Student Supplementary Materials Answers To Test Yourself Questions
Student Supplementary Materials Answers To Test Yourself Questions
Student Supplementary Materials Answers To Test Yourself Questions
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS
Theresa A. Gabaldon
Lyle T. Alverson Professor of Law
The George Washington University Law School
Christopher L. Sagers
James A. Thomas Distinguished Professor of Law
Cleveland State University, Cleveland-Marshall College
of Law
© 2016, 2018 Theresa A. Gabaldon and Christopher L. Sagers
This Supplement is made available as a courtesy to law students and law teachers with
the understanding that it will not be reproduced, quoted, or cited, except as indicated.
Sale or distribution of this Supplement is strictly prohibited. The Supplement may be
cited for thoughts drawn from it, with reference to the relevant page number of the
materials text (with the formula “suggested by”). For information about permissions or to
request permissions online, visit us at www.wolterskluwerlb.com, or fax written request
to our permissions department at 212-771-0803.
Table of Contents
i
Chapter 29: Proxy Regulation
Chapter 30: Fraud and Related Issues Under Rule 10b-5
Chapter 31: Trading by Insiders: Rule 10b-5
Chapter 32: Trading by Insiders: Short-Swing Trading Under §16(b)
Chapter 1: Introduction: Welcome to the Law of Business
Organizations!
1. The reasons for involving more than one person in ownership or operation of a
business entity do not include:
4. Which of the following would not be resolved as a matter of the law of business
organizations?
3
b. Also represents its managers.
c. Both answer a and answer b.
d. Neither answer a nor answer b.
Chapter 2: The Law of Business Organizations Generally,
the Choice of Entity Problem, and the Basic Problems of the
Business Counselor
1. Alan, a hair stylist, has become at long last fed up with the despotic management
of the salon where he works, and he has decided to strike out on his own. He plans to set up a
salon in a back room in his home. He will be the only worker in the business, and he will fund its
expenses entirely from his own savings. He has come to you for choice-of-entity advice, and he
would like to know specifically whether he should incorporate, form an LLC, or take other
formal action.
a. First of all, if Alan takes no legal action, and just starts up his business, in what
form of business will he be operating?
Alan will form a sole proprietorship by simply starting the business without any legal
action.
b. What are the pros and cons for Alan of incorporating? Is there an argument to be
made that he should not take legal action as to choice of entity?
Incorporating will give Alan limited liability, but he will have to begin observing corporate
formalities, become subject to double taxation, and owe some minor state regulatory
compliance obligations.
It is possible that Alan may be better off by not taking legal action because the only clear
benefit to him of incorporating (or forming any other entity) would be limited liability.
However, that isn’t likely to do him much good. Since he is the only person working in the
business, any tort liabilities would likely be his personal liabilities—for example, if he hurts
someone with scissors while cutting their hair—and he could not escape them merely by
owning a limited liability entity. He also likely won’t benefit much from limited liability for
contract liabilities, because, as a small-assets start-up, most third parties would not extend
credit to his business without insisting on his personal guarantee.
c. Consider the possibility that Alan might be best advised to save the money he
would paid you to incorporate his business or form some other entity, and spend it
on something else, specifically. What might that other thing be?
2. Consider Robin, a woodworker, who, like Alan, decided to start her own small
business making furniture from scratch. Initially she was the only worker and funded the
business with her own savings. She chose to remain a sole proprietor. But after a few years of
successful
operation, Robin is ready to take the big step of hiring her first employee. Assuming you don’t
disagree with her initial decision to remain in sole proprietorship, how does this new addition
affect her choice-of-entity concerns?
The value of limited liability has increased substantially, since the business will now take on
risk of vicarious liability for torts and contracts of the employee, that might not in and of
themselves apply to Robin. For example, if the employee uses the company truck to make a
delivery, and causes injury by driving it negligently, the liability will likely apply to the
employer vicariously. If Robin’s business remains a sole proprietorship, she herself would
be liable as employer. But if the business is organized as a limited liability entity, the entity
can be made the employer, and judgments for vicarious liabilities could only be executed
against the entity’s assets.
(A) is correct because both LLCs and corporations offer limited liability for all owners.
Corporations offer strong, centralized management, but LLCs offer more flexible
management terms. LLCs enjoy pass-through taxation unless an LLC elects to be taxed as
a corporation. However, a corporation is subject to two-tier taxation unless it satisfies the
requirements that apply to S corporations and elects to be treated as one for tax purposes.
