Delaware Supreme Court Reverses Chancery on Federal Motion to Dismiss Standard
Cambium Ltd. v. Trilantic Capital Partners, No. 363, 2011 (Del. Supr, Jan. 20, 2011), read Order here.
This Order of the Delaware Supreme Court applied the recent decision of Delaware’s High Court in the Central Mortgage case in which it clarified that Delaware has not adopted the federal standard for motions to dismiss under Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) as described in the U.S. Supreme Court’s Twombly and Iqbal decisions, despite the truism that the Delaware Rules of Civil Procedure are generally based on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The recent Delaware Supreme Court decision in Central Mortgage taking this position was highlighted here. The foregoing summary also includes links to other commentary on this blog about this issue.
The recent Court of Chancery decision in the Winshall case responded to the clarification in the Central Mortgage case, especially in an expansive footnote 23, as noted here. The Delaware Supreme Court in its Order described the Delaware standard for a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) as:
… a “minimal” one. In Central Mortgage, comparing Delaware’s “conceivability” standard to the federal “plausibility” standard, this Court explained that the former “is more akin to possibility while the federal plausibility standard falls somewhere beyond mere possibility but short of probability.”
Chancery Finds Corporate Officers Usurped Corporate Opportunities and Converted Resources in Violation of their Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty
In a post-trial decision, the Court of Chancery in Dweck v. Nasser, C. A. No. 1353-VCL (Jan. 18, 2012), found that Dweck, the former CEO, a director and 30% stockholder in Kids International Corporation (“Kids”), and Kevin Taxin, Kids’ President, breached their fiduciary duties of loyalty to Kids by establishing competing companies that usurped Kids’ corporate opportunities and converted Kids’ resources.
The Court also found that Dweck breached her fiduciary duties by causing Kids to reimburse her for hundreds of thousands of dollars of personal expenses and that Bruce Fine, Kids’ CFO, breached his fiduciary duties by abdicating his responsibility to review Dweck’s expenses and signing off on them.
This summary was prepared by Kevin F. Brady.
Background
The background to this case is long and complex as shown by the trial logistics – five-day trial, 930 exhibits, almost 30 fact and three expert witnesses. As a result, I will only provide a high-level summary of the facts here. In 1993, Dweck and Nasser (Chairman and controlling shareholder of Kids) and others purchased the assets of EJ Gitano. As part of the transaction, Kids was formed and designated for tax purposes as a Subchapter S Corporation so Kids’ profits would be attributed pro rata to Kids stockholders (originally only Nasser). In 1994, Taxin joined Kids as Vice President of Sales and Merchandising, and Kids’ sales subsequently increased by a factor of five over a four-year period. Around 1998, Dweck was issued 45% of Kids’ outstanding equity. However, Dweck believed she was not being adequately compensated and so in October 2001, she formed Success Apparel LLC (“Success”), to operate as a wholesaler of children’s clothing.
From 2001 until 2005, Success operated out of Kids’ premises using Kids’ employees. Success drew on Kids’ letters of credit, sold products under Kids’ vendor agreements, used Kids’ vendor numbers, and capitalized on Kids’ relationships. Then in June 2004, Dweck founded Premium Apparel Brands LLC (“Premium”), a clothing wholesaler, which also operated out of Kids’ premises, and used Kids’ employees and resources. Dweck owned 100% of Premium and served as its CEO. Between 2002 and 2005, Dweck charged almost $500K in expenses to Kids and at least $172K were personal expenses, including vacations and assorted luxury goods. In March 2005, Dweck admitted at a stockholder meeting that she was selling “overlapping product” and competing with Kids from Kids’ premises. However, Dweck continued to work out of Kids’ offices until April 11, 2005, and Dweck and Taxin continued to divert Kids’ business to Success. Dweck and Taxin also arranged for a mass exodus of Kids’ employees to join Success.
Eventually there was a falling out with Nassar and Dweck accusing each other of breaching their fiduciary duties (Nassar also asserted third-party claims against Taxin and Fine). Nasser sought damages equal to Kids’ purported going-concern value at the time of the split, which his expert values at between $70.8 million and $458.2 million.
