Business Associations Outline
Business Associations Outline
Business Associations Outline
Principles of Attribution: outward looking consequences come about because principals can be held liable for the tortuous
actions of their agents, and can be required to fulfill contracts into which their agents have entered because the principal has
the ability to select and control the agent and to terminate the agency relationship
Actual Authority: created by principals manifestation to an agent, as reasonably understood by the agent,
expresses the principals assent that the agent take action on the principals behalf. Restatement 1.03
o 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 to act. Restatement 2.01
Express: what the principal actual conveyed to the agent
Implied: power to do those things necessary to fulfill the agency
Castillo v. Case Farms: authority to recruit migrant workers includes the implied authority to transport &
house the workers. These activities were within the scope of employment.
Actual authority includes the implied authority to do what is necessary & proper to complete the
actual authority
Apparent Authority: one person may bind another in a transaction with a third person, even in the absence of
actual authority, when the third person reasonably believes based on manifestations of the purported principal
that the actor is authorized to act on behalf of the purported principal. Components:
1. Power to affect the legal relations of another person by transactions with third person, professedly as an
agent for the other, arising from and in accordance with the others manifestations to such third persons.
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Implied direct communication between the principal & the third party
2. Power held by an agent or other actor to affect a principals legal relations with third parties when a third
party reasonably believes the actor has authority to act on behalf of the manifestations. Restatement 2.03
Implies that apparent authority may be created without any communication made directly to the
third person. Custom may create apparent authority.
Scope of authority depends on the third partys reasonable interpretation of the manifestation
o Manifestation: a person manifests consent or intention through written or spoken words or other conduct.
Restatement 1.03.
Apparent authority is created when the manifestation reaches the third party (through an
intermediary) as long as the manifestation can be tracked back to the principal
Principal should take reasonable steps to inform the third party of any misplaced reliance due to a
manifestation of a purported agent
- Bethany Pharmacal v. QVC: principal corrected misrepresentations made by a third
party (non-agent).
It was unreasonable to rely on the non-agents statements in light of the
principals manifestations.
An agent cannot unilaterally create apparent agency through her
communications. The manifestation must come from the principal
o Apparent authority rises when:
One person appears to be an agent of another even though no agency relationship exists i.e.
apparent agency
An actual agent exceeds the scope of his or her authority
o Apparent and actual authority may co-exist
Apparent authority may survive the termination of the agency relationship
o Estoppel: not an agency doctrine, but similar to apparent authority. Differences:
Estoppel requires detrimental reliance
Restatement says estoppel is for situations that do not involve manifestations
Estoppel does not bind the third party, only the principal. Compare with apparent authority that
can bind the third party and the principal
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Respondeat Superior: master-servant or employee-employer liability employer responsible for the torts of
his employee due to his control over his employee
o Tortuous conduct must occur in the course of employment
o Employer must have the opportunity to select employees (Ware v. Timmons)
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CHAPTER 2: PARTNERSHIPS*
Formation
Partnership: an association of two or more persons to carry on as co-owners of a business. UPA 6; RUPA 202(a)
o Governed by UPA & RUPA
o General Principles:
One partner may be bound to third parties by the action of another partner each partner is an
agent of the partnership!
Partners are personally liable for the obligation of the partnership
o Deal Points: partners assume risks and in exchange gain control
Risk of Loss: from investments in or operation of business
Return: fixed claims (salaries, interests) and residual claims (profits, incentives)
Control: who has the right to make which sort of business decisions?
Duration: how long? How terminated? Transferable?
No formalities are required to form a general partnership. Can be formed in the absence of a written agreement,
conscious intent to form a partnership or knowledge that a partnership is formed. RUPA 202(a)
o Formation at issue when an individual is attempting to avoid liability
Intend to do the thing which constitute a partnership determines whether individuals are partners
regardless of their intent to create/avoid the relationship (Holmes v. Lerner)
- Many partnerships are inadvertent
Usually if a partner intended to receive a share of profits of the business, he is a partner. Except:
- Employees or creditors who are paid for their services out of profits
o LLPs favored because theyre easy to form and provide limited liability
Partnerships v. Corporations:
o Partnership Shortcoming: no limited liability
o Partnership Advantages: simple to form, flexible in organization, & subject to pass through taxation
Management
Partnership Decision-making:
o All partners have equal rights in management and control
o If partners disagreement, majority vote controls.
Problematic if only two partners due to likelihood of deadlock
One partner cannot reduce the power of another partner
Conflicting Views: (1) Nabisco is a suit by a third party. Summers is a suit between parties and (2)
Freeman (Nabisco) was acting in the ordinary course of business. Summers was changing the
status quo by hiring another person.
- Nabisco v. Stroud: absent agreement to the contrary, partnership decisions are governed
by majority vote of the partners. If there is not a vote to end a partners actual authority
to carry out business (purchasing bread for store), then the partnership will be bound by
his actions, leaving the partnership and the individual partners liable.
- Summers v. Dooley: a partner does not have majority vote when he carries out
deadlocked partnership business (hiring an employee)
o Unanimous consent is required to:
Authorize amendments to partnership agreement
Add a new partner
In extraordinary situations i.e. acts outside of the ordinary course of partnership business
RUPA is the default rule unless the parties agree to change the rules
Fiduciary Duties
Duty of Loyalty: RUPA is the default rule but can be altered by agreement. Partners may specify acceptable
activities if not manifestly unreasonable
o Anti-theft: appropriation of partnership opportunity. RUPA 404(b)(1)
o Self-dealing: partner is on both sides of a transaction. RUPA 404(b)(2)
o Competition: only applies prior to dissolution. RUPA 404(b)(3)
Duty of Care: limited to engaging in grossly negligent or reckless conduct, intentional misconduct, or a knowing
violation of law. Partners may not unreasonably reduce this duty, but it can be altered by contract.
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Financial Attributes
Partnership Accounting: governed by UPA 501-502
o Capital Account: tracks each partners ownership claim against the partnership. Determined by:
Contributions made by each partner
Each partners share in profits/losses from partnership operations
- Equal shares is the default rule but can be changed by contract
- Phelps v. Frampton: partnership agreement controls when disbursing profits even if one
partner will benefit more than others if the agreement is not ambiguous and the result was
contemplated by the partners
Any withdrawals of funds from the partnership
Each partners gains or losses upon sale of the partnership assets
o Draws: a type of withdrawal - earnings that are removed from the partnership akin to salary/wages.
Partnerships attempt to calibrate the amount of a partners draw to the partners share of partnership profits
Sharing Profits & Losses Among Partners
o Allocations of profits & losses is determined by each partners interest in the partnership
o Profits are paid out annually. Capital contributions are normally repaid when a partner withdraws form the
partnership or when the partnership terminates
o Partnership assets are used to pay liabilities in the following order:
1. Amount owed to creditors of the partnership who are not partners
2. Amount owed to partners other than for capital accounts & profits
3. Amount owed to partners for repayment of capital
4. Amount owed to partners for any remaining profits
Liability of Partners to Third Parties
o Partners may be forced to fulfill partnership obligations to third parties out of their personal funds
Entity View: partners as contributors to the partnership having an obligation to the partnership to
furnish it with the necessary funds to meet its obligations to third person, but that those having
claims against the partnership have no claims against the partners
- Result: partnership creditors are forced to first exhaust the assets of the partnership &
then begin new proceedings to attach the claims of the partnership against the partners as
contributors
Aggregate View: adopted by UPA partners jointly liable for all partnership debts & obligations
except wrongfully acts or breaches of trust of one of the partners, for which the other partners are
jointly & severally liable
- Individual liability of a partner may not be altered by agreement among partners because
it would affect the rights of third parties
- RUPA Changes: partners are jointly & severally liable in all matters; exhausting
requirement is omitted (partners can be indemnified by partnership)
o Can be liable for debts of the partnership that existed before you joined the partnership
In re Keck, Mahin & Cate: liable for wrongful acts or omissions that occurred while you were a
partner because wrongful act triggers liability of all partners that a partner cannot escape by
leaving the partnership after the malpractice is committed but before the client wins/settles
- Dissolution of the partnership doesnt discharge existing liability of any partners
- Partners cannot release one another from liability to third parties. Third party consent is
required to release a partner from liability
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Limited Liability Partnerships: general partnerships that have registered with the state and as a result of
registration obtain a certain level of limited liability protection for partners
o Protects the person assets of partners from risk of negligence/malpractice of another partner
Partners in LLPs arent personally liable for any obligation of the partnership unless the partner is
personally liable as a result of their own conduct or have participated or supervised wrongful acts
o Dow v. Jones: a partner can bind the partnership even during dissolution if he has apparent authority (firm
letterhead, meetings at offices, no notice to client).