(A) is correct. (B) and is incorrect because one cannot accidentally form a limited
partnership. (C) is incorrect because the general rule is that limited partners may not
participate in management.
5. True or False? With careful planning, a corporation may be able to avoid the
burden of two-tier taxation.
True. As long as a corporation meets the requirement for S corporation status and elects to
be recognized as an S corporation for tax purposes, it will be subject to pass-through
taxation. In some instances, it also is possible to incur enough reasonable expenses payable
to shareholders (for salary or rent) to avoid double taxation, because those expenses are
deductible from the “income” that is taxable.
False. If a corporation is publicly traded, its stock is highly liquid. However, stock in a
closely held corporation is ordinarily highly illiquid. The situation is quite different with the
general partnership. As a practical matter, all general partnerships are “closely held”—for
practical reasons, the general partnership is just not a form that lends itself to public
trading. But under default partnership rules, general partners may have substantial
liquidity. Every partner in a default partnership has a right of unilateral dissolution, and
upon dissolution a right to insist on payout of the value of his or her interest, in cash. If
other partners wish to continue, and assuming the firm is solvent, this power of unilateral
dissolution effectively boils down to a right to force the continuing partners to buy out a
partner that wants to leave. It will typically be better for them to make that payout than to
allow a departing partner to force a dissolution and an actual liquidation of the business.
And so, the power to dissolve effectively amounts to a tool for liquidity. Note, however, that
the dissolution power is useful to the departing partner only if the firm is in the black. If
the firm is in the red—meaning that its current liabilities exceed the value of the firm—
then forcing a dissolution would actually cause the departing partner to owe money. But in
any case, so long as the partners have not modified the default dissolution right, and so long
as the firm is solvent, an interest in a general partnership is more liquid than a share in a
closely held corporation.
7. True or False? Unlike the other primary forms of doing business, sole
proprietorships cannot have employees.
False. Sole proprietorship means that only one person owns the business. As long as the
relationships between the owner and the employees are truly employment relationships and
the owner is the only owner of the business, the business is still a sole proprietorship.
Chapter 3: Introduction to Agency Law
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
1. Bob runs an auto shop. State and federal law require him to dispose of used motor
oil properly, which in Bob’s case meant that he had to haul it himself to the dump and pay to
have it recycled. Recently Bob was contacted by Phillip, who has begun a new business serving
local auto shops by collecting and recycling used oil. Phillip convinces Bob that he can dispose
of Bob’s used oil more cheaply than he can do it himself, because Phillip can take advantage of
volume discounts with recycling companies. Bob agrees to the service and agrees to pay Phillip
on a monthly basis to pick up all the used oil he collects.
(D) is correct because Bob and Phillip have merely entered into an arm’s-length contract.
(A) and (C) are incorrect because no facts indicate agreement that Phillip would act on
Bob’s behalf or subject to his control, so the relationship is not an agency. (B) is incorrect
because nothing in the contract itself imposed fiduciary duties on the parties, and in the
absence of agency, mere contracting parties owe no fiduciary duties.
(D) is the best answer because principals are liable for torts of their employee-agents
occurring within the scope of employment. They generally are not liable for the torts of
independent contractors. By contrast, they are liable for the authorized contracts of agents
of any type. (B) is incorrect because both contractors and employees are entitled to
compensation.
3. John, an artist, asks his artist friend Tina to take some of his paintings to an art
fair with her, and to sell them for him. The fact that John and Tina never discussed whether John
would pay her for this service proves that:
(D) is correct because compensation itself cannot determine whether two parties have
formed an agency relationship. They can still form an agency relationship even if there is
no payment involved.
5. Fill in the blanks: The agent has the power to affect the legal relations of the
principal.
False. They are two separate ideas. Co-agents are two or more agents who represent the
same principal. Co-principals are two or more principals who each employ the same
agent.
8. True or False? Sub-agency necessarily involves two agents and two principals.
True. A subagent has two principals – the agent who appoints the subagent and the
appointing agent’s principal. If A is B’s principal and B appoints C as a sub-agent, A
and B both are principals and B and C both are agents. Thus, the statement is true even
though, in this scenario, there are only three people.
