fiduciary Duty

Gantler v. Stephens, C.A. 132,2008 (Del. Jan. 27, 2009)

 

This is an important decision because it limits when stockholder approval of a transaction has the effect of ratifying director action. Moreover, it limits the effect of stockholder ratification by holding that the business judgment level of review still applies to the directors' action, rather than holding that ratification extinguishes any claim.

 

The ratification holding is that stockholder ratification only occurs when the stockholders approve a transaction that the directors are empowered to take without the approval of the stockholders. For example, because directors are able to issue stock without stockholder approval, the added approval of the stockholders would ratify their decision to sell stock. In contrast, because a merger already requires stockholder approval, the approval of the stockholders does not constitute "ratification" of the directors' decision to recommend the merger. They approve it but do not "ratify" it. How is that for a distinction?

 

The rationale for this tightly reasoned result lies in the difference under Delaware law between complying with a controlling statute's requirements to carry out a transaction and having a good reason for doing the transaction in the first place. In other words, in Delaware just because you have the power to act (the stockholders voted for it) does not mean you should act (a decision that is measured by Delaware's law of fiduciary duty).

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Court of Chancery Clarifies Statutory Trust Law

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

Cargill, Incorporated v. JWH Special Circumstance LLC, C.A. 3234-VCP (Del. Ch. Nov. 7, 2008)

 

In this major opinion, the Court of Chancery held that a manager of a Delaware Statutory Trust has a fiduciary duty to the Trust absent a clear exclusion of that duty in the trust instrument. This conclusion has broad implications including that the owners of the manager may also have such duties in connection with transactions that arguably benefit the owner. That is consistent with a long line of Delaware case law in other contexts, such as for corporations and limited partnerships.

 

This once again illustrates the need for very careful drafting in these alternative entities where the governing instrument may set the rules of the game. Failure to do so means that principles of corporate law, or in this case, trust law, will control by default. That will defeat the whole purpose of using an alternative to the traditional corporate form to gain the right to draft rules for that particular transaction.

 

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Court of Chancery Details Board Duties in a Merger

Posted In Fiduciary Duty, M&A

Ryan v. Lyondel Chemical Company, C.A. 3176-VCN (July 29, 2008)

This decision is a textbook explanation and summary of the Delaware case law on the duties of a board of directors when considering a takeover proposal. The Court first sets out the Revlon duties in detail including the effect on those duties when the Barkin "exception" may apply. Next, the Court explains how to comply with the principles of both Omnicare and Unocal concerning defensive measures that protect the proposed transaction. Finally, the Court explains why in the context of a summary judgment motion that the otherwise disinterested board may have its good faith questioned.

This last part of the decision is surely its most controversial. While the Delaware statute protects directors from attacks on their decisions based on their lack of care, the loophole has always been that the statute does not protect from act not taken in good faith. When does a lack of care turn into a lack of good faith is the question.

In a series of decisions such as the Disney case, the Delaware Supreme Court has tried to set out some guidance on this issue. However, the test to be applied is still vague and in the context of a summary judgment motion when all inferences must be drawn in favor of the plaintiff, the test becomes even more difficult in application. This decision illustrates that problem and is worth reading for that issue alone.

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Court of Chancery Divides Settlement Among Shareholders In Class Action Suit

Posted In Class Actions, Corporate Charters, Fiduciary Duty

The plan of allocation approved in Ginsburg v. Philadelphia Stock Exchange et. al., C.A. No. 2202-CC is a landmark decision for those in the business of litigation arbitrage, buying shares of a company that is involved in a class action that may lead to substantial settlement proceeds. More ›

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Court of Chancery Issues Major Disclosure Law Decision

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

In re Transkaryotic Therapies, Inc., C.A. 2776-CC (Del Ch. June 19, 2008)

The law of Delaware on when damages may be awarded for failing to make proper disclosures to stockholders in a proxy statement has been unsettled. This major decision resolves much of that uncertainty. The Court has now held:

“. . . this Court cannot grant monetary or injunctive relief for disclosure violations in connection with a proxy solicitation in favor of a merger three years after that merger has been consummated and where there is no evidence of a breach of the duty of loyalty or good faith by the directors who authorized the disclosures.”