Lacked actual authority to retain client but firm held him out as partner partnership by estoppel
- RUPA 308 allowed partnership by estoppel
- Purported partner is someone that has not consented to being a partner, but they are
estopped from denying partnership if there is the holding out and reliance by a third party
Partner can bind the partnership after the dissolution if the third party doesnt have notice of the
dissolution creates unlimited liability for partners actions
Dissolution: departure of a partner from the partnership, the process of liquidating & winding up a partnership or the
completion of that process
Partners can still bind the partnership in the winding up process (Dow v. Jones)
Under UPA, a change in the relations of partners caused by any partner leaving caused dissolution
o Dissolution: point in time when the partners cease to carry on business together
o Termination: point in time when all partnership affairs are wound up
o Dissolution doesnt result in immediate termination terminates the legal entity, but not the partnership
business
Under RUPA, departure of a partner does not cause dissolution. Its a dissociation.
o Dissolutions commonly caused by dissociations may breach partnership agreement
o Dissociating partner must be bought out:
Rightful Dissociation: when it is accomplished without violating the agreement between partners.
RUPA 601
Wrongful Dissociation: when a partner breaches the express/implied partnership agreement or
before the expiration of the term of completion of the undertaking. Creates liability to the
partnership and other partners. RUPA 602
Types of Partnerships: statutes provide partners with an absolute right to leave the partnership at any time (after
paying any damages that they might cause by leaving).
o At-will
o Limited Duration
o Particular Undertaking: more likely that a partner who leaves will be found to have left wrongfully. This
can effectively make it very expensive for a partners to leave
Fischer v. Fischer: one partner cannot unilaterally dissolve the partnership rightfully before the
undertaking was completed. Damages available for this form of breach.
*RUPA says partnerships are entities separate from the partners themselves rather than the aggregate. Partnership property
belongs to the entity, not to the individual partners.
CHAPTER 3: LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES
Birth & Development of LLCs
Investors in corporations have limited liability only limited to the amount of their investment
Kintner Factors: corporate norms
o Centralized management (Board of Directors)
o Continuity of life
o Free transferability of voting rights
o Limited liability
Double Taxation: corporate profits are taxed once at the corporate level and then again at the level of the individual
shareholder after payment of dividends
o Contrast with pass through tax entities (general partnerships) that only tax partners for profits
o Exception for corporations that have:
Fewer than 75 shareholders
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Only one class of stock cannot have both common & preferred shares
Individual shareholders may only be US citizens or resident aliens
o LLCs are treated as partnerships for tax purposes
o General Utilities Doctrine: permitted a corporation to distribute appreciated property to its shareholders
without realizing taxable gain, thus avoiding double taxation. Popularity of LLCs grew a
Limited Partnerships (LPs): hybrid entity corporation & partnership qualities
o Provided tax shelters investors used LPs losses to shelter other income form federal taxes
o Characteristics: must have at least one general partner who exercises management responsibilities and at
least one limited partner, who is a passive investor
Requires only one partner to be subject to unlimited personal liability
Control Rule: limited partner who participates in the control of business is liable to persons who
transact business with the LP reasonably believe based on the limited partners conduct, that the
limited partner is a general partner (later rejected)
o Importance of LPs is declining
Formation
Formed through a formal filing of a Certificate of Organization or the Articles of Incorporation
o Operating Agreement: agreement re: members
o Conflicting Agreements:
When operating agreement & articles of incorporation conflict, the agreement controls with
respect to members, dissociated members, transferees and managers while the Articles of
Incorporation controls with respect to third parties who reasonably rely on it
If an operating agreement or articles of incorporation conflict with a statute, the statute controls
with respect to mandatory provisions but the agreement between the parties prevail with respect to
non-mandatory provisions
LLCs cannot be created informally.
o Doctrines that prevent inequality due to failed incorporation attempts:
De facto corporation: if a person (promoter) attempted to incorporate but failed to follow the
proper formalities, courts might conclude that the corporation existed in fact (de facto), eve if not
in law (de jure). Recognition of limited liability to protect the promoter for personal liability
- Stone v. Jetmar Properties: voids this principle. Incorporation process is so simple that
protection shouldnt be available for those who fail to incorporate
- If there is a genuine attempt to incorporate, this doctrine may still be invoked
Corporation by estoppel: recognition of limited liability vis--vis third parties who deal with a
promoter on the assumption that the promoter represents an existing corporation, even if the
corporation has not been formed.
o RULE: all persons purporting to act as or on behalf of a corporation, knowing there was no incorporation
under this Act, are jointly and severally liable for all liabilities created while so acting. Exceptions:
Where a corporate organizer reasonably & honestly believes that the articles have been filed, but
in fact they have not been due, for example, attorney neglect;
Where the articles have been mailed or deliver for filing, but not received by the secretary of state
through no fault of the corporate organizer;
Where the third party knows the articles have not been field and looks only to the corporation in
formation;
Where the third party relies on the corporations credit even though no corporation exists, and the
corporation organizers knows that ; or
Where inactive investors have not authorized the commencement of business without the
protection of the corporate shield and business is commenced without their knowledge. MBCA
2.04
o Promoter Liability: promoters are personally liable on all pre-incorporation contracts
All persons purporting to act as or on behalf of a corporation, knowing there was no incorporation
under this Act, are jointly and severally liable for all liabilities created while so acting. MBCA
2.04
However, if one party urges another to sign in the name of the corporation, even though both know
it does not exist, estoppel may prevail
Management
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Types of Management:
o Member-Managed LLC: (default rule) members have equal management rights & decide all ordinary
business matters by a majority of members
Runs like a partnership ordinary matters are decided by majority vote of members &
extraordinary matters generally require unanimous consent
Gottsacker v Monnier: members with a material conflicts of interest are usually allowed to vote
but are required to deal fairly with the conflicted member.
- Common law rule: any transaction with a conflict of interest would be voidable
o Manager-Managed LLC: managers have exclusive management rights & decide all ordinary business
matters by a majority of managers
All members must consent to:
- Sell, lease, exchange or otherwise dispose of all, or substantially all, of the companys
property, without goodwill and outside the ordinary course of the companys activities
- Approve a merger, conversion, or domestication under Article 10
- Undertake any other act outside the ordinary course of the companys activities
- Amend the operating agreement
Unanimity favored because LLCs are likely to be closely held. Members are likely to want veto
power over extraordinary transactions
Unanimity disfavored because: obtaining consent may be costly because it may require individual
negotiations, the veto power may not be justified in an LLC as it is in a general partnership
because members cannot impose unlimited liability for their actions on each other, and a
disgruntled member has the right to withdraw and be paid for his interested in the LLC
Taghipour v. Jerez: LLC can attempt to limit power of manager by operating agreement but the
manager may still be able to bind the corporation (apparent authority issue).
Management provisions are default rules that can be altered by the operating agreement
Limited Liability
Default Rule: every member of LLC has equal management rights (member managed) unless they provide for
centralized management (manager managed) in the organizing documents. Both structures provide limited liability
Piercing the Corporate Veil: circumventing limited liability & holding shareholders personally liable for the
obligations of the corporation
o Designed to impose personal liability on shareholders when they have failed to treat the corporation as a
separate entity
o In corporations, courts look to formalities to determine if the corporate veil should be pierced (board
meetings, separate bank accounts, etc.). But, LLCs do not have these formalities harder to pierce the
corporate veiling in LLCs!
o D.R. Horton v. Dynastar: New Jersey courts use a test to determine if corporate veil should be pierced:
Plaintiff must prove subsidiary was a mere instrumentality or alter ego of its owner; and
Plaintiff must prove that parent/owner has abused the business form to perpetuate a fraud,
injustice, or otherwise circumvent the law.
o Veiling piercing usually employed when there is not a real distinction, perceived or real, between the owner
and the firm and its difficult to separate them
Requires showing of domination and control of both entitys policy & business practices
Rarely used
o Look for personal liability of defendant before attempting to pierce because direct actions are more likely
to be successful
Fiduciary Duties
Imposed on LLC managers; owed to the LLC and individual members
o Cant oppress a minority member because fiduciary duties are owed to each member
o Statutes impose the duties of care & loyalty on managers (Purcell v. Southern Hills)
o Duties can be altered by operating agreement but cannot be eliminated under RULLCA.