Analysis
The Court found that Dweck, as a director and officer of Kids and Taxin as an officer of Kids, each owed a duty of loyalty to Kids and that they breached their duty of loyalty by diverting what they decided were “new opportunities” to Success and Premium. Dweck and Taxin used Kids’ personnel and resources to pursue each opportunity, demonstrating that Kids just as easily could have pursued the opportunities in its own name. After appropriating the opportunities, Dweck and Taxin operated Success and Premium as if the companies were divisions of Kids, but kept the resulting profits for themselves. By doing so, Dweck and Taxin placed themselves “in a position inimicable to [their] duties to [Kids].”
The Court provided eminently quotable well-established law on the fiduciary duty of loyalty and the corporate opportunity doctrine:
The essence of a duty of loyalty claim is the assertion that a corporate officer or director has misused power over corporate property or processes in order to benefit himself rather than advance corporate purposes.” Steiner v. Meyerson, 1995 WL 441999, at *2 (Del. Ch. July 19, 1995) (Allen, C.). At the core of the fiduciary duty is the notion of loyalty–the equitable requirement that, with respect to the property subject to the duty, a fiduciary always must act in a good faith effort to advance the interests of his beneficiary.” US W., Inc. v. Time Warner Inc., 1996 WL 307445, at *21 (Del. Ch. June 6, 1996) (Allen, C.). Most basically, the duty of loyalty proscribes a fiduciary from any means of misappropriation of assets entrusted to his management and supervision. Id. The doctrine of corporate opportunity represents . . . one species of the broad fiduciary duties assumed by a corporate director or officer.” Broz v. Cellular Info. Sys., 67 A.2d 148, 154 (Del. 1996).
The Court also rejected various defenses raised by Dweck and Taxin. Dweck and Taxin tried to distinguish the new line of business they were entering into from Kids’ line of business. However, the Court rejected that argument noting that “[w]hen determining whether a corporation has an interest in a line of business, the nature of the corporation’s business should be broadly interpreted. ‘[L]atitude should be allowed for development and expansion. To deny this would be to deny the history of industrial development.’” Dweck also argued that Nasser gave Dweck permission to compete with Kids but the Court failed to find Dweck’s version of what occurred to be believable.
Dweck also argued that an operating agreement which contained a so-called “free-for-all” provision authorized her to compete with Kids. The Court rejected Dweck’s reading of the operating agreement and as to any ambiguity in the agreement, regarding the parties’ course of performance, the Court noted:
It is a familiar rule that when a contract is ambiguous, a construction given to it by the acts and conduct of the parties with knowledge of its terms, before any controversy has arisen as to its meaning, is entitled to great weight, and will, when reasonable, be adopted and enforced by the courts. Radio Corp. of Ain. v. Phila. Storage Battery Co., 6 A.2d 329, 340 (Del. 1939). The evidentiary record reflects that before this litigation, the parties did not believe that the essential free-for-all provision granted Dweck the right to compete with Kids. Dweck repeatedly sought to have Nasser sign the Kids stockholders’ agreement, each draft of which contained a functionally identical free-for-all provision. Nasser refused to sign the draft agreements, specifically objecting to the free-for-all provision. Before founding Success and taking the Bugle Boy opportunity, Dweck sought Nasser’s consent (albeit in a vague and ambiguous manner). She received approval only after assuring Shiboleth that her new business would not compete with Kids. If the Essential agreement operated as Dweck now contends, then she had no reason to seek Nasser’s consent.
The Court determined that with respect to the damages for usurping Kids’ corporate opportunities, Dweck, Taxin, Success, and Premium were jointly and severally liable to Kids for the lost profits Kids would have generated from business diverted to Success and Premium between January 1, 2005 and May 18, 2005, which were over $9M. In addition, among other things, the Court found that Dweck, Taxin, Success, and Premium were also jointly and severally liable for profits generated by Success and Premium after May 18, 2005. This analysis may also be relevant in covenant not to compete cases. See, e.g., Slip op. at 36.
With respect to the mass departure of Kids’ employees and the taking of Kids’ property and files, the Court found that Dweck actively conspired with Taxin and Fine, thereby aiding and abetting Taxin and Fine’s breaches of fiduciary duty. As a result, the Court found that Kids’ remedy for the departure-related breaches of fiduciary duty should be limited to the damages Kids suffered over and above where Kids would have been had Dweck and Taxin resigned in an appropriate manner. The Court then awarded Kids the profits generated by Success in its non-branded business for the Holiday 2005 and Spring 2006 seasons.