Chapter 4: The Consequences of Agency and Attempts to
Avoid Them
DotBomb, Inc. runs an online retail business through its website, DotBomb.com. In
addition to its own sales of a wide range of retail products, DotBomb sells advertising space on
its site. It does so through a team of in-house sales people, whom advertisers contact by calling a
number on the “Contact Us” page of the website. (Often enough, though, DotBomb’s sales
people make cold calls to potential advertisers, which they can follow up with marketing
materials including their business cards and correspondence on company letterhead.) Anyway,
Jenny, one of the firm’s brightest salespeople, recently scored a huge victory, selling a one-year
advertising deal with AutoMax, the nationwide chain of auto dealerships. Or at least she thought
it was a victory, until her supervisor pointed out that under the firm’s internal sales team
handbook, contracts in excess of six months required approval by DotBomb’s CEO.
Meanwhile, a different sales person, Dave, has started behaving erratically lately, and
hasn’t made any sales in a while, so DotBomb provides him written notice that his job will be
terminated and that he is no longer entitled to act on DotBomb’s behalf. However, DotBomb
management fears that after receipt of notice Dave will go “rogue” and will try to retaliate by
committing DotBomb to a string of unfavorable advertising contracts.
(B) is correct because Jenny could have apparent authority based on her job title and
materials indicating her status as salesperson, like business cards and company letterhead.
It would be reasonable for AutoMax to believe that Jenny has the authority to enter into a
sale contract. On the other hand, Jenny likely does not have actual authority because of the
limitation in the internal sales team book.
2. When DotBomb salespeople make cold calls that result in contracts for the sale of
advertising space, the contracts are enforceable because:
a. The salespeople have actual authority, assuming the contracts are for less than 6
months.
b. The salespeople have apparent authority by virtue of the business cards and other
materials they can distribute.
c. The salespeople have apparent authority if it is customary in the industry for
contracts of this nature to be sold by salespeople without prior approval.
d. a and b are both correct.
e. a, b, and c are all correct.
(E) is correct because salespeople have the actual authority to sell the advertising space for
a term no more than 6 months by the nature of the employment. Likewise, the business
cards, the other materials, and industry custom can all demonstrate apparent authority.
(B) is the best answer. (A) and (B) are incorrect, because in the absence of some notice,
Dave’s loss of authority would not be obvious to third parties, and these contracts could in
fact be binding with apparently authority. However, to avoid liability for contracts made
with apparent authority, DotBomb could stop supplying Dave with marketing materials,
business cards, and letterhead, and retrieve materials it had already given him. It could
also exclude him from databases or other resources to find potential customers. And
finally, DotBomb could contact current and potential customers and notify them of Dave’s
termination.
Dena represents Wacky World, a family entertainment empire that operates several very
popular amusement parks, with rides and attractions designed around characters from its
signature animated films. Wacky World aims to build a new park in Florida, entering head to
head competition with the well-known theme parks already established in Orlando. It instructs
Dena to identify parcels near Orlando that might be stitched together into one block large enough
for a new park. She is under orders not to disclose that she represents a principal, and not to
make any purchases in excess of $100,000 without prior approval. Dena nevertheless jumps at
the opportunity to buy two parcels, one from Mary and the other from Robert. She bought
Mary’s first, even though Mary demanded $125,000, because she was sure Wacky World would
subsequently approve it. She then met with Robert, who had heard about Dena snooping around
and the fairly miraculous price Mary got for her swampland. Robert asked Dena a number of
probing questions, confident that she must represent a new park or some other major interest that
would probably pay top dollar were its identity revealed. Dena flatly denied it, lying in fact, and
insisting that the land was to be her own personal property. In the end, Dena purchased Robert’s
parcel too, this time paying $130,000.
(D) is the correct answer because when the principal is undisclosed, the agent must have
actual authority to bind the principal. Here, although Dena believed that Wacky World
would approve the contract and therefore retroactively made the contract entered with
actual authority, Wacky World also made it clear that Dena had no authority to purchase
any land worth more than $100,000 without prior approval. Therefore, Dena did not have
actual authority and Wacky World would not be bound.
(A) is the correct answer because Wacky World made it clear that Dena could not purchase
land worth more than $100,000 without prior approval. When working for an undisclosed
principal, an agent would need actual authority to bind the principal. Here, Dena did not
have actual authority to buy land worth more than $100,000 without approval and
therefore could not bind Wacky World. The fact that Dena lied about the principal would
only have made the contract voidable at Robert’s instance, if in fact it were otherwise
enforceable.
