16fall Ba Attack
16fall Ba Attack
16fall Ba Attack
CHAPTER 1AGENCY
1. WHO IS AN AGENT?
Use Restatement of the Law (Third) Agency and Case Law on the Exam
Agency: Restatement (Third) 1.01Agency is the fiduciary relationship that arises when one person (a
principal) manifests assent to another person (an agent) that the agent shall act on the principals behalf and
subject to the principals control and the agent manifests assent of otherwise consents so to the act.
Types of Agency:
Express Agency: an agency that occurs when a principal and an agent expressly agree to enter into an agency
agreement with each other.
Apparent Agency: agency that arises when a principal creates the appearance of an agency that in actuality
does not exist.
Agency by Ratification: an agency that occurs when:
o a person misrepresents himself as anothers agent when in fact they are not, and
o the purported principal ratifies (accepts) the unauthorized act.
Agency by Estoppel: when a third party alters its position because of offer from the agent
o Protects against improper actions of the principal
Gorton v. Doty
-Def. Agency
A Gay Jenson
Farms Co. v.
Cargill, Inc.
-Questions of
control
Where one undertakes to transact some business or mange some affair for
another by authority and on account of the latter, the relationship of
principal and agent arises.
A creditor who assumes control of his debtors business may be held liable
as principal for the acts of the debtor in connection with the business.
Types Authority:
Actual Authority: Restatement (Third) 2.01 An agent acts with actual authority when, at the time of
taking action that has legal consequences for the principal, the agent reasonably believes, in accordance with
the principals manifestations to the agent that the principal wishes the agent so to act.
Apparent Authority: Restatement (Third) 2.03 Apparent authority is the power held by an agent or the
other actor to affect a principals legal relationships with third parties when a third party reasonably believes
the actor has authority to act on behalf of the principal and that belief if traceable to the principals
manifestations.
-Implied Authority by custom:
Implied authority: Restatement (Third) 2.02
o Implied actual authority: act of putting agent in such a position leads agent to reasonably believe
he has authority
o Implied apparent authority: act of putting agent in such a position leads third party to reasonably
believe agent has authority
Inherent Authority (Now just apparent authority):
Restatement 8AInherent agency power is a term used in the restatement of this subject to
indicate the power of an agent which is derived not from authority, apparent authority or estoppel,
but solely from the agency relation and exists for the protection of persons harmed by or dealing
with a servant or other agent.
Third Restatement abandons inherent authority and groups it with apparent authority.
-Implied
Authority
Three-Seventy
Leasing Co. v.
Ampex Co.
Watteau v. Fenwick
-Apparent
Authority
-Inherent
Authority
Apparent
Authority
B. RATIFICATION
Botticello v.
Stefanovicz
-Ratification
C. ESTOPPEL
Hoddeson v. Koos
Bros.
-Estoppel
-Agents
Liability
Independent Contractors: an independent contractor is a person who agrees to carry out some task but is not subject
to the principals control in doing so.
Independent contractor (agent type)subject to limited control by P with respect to the chosen results
A has the power to act on Ps behalf
Independent Contractor (non-agent type)less control on Ps part
A has no power to act on Ps behalf.
-Independent
Contractor vs.
Agent;
-Franchise
-Franchise
-Franchise;
-Sufficient
control
-Tort liability;
-Franchise;
-Control ;
-Apparent vs.
actual authority
-Scope of
agents
employment
For purposes of determining tort liability, a jury may find that an agency
relationship exists between a franchisor and a franchisee where the
franchisor retains significant control over the daily operation of the
franchisees business and insists on uniformity of appearance and the
standards designed to cause the public to think that the franchise is part of
the franchisors business.
Conduct of an employee may be within the scope of employment even if
the specific act does not serve the employers interest.
C. SCOPE OF EMPLOYMENT
Manning v.
Grimsley
-Scope of
agents
employment;
-Tort liability
D. STATUTORY CLAIMS
Arguello v. Conoco,
Inc.
-Statuary
liability;
-Agency
relationship;
-Franchise
P usually not liable for an independent contractors torts, but exceptions apply:
P retains control over the aspect of the work in which the tort occurs
Majestic Realty
Associates, Inc. v.
Toti Contracting Co.
-Principal
liability for
independent
contractors
actions
Reading v. Regem
Rash v. J.V.
Intermediate, Ltd
-Agents duty of
loyalty;
-Secret profits
-Agents duty of
loyalty;
-Usurping bus
opportunity
from principal
B. DUTIES DURING AND AFTER TERMINATION OF AGENCY: HEREIN OF GRABBING AND LEAVING
Town & Country
House and Home
Services, Inc. v.
Newbery
-Duty of
loyalty;
-Grabbing and
leaving
CHAPTER 2PARTNERSHIPS
1. WHAT IS A PARTNERSHIP AND WHO ARE THE PARTNERS?
Use RUPA (1997) on the Exam
Partnership Creation:
o Uniform Partnership Act (1997) Section 202. Formation of partnership
o (c) In determining whether a partnership is formed, the following rules apply:
(1) Joint tenancy, tenancy in common, tenancy by the entireties, joint property, common property,
or part ownership does not by itself establish a partnership, even if the co-owners share profits
made by the use of the property.
(2) The sharing of gross returns does not by itself establish a partnership, even if the persons
sharing them have a joint or common right or interest in property from which the returns are
derived.