Liability of Officers for Breach of Fiduciary Duty (Approving Personal Expenses of Superior to be Paid by Company Funds)
Finally, with respect to the personal expenses, the Court found Dweck liable to Kids for a total of $342,366 in expenses, comprising both the $171,966 of admittedly personal expenses and the $170,400 of indeterminate expenses. The Court also found that Fine was jointly and severally liable for those amounts because Fine co-signed for the reimbursement of Dweck’s personal expenses, and he admitted at trial that he did not perform any review of Dweck’s expenses before co-signing her reimbursement checks. See generally, Slip op. at 37-40.
As proven by this case and at least one other prior Chancery opinion cited in this opinion, an officer who approves personal expenses of a superior, which are to be paid with company funds, faces an unenviable binary choice: risk losing one’s job by refusing to process the reimbursement of personal expenses as requested by the superior, or risk personal liability in a court proceeding for approving those expenses in violation of the officer’s fiduciary duty to the company.
Commentary on Credibility
There is an important theme that the Court mentions a number of times in the opinion that has to do with witness credibility especially in fiduciary cases. While every litigator know that a witness (and their lawyer’s) credibility is very important, it is worth a reminder now and again. It is also important to remember that credibility does not just come into play at trial. It starts at the very beginning of the case with the filing of the complaint and motion practice especially in discovery disputes before the Court of Chancery. A good example of this comes from Vice Chancellor Laster’s comments in Eagle Rock when he was dealing with a discovery dispute as to whether an individual should be trusted to identify, preserve, review, and produce relevant electronically stored information. His larger concern went to the trustworthiness and credibility of an individual who was involved in the litigation and whether he/she should be trusted to do the right thing (in the Eagle Rock case he said that they shouldn’t be trusted to do that without a lawyer being present.)
Postscript: Professor Gordon Smith blogged about the case here, with scholarly insights on the “free for all” clause that can attempt to eliminate a corporate opportunity claim. See DGCL Section 122(17).
Chancery Grants TRO to Halt Restructuring of Loans Secured by Atlantis Resort and Casino in the Bahamas
Trilogy Portfolio Company, LLC v. Brookfield Real Estate Financial Partners, LLC, C.A. No. 7161-VCP (Del. Ch., Jan. 13, 2012), read opinion here.
Issue Addressed
Whether the restructuring of a $2.7 billion mortgage loan secured by the Atlantis Resort and Casino in the Bahamas created the necessary type of irreparable harm to the lenders which warranted a TRO.
Short Answer: Yes.
Background
The creditors of a multi-billion dollar loan secured by the Atlantis Resort and Casino in the Bahamas sought expedited injunctive relief to stop a proposed restructuring of a loan which would forgive the debt owed to the junior-most note holders in exchange for an 100% equity interest in the borrower. Holders of the more senior notes claim that the proposed transaction would unfairly benefit the junior holders of the debt at the expense of the more senior holders and in direct contravention of the terms of the agreements controlling the debt. The senior holders also sought a TRO on the basis that they would suffer irreparable harm based on the loss of certain rights and the loss of certain guarantees under the terms of the proposed new loan.
This 23-page decision provides a thorough summary of the multiple parties involved and the different layers of creditors and how each of them would be impacted by the proposed transaction.
Procedural History
The verified complaint in this action was filed on January 4, 2012, along with motions for TRO and expedited proceedings. Responses were filed on January 9, 2012 and a reply brief by the plaintiff was filed on January 10, 2012. The Court heard oral argument on the TRO motion on January 11, 2012.
Contentions of the Parties
Plaintiffs argued that the proposed transaction was unfair to the creditors and that the proposed loan restructuring would provide a valuable equity interest in the borrower while unfairly transferring substantial risk to the other creditors. The plaintiffs alleged that the restructuring would violate contractual rights, as well as breach fiduciary duties.
Analysis
The Court recited the familiar prerequisites that need to be satisfied for a TRO and its “less exacting” scrutiny based on the limited factual record generally available at such an early stage of an expedited proceeding. See footnotes 7 through 12.
Contrast this standard, however, with a factual record that is more fully developed, in which event “the traditional temporary restraining order standard is not fully applied and the Court considers whether there is a probability of success on the merits.” See footnote 13. In this case, the Court found that the plaintiffs satisfied the prerequisits for a TRO. The Court required a bond pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 65(c) in the amount of $100,000 secured, and rejected the request of the defendants that the bond be in the amount of $230 million.