DEs LLC statute allows for complete waiver of these duties
Types of Lawsuits:
o Derivative: enforcement of fiduciary duties in an action which shareholders of a corporation sue on behalf
of the corporation to enforce fiduciary duties against the managers of the corporation
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Harm caused to the corporation i.e. mismanagement or theft of corporate funds harm to
shareholders derives from the harm to the corporation
Harder to sustain
Direct: shareholders act on their own behalf
Harm caused to the shareholders i.e. depriving shareholders of mandatory dividends based on
shareholder agreement
With LLCs, sometimes direct actions allowed for matters that would normally be considered
derivative actions if a corporation was involved
Dissolution
Statutes often impose requirements on LLCs and its members prior to dissolution
Dissolution much more complicated in LLC context than partnership context
LLCs are a creature of contract so courts will often hold parties to the provisions they agreed to
o Compare with Hadley v. Talcott: judicial dissolution granted to break deadlock between two 50% members
of the LLC because exist mechanism was inadequate. Exit would have left one member responsible for the
mortgage of the other with no control over the LLC
CHAPTER 4: ORGANIZATION & STRUCTURE OF A CORPORATION
Corporate Governance Roles:
Officers: in charge of the day-to-day operations of the corporation
Directors: elected by shareholders to supervise the officers shareholders representatives within corporation
o Do not act as individuals; act collectively as the Board of Directors
Shareholders: owners of the corporation possessing control rights.
Ownership Structures:
Public Corporation: shares are owned by a large number of investors & are traded in the public securities market
o Roles: officers, directors & shareholders are three distinct groups results in conflicts of interest
o Control: formal mechanisms are exercised by the Board of Directors; shareholders elect directors
Separation of ownership (shareholders) & control (management)
o Federal Securities Laws: demanding set of disclosure requirements 0 must make quarterly reports and
annual disclosure of large quantities of specified information
o Market for Corporate Control: hostile takeovers public corporations are subject to the threat of being
taken over by another company gaining control of a majority of the corporations outstanding stock
o Commonly incorporated under Delaware law about of all Fortune 500 companies incorporated in DE
DE selected because of its specialized courts and pro-business statutes. Provides predictability
o Exit options easy sell your shares BUT in exchange for an easy exit, voice (control) rights are limited
Closely-held Corporations: shares are owned by a small number of shareholders without access to the public
securities markets
o Roles: officers, directors & shareholders roles often overlap
o Control: formal mechanisms of control are exercised by shareholders
Contracts between shareholders govern actions
May eliminate the Board of Directors
o Federal Securities Laws: no requirements
o Commonly incorporated in the state of principal place of business because cost of incorporation is cheaper.
State law doesnt matter as much because contract governs most issues
o No market for shares of the corporation making it harder to exit, so shareholders are given more control
Corporate Law: governed by statutes enacted by states
o Internal Affairs Doctrine: rules governing the relations between officers, directors and shareholders are
taken form the state of incorporation, commonly Delaware. In DE, the DGCL governs.
o Model Business Corporation Act (MBCA)
Incorporation: process by which a separate legal entity is formed
Incorporation Process:
o Draft articles of incorporation
Called the certificate of incorporation in DE
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Capital Structure
Types of Claims Sold:
o Equity: power & control, usually by voting, and the right to receive the fruits of the business through
dividends, distributions, and liquidation
Common: unlimited voting rights (including especially the right to vote for directors) and the right
to the residual assets of the corporation (after payment of all corporate liabilities)
Preferred: shares that have some preference or priority in payment over common shares
- Set out in Articles of a separate document called a certificate of designations
Preference in dividends
Preferred rights during the winding up stages
Can be used to enhance voting rights
- Blank Check Preferred: board of directors may designate the attributes of a class or
series of shares in an amendment to the articles not requiring shareholder approval
Types of Equity Schemes:
- One Class: all equity holders have the same rights
- Multiple Classes: equity holders with different rights
- Series within a Class: make distinctions within the class of equity holders
All equity interests are the capital stock of the corporation
- Individual units of capital stock are called shares
Shares are issued when they are sold
Shares are outstanding as long as shareholders hold them
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Enhances boards decision-making due to independence but may be forced to rely on inside
information due to lack of knowledge of business
Election of Directors:
O Directors elected at annual meeting of shareholders - MBCA 8.03(d). Directors hold office until their
successors are elected and qualified
Staggered: always a majority of directors who are continuing without need for re-election
- Anti-takeover device because its hard to get enough people on the board to complete a
hostile takeover (multi-year project)
- Restricts shareholders ability to monitor board action
- Governed by MBCA 8.06
Classified: board that allows for classes of directors to be elected for multiple year terms
Removal: directors may be removed from the board by shareholders, with or without cause, unless the charter
provides that cause is required. MBCA 8.08(a)
O If a specific class of shares elects a director, only those shares may remove the director. MBCA 8.08(b)
O Special rules for cumulative voting. MBCA 8.08(c)
O Directors may be removed in a judicial proceeding for bad behavior, if the court finds that removal is in the
best interests of the corporation. MBCA 8.09
O DE Provisions: directors may always be removed for cause. But, removal of directors in staggered board is
only for cause. DGCL 141(k)(1)
Vacancies: caused by death, removal, or resignation. Directors may resign at any time by delivering written notice
of resignation. Vacancies may be filed by the remaining directors or by shareholders
O Creation of a new directorship is functionally the same as a vacancy
O Shareholders or director may fill vacancies or new directorships. MBCA 8.10; DGCL 223
Board Meetings: members will be considered present if the director participates in the meeting by telephone
O Directors can act without holding a meeting (unless the charter or bylaws provide otherwise) but written
consent of all of the directors is required. MBCA 8.21(a)
O Special meeting requires notice of date, time, and place but not purpose
O A majority of directors must be present to satisfy the statutory quorum requirement but charter or bylaws
may alter the quorum requirement to specify more or less than majority. MBCA 8.24(a)-(b)
O Meetings of the Board:
Directors act at regular or special meetings of the board. MBCA 8.20(a)
Board acts by majority vote, unless the charter or bylaws require a supermajority. MBCA 8.24(c)
Board Committees: the board of directors may act through committees comprised of fewer than the total number of
directors. MBCA 8.25(a)
O Rules governing meetings of the board also govern meetings of committees. MBCA 8.25(c)
O Committees may be authorized to act on behalf of the whole bard. MBCA 8.25(d)
O Stock exchange rules may require committees and certain composition of the committee i.e. audit
committee have at least one financial expert
O Federal regulation also has focused on committees (S-OX)
O Cannot delegate all matters to the committee actions that will need to be put to a shareholder vote may
not be delegated to committee, nor may a committee adopt, amend, or repeal bylaws of the corporation.