(3) A person who receives a share of the profits of a business is presumed to be a partner in the
business, unless the profits were received in payment:
(A) of a debt by installments or otherwise;
(B) for services as an independent contractor or of wages or other compensation to an
employee;
(C) of rent;
(D) of an annuity or other retirement or health benefit to a deceased or retired partner or a
beneficiary, representative, or designee of a deceased or retired partner;
(E) of interest or other charge on a loan, even if the amount of payment varies with the
profits of the business, including a direct or indirect present or future ownership of the
collateral, or rights to income, proceeds, or increase in value derived from the collateral;
or
(F) for the sale of the goodwill of a business or other property by installments or
otherwise.
o UPA (1997) 105: (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d), the partnership agreement
governs: (1) relations among the partners as partners and between the partners and the partnership (b)
To the extent the partnership agreement does not provide for a matter described in subsection (a), this
[act] governs the matter.
EXAM NOTE: Have two or more persons associated together to carry on as co-owners a business for profit?
o When in doubt, refer to rule UPA (1997) 202
A. PARTNERS COMPARED WITH EMPLOYEES
Fenwick v.
Unemployment
Compensation
Commission
-Def of
partnership
A partnership is an association of two or more persons to carry on as coowners a business for profit.
-Intent of parties
on partnership
formation
Southex Exhibitions,
Inc. v. Rhode Island
Builders
-Standard of
review for
Partnership:
Association, Inc.
totality-of-thecircumstances
C. PARTNERSHIP BY ESTOPPEL
Young v. Jones
-Partnership by
estoppel
(3) to refrain from competing with the partnership in the conduct of the partnerships business
before the dissolution of the partnership.
Actions that might violate this duty: competing with the partnership; taking away
business from the partnership; using partnership property for personal profit; conflicts of
interest
A. INTRODUCTION
Meinhard v. Salmon
Sandvick v.
LaCrosse
-Joint venture
fiduciary duty
-Partnership vs.
Joint venture;
-Def of joint
venture;
-Joint venture
fiduciary duty of
loyalty
-Usurping bus
opportunity
Joint adventurers own one another the highest fiduciary duty of loyalty
while the enterprise is ongoing.
(1) A partnership does not exist where a business undertaking is more
limited than a series of acts directed to an end.
(2) A joint venture exists between parties who purchase assets from their
credits in a single checking account in equal shares, where the assets are
titles in a single entitys name, and where profits, if any, are to be shared.
(3) Joint venturers breach their fiduciary duty of loyalty to co-joint
venturers where they take for themselves an opportunity that belongs to the
joint venture without giving their co-joint venturers the chance to
participate in that opportunity.
-Expulsion
-Good faith
requirement
3. PARTNERSHIP PROPERTY
Rights of a Partner:
o Control Rights: UPA (1997) 401(h): Each partner has equal rights in the management and conduct of
the partnership business.
Putnam v. Shoaf
Economic Rights: UPA (1997) 401(b): Each partner is entitled to an equal share of the partnership
distributions and is chargeable with a share of the partnership losses in proportion to the partners
share of the distributions.
Partnership Property:
UPA (1997) 501: A partner is not a co-owner of partnership property and has no interest in
partnership property which can be transferred, either voluntarily or involuntarily
UPA (1914) 25(1): A partner is co-owner with his partners of specific partnership property
holding as a tenant in partnership
Partnership Capital: UPA (1997) 401(a)
Capital Account: a running balance showing each Ps ownership equity
-Partners
interest in
partnership
property
The Partnership Interest: the partners interest is the partners share of profits and losses
o UPA (1997) 503(a)(2) codifies prior law that transfer of an interest does not effect a dissolution of the
partnership
A partner who has transferred his interest remains a partner
UPA (1997) 601(4) expulsion for transferring substantial amount of partners interest.
debts
Day v. Sidley &
Austin
Partners have a fiduciary duty to make a full and fair disclosure to other
partners of all information that may be of value to the partnership.
5. PARTNERSHIP DISSOLUTION
Dissolution:
o Effect on partnership: If no agreement between partners to carry on the business, the partnership must be
wound up.
If the business will not continue then winding up process contemplates that the firms assets are
distributed to the partners.
Authority of partners to act on behalf of partnership terminated except in connection with
winding up of partnership business. UPA (1997) 804
Dissociation: UPA 601. Events Causing Partners Dissociation
o (5) on application by the partnership or another partner, the person is expelled as a partner by judicial
order because the person:
(A) has engaged or is engaging in wrongful conduct that has affected adversely and materially, or
will affect adversely and materially, the partnerships business;
(B) has committed willfully or persistently, or is committing willfully or persistently, a material
breach of the partnership agreement or a duty or obligation under Section 409; or
(C) has engaged or is engaging in conduct relating to the partnerships business which makes it
not reasonably practicable to carry on the business with the person as a partner;
A. THE RIGHT TO DISSOLVE
Owen v. Cohen
-Judicial
dissolution
Collins v. Lewis
-Judicial
dissolution
requirements
-Judicial
dissolution basis
-Family
partnership
-Partners
conduct
Giles v. Giles
(i) the partner withdraws by express will, unless the withdrawal follows within
90 days after another partners dissociation by death or otherwise under Section
601(6) through(10) or wrongful dissociation under this subsection;
o (ii) the partner is expelled by judicial determination under Section 601(5);
o (iii) the partner is dissociated by becoming a debtor in bankruptcy; or
o (iv) in the case of a partner who is not an individual, trust other than a business
trust, or estate, the partner is expelled or otherwise dissociated because it
willfully dissolved or terminated.
(c) A partner who wrongfully dissociates is liable to the partnership and to the other partners for
damages caused by the dissociation. The liability is in addition to any other obligation of the
partner to the partnership or to the other partners.
o
Prentis v. Sheffel
-Freeze-out
-Judicial sale
-Bad faith
Pav-Saver Corp. v.