The Court scheduled a preliminary injunction hearing for January 27, 2012, and made the TRO effective immediately.
Delaware Court of Chancery Issues Non-Binding Guidelines to Help Lawyers Navigate Their Cases Through The Court More Efficiently

On January 13, 2012, the Court of Chancery issued non-binding guidelines or “best practices” to help lawyers and their parties handle common and sometimes complex procedural issues that arise in litigation before the Delaware Court of Chancery.
Kevin F. Brady, who is a member of the Court of Chancery Rules Committee, prepared this summary.
The 18-page Guidelines cover a variety of topics from as simple as hearing protocols, courtesy copies, contacting Chambers and scheduling expedited or summary proceedings to more expedited subjects such as expert report and confidentiality agreements. The Guidelines also include sample forms for such proceedings as scheduling a preliminary injunction, a Rule 12(b)(6) motion or cross-motions for summary judgment.
The Guidelines, available for download here, include procedures that the Court would prefer to see. For example, with respect to expert reports, the Guidelines state:
In general, the Court prefers that parties stipulate to limit expert written discovery to the final report and materials relied on or considered by the expert. Counsel should be aware that the Court understands the degree of involvement counsel typically has in preparing expert reports. Cross-examination based on changes in drafts is usually an uninformative exercise.
With respect to the pleadings, the Guidelines state: “An answer should repeat the allegations of the complaint and then set forth the response below each allegation. Otherwise the Court has to look back and forth from answer to complaint to see what is being denied.”
One of the more important guidelines issued by the Court provides instruction to the legions of non-Delaware lawyers who coordinate with local Delaware lawyers to litigate cases in Chancery. About these working relationships, the Court gives the following specific direction:
Role of Delaware Counsel
a. The concept of “local counsel” whose role is limited to administrative or ministerial matters has no place in the Court of Chancery. The Delaware lawyers who appear in a case are responsible to the Court for the case and its presentation.
b. If a Delaware lawyer signs a pleading, submits a brief, or signs a discovery request or response, it is the Delaware lawyer who is taking the positions set forth therein and making the representations to the Court. It does not matter whether the paper was initially or substantially drafted by a firm serving as “Of Counsel.”
c. The members of the Court recognize that Delaware counsel and forwarding counsel frequently allocate responsibility for work and that, in some cases, the allocation will be heavily weighted to forwarding counsel. The members of the Court recognize that forwarding counsel may have primary responsibility for a matter from the client’s perspective. This does not alter the Delaware lawyer’s responsibility for the positions taken and the presentation of the case.
d. Non-Delaware counsel shall not directly make filings or initiate contact with the Court, absent extraordinary circumstances. Such contact must be conducted by Delaware counsel.
e. It is not acceptable for a Delaware lawyer to submit a letter from forwarding counsel under a cover letter saying, in substance, “Here is a letter from my forwarding counsel.”
Finally, there are some interesting comments with respect to what counsel should include in Compendiums and Appendices. The Guidelines show that this is an opportunity to point the Court to exactly what counsel want the Court to review. There is also a humorous comment where the Guidelines tell counsel they don’t have to include everything in a compendium – “Avoid the Manhattan Phonebook. If a submission is huge, uncomfortable to hold, and likely to fall apart, please break it into separate usable volumes.”
As the Court stated in its announcement:
The goal of the guidelines is to help litigants deal with each other and the Court in a more constructive, less contentious, and therefore more efficient and just manner. … All the members of the Court recognize the guidelines as sound and members of the Court will endeavor to avoid the chambers-specific approach that results in litigants having to address the idiosyncratic preferences of multiple members of the same court. All of us on Chancery recognize how challenging it is for lawyers to address complex cases especially in view of evolving issues such as electronic discovery, said Chancellor Leo E. Strine, Jr. By developing these practice guidelines with the invaluable help of our Rules Committee, we hope to make our Bar’s life a little easier and to enable all of us to concentrate more on the merits, rather than procedural jousting. This will get cases resolved less expensively and faster.
The Guidelines are the product of a joint effort between the judges of the Court of Chancery and the Court’s Rules Committee, which is comprised of experienced Delaware practitioners. Please note that this is not the end of the guidelines for the Court of Chancery. The Rules Committee is working on other rules and procedures, so stay tuned for more information.