Shareholder Voting: default rules can be altered by charters or bylaws
O Each outstanding share of common stock is entitled to one vote on each matter voted on at a shareholder
meeting. MBCA 7.21(a)
O Allowed to vote on election of directors and fundamental transactions:
Electing directors: MBCA 8.03(d)
Removing directors: MBCA 8.08
Amending the charter: MBCA 10.03
Amending the bylaws: MBCA 10.20
Approving a merger: MBCA 11.03
Approving sale of all the companys assets: MBCA 12.02
Approving dissolutions: MBCA 14.02
Ratifying conflict-of-interest transactions: MBCA 8.16(b)(2)
O Can vote at shareholder meeting in person or by proxy. MBCA 7.22(a)
Proxy Voting: common in publicly traded companies
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Legal Capital: par value per share times the number of shares outstanding. Distribution that exceed the
surplus result in a impairment of capital
Disconnecting Par Value & Price:
o No law required par value to equal issue price
o Promoters were reluctant to lower par values because they didnt want their corporations to appear as
penny stocks
Once that inhibition was overcome, par values and issue prices began to separate
Today par values are set a trivial amount (usually $.01 or less)
o In absence of par value, the board of directors specifies a stated capital
Klang v. Smiths Food & Drug Centers, Inc.: Smith didnt impair capital despite the negative amount on the
balance sheet. Balance sheet is not outcome determinative because Smith has an opportunity to revalue assets &
liabilities to show economic value the company may borrow against
o When assets were revalued, capital was not impaired
o Must revalue assets & liabilities in good faith, on the basis of acceptable data, by methods that they
reasonably believe reflect present values, and arrive at a determination of the surplus that is not so far off
the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud. Gives directors ability to calculate own insolvency
o Business Judgment Rule: courts will not second guess the business judgment of a company
o
2.
o
o
o
If no personal liability whether corporate formalities have been carefully observed. If observed,
courts will rarely pierce
3. Beyond showing the corporate formalities were not maintained, most courts require a showing of
injustice/unfairness to link the wrongdoing to the harm. Types of injustice: (a) where the disregard
for the corporate entity has been visible to a third party and that third party has reason to be
confused about whether he was dealing with a corporation or an individual or (b) where the
shareholder has disregarded the separateness of the corporations funds & treated them as her own
Soerries v. Dancause: corporate veil pierced to reach club owner for negligence at his club because
corporate form was abused comingling of funds and confusing third parties as to who (corporation or
individual) is responsible.
Enterprise Liability: rather than pursuing a remedy against the corporations stockholder, the plaintiff
seeks recovery from the assets of a sister corporation (treating multiple entities as one)
Reverse Piercing: an attempt to reach assets in a corporation in order to meet financial obligations of
the corporations shareholders
In re Phillips: a corporation may be liable for the debts of a controlling shareholder or other
corporate insider where the shareholder or insider treated the corporation as his alter ego to
perpetuate fraud or defeat a rightful claim and an equitable result is achieved by piercing
Doctrine more likely to be used where other shareholders are not entirely innocent
FACTORS: (1) the controlling insider and the corporation were alter egos for other each, (2)
justice requires recognizing the substance of the relationship over the form because the
corporate fiction is utilized to perpetuate a fraud or defeat a rightful claim, and (3) an
equitable result is achieved by piercing.
- Inside: allow a shareholder to disregard the corporate form of which he/she is a part
- Outside: involve a corporate outsider seeking to obligate a corporation for the debts
of a dominant shareholder or other corporate insider
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Result: look at each provision or subchapter and determine the independent effect, not the
substantive effect. Form over substance!
Used in Delaware
Cumulative Voting: method of counting shareholder votes in director elections in which each shareholder is entitled to cast a
number of votes equal to the product of the number of such shareholders shares time the number of directors to be elected
Purpose: increases minority participation on the board. Goal can also be achieved through Shareholder Agreement
or entitling special classes of stock to x number of directors.
Staggered voting defeats the effect of cumulative voting
Must be provided for in charter
Supermajority Requirements
Protects minority shareholders by giving them veto powers over corporate decision without offending corporate
norms because corporate statutes allow high quorum and voting requirements
Adoption of Supermajority Requirement:
o Delaware: majority vote
o MBCA: adopted by same vote as required by the proposed supermajority
Amending Rules:
o Delaware: in charter, they can be amended or repealed only be the greater vote specified in the charter
provision. But, theres no statutory restriction on the amendment or repeal of supermajority voting
requirements in bylaws
o MBCA: amendment or repeal requires supermajority vote
Options: can apply to all transactions or only certain transactions (merger or sale). If applies to all transactions,
likelihood of deadlock increases.
Preemptive Rights: rights of a shareholder to subscribe to the portion of any increase in a corporations capital stock
necessary to maintain the shareholders relative voting power as against other shareholders
Not considered inherent in capital stock granted/denied in Articles of Incorporation
Types of Preemptive Right Provisions:
o Opt-In: (most frequently used) default rule is against preemptive rights but a corporation may provide for
preemptive rights by including a provision in its Articles
o Opt-Out: reflects skepticism about the value of preemptive rights and a recognition that from the
corporations standpoint, preemptive rights simply complicate the issuance of new shares
Rarely used in public companies but common in closely held corporations
Can be waived as a class (Kimberlin v. Ciena)
Deadlock: occurs when shareholder vote is divided
Usually leads to dissolution of the corporation, which requires shareholder and director approval. If approval
doesnt occur and deadlock persists, the corporation may be judicially dissolved upon a showing of deadlock
o Conklin v. Perdue: day deadlock first occurred is the day of dissolution. All actions taken after that date
are independent of the former entity. Judicial dissolution
Buyouts are a common remedy
CHAPTER 7: OPPRESSION OF MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS
The Plight of the Minority Shareholder
Pressure Points in Closely-Held Corporations:
o Benefits of stock ownership include:
Dividends
Participation in management
Employment: termination may be equivalent to withholding the benefits of stock ownership
o Why close corporations pay salaries, not dividends:
Reasonable salaries are deductible as expenses
Dividends are not deductible (double taxation)
Will of majority shareholders governs the business, but directors have a fiduciary duty to serve all shareholders
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Vulnerability of Minority: in closed corporations minority are vulnerable because they have both
investment and employment in the company. Loss of employment leaves few options on how to get the
proper return on investment. Minority shareholders cannot get out!
o Freeze-Out: terminate minority shareholders employment, remove the minority shareholder from the
board, refuse to declare dividends, increase salaries and employment-related perquisites to majority
shareholders, buy the minority shareholders shares at a discounted price (squeeze out price)
Response:
- Judicial: fiduciary law allows direct suits because of partnership-like duties
- Legislative: special dissolution statutes
Broaden the grounds to include oppression
Provide additional remedies for dissolution, including buyout, appointment of a
custodian, ordering a dividend, or other equitable remedy
Addressing Minority Oppression:
o Donahue v. Rodd (Mass.): closely held corporation is like a partnership
Heightened fiduciary duty comparable to duty that partners owe each other exists in closely held
corporations
Equal Opportunity Rule: if the stockholder whose shares were repurchased was a member of the
controlling group, the controlling stockholders must cause the corporation to offer each
stockholder an equal opportunity to sell a ratable number of his shares to the corporation at an
identical price
o Nixon v. Blackwell (De.): parties are bound by what they contracted for minority shareholder knew he
was going to be in the minority and couldve protected his interest through a definitive stockholder
agreement and decided not tocourt wont protect him now.
o Wilkes v. Springside Nursing (Mass.): response to Donahue
Nervous about the untempered application of Donahue will result in the imposition of limitations
on legitimate action by the controlling group in a close corporation which will unduly hamper its
effectiveness in managing the corporation in the best interests of all concerned
Refining Donahue: whether the controlling group can demonstrate a legitimate business purpose
for its action is determinative. When an asserted business purpose for the action is advance by the
majority, it is open to the minority to demonstrate that the same legitimate objective could have
been achieved through an alternative course of action less harm to the minoritys interest
- Flexibility need to establish business policy of corporation necessary in declaring of
withhold dividends, deciding whether to merge or consolidate, establishing salaries of
corporate officers, dismissing directors without or without cause, hiring/firing employees
- Legitimate Business Purpose: courts have cited various purposes as legitimate:
Misconduct by minority shareholders
Incompetence of the minority shareholder
Poor business or economic conditions
Change in technology or business plan
- Courts have rarely allowed a minority shareholder to show an alternative course of action
would be less harmful. Nevertheless, it suggests that courts should balance the interests
of the parties
o Riblet Products v. Nagy (De.): Wilkes is REJECTED in Delaware!
o Elmalen v. Barlow: heightened fiduciary duties are only owed in closely held corporations
Shareholders owe no obligations to each other. There are no fiduciary duties. Exceptions:
- Controlling shareholders owe fiduciary obligations to other shareholders
- Shareholders in a closely held corporation owe each other the highest form of fiduciary
obligation
Basis for increased obligation:
- Small number of shareholders: fewer than 21 shareholders
- No ready market for the corporate stock
- Substantial majority shareholder participation in management, direction, and operations
of the corporation
o Leslie v. Boston Software: utmost good faith requirement due to enhanced status as an owner required
The were less harmful alternatives: Leslies administrative functions could have been modified
such that he could have been insulated from direct contact with BSC employees, etc.