(A) is correct because Dena did not disclose Wacky World as the principal at all and
pretended to act for herself. An agent is liable for a contract when working on behalf of an
undisclosed principal.
7. Now suppose that Dena was unable to keep the secret, and eventually disclosed to
both Mary and Robert, before executing contracts with them, that she represented Wacky World,
forgetting to mention her directions not to disclose and not to spend more than $100,000. If the
contracts are enforceable, it is because:
(B) is the correct answer. Dena lacked actual authority to buy land for more than $100,000.
However, if custom or other evidence suggested that Dena could proceed this way, Robert
and Mary could have reasonably believed that Dena had the authority to enter the
contracts and therefore Dena had apparent authority.
John is the owner and manager of an apartment building. Concerned about the safety of
his tenants, John hires SafetyGuys, Inc., to provide security services in his building. SafetyGuys
is a corporation formed for the purpose of providing security guards to private businesses. In
making the arrangement, John deals directly with SafetyGuys’ chief executive officer, a man
named Richard, who explains to John that the security guards will be employees of SafetyGuys
who will receive their instructions from their supervisor, another SafetyGuys employee.
However, any agreement with SafetyGuys would be subject to John’s specific requests
concerning the conduct and duties of the guards, and John could make any further requests as he
chose during the life of the agreement.
During the first week that a SafetyGuys guard was on duty in John’s building, the guard
mistook Peter, a tenant, for an intruder. A scuffle ensued and the guard beat Peter severely,
causing significant physical injuries. Peter sues John for money damages for his injuries.
(C) is the correct answer. Officers are agents of a corporation, and here Richard, as the
CEO of SafetyGuys, is an officer and therefore an agent of SafetyGuys. Similarly, the
security guards are employees of SafetyGuys and therefore agents of SafetyGuys.
Of these answers, (D) is the best because it is the only one that could be right. Whether (D)
actually states the correct legal relationship is a close question, because it really depends on
whether SafetyGuys, Inc. is John’s agent. If so, then the guards are his sub-agents. If not,
then John and the guards have no relationship. SafetyGuys, Inc. may well not be John’s
agent because, while he is contractually given some right to specify the guards’ conduct, it
is not clear that SafetyGuys, Inc. actually agrees to act subject to John’s control or on his
behalf. That really is a fact question for a trier of facts, but in any case (D) is the only
answer here that could be right.
10. Which of the following facts, if true, would be most helpful to Peter in this action?
a. Richard, the SafteyGuys CEO, has encouraged all his guards “not to spare the rod”
– that is, he has taught them that physical force is appropriate for self-defense and
whenever the guards’ orders are disobeyed.
b. Peter cannot win this action.
c. SafetyGuys is improperly incorporated and has committed federal securities fraud.
d. John failed to inquire of Richard concerning the caliber of SafetyGuys
employees.
(D) is correct because it could be the basis for a theory of direct liability against John for
negligent hiring or supervision. (C) might create serious issues to SafetyGuys, but seems
irrelevant to Peter’s case. (A) could be the basis for an action for direct liability against
SafetyGuys, as if it were true then the beating may have been actually authorized, but Peter
has sued only John.
11. Jim, an employee of Bill’s Burger Hut (“BBH”), a corporation whose sole
business is to own and operate a fast food restaurant, is entrusted with operation of the french fry
cooker. One day Jim becomes incensed at a customer and savagely beats him with a spatula
within the restaurant. If BBH escapes liability for the customer’s injuries, it is most likely
because of:
(C) is correct. It is clear that Jim is BBH’s employee-agent. However, given the nature of
Jim’s duties, it is possible that direct customer services is not within the scope of Jim’s
employment.
12. Darya is a driver for Muber, a company that provides an app for on-demand
moving services. Her agreement with Muber provides that she is an independent contractor and
that she will provide her own moving truck and dolly, as well as her own insurance. Muber
exercises no control over the way Darya operates her vehicle or the way she loads and unloads it
and cannot dictate her routes. Muber does, however, require that Darya be available to accept
jobs during the hours stipulated in their agreement and that she accept all requests for jobs that
she receives. Which of the following is most true?
a. Darya is not an employee because she agreed to be an independent contractor.
b. Darya is not an employee because she provides her own truck, dolly, and
insurance.
c. Darya is not an independent contractor because Muber controls her hours.
d. There is not enough information to answer this question with certainty.