The opinion carefully reviews and harmonizes precedent to reach this final conclusion. The net effect then is that the remedy for negligent disclosure violations is an injunction. Of course, as the opinion makes clear, damages may still be available in circumstances where there was a conflict of interest by the directors or they acted in bad faith. The latter would occur, for example, if the directors omitted substantial materials from the proxy statement deliberately to mislead.

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District Court Denies Motion to Dismiss, Allows Duty of Care, Loyalty and Fraud Claims to Proceed

Posted In Business Torts, Directors, Fiduciary Duty, Jurisdiction

Ad Hoc Comm. of Equity Holders of Tectonic Network, Inc. v. Wolford, 2008 WL 212 7464 (D. Del. May 21, 2008)

The District Court recently allowed claims for breach of the duties of care and loyalty against former directors and officers of Tectonic Network, Inc. (the “Company”) to go forward, rejecting Defendants’ jurisdiction, standing and insufficient claim arguments. Plaintiff, an Ad Hoc Committee of Equity Holders in the Company, sued Defendants for purportedly improper conduct in connection with the acquisition of three businesses and the resulting sale of one of the Company’s subsidiaries. Plaintiff alleged that Defendant Officers (Officer #1 and Officer #2) committed fraud related to the Company’s actions, and all Defendants breached their fiduciary duties. Specifically, Plaintiff alleged that the Defendants breached their fiduciary duties in recommending and/or approving the acquisition of the three businesses, all of which Officer #1 had a majority interest in. Plaintiff also alleged that the Defendant Officers committed fraud in making material misrepresentations to the board regarding the profitability of the acquired businesses and the prospective profitability of a future business plan that resulted in the sale of the Company’s subsidiary. Subsequent to acquisitions and sales, the Company’s financial picture worsened, and it filed for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The Bankruptcy Court lifted the stay to allow Plaintiff to press its claims outside of the bankruptcy proceedings. More ›

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Court of Chancery Defines Unreasonable

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

Venhill Limited Partnership v. Hillman, C.A. 1866-VCS (Del. Ch. June 3, 2008)

For a director of a Delaware corporation to be guilty of gross negligence, her conduct must be so unreasonable that no one could have made the same decision. Unless the decision under review is this bad, it will be protected by the business judgment rule. This gross negligence rarely happens and it is thus difficult to find decisions that illustrate the type of conduct that meets this test. In fact, in this decision the defendant had a conflict of interest and thus the business judgment rule did not apply for that reason.

However, the Court went to great length to point out that the investment decisions under review did also exceed the gross negligence standard. This explanation provides an insight into what sort of decision-making is a breach of fiduciary duty. For example, in this case the investment was in a company that did not have a business plan, was continuously losing money, and was generally in such poor shape that no one but the hapless defendant would have lent it money. In short, it was gross negligence to make the loans and the defendant was liable for them as a result.

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Court of Chancery Upholds LLC Agreement Voting Rights

Posted In Fiduciary Duty, Jurisdiction, LLC Agreements

Fisk Ventuers LLC v. Segal, C.A. 3017-CC (Del. Ch. May 7, 2008)

A Delaware LLC is a creature of the members' contract. Here the LLC agreement gave voting rights to a class of members that effectively gave them veto rights over certain actions. When those members exercised those veto rights, the other members sued claiming that constituted a breach of duty. The Chancellor flatly rejected that argument as an attack on the veto rights that were given in the LLC Agreement.

The opinion also holds that a member's consultation with his designated managers on the LLC Board does not give Delaware jurisdiction over that member under the long arm statute's provisions that subject managers to jurisdiction in Delaware.

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Ebay Brings Stockholder Action In Court of Chancery Against Craigslist And Its Directors For Diluting Its Minority Stake

Posted In Fiduciary Duty, News

Yesterday eBay Domestic Holdings Inc. brought an action in the Court of Chancery, C.A. 3705-CC, against Craigslist and certain of its directors, challenging recent transactions implemented by the Craigslist board. eBay acquired a minority ownership interest in Craigslist (28.4%) back in 2004.  It now alleges that Craigslist's directors have taken unilateral action in violation of their fiduciary duties and have disadvantaged eBay and its investment. 