Remedy:
o
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Liability Provisions: whenever issuers or underwriters participate in sales that involve material
misstatements or material omissions of fact
Securities Exchange Act of 1934: more comprehensive regulates secondary market transactions purchases &
sales of securities among investors in the trading markets and exchanges
o Regulates NYSE, ASE & regional exchanges
o Regulates the actions of brokers/dealers in trading venues
o Delegates power to SEC to regulate proxy process
o Mandatory disclosure requirements: decided not to directly regulate corporations but instead give
shareholders all of the information they need to make informed decisions
Disclosure is a continuous process, being required at fixed times throughout the year and upon the
occurrence of important transactions
While much the required disclosure of financial info., there is a lot of pure corporate governance
information that is required to be disclosed
Purpose of Proxy Regulation: provide shareholders with information needed to make informed voting decisions
o Proxy statements are provided directly to each shareholder whenever shareholders have the right to vote
o Proxy Solicitation: SEC Schedule 14A usually occurs in preparation for the annual meeting
o Shareholder Resolutions: shareholder proposals for items of business to be added to the agenda of the
annual meeting; 500 word statement asking the company to include the resolution and supporting statement
in the companys proxy statement
o
Definition of Proxy Solicitation: regulations promulgated pursuant to 14(a) of the 1934 Act apply only to
shareholder communications defined as proxy solicitation (seeking voting authority)
o Must be sent to all shareholders
Liability for Misleading Proxy Disclosure:
o Rule 14a09: SEC defined a cause of action for false or misleading proxy statements and shareholders have
an implied private right of action to bring claims under this rule
Its a violation of Rule 14a-9 for a company to make a false statement of material fact or omit to
state material facts in its proxy statements
Material Fact: info. a reasonable shareholder would consider important in deciding how to vote
- Fact-specific inquiry
- Usually financial facts concerning the value of securities/transaction
Shareholder Proposals: Introduction to Rule 14a-8
o Shareholder Proposals: proposing action at the annual shareholders meeting and requiring the company
to include the resolution on its proxy statement
Social Activist Proposals: ask the board to study or disclose social, environmental, etc. issues.
Usually brought by members of a socially responsible investment (SRI) community, which
evaluates companies on both financial, social and environmental grounds
Corporate Governance Proposals: seek changes in companys bylaws. Generally brought by nonSRI institutional investment community
o Rule 30b1-4: requires mutual fund managers to disclose how they voted on every shareholder proposal in
every company in their portfolio
Exposes conflicts of interest: mutual fund managers often vote the companys management even if
it is contrary to the represented shareholder
o Rules 14a-7 & 14a-8: forcing company to include their proposal and supporting statement in the companys
proxy statement under 14a-8 or requiring shareholder list and mailing its proposal out separately (costly)
under 14a-7
o Requirements to Make a Proposal: proponent must own at least $2,000 in stock or 1% of outstanding
shares for a minimum of 1 year. Shareholder resolution must be submitted 120 days before the proxy
statement is released to shareholders
o Acceptable Exclusions from Proxy:
Shareholders cant command directors act limited to recommendations
If a proposal relates to less than 5% of a companys total assets or less than 5% of its net earnings,
it can be excluded, unless it raises significant social policy issues related to the companys
business
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Companies may exclude proposal nominating candidates to the board or relating to elections
No Action Procedure: method by which SEC staff members provide guidance to companies on the SECs
interpretation of its rules (similar to advisory opinions). These are not precedents on which parties can rely
because they are the decisions of staff members, not the SEC as a whole
Apache Corp. v. Nycers: companies refusal to include resolution against sexual orientation
discrimination was acceptable because, when viewed as a whole, it deals with the companys
ordinary business operations
- Courts wont allow shareholders to micro-manage
- Some deference will be given to SEC No-Action Letters
When directors are subject of a conflict of interest with respect to the challenged decision, courts review
the decision under the standards developed under the duty of loyalty
o When directors fail to gather the requisite information to make the challenged decision, courts review the
decision under the gross negligence standard
Smith v. Van Gorkom: informational gathering deficiency triggers a gross negligence standard of liability
o Director has a duty to act in an informed and deliberate manner in determining whether to approve an
agreement of merger before submitting the proposal to stockholders
o Counter-Arguments: substantial premium over stock price, market test & director experience and expertise
o Defects in information can be cured
o
Law tolerates conflict of interest transactions because the benefits of such transactions often are high
o Conflicts common due to directors diverse financial interests
o Need to allow conflict of interest transactions because otherwise people wouldnt want to be directors
o Corporate law attempts to identify bad transactions those that are unfair to the company and its
shareholders while allowing good transactions those that are fair to go forward
Self-dealing occurs when the corporation enters into a transaction with a director. DGCL 144
o Varied transactions ranging from the sale of property to provision of services
o May be direct or indirect (indirect includes transactions with relatives, other entities in which the director
has a financial interest, and interlocking directorates)
o Includes cases where executive demines her own compensation
o Fundamental principle is that decision-making process is tainted
o Two possible solutions: cleanse the process or look at substance
Hollinger v. Black: Black failed to adhere to the duty of loyalty via self-dealing
o Corporate Opportunity: taking the companys opportunity for ones own benefit
o Blacks Misconduct:
Purposely denying the International board the right to consider fairly and responsibly a strategic
opportunity within the scope of its strategic process and diverting that opportunity to himself
Misleading his fellow directors about his conduct and failing to disclose his dealings with
Barclays, under circumstances in which full disclosure was obviously expected
Improperly using confidential information belonging to International to advance his own personal
interests and not those of International, without authorization from his fellow directors
Urging Barclays to pressure Lazard with improper inducements to get it to betray its client,
International, in order to secure the boards assent to the Barclays transaction
Majority or Controlling Shareholders:
Majority or controlling shareholders are fiduciaries of the corporation and have duties to the corporation and its
minority shareholders
o Cant make the corporation act in a manner than would benefit the fiduciary at the expense of minority
shareholders
o Majority Shareholder: owns more than 50% of a corporations outstanding voting rights
Entire Fairness: fairness of the procedure developed to approve a transaction and the fairness of the price of the
transaction
Williamson v. Cox Communications: establishes that a controlling shareholder owes fiduciary duties
o Controlling Shareholder: established when (1) a shareholder owns more than 50% of the voting power in
a corporation or (2) if she exercises control over the business affairs of the corporation
o If controlling status is established, entire fairness standard (instead of business judgment rule) applies.
Control evidenced by:
Designation of directors or entering into business agreements with an investee
Veto power
o Control Premium: those seeking control will pay a premium for their shares because they are receiving
control in exchange for increased price
Procedural Mechanisms to Limited Judicial Review
In re Wheelabrator: ratification of breach of loyalty
o The effect of the informed shareholder vote was to extinguish a due care claim. The vote did not operate
either rot extinguish the duty of loyalty claim or shift to the plaintiffs the burden of proving the merger was
unfair, and the effect of the shareholder vote in this case is to invoke the business judgment standard, which
limits review to issues of gift or waste with the burden of proof resting on the plaintiffs
o Extinguishment Doctrine: fully informed vote extinguishes due care claim but does not extinguish breach
of loyalty claim. Extinguishment applies to:
Directors act in good faith, but exceed the boards de jure authority or
Where the directors fail to reach an informed business judgment in approving transaction.