Academic Analysis of M & A Litigation. Is Delaware Losing Market Share?
Professor Steven Davidoff provides scholarly and statistical analysis of M & A litigation in a recently published article, in which he also addresses the issue of whether Delaware is “losing” that type of litigation to other states, and related aspects of this topic. His article entitled: “A Great Game: The Dynamics of State Competition and Litigation“, with University of Notre Dame professor Matthew D. Cain, is available here. The abstract explains as follows:
We provide a multi-dimensional picture of jurisdictional competition for corporate litigation by examining merger litigation in a hand-collected sample of 955 takeovers from 2005-2010. We find that entrepreneurial plaintiffs’ attorneys drive this competition by bringing suits in jurisdictions which have previously awarded more favorable judgments and higher fees and by avoiding unfavorable jurisdictions. States with an interest in attracting corporate litigation respond in-kind by adjusting judgments and awards to re-attract litigation. Competing states award higher attorneys’ fees and dismiss fewer cases when attorneys have been migrating to other jurisdictions. Our findings illuminate the dynamics of jurisdictional competition for corporate litigation.
Chancery Addresses Appraisal of Preferred Shares Based on Terms in Certificate of Incorporation
Shiftan v. Morgan Joseph Holdings, Inc., C.A. No. 6424-CS (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 2012), read opinion here.
Issues Addressed:
(i) Whether the Court may consider in an appraisal action a contractually required redemption event in the certificate of incorporation, scheduled to occur six months after the merger, in determining the fair value of the stock;
(ii) Whether the automatic redemption provision was subject to an “excess cash” requirement in the certificate of incorporation.
Short Answers:
(i) The Court concluded that it was appropriate to consider the automatic redemption for purposes of the appraisal analysis even though the merger occurred several months before the right was triggered. The Court distinguished this redemption right from cases in which the Court has refused to consider speculative possibilities in rendering an appraisal opinion, or where preferred stockholders were contractually told how their shares would be treated in the event of a merger;
(ii) The Court also found that the automatic redemption was not subject to an “excess cash requirement” under the certificate. The certificate of incorporation was plain that there were two types of redemptions for preferred stock. In addition, although the Court found that the certificate was unambiguous, parol evidence also supported the conclusion in favor of the petitioners. The Court especially noted that Morgan Joseph chose not to file a Rule 56(f) affidavit or to submit any conflicting parol evidence.
Background
The defendant in this case, Morgan Joseph Holdings, Inc., is an investment bank in which the petitioner held Series A Preferred Stock. The petitioners bought their preferred stock when Morgan Joseph was founded in 2001 to help provide the initial funding for the company. In December 2010, Morgan Joseph merged with another investment bank called Tri-Artisan Capital Partners, LLC. The new Series A Preferred Stock which was governed by a new certificate of incorporation, was offered in exchange for Morgan Joseph’s old Series A Preferred Stock. Instead of exchanging their Series A Shares, the petitioners in this action demanded appraisal under 8 Del. C. § 262.
The certificate of incorporation included a provision for an automatic redemption of the Series A Preferred Stock at $100 per share which would have been triggered six months after the merger. The petitioners claimed that because their stock was to be mandatorily redeemed six months after the merger, the Court should take into account the $100 per share redemption value provided for in the certificate in determining the fair value of the Series A Preferred Stock.
Short Summary of Court’s Reasoning
The Court emphasized that “the core mandate of Section 262 requires this Court to award the petitioners the ‘fair value of their shares.’” (emphasis in original) (citing 8 Del. C. § 262(h)). The Court also emphasized that in the case of an appraisal of preferred stock, the Court must look at the contract rights granted to the shares being appraised under the relevant certificate of incorporation or designation in determining fair value. In this case, the Court reasoned that the unique contractual feature of the automatic redemption given to the Series A Preferred Stock under the certificate had to be considered in rendering the final appraisal decision.
This decision was made in the context of a motion for partial summary judgment. The material facts were not disputed, but rather, there was a different interpretation about how the certificate of incorporation provisions should be interpreted in connection with the automatic redemption clause and its impact on the analysis of the fair value in this appraisal proceeding.
The Court conducted an extensive analysis of the language in the certificate of incorporation and applied contract interpretation principles, including the principle of contract interpretation which says that ambiguous terms should be construed against the drafter. The Latin phrase for that contract interpretation principle is contra proferentem. See footnotes 17 through 26.