Vasso Corp.
-Wrongful
dissolution
-Right to
continue the bus
Kovacik v. Reed
-Liability of
partnership Loss
In a joint venture in which one party contributes funds and the other labor,
neither party is liable to the other for contributions for any loss sustained.
D. BUYOUT AGREEMENTS
G&S Investments v.
Belman
-Partnership
buyout
agreement
-Freedom of
Contract
ALTERNATIVES TO INCORPORATION
6. LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS
Use Case Law on Exam
Limited Liability Limited Partnership: a limited partnership that elects limited liability limited partnership status by
filing an application for LLLP registration.
o All partners in the limited partnership, including the general partners, have personal liability protection
o Other than the limited liability component, an LLLP maintains all other characteristics of a LP
o In an LP the general partners have full personal liability, but a corporation may serve as general partner
In an LLLP the general partners, whether individual, unincorporated association, or corporation, gets
limited liability.
Limited Partner Liability in Limited Partnerships:
o ULPA (1976): A limited partner shall not become liable as a general partner, unless, in addition to the
exercise of his rights and powers as a limited partner, he takes part in the control of the business.
o ULPA (1985) 303(a): Only limited partners who participate in control can be held liable
o ULPA (1985) 303(b): Safe harbors for conduct not deemed to participate in control
Being an agent, employee, or contractor for the limited partnership;
Consulting with the advising a general partner with respect to the business of the limited partnership;
Approving or disapproving of an amendment to the partnership agreement; or
Voting on specified matters.
Holzman v. De
Escamilla
In re: El Paso
Pipeline Partners,
L.P. Derivative
Litigation
-Limited vs.
General Partners
-Right to
contract away
fid duties
-Duty of good
faith
1. FORMATION
Formation of LLC:
o Legal Steps:
File articles of organization in the designated State office. ULLCA 202(a)
Required and optional contents in ULLCA 203
Filing fees and $800 min franchise tax (California)
o Other steps:
See Outline
Duray
Development, LLC
v. Perrin
De Facto Corporation: Grant shareholders limited liability as though in a de jure corporation if the organizers
meet the 4 requirements
Corporation by Estoppel: Estop creditors from holding shareholders personally liable as against only contract
creditors If the person dealing with the firm:
-LLC freedom
to contract
-operating
agreement
-Limits of the
operating
agreement
-LLC duty of
good faith
-Piercing the
corp. veil
-Alter ego
theory
Claims against the owner of a company for the debts of the company
should be allowed to proceed on the theory that the owner is the
companys alter ego where sufficient evidence has been presented that the
owner and company operated as one, and that the owner conducted the
companys affairs in a fraudulent, illegal, or unjust manner.
4. FIDUCIARY OBLIGATIONS
McConnell v. Hunt
Sports Enterprises
-Operating
agreement;
-Extrinsic
evidence
-Fid duty
-Corp.
Opportunity
Doctrine
5. ADDITIONAL CAPITAL
Racing Investment
Fund 2000, LLC v.
Clay Ward Agency,
Inc.
-LLCs right to
capital call,
scope
6. DISSOLUTION
Dissociation v. Dissolution
o Dissociation:
Withdrawal or expulsion of a member (ULLCA 601)
Dissociation w/o Dissolution:
o Dissociated members interest must be purchased by the LLC
Judicial appraisal proceeding available
o Members right to participate in firm business terminates
Exception for participation in a post-dissolution winding up process
o Dissolution:
Winding up of LLC triggered (ULLCA 801)
Events of Dissolution:
o By operation of law:
Upon the happening of any event specified in LLC operating agreement
Vote of members (as specified in operating agreement)
It becomes unlawful to carry on the business
o Upon court order:
Economic purpose frustrated
Misconduct by members
New Horizons
Supply Cooperative
v. Haack
-LLC
member/manage
r liability
following
dissolution
Corporation-General Info
o Either Public (Publicly held) or Close (Closely held)
o Critical Attributes:
1. Legal Personality, separate legal existence from its owners
2. Limited Liability
3. Separation of Ownership and Control
4. Liquidity
5. Flexible Capital Structure
Rights of Shareholders
o Vote on limited range of issues
o Receive dividends when declared by the board
o Inspect corps. books and records
o Receive distribution upon termination
o Purchase proportionate shares of a new issuance of corporate stock to maintain current current ownership
% (Preemptive right )
o File derivative suit
-BoD power
under article of
incorporation
-Bylaws
-Statutory
validity
-Contractual
Validity
Walkovszky v.
Carlton
-Personal
liability
-Piercing the
corp. veil
Sea-Land Services,
Inc. v. Pepper
Source
-Grounds for
piercing the
corp. veil
-Owner Liability
-Grounds for
piercing the
corp. veil
-Parent /
subsidiary
-Parent Tort
Liability
-Products
liability
In re Silicone Gel
Breast Implants
Products Liability
Litigation
Frigidaire Sales
Corporation v.
Union Properties,
Inc.
-Limited
liability of
limited partners
-Ground for
piercing
A. INTRODUCTION
Cohen v. Beneficial
Industrial Loan
Corp.
Eisenberg v. Flying
Tiger Line, Inc.
-State incorp.
law in Fed Court
-Derivative suits
-Personal vs.
derivative suits
-Shareholder
rights
Grimes v. Donald
Marx v. Akers
-Direct vs.
derivative
-Demand
excused
-Demand
rejection
grounds
-Waiver on
appeal
-NY law on
Demand Futility
(1) A claim that a board of directors has abdicated its statutory duty may
be brought directly.