Ratification decisions involving the duty of loyalty:
Interested Transactions: cases between corporation and its directors ratification
invokes the business judgment rule
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Controlling Shareholder: cases involving a transaction between the corporation and its
controlling shareholder ratification invokes the entire fairness standard in which the
burden to prove the merger was unfair shifts to the plaintiffs
Merger didnt involve an interested and controlling shareholder, therefore the business judgment rule
applies. Only interested stockholder = business judgment
Corporate Opportunities
Corporate Opportunity Doctrine: diversion of corporate opportunities for the benefit of a corporate
director/manager. Competition between the corporation and the director/manager (Hollinger v. Black)
o Plaintiff must prove the opportunity belonged to the corporation. Tests:
Interest or Expectancy Test: precludes acquisition by corporation officers of the property of a
business opportunity in which the corporation has a beachhead in the sense of a legal or equitable
interest or expectancy growing out of a preexisting right or relationship
Line of Business Test: characterizes an opportunity as corporate whenever a managing officer
becomes involved in an activity intimately or closely associated with the existing or prospective
activities of the corporation
Fairness Test: determines the existence of a corporate opportunity by applying ethical standards
of what is fair and equitable under the circumstances
o Traditionally, courts wont allow managers to take a corporate opportunity for themselves unless they could
prove the corporation consents or was unable to take advantage of the opportunity because of lack of cash
Broz v. Cellular Information: determining if a corporate fiduciary has usurped a corporate opportunity is factintensive and turns on, inter alia, the ability of the corporation to make use of the opportunity and the companys
intent to do so
o While presentation of a purported corporation opportunity to the board and the boards refusal thereof may
serve as a shield to liability, there is no per se rule requiring presentation to the board prior to acceptance of
the opportunity
Presenting opportunity to board creates a safe harbor
DE: board doesnt have to formally decide it doesnt want the opportunity
o Cannot take business opportunity for your own if:
The corporation is financially able to exploit the opportunity
The opportunity is within the corporations line of business
The corporation has an interest or expectancy in the opportunity
By taking the opportunity for your own, the corporate fiduciary will thereby be placed in a
position inimical to your duties to the corporation
o Can take business opportunity for your own if:
The opportunity is presented to the director/officer in his individual and not his corporate capacity
The opportunity is not essential to the corporation
The corporation holds no interest or expectancy in the opportunity
The director/officer has not wrongfully employed the resources of the corporation in pursuing or
exploiting the opportunity
o Corporate opportunity inquiry looks to circumstances that exist at the time the opportunity is presented.
Its not necessary to consider speculative facts
Entire Fairness: components fair dealing and fair price.
o Fair Dealing: when the transaction was timed, how it was initiated, structured, negotiated, disclosed to the
directors, and how the approvals of the directors and the stockholders were obtained.
o Fair Price: economic and financial considerations of the proposed merger, including all relevant factors:
assets, market value, earnings, future prospects, and any other elements that affect the intrinsic or inherent
value of a company's stock
CHAPTER 11: LITIGATION TO ENFORCE DIRECTORS DUTIES*
Derivative or Direct:
Distinction must turn solely on the following questions:
o Who suffered the alleged harm (the corporation or the suing stockholders, individually)?
o Who would receive the benefit of any recovery or other remedy (the corporation or the stockholder,
individually)?
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*We did not read this chapter. Notes are from powerpoint slide.
CHAPTER 12: FRIENDLY MERGER & ACQUISITIONS
Structuring an Acquisition: types of acquisitions FORM MATTERS!
Classifying the Transaction:
o Friendly Acquisitions: targets board supports the transaction
Deal Risks:
- Risk of third-party bid (Van Gorkom): addressed by contractual terms.
- Regulatory risks (ADS)
- Risk of adverse change (Hexion)
o Hostile Acquisition: targets board resists the transaction
Fiduciary Duties: does board have a valid reason to resist the transaction
Conflict: shareholders want to sell if price is right; board wants to avoid takeover to keep their job
Merger or Consolidation: all assets & liabilities of the company(ies) being merged out of existence transfer
automatically when (a) the boards of both companies approve a plan or merger, (b) the shareholders with voting
rights approve the plan of merger, (c) the surviving company files the pan of the merger in its state of incorporation
o Merger: one company is entirely subsumed by another through the operations of law. The surviving
company is one of the two companies that entered the process
o Consolidation: two companies use the statutory merger procedure to combine to form a new company
o Consideration for merger/consolidation is tock of the acquiring company, bonds, cash, securities of
another company or a combination of all of the above
If stocks/bonds > 50% of the merger consideration, then its a nontaxable transaction for the
acquiring corporation, for the selling corporation and for the sellers shareholders
If cash > 50% of the merger consideration, then it is a taxable transaction
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Shareholder Vote: target companys shareholders have right to vote because a merger/consolidation is a
fundamental change to the corporation; acquiror shareholders may have the right to vote if:
Charter of the surviving company will be amended by the merger
Rights/privileges attached to shares or the surviving company will be changed by the merger
Surviving company is going to issue new shares of stock equal to 20% or more of the common
stock outstanding prior to the merger in order to pay for the merger
Vote often avoided to protect the deal (time consuming & expensive)
o Triangular Merger: surviving co. establishes a wholly owned subsidiary and capitalizes the subsidiary
with the merger consideration. The subsidiary and the selling company then enter into a merger agreement,
which both boards approve, and the selling companys shareholders vote on the plan. Now the only
shareholder of the acquiror that has voting rights is the parent company itself eliminates acquiror
shareholder voting
o Short-Form Merger: parent company owns 90% or more of the stock of the target corporation. The
parent is allowed to merge the subsidiary into itself using simplified procedures avoids vote of target
companys shareholders
Procedures: notify minority shareholders of target company that the merger has occurred, offer
them the merger consideration for their shares that the parent has determined is fair, and notify any
dissenting shareholders of their right to an appraisal
Purchase of Assets: negotiated transaction to purchase specified assets and liabilities of another company
o Assets and liabilities do not automatically transfer must be negotiated
o Procedure: both boards adopt resolutions authorizing the transaction. Once the shareholders have approved
the sale, the assets/liabilities agreed to in negotiations are transferred in exchange for merger consideration.
The selling board adopts a resolution dissolving the company, paying any creditors that have not agreed to
the substitution of a new debtor, cancelling the outstanding stock, and distributing any remaining proceeds
from the merger consideration to the selling companys shareholders
o Shareholder Vote: if selling company is selling substantially all of its assets, then its shareholders have the
right to vote to approve the sale
Substantially All: neither voting rights nor appraisal rights are available if the company will be
left with at least 25% of its presale assets and either 25% of after-tax operating income or 25% of
revenues (MBCA) or sale of assets quantitatively vital to the operation of the corporation and is
out of the ordinary and substantially affects the existence and purpose of the corporation (DGCL)
Dissenting shareholders in seller company have right to appraisal except if their shares are
publicly traded and they are receiving either cash or publicly traded shares (appraisal rights dont
exist in DE)
Purchasing companys shareholders dont have voting rights in purchase of assets transactions
o A sale of assets for cash is a taxable transaction for the selling shareholders (the cash will be treaded as a
dividend), while a sale of assets for stock is nontaxable
Purchase of Stock: (hostile or friendly) triggers the Williams Act
o Tender Offer: acquiror gains control of a majority or even all of the shares by making a tender offer
directly to shareholders to purchase their shares for a premium
No shareholder vote required because shareholders are acting individually when tendering
Usually successful
o Self-Tenders: corporation busy its own stock if a controlling shareholder attempts to buy stock by
squeezing out or cashing out minority shareholders
Usually try to launch a tender offer in hope of obtaining >90% of shares (short-form trigger)
If <90%, effect cash out merger of minority shareholders by getting board to adopt resolution
approving the agreement to merge. Puts merger to shareholder vote
o Williams Act: federal regulation of tender offers & stock purchases. Regulates:
Disclosure of stock holdings
Disclosure of tender offers
Rules regarding the tender offer process
Appraisal: right to challenge the merger price
o Procedure: shareholders vote against the transaction, notify the company within specified time that they
will assert their appraisal rights, then assert rights within proper time
o Exception: shareholders have right to vote on a merger but start out with stock of a publicly held company
and end up with stock of another publicly held company. Wall Street rule applies.
o
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Fiduciary Duties in Friendly Transactions: directors must fulfill the duties of care and loyalty in evaluating and approving
the transaction and must act in good faith. Also must disclose all material facts to the shareholders in a proxy statement
soliciting shareholders votes, or in the notice the company sends out describing the transaction (short-form merger)
The Entire Fairness Standard: procedural fairness (fair dealing) and substantive fairness (fair price)
The Independent Board Committees: used to protect controlling shareholder from taint of self interest
o Kahn v. Lynch Communications: can be a controlling shareholder without own 50% of a corporation if
you exercise domination over corporate affairs
Domination triggers entire fairness review which must be proved by defendant unless an
independent, arms length transaction (approved by a special committee) occurs. This shifts the
burden of proving the merger was unfair to the plaintiffs
Test re: Effectiveness of Special Committee:
- The majority shareholder must not dictate the terms of the merger
- The special committee must have real bargaining power that it can exercise with the
majority shareholder on an arms length basis
Majority-of-the-Minority Provisions: increases the perceived fairness of the deal
Tender Offers
o In re Pure Resources: differences in fiduciary duties between negotiated merger structure or tender offer
structure
Tender offer was coercive because the majority of the minority provision included interested
members. Coercion forces stockholders to tend at the wrong price to avoid and even worse fate
later on.