This 23-page opinion also provides helpful analysis regarding the construction of the rights granted to preferred stockholders in a certificate of incorporation or a certificate of designation.
Chancery Disqualifies Class Representative and Requires Disgorgement of Imputed Profits from Trades on Confidential Data Obtained in Litigation
Steinhardt v. Howard-Anderson, C.A. No. 5878-VCL (Del. Ch. Jan. 6, 2012), read opinion here.
Issue Addressed
This opinion addressed the issue of whether representative plaintiffs in a putative class action should be in sanctioned for trading on the basis of confidential information obtained in the litigation. The motion was granted.
Background
On November 21, 2011, the Court held an evidentiary hearing on the Motion for Sanctions and heard live testimony. The paper record included depositions, affidavits and additional deposition transcripts and documents from the injunction phase of the case.
This action was originally filed in October 2010 challenging a merger between Occam Networks, Inc. and Calix, Inc. In November 2010, the Court approved the Stipulation and Order governing the production and exchange of confidential information. In December 2010, the Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction against the merger and expedited discovery ensued. After the discovery was nearly complete, Steinhardt began short-selling Calix’s stock. He intended to and later did use the shares of Calix stock he would receive when the merger closed to cover his short sales, even though Steinhardt and his co-plaintiffs where asking the Court to enjoin the closing of the merger.
According to published reports, Steinhardt has a net worth of approximately $500 million and has been described in some reports as one of the most successful investors in the history of Wall Street. In January 2011, after a hearing open to the public, the Court granted the Motion of the Plaintiffs for a Preliminary Injunction. After the issuance of supplemental disclosures and the deposition of one of the lead investment bankers, which were conditions of the injunction, a special meeting of stockholders was held, additional disclosures where made, and the merger was approved in February 2011.
Legal Analysis
The Court emphasized that when a stockholder of a Delaware corporation files suit as a representative plaintiff for a class of similarly situated stockholders, the plaintiff voluntarily assumes the role of a fiduciary for the class. As a fiduciary, the representative plaintiff “holds to those whose cause he advocates a duty of finest loyalty”.
The Court referred to a long list of Chancery transcript rulings at footnote 1 in which the Court of Chancery has addressed trading by representative plaintiffs, and has explained that trading by plaintiff–fiduciaries on the basis of information obtained through discovery undermines the integrity of the representative litigation process and is unacceptable. It remains unacceptable for a plaintiff-fiduciary to trade on the basis of non-public information obtained in litigation. See footnote 3.
The Court explained in detailed reasoning from those transcript rulings, and applied those rulings to the extensively described factual minutiae of the trading involved in this case, based on information obtained during the discovery as representative plaintiff.
Damages for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
The Court explained that the scope of remedy for breach of the duty of loyalty is not to be determined narrowly and that the disgorgement remedy rests upon “ a wise public policy that for the purpose of removing all temptation, extinguishes all possibility of profit flowing from a breach of confidence imposed by the fiduciary relation.”
The Court provided a detailed numerical listing of the trades and the “deemed purchases” in violation of the obligations to maintain the confidentiality of the information received in the litigation. The Court deducted the implied basis of the stock from the actual sales proceeds to generate a disgorgement amount of approximately $534,000.00. The Court encouraged the parties to double-check its math and if possible to distribute the funds to the class immediately.
Conclusion
The Court summarized its holding, in part, as follows:
Consistent with prior rulings by this Court when confronted with representative plaintiffs who have traded while serving in a fiduciary capacity, Steinhardt and the funds are dismissed from the case with prejudice, barred from receiving any recovery from the litigation, required to self-report to the Securities and Exchange Commission, directed to disclose their improper trading in any future application to serve as lead plaintiff, and ordered to disgorge profits in the amount of $534,071.45.
Postscript: Professor Bainbridge provides scholarly insights about the case here.
U.S. Supreme Court Recognizes “Ministerial Exception” as Defense to Discrimination Claims Against Churches
In Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC (download here), the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday recognized a defense that churches may assert against claims by some employees based on anti-discrimination laws, such as a minister that claims she was discriminated against on an issue that comes within the scope of the church’s religious beliefs. Professor Bainbridge comments on this important ruling here; The Wall Street Journal reports on the U.S. Constitutional basis in the opinion (that also cites to the Magna Carta) here, and employment lawyer Daniel Schwartz provides insights here.