The complaint was filed under seal.  The matter has been retained by Chancellor Chandler.   

The WSJ Law Blog has coverage here.  And, The NY Times reports here.   

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Court of Chancery Finds Duty To Speak

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

Corporate Property Associates 14 Inc. v. CHR Holding Corp., C.A. No. 3231-VCS (Del. C. April 10, 2008)

In this case of first impression, the Court of Chancery held that a corporation had a duty to a warrant holder to truthfully answer its inquiries about corporate plans. This is significant because normally there is no fiduciary duty running to warrant holders and no duty to keep them informed. Here, however, finding that when asked about a matter that implicated the warrant holders' financial interest, there was a duty to answer a question truthfully.

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Delaware Bankruptcy Court Applies Caremark to Officers

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

Miller v. McDonald, C.A. 07-51350 (Bankr. Del. April 9, 2008)

In a case of apparent fist impression, a bankruptcy court in Delaware has held that Caremark duties apply to corporate officers as well as directors. Thus, corporate officers also have the duty to exercise reasonable care in oversight of corporate operations in their area of responsibility. This is hardly a surprise. However, given that the officer involved in this case was considered the company's general counsel, this decision has some far-reaching implications.

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Court of Chancery Upholds Proxy Power

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

In Re IAC/Interactivecorp, C.A. 3486-VCL (Del. Ch. March 28, 2008)

In this widely reported decision, the Court of Chancery applied well established principles of contract construction to determine when a proxy would be upheld. Once again, the Court rejected an attempt to modify the contract language to imply a duty of good faith and fair dealing, or a fiduciary duty that would override the rights given in the contract.

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Class Action Filed Against Bear Stearns in Delaware Seeking to Enjoin Acquisition by JPMorgan

Posted In Class Actions, Fiduciary Duty, M&A, News

See latest developments on 03/31/08 above: Last Thursday, a class action complaint was filed against Bear Stearns and its directors in the Court of Chancery.  The complaint alleges that the company has failed to maximize shareholder value by agreeing to be purchased by JPMorgan Chase for $2 per share.  The complaint further alleges that, by agreeing to the deal, the company has favored numerous constituencies over the shareholders. 

 

Update: The New York Times reports  that JPMorgan Chase raised its offer to $10 per share.  Professor Ribstein has commented , along with Pileggi. 

 

Further Update: An additional class action was filed against Bear Stearns on Monday by the Wayne County Employees' Retirement System .  And, yesterday a TRO was filed on behalf of the plaintiffs in both actions, seeking to enjoin the sale, which is set to close on April 8.  Both actions, and the accompanying TRO, have been assigned to Vice Chancellor Parsons

 

 

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Court of Chancery Explains Options Cases

Posted In Derivative Claims, Fiduciary Duty

Weiss v. Swanson, C.A. No. 2828-VCL (Del Ch. March 7, 2008)

In the latest of the Chancery decisions on complaints challenging the grant of options, the Court has explained what it takes to state a derivative complaint that excuses demand on the Board. Briefly, the Court here focused on what was disclosed to the stockholders when they were asked to approve option plans or elect directors who had received option grants. First, full disclosure is required, particularly of practices that are likely to lead to increasing the value of the options, such as the bullet-dodging alleged in this case.

Second, the fact that a majority of the board received the options also made them interested enough to excuse demand.

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Court of Chancery Dismisses Complaint Based On Conjecture

Posted In Fiduciary Duty

Pfeffer v. Redstone, C.A. No. 2317-VCL (February 1, 2008).

At first this seems like a common disclosure case. It is more than that, however. The court here shows that it expects claims to be based on more than mere conjecture to survive a motion to dismiss. The Complaint alleged that the key corporate officers knew of a bad cash flow analysis but failed to disclose it in connection with an exchange offer. When the plaintiff''s counsel could not even say he had seen the alleged report or explain how it was disclosed to the defendant directors, the complaint was dismissed.

To support allegations of knowledge of a red flag, the allegation must be based on common sense or specific facts. It is common sense to infer the directors saw a report if it was common knowledge in the corporation and is a type of report that one would expect the board to have seen. It is not common sense to believe that an obscure memo generated by a lower level employee was shown to the board of a publicly traded corporation.

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