Going private: treated differently because of power (lack thereof) of shareholders
- Negotiated Merger: entire fairness standard (Lynch v. Cox Communications)
- Tender Offer: business judgment rule (Solomon)
o Tender is Non Coercive if:
It is subject to a non-waivable majority of the minority tender condition
The controlling shareholder promises to consummate a prompt 253 merger at the same price if it
obtains more than 90% of shares
The controlling shareholder has made no retributive threats
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The defensive measures taken must bear a reasonable relationship to the threat and not be coercive or
unduly preclusive
Unocal Applied
o Omnicare as application: The NCS directors must first establish that the merger deal protection devices
adopted in response to the threat were not coercive or preclusive, and then demonstrate that their
response was within a range of reasonable responses to the threat perceived.
o Deal protection measures must be reasonable in relation to the threat and neither preclusive nor
coercive. The action of the NCS board fails to meet those standards because, by approving the Voting
Agreements, the NCS board assured shareholder approval, and by agreeing to a provision requiring
that the merger be presented to the shareholders, the directors irrevocably locked up the merger. In
the absence of a fiduciary out clause, this mechanism precluded the directors from exercising their
continuing fiduciary obligation to negotiate a sale of the company in the interest of the shareholders.
o Paramount v. Time as application: 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
Revlon applies when:
o When a corporation initiates an active bidding process seeking to sell itself or to effect a business
reorganization involving a clear break-up of the company;
o Where, in response to a bidders offer, a target abandons its long-term strategy and seeks an alternative
transaction involving the break-up of the company
o When approval of a transaction results in a sale or change of control. [[There is no sale or change in
control when [c]ontrol of both [companies] remain[s] in a large, fluid, changeable and changing
market.]]
o Then, Directors have the enhanced burden of achieving the highest value reasonably available for
stockholders
Revlon Duties:
o Revlon requires the board to get the best price for the shareholders once the board has decided to sell the
Company
o There is no blueprint as to how the board obtains the best price. An active auction is not necessarily
mandated. [Barkan v Amstad] The board can adopt any reasoned course of action to maximize
shareholder value.
o Must be a reasonable uninhibited market check. Must not be conflicted or prejudiced against a competing
offer.
o Go Shop provisions allow the Target Company to negotiate a sale of the Company, and still fulfill its
Revlon duties, subject to receiving a better offer during a Go Shop period.
Difference between Revlon & Unocal:
o Revlon: Obligation to Maximize Value
o Unocal: Obligation not to Preclude Competitive Bids
o
DE: trigger is 15% of stock & a moratorium of 3 years, unless the bidder acquires 85% of the stock at the
same time it crosses the 15% threshold, in which case the statute does not apply. Only applies to mergers
o NY: trigger is 20% of stock & a moratorium of 5 years. Business combination includes mergers,
liquidations, or substantial sale of assets.
Control Share Statutes: provide that a majority of disinterested shareholders must approve the acquisition of a
control block of shares, usually 20%. Corporations may opt out of this statute
Fair Price Statutes: require either a supermajority vote for the second step in a two-step merger between the target
and an interested party (purchaser of 10% of shares or more), or require that the price paid in the second step be as
high as the highest price paid in the first step. Corporations may opt out of this statute with a charter amendment
approved by a supermajority vote
CTS v. Dynamic Corp: upheld Indianas control share acquisition statute
o Inquiry: whether the state law stood as an obstacle to the accomplishment of the Congressional purpose
underlying the Williams Act
Purpose of Williams Act: protect independent shareholders from both the offeror and target
management
Protects shareholders from the coercive aspects of certain tender offer tactics, especially an unfair
or inadequate two-tier offer
o Dissent: Act was intended to protect investors, as opposed to shareholders
Each investor should have the right to make his/her own decision. Statute removes this right
because it considers shareholders as a group. This frustrates the will of individual shareholders in
violation of the Williams Act
o In response DE passed DGCL 203: a DE target may not engage in a business combination for a period of
three years after an offeror becomes an interested stockholder.
When the Three-Year Freeze is Applicable:
- Prior to the date on which the bidder crosses the 15% threshold, the business combination
or the triggering acquisition is approved by the targets board of directors; OR
- The bidder, in a single transaction, goes from less than 15% to more than 85% of the
targets voting stock (not counting shares owned by inside directors or by employee stock
plans in which the employees do not have the right to determine confidentially whether
shares held by the plan will be tendered); OR
- During the three year freeze period, the transaction is approved by the board of directors
and by the two-thirds of the outstanding shares not owned by the bidder; OR
- The targets board of directors approves a white knight transaction.
No restrictions once freeze period ends
Fewer restrictions on bidders use of target assets to finance an acquisition in connection with
older business combination statutes
Constitutionality: states must preserve a meaningful opportunity for hostile offers to succeed
o
14(a) & Rule 14a-9: private cause of action for any material misstatement or omission in a proxy
communication
10(b) & Rule 10b-5: cause of action for fraud for any material misstatement or omission in connection with the
purchase or sale of securities that has caused damages
o Includes statements in: (1) required disclosures annual reports, (2) public statement of a companys
authorized agent press releases
o Often deals with insider trading
o Security: any investment using money or other considerations
Elements of a Cause of Action: (1) misstatement or omission of a (2) material fact on which the plaintiff (3)
relied (4) in connection with the (5) purchase or sale of securities, (6) causing (7) damages.
o Interpreted to deal with the accuracy of disclosure and not corporate governance or enforcing fiduciary
duties - See Santa Fe v. Green (1977)
o Increasing importance in corporate governance because disclosure brings to light conflicts of interest and
enhances shareholder power
Sarbanes-Oxley federalizes some aspects of corporate governance
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Proxy statements must be full & complete. The hard thing to show is that the misstatement or omission is
material.
Misstatements & Omissions
o Plaintiffs must first show that the defendant misstated a material fact or omitted to state a material fact
necessary to make the statements that were made not misleading
Omissions challenging because silence, absent a duty to speak, is not misleading under Rule 10b5. Dont always have a duty to speak about all things.
Duty to Speak: arises because a company is selling new securities and needs to file a prospectus
(disclosure statement)
- Governed by Rule 408: requires additional disclosure necessary to make the statements
not misleading that are made in response to line-item disclosure under Regulation S-K
- Other times speech is required: (1) filing quarterly reports, (2) repurchasing stock, etc.
- Failure to speak creates liability!
o No duty to disclose every material event immediately
Form 8-K: required disclosure within four business days of an event
SOX 409: requires continuous disclosure
o Gallagher v. Abbott Laboratories: theres no continuous disclosure requirement. Duty to disclose
information only when firms are issuing securities or when periodic reports are due (annually/quarterly)
Materiality & Reliance
o Material: a fact a reasonable investor would consider significant in the total mix of information available
about a company
Fact and context-specific
Concern over speculative or future facts protection of investment
Rule 10b-5 has an outcome determinative test would it influence a shareholder
o Fraud: (common law) plaintiffs must show that they relied upon a material misstatement of fact to their
economic detriment
10(b) expands the scope of common law fraud
PROBLEMS: (1) reliance is based on a face-to-face transaction and (2) how can one rely on an
omission?
o Basic v. Levinson: An investor who buys or sells stock at the price set by the market does so in reliance on
the integrity of the at price. Because most publicly available information is reflected in market price, an
investors reliance on any public material misrepresentations therefore, may be presumed for purposes of a
Rule 10b-5 action.