Chancery Grants Records Under Section 220 Despite Pending Federal Securities Suit
Paul v. China MediaExpress Holding, Inc., C.A. No. 6570-VCP (Del. Ch. Jan. 5, 2012), read opinion here.
Issues Addressed
(1) Whether a Section 220 case should be stayed pending the outcome of a related federal securities suit; and (2) Whether the shareholder in this case established a proper purpose to inspect books and records under DGCL Section 220.
Short Answer
(1) Based on a three-part test as applied to the facts of this case, the Court refused to stay this action in favor of a pending related federal securities suit, even though a motion to stay was also pending in the federal court. (2) In this post-trial opinion, the Court determined that the shareholder established a proper purpose and was entitled to the documents necessary to investigate that proper purpose.
Background
This is another installment in what can be referred to as the Court of Chancery’s “China Series,” to the extent that it deals with corporate governance complaints involving Delaware entities that are based in or conduct most of their operations in Hong Kong and/or mainland China. The defendant company in this case was engaged in the business of television advertising on buses in China. Until recently it was listed on the NASDAQ, which listing it obtained via a merger with a public company in 2009. The shareholder in this case sought books and records after a report was released indicating that the defendant company (“CME”) was engaging in fraudulent practices. Shortly after those reports, the independent auditor of the company, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (“DTT”) resigned, stating in its resignation letter that it was “no longer able to rely on the representations of management”. That same day, the company requested that NASDAQ temporarily suspend trading in its stock. Following the resignation of DTT, the CFO of the company as well as another CME director also resigned. Shortly thereafter, NASDAQ notified the company that it was suspending trading in the company’s stock and then NASDAQ delisted shares of CME.
Meanwhile, another investor filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware alleging violations of state and federal securities laws and breach of fiduciary duty. Discovery in that matter was stayed pending the resolution of a motion to dismiss pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLR”).
Procedural History
In May 2011, while the federal action was proceeding, the shareholder in the instant matter served a written demand on CME for books and records pursuant to DGCL Section 220. No response was forthcoming by CME and as a result a complaint was filed in this action on June 16. A trial date was set for October 11, 2011.
On September 27, 2011, CME moved in the Federal Action for a stay of discovery in this Section 220 action pursuant to the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act (“SLUSA”). Then, less than a week before the scheduled trial in this action, CME requested a continuance of the trial date in this case until after the District Court decided the Motion to Stay. The Court of Chancery denied the request and the trial in this matter proceeded on schedule in October.
Analysis
This decision provides a helpful overview of the prerequisites that must be satisfied in order for a shareholder to successful pursue a demand for books and records under Section 220. For example, the Court discusses the prerequisites under DGCL Section 220 such as proper purpose and a credible basis to allege wrongdoing.
Proper Purpose
A shareholder who seeks books and records (other than the stock ledger or list of stockholders) has the burden of proof to demonstrate a proper purpose for inspection by a preponderance of the evidence. There are many proper purposes that have been well established, including investigation of waste and mismanagement, for which there must be a credible basis “through documents, logic testimonial or otherwise”, from which the Court can infer wrongdoing, although actual proof of wrongdoing is not necessary.
Credible Basis
The Court explained that a credible basis is the lowest possible level of proof and does not require a preponderance. It must be a showing from which the Court can infer that there are reasonable grounds to suspect mismanagement that would warrant further investigation. This showing may ultimately fall well short of demonstrating that anything wrong occurred.” See footnotes 31-32.
In this case, Court found a credible basis for suspicion of waste and mismanagement based on numerous third-party media reports alleging fraudulent conduct, the halting of trading by NASDAQ, as well as delisting of CME shares; the resignation of the company’s independent auditors, the noisy resignations of three board members and the CFO, as well as the initiation of CME’s own internal investigation. The Court noted that that next lowest standard other than credible basis would be to eliminate the requirement that the stockholders show any evidence of possible wrongdoing. The Court also noted that for purposes of establishing a credible basis, the Court may rely on hearsay evidence. See footnote 34-35.
