Bylaws May Contain Conditions to Grant of Advancements Rights that Supplement Advancement Rights in Charter

Xu Hong Bin v. Heckmann Corp., No. 4802-CC (Del. Ch., January 8, 2010), read letter decision here. The Delaware Court of Chancery previously granted partial summary judgment in favor of Xu on one of the counterclaims by Heckmann. Read summary of that prior decision in this case here. This ten-page letter decision from the Delaware Court of Chancery contains important analysis and recitation of Delaware law on both advancement and indemnification.

Key Issue

One of the key issues addressed by the Court was whether the provisions in the bylaws that allow the board to impose reasonable conditions prior to advancing legal fees were consistent with or contrary to the right to advancement contained in the Certificate of Incorporation.

Legal Analysis

The Court determined that there was no violation of Delaware General Corporation Law Section 109(b) in connection with the provisions in the bylaws that allowed the board to impose reasonable conditions on advancement, for two reasons. First, because the Court determined that the bylaw provisions were drafted and made effective contemporaneous with the provisions in the charter regarding advancement rights. Second, both documents were in effect when Xu began his service as a director and he should have been aware of the advancement provisions when he began his service as a director.

The Court observed that there was no requirement in Delaware law that all of the terms regarding advancement rights to which a person is entitled must be in one document. To the contrary, no such authority was presented to the Court.

Moreover, in light of Xu previously prevailing on Count III of Heckmann's counterclaims, the Court granted summary judgment in his favor for indemnification with respect to Count III.

However, the Court denied a request for “fees on fees” in the instant advancement proceedings because Xu did not prevail on his pending claim for advancement to the extent that the Court upheld the arguments of Heckmann on the issue of conditions precedent to advancing fees, contrary to the position argued by Xu--the net effect of which was to allow Heckmann to impose reasonable conditions prior to granting advancement rights.

Procedural Commentary

The Court observed as a procedural matter that fee advancement actions are especially appropriate for summary judgment proceedings because the entitlement of a party to advancement can be determined by applying the allegations contained in the pleadings to relevant corporate documents. Likewise, indemnification is also appropriate at the summary judgment stage where there are no material factual disputes germane to indemnification.
                                                                              

Court of Chancery Explains Policy Reasons For Selection of Lead Counsel in Class Action; Rejects Motion to Reconsider

Dutiel v. Tween Brands, Inc., No. 4743-CC and No. 484-CC (Oct. 28, 2009), read letter decision here. Read prior Chancery Court decision in this case highlighted on this blog here. In this most recent ruling, the Chancellor denied a motion for reconsideration of the Court's selection of lead counsel in a consolidated class action.

Overview

This letter decision denies a motion for reargument based on the familiar standards for such a motion. In addition to reciting the high hurdle to satisfy the prerequisites in this procedural setting, citing cases at footnotes 5 through 10, the Court summarized its reasoning by saying that relief pursuant to a motion for reconsideration is available “to prevent injustice” and there was no injustice in this situation. Instead, the Court explained that the motion was based on arguments that were themselves erroneous and, the Court added, also appeared to be based on “Dutiel’s misunderstandings and misapplications of settled Delaware law.”

As explained in more detail in the prior case summary linked above, the primary focus of  the Court's initial decision was the Court’s appointment of Ohio counsel as the lead counsel in this consolidated class action.

The Court used some “Halloween humor” to explain why it disagreed with the characterization by the movant of the Court's prior opinion in connection with describing the level of cooperation among the plaintiffs in this consolidated class action. In footnote 14 the Court explained as follows:

This Court appreciates holiday festiveness and cheer, but even at this time of year, it is best not to dress up or disguise a Court’s legal reasoning.”

Analysis

The Court addressed with a robust analysis the argument that the Court “misapplied a legal precedent” to the extent that it allegedly based its decision on the appointment of lead counsel on the fact that counsel chosen represented plaintiffs that “had a greater economic interest.” The Court addressed the cited cases that referred to “relative economic stakes” as compared to “simply economic stakes.”

The Court referred to other Chancery Court opinions that relied on a determination of economic interest of a plaintiff in “absolute terms not relative ones” and did not favor the plaintiff with the higher economic interest. See Wiehl v. Eon Labs, 2005 WL 696764 at * 3 (Del. Ch. Mar. 22, 2005).

Moreover, the Court noted that it was “baffling” and not understandable why Dutiel would demand an analysis of “relative economic stakes,” when in relative terms the interest of the plaintiffs whose counsel was chosen, was 1100% larger than the interest of Dutiel. The Court also explained that the Wiehl Court did not compare the sizes of the stakes of the different shareholders relative to one another, but noted how similar the stakes were in absolute terms (that is, as a percentage of the overall company). Such an analysis is mislabeled as relative, the Court explained.

The Court, in footnote 27, provided an explanation of the meaning of the word "relative" by the “Father of Relativity himself, Albert Einstein, who is said to have explained: “Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour, sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. THAT''s relativity.”

Clarification of Reasoning

The Court went to great lengths to emphasize that it was not advocating a bright-line rule with regard to the factors to apply in determining lead-plaintiff status. For example, the Court explained that it was not basing its decision on the plaintiff with the highest absolute economic stake. It was not setting a specific dollar amount on the stake that a plaintiff must have in order for the Court to be confident that the plaintiff will take an active interest in the outcome of the litigation. Rather, the Court underscored that it considers several factors when deciding which plaintiff the Court will appoint as lead plaintiff. For several of the factors, the race between potential lead plaintiffs was too close to call, but in no way do such close races mean the plaintiffs never even had the opportunity to “lace up their shoes.”

On Incentives and Ethics

The movant argued that the Court’s decision would “invite abuse” to encourage plaintiffs “who routinely file elsewhere to game the system and seek a second bite at the apple when they  are shut out in a competing jurisdiction.” The Court described that argument thusly: "the movant simply created a straw man - - accusing the Court of incentivizing bad behavior - - and then purports to knock it down.”

Rather, the Court emphasized that its decision merely declined to penalize a litigant because his or her counsel filed in another jurisdiction. The Court reasoned that the “initial location of filing cannot be a principled basis for this Court to resolve lead counsel disputes.” The Court also rejected the argument that it gave any weight to the lawyers who “invoke this Court’s name in a ‘fishing’ press release and then file elsewhere, only to return here after determining that their action is going to be stayed or dismissed.”

The Court underscored that the referenced online press release did not bear upon its decision. It also explained that the role of the Court is not to serve as a “professionalism policeman.” The Court concluded with a suggestion to the movant that if the movant believed that “the issuance of online press releases poses an ethical problem, her counsel should report the conduct to the appropriate disciplinary counsel.”

UPDATE: Alison Frankel of The AmLaw Litigation Daily  also reviews this case and links to our summary here.