(2) When a stockholder demands that the board of directors takes action
on a claim allegedly belonging to the corporation and demand is refused,
the stockholder may not thereafter assert that demand is excused with
respect to other legal theories in support of the same claim, although the
stockholder may have a remedy for wrongful refusal or may submit
further demands which are not repetitious.
Demand on a board of directors is futile if a complaint alleges with
particularity that: (1) a majority of the directors are interested in the
transaction; (2) the directors failed to inform themselves to a degree
reasonably necessary about the transaction; or (3) the directors failed to
exercise their business judgement in approving the transaction.
Independence Contexts:
Independent and disinterested decision makers key precondition to BJR:
Demand futility
SLC recommendation
Approval of conflicted interest transactions
Mergers and acquisitions
Especially defenses against hostile takeover bids
Board Functions: DGCL 141(a): The business and affairs of every corporation organized under this chapter
shall be managed by or under the direction of a board of directors.
Board Special Committees: DGCL 141(c)(2): The board of directors may designate 1 or more committees,
each committee to consist of 1 or more of the directors of the corporation. Any such committee, to the extent
provided in the resolution of the board of directors, or in the bylaws of the corporation, shall have and may
exercise all the powers and authority of the board of directors in the management of the business and affairs of the
corporation, and may authorize the seal of the corporation to be affixed to all papers which may require it; but no
such committee shall have the power or authority in reference to the following matter: (i) approving or adopting,
or recommending to the stockholders, any action or matter (other than the election or removal of directors)
expressly required by this chapter to be submitted to stockholders for approval or (ii) adopting, amending or
repealing any bylaw of the corporation.
Corporate Officers:
o Officers serve at the pleasure of the Board of Directors.
o Act as agents for the corporation.
Have fiduciary duties of agents, plus.
o In most states, one can be both officer and director.
Fiduciary Duties: Directors and officers are fiduciaries of the corporation.
o Duty of Care: Directors/officers are expected to act in good faith and the best interests of the corporation.
Failure to exercise due care may subject individual directors or officers personally liable.
o Duty of Loyalty: subordination of personal interests to the welfare of the corporation.
Auerbach v.
Bennette
-Special
Committee
qualifications
-BJR
-Courts scope of
inquiry
Zapata Corp. v.
Maldonado
-Special
Committee
Demand
rejection
-Zapata 2 step
-BJR
In re Oracle Corp.
Derivative
Litigation
-Special
Committee
independence
-Burden of
establishing
independence
Business Judgement Rule: In the absence of a showing of fraud, illegality or self-dealing by the directors, their
decision is final and not subject to review by the courts
Dodge v. Ford
Motor Co.
Shlensky v. Wrigley
-Charitable
contributions
-Dividends
-BJR
-Charitable
contributions
-Dividends
-BJR
-BoD Scope of
power
-Derivative suit
basis
-BJR
Exercise of Business Judgement? Waste? Fraud? Conflict of interest? Illegal Action? Egregious
Decision? Uninformed Decision? Bad Faith? Business Judgement Rule applies court abstains
Legal Effect of a Merger: DGCL 259(a): When any merger shall have become effective , for all purposes of
the laws of this State the separate existence of all the constituent corporations except the one into which the other
constituent corporations have been merged shall cease and the [surviving] corporation [shall possess] all the
rights, privileges, powers and franchises ..., and [be] subject to all the restrictions, disabilities and duties of each of
such corporations so merged or consolidated and all property, real, personal and mixed, and all debts due to any of
said constituent corporations shall be vested in the corporation surviving from such merger but all rights of
creditors of any of said constituent corporations shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and duties
of the respective constituent corporations shall thenceforth attach to said surviving corporation
Mergers effect on Shareholders: DGCL 251(b)(5): The plan of merger shall specify the manner of converting the
shares of each of the constituent corporations into cash securities of any other corporation or entity which the
holders of such shares are to receive in exchange for [their] shares
Business Judgement Rule post-Van Gorkom:
o A standard of liability
Directors may be held liable for gross negligence in failing to make an informed decision
o A rule of abstention
Will court review substance of BoD decision?
No
Court will examine decision making process
o The extent to which BoD made an informed decision
Directors Defense to Business Judgement Rule:
o DGCL 141(e) provides a defense for directors who rely on reports from officers.
BUT, BoD has a duty of inquiry, they cannot rely blindly
Smith v. Van
Gorkom
Francis v. United
Jersey Bank
-BJR scope
-BoD Duty of
Care, informed
decisions
-Liability of
BoD to corp.
Clients;
-Duty of care
2. DUTY OF LOYALTY
A. DIRECTORS AND MANAGERS
Delaware Law on Contracts between the Corporation and a Directors Interest: DGCL 144
o (a) No contract or transaction between a corporation and 1 or more of its directors or officers, or between
a corporation and any other corporation, partnership, association, or other organization in which 1 or more
of its directors or officers, are directors or officers, or have a financial interest, shall be void or voidable
solely for this reason, or solely because the director or officer is present at or participates in the meeting
of the board or committee which authorizes the contract or transaction, or solely because any such
directors or officers votes are counted for such purpose, if:
(1) The material facts as to the directors or officers relationship or interest and as to the contract
or transaction are disclosed or are known to the board of directors or the committee, and the board
or committee in good faith authorizes the contract or transaction by the affirmative votes of a
majority of the disinterested directors, even though the disinterested directors be less than a
quorum; or
(2) The material facts as to the directors or officers relationship or interest and as to the contract
or transaction are disclosed or are known to the shareholders entitled to vote thereon, and the
contract or transaction is specifically approved in good faith by vote of the shareholders; or
(3) The contract or transaction is fair as to the corporation as of the time it is authorized, approved
or ratified, by the board of directors, a committee or the shareholders.
o (b) Common or interested directors may be counted in determining the presence of a quorum at a meeting
of the board of directors or of a committee which authorizes the contract or transaction.