Defense Rejected
The Court emphasized that the defendant misunderstood the relevant law about whether or not the proper purpose could be defeated by a showing that the plaintiff could not prove that he would qualify as a representative plaintiff in a later class derivative action. Instead, the Court explained that the purpose stated in this case is to investigate the independence of directors in anticipation of alleging demand futility, and if later a class or derivative suit is brought, it is sufficient if the shareholder would have standing to bring either a direct or derivative claim against the company following the requested inspection– regardless of whether the shareholder would qualify as a representative plaintiff in a later class or derivative action. See footnote 40.
Scope of Demand
The Court emphasized that even after a proper purpose is established, that the scope of inspection for the books and records demand must be “circumscribed with precision and limited to those documents that are necessary, essential and sufficient to the stockholder’s purpose”. See footnotes 42-45.
Specific Documents
This opinion recites each and every document requested and examines which of them satisfy the “scope of demand” related to the proper purpose established, and then the Court describes which specific books and records will be ordered for production.
Postscript
This post-trial opinion is indicative of how expensive and unpredictable Section 220 cases can be. After the substantial cost of a trial, the only thing that the shareholder won, after prevailing in this Section 220 case, is the right to receive a limited scope of documents. After spending what was a considerable sum on discovery and trial preparation on an expedited basis, one can still predict skirmishes between counsel over what specific documents the company will claim that it has – - compared to documents that are actually sought.
Bankruptcy Judge Explains Preference Law and Two Common Defenses
Burtch v. Revchem Composites, Inc., f/n/a Revchem Plastics, Inc. (In re Sierra Concrete Design, Inc.), Adv. Case No. 10-52667 (CSS) (Bankr. D. Del., Jan. 4, 2012), read opinion here.
Tara Lattomus of Eckert Seamans prepared this summary.
Issue Addressed
Whether a creditor sued in a preference action was entitled to summary judgment based upon the ordinary course of business and subsequent new value defenses?
Short Answer
The defendant’s motion for summary judgment was denied in part and granted in part. The defendant failed to establish a sufficient course of business to establish the ordinary course of business defense. However, invoices issued after the preference payments entitled the defendant to some credit for the new value defense.
Background
This opinion did not contain many details about the underlying dispute. Instead, Judge Sontchi took the opportunity to explain the theories behind bankruptcy law, in general, and preference law, specifically. He began with the concept that outside of the bankruptcy context creditor recoveries are based on the principle of “first come, first served.” However, in the bankruptcy context, this principle may be harmful to creditors as a whole. The bankruptcy proceeding ends the individual collection efforts of specific creditors in favor of maximizing the return to all similarly situated creditors. Preference law supports the theory behind bankruptcy because it allows a debtor to recover any payments made to its creditors in the 90 days prior to the filing of the bankruptcy case. So, in other words, preference law is meant to deal with those creditors who see a bankruptcy filing on the horizon and step up their collection efforts in order to receive full payment on their claims before the case is filed.
Analysis
Because not all creditors who receive payments in the 90 days prior to bankruptcy are pursuing a debtor with this motivation, there are certain defenses to a preference action that are very fact specific. The two most common defenses are the ordinary course of business and new value defenses.
The ordinary course of business defense protects payments “that are made in ordinary course on debts incurred in ordinary course according to ordinary business terms.” The ordinary course of business defense can be established either by reference to the course of dealing between the two parties or by the industry standard. Specifically, a creditor must prove that the payments received during the preference period were consistent with payments it received prior to the preference period or that the payments it received were consistent with the industry standard.
The subsequent new value defense “protects creditors who provide new credit [to the debtor] after an old invoice is paid off.” In order to establish the subsequent new value defense a creditor must establish two elements: (1) after receiving the transfer the creditor must have advanced new value to the debtor on an unsecured basis; and (2) the debtor must not have fully compensated the creditor for the new value as of the bankruptcy filing. The judge explained that in order to undertake this analysis one must consider the net result after looking at the new value the creditor extended to the debtor after the preference payments but that any credit for new value should not be in excess of the preference exposure.
In this case, Judge Sontchi ruled that the creditor and the debtor had an insufficient pre-preference period relationship to establish an ordinary course of business. The pre-preference period consisted of 17 checks covering approximately 68 invoices over an 11 month period. The Court ruled that this was insufficient evidence to establish an ordinary course of business. The creditor also failed to present sufficient evidence to establish an industry standard. However, the judge did find that the creditor was entitled to certain credits for new value thereby reducing its preference exposure. As a result, the motion for summary judgment was denied in part and granted in part.

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