Court adopted materiality standard for Rule 10b-5: an omitted fact is material if there is a
substantial likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important in deciding
how to vote
Theories of Materiality:
- Agreement-in-Principle: preliminary merger discussions do not become material
until agreement in principle as to the price and structure of the transaction has been
reached theory rejected!
1. Too much information overwhelms investors & makes them overly
optimistic the merger will be completed rejected! Investors arent dumb.
SEC rules promote caveat emptor, not paternalism!
2. Secrecy is necessary to complete mergers rejected! Confidentiality
doesnt justify depriving investors of material information re: mergers
3. Bright-line rule favored rejected! Ease of disclosure for managers doesnt
justify depriving investors of information
- Probability/Magnitude: balance the magnitude of the event in the corporations life
v. the probability it will go through. The greater magnitude or probability, the earlier
material information must be disclosed. This is a fact-specific inquiry!
Standard Adopted: materiality depends on the significance the reasonable investor would
place on the withheld or misrepresented information.
Fraud-on-the-Market: price of a companys stock is determined by the available material
information regarding the company and its business. Misleading statements will therefore
defraud purchasers of stock even if the purchasers do not directly rely on the misstatements.
Treat market reliance like direct reliance of misrepresentation
o
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Explains how class could be certified all relied therefore no individualized facts to
establish direct, personal reliance
- Todays business takes place on the market, reliance reasonable market acts as
agent of investor
- This presumption is adopted!
Rebutting the Presumption: any showing that severs the link between the alleged
misrepresentation and either the price received (or paid) by the plaintiff, or his decision to
trade at a fair market price, will be sufficient
Scienter: defendants omission or misstatement of material fact was made with the intent to deceive
o
10(b) requires knowing or intentional misconduct: dont want to impose liability for
wholly faultless conduct where such conduct harms investors
Fraud > negligence
Recklessness sufficient for 10(b) purposes
o
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act: amended regulations to make 10(b) actions
harder to bring
Pleading Requirement: plaintiffs must state facts that provide a strong inference that the
defendants acted with the required mental state to set out a cause of action
o Tellabs v. Makor Issues: inference of scienter must be more than merely plausible or reasonable it must
be cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference of nonfraudulent intent
Pleading standard: (1) specify each statement alleged to have been misleading and the reason or
reasons why the statement is misleading and (2) state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong
inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind
In Connection With
o SEC v. Zandford: expands scope of in connection with
SEC complaint describes a fraudulent scheme in which the securities transactions and breaches of
fiduciary duty coincide. Those breaches were therefore in connection with securities sales
within the meaning of 10(b).
- Flexible reading of SEC rules justified to protect investors
- Must be narrow enough so every common-law fraud isnt a violation of 10(b) but broad
enough to protect investors
Causation: plaintiffs must allege and prove that the defendants misstatement or omission caused the financial loss
of which plaintiffs complain
o
Transaction Causation: refers to the requirement that plaintiff allege and ultimately
prove that the misstatement or omission caused the plaintiff to engage in the transaction in the first place
Subsumed in the reliance element of Rule 10b-5 See Basic v. Levinson
o
Loss Causation: refers to the requirement that plaintiff allege and ultimately prove that
her financial loss was caused by the misstatement or omission
Met by showing the stock price dropped after the true facts about the company emerged
o Dura Pharm. V. Broudo: law requires the plaintiff to prove the defendants misrepresentation proximately
caused the economic loss. Must show price was effected by disclosure
Difference in purchase & sale price doesnt prove economic loss
Securities laws arent investment insurance
Insider Trading
The Classical Theory: corporation insiders unfair use of corporation information to make a profit at the expense of
outsiders who couldnt possibly, by dint of hard work, discover the information
o
Prohibition anchored to fiduciary duty that was imported to securities law
Duty to disclose or abstain
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulpher: company bought land when it discovered minerals on local lands.
Insiders purchased stock knowing when the discovery went public, stock prices would increase.
This violated 10(b). Anyone in possession of material inside information must either disclose it
to the investing public, or must abstain from trading.
o
Misappropriation: prohibits some people outside the firm from trading without
disclosure of material, non-public information where that information has been misappropriated in violation
of fiduciary duties to the source of the information
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United States v. Smith: Rejects the knowing possession standard for insider trading
violations in favor of a use standard. Rule 10b-5 requires that the government (or the SEC) demonstrate the
suspected insider trader actually used material nonpublic information in consummating his transaction.
Under Basic v. Levinson, information is material if a reasonable investor would have considered it
useful or significant forecasts are material.
Soft, forward-looking information can be material based on the probability/magnitude test
Use v. Possession:
- Use: 11th Circuit adopted by the 9th Circuit in this case must use the information
under the classical theory to establish liability
- Possession: adopted by SEC & 2nd Circuit possession is sufficient to establish scienter
because it comports with the duty to disclose or abstain and its likely an insider who
trades will unconsciously use information even if not intentional
Use is required because it comports with the requirement of scienter (deceptive/manipulative)
requires use. Knowing possession is < scienter.
The Misappropriation Theory
o For insiders, the duty to disclose arises from the fiduciary duty every agent owes his principal. But,
outsiders to a company owe fiduciary duties to the company, not the shareholders individually.
o Grounds for liability on deception based on a breach of fiduciary duty between an agent and a principal, not
on a breach of a fiduciary duty of disclosure between a company insider and the buyer and seller of stock
o United States v. OHagan: endorses the misappropriation theory criminal liability under 10(b) may be
predicated by the misappropriation theory
Deceiving the principal (law firm) by using its confidential information in connection with the
purchase of securities
Disclosure is an affirmative defense
o
Regulation FD
Insider Trading Sanctions Act of 1984: makes it illegal to trade options and other derivative securities in
circumstances where it would be illegal to trade the underlying security
Insider Trading & Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988: mended the Exchange Act to provide a
remedy for contemporaneous traders against any person who violates any provision of this title or the rules or
regulations thereunder by purchasing or selling a security while in possession of material, nonpublic information
o Requiring insiders to disgorge any profits from short swings in their companys stock purchase followed
within 6 mo. by a sale or vice versa
Regulation Fair Disclosure: states that if a company discloses material, nonpublic information to brokers or
dealers, investment advisers, securities analysts, etc. it must publicly disclose the same information either
simultaneously, in the case of intentional disclosure, or promptly, in the case of non-intentional disclosure
o SEC attempting to create a level playing field for all investors and close loophole created by Dirks v. SEC
(1983), allowed tippee to avoid liability if he didnt breach fiduciary duty to the company or personal
benefit from the disclosure (discussing with securities analysts). Theres no breach by tipper and thus no
derivative breach by the tippee
SEC v. Siebel Systems: comments privately made but based on publicly disclosed information do not violate
Regulation FD.
o SEC shouldnt be nit-picky or it will result in a chilling effect which will undermine the regulation
o Dont need to repeat information privately that has already been publicly disclosed
o Material Matters:
Earnings information
Mergers, acquisitions, tender offers, joint ventures, or changes in assets
New products or discoveries
Changes in control/management
Change in auditors or auditor notification that the issuer may not longer rely on an auditors report
Events regarding the issuers securities
Bankruptcies & receiverships
Fiduciary Duty of Disclosure under State Law
Duty of Disclosure/Candor: cant protect shareholder right to vote unless shareholders are informed prior to
vote
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State Fiduciary Law Action Requested: duty of disclosure in the context of a request for shareholder action.
Obligation to provide the shareholders with accurate and complete information material to a transaction or other
corporation event that is being presented to them for action
o Duty of disclosure is a term of art that does not apply to all situations when disclosure is at issue
State Fiduciary Law No Action Requested: directors owe a fiduciary duty even when no shareholder action
is requested
o When directors disseminate information to stockholders when no stockholder action is sought, the fiduciary
duties of care, loyalty and good faith apply. Dissemination of false information could violate one or more
of those duties
Merrill Lynch v. Dabit: SLUSA preempts state class actions for securities fraud resulting from failure to
disclose. PLSRA & SLUSA shouldnt be used to avoid federal court.
o All class actions preempted avoids parallel actions
o
o
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