Bayer v. Beran
Benihana of Tokyo,
Inc. v. Benihana,
Inc.
-BJR Scope
-Heightened
scrutiny for
breach of
loyalty claims
-Interested vs.
disinterested
BoD;
-BoD duty of
loyalty scope
-BJR Scope
B. CORPORATE OPPORTUNITIES
Delaware Test:
o A corporate opportunity exists where:
1. Corporation is financially able to take the opportunity
2. Opportunity is in the corporation's line of business
3. Corporation has an interest or expectancy in the opportunity
Interest: Something to which the firm has a better right
Expectancy: takes something which, in the ordinary course of things, would come to the
corporation
4. Embracing the opportunity would create a conflict between directors self-interest and that of the
corporation
Broz v. Cellular
Information
Systems, Inc.
In re eBay, Inc.
Shareholder
Litigation
-Corporate
Opportunity
Doctrine Scope;
-Conflicted
Directors
-Corporate
Opportunity
Doctrine Scope;
-Conflicted
Directors;
-IPO
C. DOMINANT SHAREHOLDERS
Zhan v.
Transamerica
Corporation
-Parent /
Subsidiary fid
duties
-BJR vs.
Intrinsic fairness
-Majority SH fid
duty
-Majority SH
conflicts of
interest
-Ratification of
interested
transaction;
-Corporate
Opportunity
Doctrine Burden
of Proof
-Duty of
disclosure
-Duty of Care,
informed SH
vote
-Duty of
Loyalty,
informed SH
vote,
-BJR
D. RATIFICATION
Fliegler v. Lawrence
In re Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc.
Shareholder
Litigation
o
o
DGCL 141(e) provides: A member of the board of directors, or a member of any committee
designated by the board of directors, shall be fully protected in relying in good faith upon [specified
documents and persons]
DGCL 102(b)(7) provides that a corporations articles of incorporation may (but need not) contain: A
provision eliminating or limiting the personal liability of a director to the corporation or its stockholders
for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director, provided that such provision shall not
eliminate or limit the liability of a director: for acts or omissions not in good faith or which involve
intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law.
DGCL 145(a) and (b) only authorize indemnification of a director or officer who acted in good faith.
Bad Faith = Failure to Act in the Face of a Known Duty to Act
Intentional dereliction of duty, a conscious disregard for one's responsibilities
Fiduciary conduct of this kind, which does not involve disloyalty (as traditionally
defined) but is qualitatively more culpable than gross negligence, should be proscribed.
Section 102(b)(7) distinguishes between intentional misconduct and a knowing
violation of law (both examples of subjective bad faith) on the one hand, and acts ... not
in good faith, on the other. Because the statute exculpates directors only for conduct
amounting to gross negligence, the statutory denial of exculpation for acts ... not in good
faith must encompass the intermediate category of misconduct captured by the
Chancellor's definition of bad faith.
A. COMPENSATION
Corporate Waste: A transaction that is so one sided that no business person of ordinary, sound judgment could
conclude that the corporation has received adequate consideration
In re The Walt
Disney Co.
Derivative
Litigation
Stone v. Ritter
-Derivative suit
-Exculpation of
duty of care for
BoD
-Good faith
-Oversight
responsibilities
(Corp
Compliance)
Analytical Sequence:
o 1. Direct or Derivative?
o 2. If derivative, demand excused or required? Standard:
Complaint create reasonable doubt BoD could have exercised independent judgment in
responding to a demand?
Substantial risk of monetary liability?
o 3. Risk of liability analysis depends on whether 102(b)(7) clause is present
o 4. If so, is there reason to believe plaintiff can show loyalty or bad faith?
BoP? Probably defendant, b/c 102(b) is an affirmative defense
o 5. If only care claim, 102(b)(7) precludes liability and demand required
In real world, plaintiff probably goes away
o 6. If bad faith or loyalty, liability cannot be exculpated
o 7. Liability risk high enough to excuse demand?
If so, defendants probably settle
If not, SLC?
If not, pre-trial substantive motions: remember determinations to this point all reasonable doubt
based on pleadings and limited discovery
In re China
Agritech, Inc.
Shareholder
Derivative
Litigation
-Derivative suit
-Demand futility
-BoD
independence
- Exculpation of
duty of care for
BoD
-Duty of loyalty
-Good Faith
- 102(b)(7)
(1) A derivative action will not be dismissed where the plaintiff has
pleaded particularized facts that support a reasonable inference that a
majority of the members of the board on whom demand would have been
made were not independent or disinterested and would face a substantial
risk of liability for oversight violations.
(2) Where a corporation has a provision in its certificate of incorporation
that exculpates directors for breach of the duty of care, such a provision
does not shield the directors from claims that implicate the duty of loyalty
and its embedded requirements of good faith.
Section 16(a): Every person who is directly or indirectly the beneficial owner of more than 10 per centum of any
class of any equity security . . . or who is a director or an officer of the issuer of such security . . . within ten days after
the close of each calendar month . . . shall file with the Commission . . . a statement indicating his ownership at the
close of the calendar month and such changes in his ownership as have occurred during such calendar month
Section 16(b): any profit realized by [such beneficial owner, director, or officer] from any purchase and sale, or any
sale and purchase, of any equity security of such issuer . . . within any period of less than six months . . . shall inure to
and be recoverable by the issuer
Halliburton Co. v.
Erica P. John Fund,
Inc.
West v. Prudential
Securities, Inc.
Securities and
Exchange
Commission v.
Texas v. Gulf
Sulphur Co.
Dirks v. Securities
& Exchange
Commission
-Reliance on
fraud info;
-Effect on stock
prices
-Non-public
misinformation;
-Fraud-on-themarket doctrine
-Disclosure of
Material inside
info;
-Insiders with
info duty;
-Insider trading
on non-public
info
-Tippee (noninsider) with
info
United States v.
Hagen
Reliance Electric
Co. v. Emerson
Electric Co.
ForemostMcKesson, Inc. v.
Provident Securities
Company
o
-10(b) and
Rule 10b-5;
-Insider fid
duty;
-Traders duty;
- Rule 14e-3(a)
scope;
-Tender Offers
-Short-swing
profits
-16(b) scope/
application
-16(b) scope/
application;
-Beneficial
owners
Waltuch v.
Conticommodity
Services, Inc.
-Indemnification
of good faith
clause
limitations
-DCGL145(a);
(c); (f)
Citadel Holding
Corporation v.
Roven
-Corp advance
of reasonable
cost in
defending suit
(2) A corporate director of officer who has been successful on the merits
or otherwise vindicated form the claims asserted against him is entitled to
indemnification from the corporation for expense reasonably incurred.
A corporation may advance reasonable costs defending a suit to a director
even when the suit is brought by the corporation.
14a-3: Incumbent directors must provide annual report before soliciting proxies for annual meeting
Anyone who solicits a proxy must provide a written proxy statement BEFORE soliciting the
proxy.
o Rule 14a-1(l)(2)(iv) exempts public statements of how the shareholder intends to vote and its reasons for
doing so
o Rule 14a-2(b)(1), subject to numerous exceptions, exempts persons who do not seek "the power to act as
proxy for a security holder" and do not furnish or solicit "a form of revocation, abstention, consent or
authorization
o Rule 14a-2(b)(2) exempts solicitations of 10 or fewer persons
o Rule 14a-2(b)(3) exempts the furnishing of proxy voting advice by someone with whom the shareholder
has a business relationship
Solicitation
o Solicit includes not only direct requests to furnish, revoke or withhold proxies, but also ...
communications which may indirectly accomplish such a result or constitute a step in a chain of
communications designed ultimately to accomplish such a result.Long Island Lighting Co. v. Barbash,
779 F.2d 793, 796 (2d Cir.1985).
o
-Incumbent
Directors
-Proxy contests
-Corp funds for
solicitation
B. REIMBURSEMENT OF COSTS
Management can use corporate funds to pay for expenses they incur in conducting their proxy solicitation as
long as the amounts are reasonable and the contest involves policy questions rather than just a purely
personal power struggleRosenfeld
Insurgent can use corporate funds to pay for expenses it incurs in conducting their proxy solicitation if it is
approved by the shareholders and the board must act first.
Reimbursement Bylaws:
o In 2009, DGCL 113 adopted:
(a) The bylaws may provide for the reimbursement by the corporation of expenses incurred by a
stockholder in soliciting proxies in connection with an election of directors, subject to such
procedures or conditions as the bylaws may prescribe, including:
(1) Conditioning eligibility for reimbursement upon the number or proportion of persons
nominated by the stockholder seeking reimbursement or whether such stockholder
previously sought reimbursement for similar expenses;
(2) Limitations on the amount of reimbursement based upon the proportion of votes cast
in favor of one or more of the persons nominated by the stockholder seeking
reimbursement, or upon the amount spent by the corporation in soliciting proxies in
connection with the election;
(3) Limitations concerning elections of directors by cumulative voting pursuant to 214
of this title; or
(4) Any other lawful condition.
Rosenfeld v.
Fairchild Engine &
Airplane Corp.
-Contest over
policy
-Corp funds for
solicitation
Proxy Litigation:
o Fraud:
Rule 14a-9 under 1934 Act 14(a) prohibits misrepresentations or omissions of a material fact in
proxy materials
o Other Violations:
Soliciting without providing proxy statement
Failing to file proxy materials w/ SEC
Company soliciting proxies without first providing annual report
Miscellany
Stock Options
o Stock options are rights to purchase shares at a specified price during a specified period of time.
Stock options are the most popular long-term incentive compensation approach used in U.S.
companies.
o Exercising Stock Options
Cash exercise option holder pays company cash; company often uses it to buy stock back to
reduce dilution
Cashless exercise - no investment or risk on part of recipient.
Broker buys shares from company and immediately sells them; then delivers difference in
cash to recipient
Seinfeld v. Bartz
-Proxy
statement;
-Stock options;
-Material
omissions under
14(a)
D. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
Shareholder Proposals
o Many companies have advance notice bylaws.
Require advance notice of shareholder proposals and director nominations to ensure orderly
annual meeting process and to give company adequate time to strategize and prepare proxy
materials.
Delaware Chancery Court narrowly construes these provisions and resolves ambiguities in favor
of dissident shareholders.
o Rule 14a-8: Allows qualifying shareholders to put a proposal before their fellow shareholders
And have proxies solicited in favor of them in the companys proxy statement
Expense thus borne by the company
o Responses to Proposals
Attempt to exclude on procedural or substantive grounds
Must have specific reason to exclude that is valid under Rule 14a-8
Eligibility
Timing: The proposal must be submitted to the corporation at least 120 days before the date on
which proxy materials were mailed for the previous year's annual shareholder's meeting.
Holdings: 14a-8(b)(1): Proponent must have owned at least 1% or $2,000 (whichever is less) of
the issuer's securities for at least one year prior to the date on which the proposal is submitted.
Length: 14a-8(d): Proposal plus supporting statement cannot exceed 500 words
Submitting Proposals:
14a-8(c): Only one proposal per year
14a-8(h): If the proponent fails to show up at the meeting to present the proposal in
person, the proponent will be ineligible to use the rule for the following two years
Repeat Proposals: 14a-8(i)(12): a proposal can be excluded if it (or a substantially similar one )
was submitted
Once during the preceding 5 years and got less than 3% of the vote
Twice during the preceding 5 years and got less than 6% of the vote the last time it was
submitted
3 times in the preceding 5 years and got less than 10% of the vote the last time it was
submitted
Lovenheim v.
Iroquois Brands,
Ltd.
-Exclusion of
SH proposal;
-Scope of SH
proposal;
-Rule 14a-8(c)
(5)
-SH proposal
subject matter;
-Proxy
statements;
-DGCL
109(a); 141(a)
-BoD scope of
power
-Minority SH
freeze-out;
-Forced buyout
remedy
-Close corp
stock buy back
-Duty to
disclose
-Maj SH duty of
good faith to
Min SH
-Statutory
dissolution in
close corp
-Animosity b/w
directors
6. TRANSFERS OF CONTROL
Frandsen v. JensenSundquist Agency,
Inc.
Zetlin v. Hanson
Holdings, Inc.
Essex Universal
Corporation v. Yates
-Asset sale as
transfer of
control
-Controlling SH
right to sell
shares
-Premium
pricing
-Sale of
controlling
interest
-immediate
transfer of
control
Triangular TransactionsProvides the transaction cost-minimizing advantages of an asset sale, while also
providing the advantages a merger.
o Froward Triangular Merger
B. FREEZE-OUT MERGERS
Standards of review
o Legal Background: Alternative standards of judicial review for claims of breach of fiduciary duties in
sales transactions
o Standard of review has implications for the cost and uncertainty of fiduciary duty lawsuits regardless of
the merits, the standard of review impacts the stage at which non-meritorious suits can be dismissed and,
therefore, the settlement value
Business judgment rule significantly increases likelihood of potential dismissal of claims without
merit; likelihood of winning at trial when motion to dismiss is denied
Weinberger v. UOP,
Inc.
Kahn v. M & F
Worldwide Corp.
-Freeze-out
merger
-Fair Price
-Conditions for
BJR applied to a
going private,
controller
buyout merger
E.g. Quasi-Appraisal
Tender Offers
o In its basic form, a tender offer is simply a public offer usually made to all shareholders of the target
corporation in which the buyer offers to purchase target company shares
o Most potent weapon in the hostile corporate raiders arsenal
Advantages over major alternatives, such as asset sales or mergers:
Approval by the targets board of directors is a necessary prerequisite to statutory
transactions
o Tender offer permits the bidder to bypass the targets board and to purchase a
controlling share block directly from the stockholders
Coggins v. New
England Patriots
Football Club, Inc.
-Controlling SH
fid duty to Min
SH
-Freeze-out
mergers
2. TAKEOVERS
Planning for Defense
o Start early when implementing defenses
Shark Repellents
o Provisions in the articles of incorporation or bylaws; articles better, see DGCL 109(a)
Examples:
Limit shareholder right to call a special meeting (so that they cant remove directors)
Prohibit removal of directors other than for cause
o Fair Price Provision: No backend or freeze-out merger unless bidder pays a fair price (as determined per
provision) or transaction approved by a majority of the disinterested shareholders (as defined)
Redemption Provision: Gives post-tender offer minority shareholders a put option to sell at a fair price
(as defined)
o Business Combination Provision: Precludes a freeze-out merger for a specified period of time; and even
then typically requires approval by disinterested shareholders
o Classified boards
Divide board into classes (usually 3)
Each class serves a multiyear term (equally to the number of classes)
Only one class elected per year
Poison Pills
o The term poison pill refers to the adoption by the target board of directors of a stockholder rights plan
that has the effect of deterring any corporate raider or would-be hostile party from purchasing stock of the
target corporation beyond a specified trigger level without approval of the target board.
The second generation discriminatory flip-in/flip-over pill
o The board declares a dividend of one stock purchase right for each outstanding common share (the
company also enters into a rights agreement with a bank or trust company acting as rights agent, and this
agreement embodies the terms of the rights plan).
o The right has no economic value unless and until a bidder acquires a specified percentage of the targets
voting stock without board approval. Doing so causes the bidder to be treated as a non-board-approved
owner, and regardless of bidders intentions, allows all other stockholders to purchase additional voting
stock at a discount from the current market price (the flip-in).
o In addition, if, after a flip-in event, the company is involved in a business combination or substantial asset
sale with any person, all stockholders (except the raider) become entitled to purchase, at a discount to
market price, the most senior voting securities of the ultimate corporate parent resulting from the
transaction (the flip-over).
NOL Pills
o Losses accumulated in prior periods can be used to offset future profits
o Under IRS regulations, NOLs are are forfeited if an ownership change occurs at the company.
An ownership change occurs (simplified) if any shareholder owning 5 percent or more of the
company increases its ownership by more than 50 percent
o Companies have been adopting NOL poison pills to protect tax status of their NOLs.
Very low triggers of 4.99% stockownership
NOL pill also has the ancillary effect of being a substantial antitakeover device that can
be justified for economic reasons
Poison Debt: Target issues bonds or notes with terms that make target less attractive
o
A. INTRODUCTION
Cheff v. Mathes
Corporate fiduciaries may use corporate funds to fend off what they, in good
faith and pursuant to reasonable investigation, believe is a threat to corporate
policy and effectiveness.
-Tender Offer
-Defensive
measures for
takeover
B. DEVELOPMENT
Unocal Corporation
v. Mesa Petroleum
Co.
Unocal
o Standard of Review:
Not business judgement rule because the omnipresent specter that a board may be acting in its
own interest
Conditional BJR an enhanced duty which calls for judicial examinations at the threshold before
the protections of the business judgement rule may be conferred
Burden of Proof:
Initially on board of directors.
If the directors carry their burden?
o BOP shifts back to the plaintiff, who must rebut the BJR.
If not?
o The defense must pass muster under the intrinsic fairness standard of the duty of
loyalty.
Defining the Unocal Test:
Was the action within the power or authority if the board?
Requires two questions: (1) does the statute authorize this defense; and (2) if it is okay
under the statute does the firms charter impose any restrictions on the use of this
defense?
Does the board have reasonable grounds for believing that a danger to corporate policy and
effectiveness exists?
Defendant satisfy this by showing good faith and reasonable investigation
o Good faith = primary purpose not entrenchment
o Reasonable investigation = Van Gorkom
Was the defense reasonable in relation to the threat posed?
Post-Unocal Standards of Review:
Traditional BJR, i.g. Van Gorkom
Traditional duty of loyalty, i.g. Weinberger
The new conditional BJR, set out by Unocal
Revlon, Inc. v.
MacAndrews &
Forbes Holdings,
Inc.
-Lockups
-Defensive
Measures
-Directors as
auctioneers
Lockups and related defensive measures are permitted where their adoption
in untainted by directors interests or other breaches of fiduciary duty and
where the value to shareholders is maximized.
Case implicitly approved shopping the company as a means of gathering information, but did not
require the directors to do so
Delaware addressed in Barkan
Holding: Revlon does not require that every control transaction be preceded by a bidding contest
When the board is considering a single offer and has no reliable grounds for judging its
adequacy, a concern for fairness demands that the market be canvassed
o But when directors possess a body of reliable evidence with which to evaluate
the fairness of a transaction, they may approve it without an active survey of the
market
Paramount
Communications,
Inc. v. Time
Incorporated
Paramount
Communications
Inc. v. QVC
Network Inc.
-Tender offer
-freezeout
merger
-Directors duties
-Multiple suitors
bidding
-defensive
measures
-favoritism to
one
So long as the acquiring entity is publicly-held, neither triangular nor non-stock for stock mergers should
be deemed a sale of control
QVC really concerned with creation of a large block of stock held by an identifiable control
group
Enhanced Scrutiny:
o Under QVC, the enhanced scrutiny test is basically a reasonableness inquiry to be applied on a case-bycase basis:
The key features of an enhanced scrutiny test are: (a) a judicial determination regarding the
adequacy of the decision making process employed by the directors, including the information on
which the directors based their decision; and (b) a judicial examination of the reasonableness of
the directors action in light of the circumstances then existing.
o Delawares Motive-Based Balance:
Under the Unocal/Revlon regime, the board retains full decision making authority including
the authority to foreclose shareholder choice unless it acted from improper motives
o
Lyondell Chemical
Company v. Ryan
-When Revlon
duties apply
-Bad faith
-Def of bad faith
There are no legally prescribed steps that directors must follow to satisfy
their Revlon duties to maximize price in a sale of control transaction, such
that failure to take those steps during the sale of their company demonstrates
a conscious disregard of their duties.
-Lockups
-Fiduciary out
clauses
-Coercive and
Preclusive
Omnicare
o - RULES
o Deal Protection Devices Require Enhanced Scrutiny
Defensive devices adopted by the board to protect the original merger transaction must withstand
enhanced judicial scrutiny under the Unocal standard of review, even when that merger
transaction does NOT result in a change of control.
When Revlon doesnt apply to Defensive Devices, Unocal does.
Just as defensive measures cannot be draconian, however, they cannot limit or
circumscribe the directors fiduciary duties.
Unocal Test
The second stage of the Unocal test requires board directors to demonstrate that their defensive
response was reasonable in relation to the threat posed.
This inquiry involves a two-step analysis.
o 1) The board directors must first establish that the merger deal protection devices
adopted in response to the threat were not coercive or preclusive, and;
Coercive
A response is coercive if it is aimed at forcing upon stockholders
a management-sponsored alternative to a hostile offer.
Preclusive
A response is preclusive if it deprives stockholders of the right to
receive all tender offers or precludes a bidder from seeking
control by fundamentally restricting proxy contests or otherwise.
o NOTE: If defensive measures are either preclusive or
coercive they are draconian and impermissible.
o 2) Then demonstrate that their response was within a range of reasonable
responses to the threat perceived.
NOTE: A stockholder vote may be nullified by wrongful coercion where the board or some other
party takes actions which have the effect of causing the stockholders to vote in favor of the
proposed transaction for some reason other than the merits of that transaction.
Revlon issues
o When do directors stop being defenders of the corporate bastion and become auctioneers?
o Are Revlon duties really different from those imposed from Unocal?
o Omnicare says there is something special about Revlon situations.
It is an enhanced scrutiny test.
If Revlon applies you get the price
If it does not, Unocal applies:
o Board must show threat to corporate policy.
o Response must not be coercive or preclusive.
o Response must be reasonable in relation to threat.
o Omnicare seems to be a duty of care case. Even if they breach their duty of care, they have no liability.
o
Williams Act (1968)Federal regulation of tender offers. Disclosure; Procedural requirements, albeit mainly to
make the disclosure requirements more effective
CTS Corporation v.
Dynamics
Corporation of
America