(D) is correct. Clearly, (A) is incorrect because the parties’ characterization of their
relationship is not dispositive. Although (B) is indicative of an independent contract
relationship, the fact stated in (C) is also true, and it cuts the other way. Accordingly, more
information is required.
13. Which of the following is not a reason an organization might consider using a
staffing company to provide part of its workforce?
a. Avoiding all liability from the conduct of the staffing company’s employees.
b. Avoiding recruiting and human resource expenditures.
c. Avoiding various employee rights that are provided by statute or other legal
regulation.
d. Avoiding the need to engage in collective bargaining.
(A) is correct. Even if the employees truly are the employees only of the staffing company,
they could still expose the organization to liability in various ways. They may have
authority to enter into contracts for the organization using the staffing company. In
addition, the organization could risk direct tort liability for foreseeable injuries if it was
negligent in selecting the staffing company or supervising its employees, and it can be
liability for torts if it directs the employees to engage commit them.
Chapter 5: Further Topics in Agency
After running a small business from her home for a few years, quite successfully, Priya
took on a college student to help out as a part-time employee. She taught the student, Alice, how
to wrap up the firm’s products and ship them to the firm’s mail-order customers, plus several
other more or less clerical tasks, which Alice did entirely from the make-shift office Priya had set
up in her basement. Turns out Alice found sitting down there by herself pretty boring, and so she
took it on herself to make some improvements in the business—and after her initial shock, Priya
found both of them actually quite desirable. Her biggest step was signing a lease on Priya’s
behalf for warehouse space in which to move the business, with rent payable monthly. Secretly, a
fact Priya had shared with no one was that she’d actually been planning to take just this step, and
after her initial surprise and anger at Alice wore off, she realized that Alice had actually found an
ideal location at a good price. Thing is, though, the first Priya heard of it was a month after Alice
did the deal, when the bill for the first month’s rent showed up. Anyway, after chewing out
Alice, she calmed down and said, “Ugh. Okay, it’s time to bite the bullet and take this risk.”
Alice’s other big step was to secure a used photocopy machine for the office, which she
knew to be a steal at the offering price of $2000. Turns out, before Alice could tell Priya what
she’d done, the seller called Alice and said there’d been a mistake. He would not sell the
machine for less than $3,000.
(B) is correct. Although Alice did not have actual or apparent authority at the time of
signing the lease, Priya approved Alice’s act on signing the lease by saying “it’s time to bite
the bullet and take this risk.” Therefore, she retroactively ratified Alice’s action and made
the lease binding.
(A) is correct because ratification requires that the ratifying person have actual knowledge
of material facts. It is possible that Priya “assumed the risk” of her own lack of knowledge
by ratifying without further investigating the state of the premises, as suggested in notes
following Re(3) §4.06. But that seems unlikely here because there was no indication of any
such serious problem at the time Priya ratified. For a person to be held to have assumed
this risk, there usually must have been some indication that something is wrong or that
otherwise material facts might be unknown.
(C) is correct because Alice did not have actual or apparent authority to order the
photocopier at the beginning, and the seller withdrew the offer before Priya could ratify it.
Therefore, the contract is not binding on the business or Priya.
PixCo, Inc., is a big chemicals firm based in Birmingham, Alabama. A pipe is currently
leaking a dangerous substance just outside a PixCo plant building, near a stream. Under federal
law, a plant owner who knows of such a condition and fails to report it is guilty of an
environmental law violation. In each of the following cases, decide whether PixCo’s failure to
report is illegal.
(A) is correct because one of Arno’s major duties is to identify environmental risks and
report them to his supervisor. Neither the “scope of employment” test nor the fact that
Arno is to report to a co-agent supervisor is relevant to imputation. Therefore, a notice
about the leak is imputed.
5. It is Arno again that makes the discovery, but not on an official inspection tour.
Instead, he notices the leak while he is on a hike for pleasure with several friends,
as PixCo has adopted a new policy permitting employees and their guests to use
the company’s expansive, wooded grounds for recreation.
(A) is correct. A notice is imputed to the employer if the information is a material part of
the employee’s duties, the employee is not in adverse relationship against the employer, and
the employee is not under a non-disclosure duty to another person.
6. This time, assume the discovery is made by Abigail, a clerk in PixCo’s accounts-
payable department.
(C) is correct. Although (A) is a correct statement, it only imposes on Abigail certain
obligations to PixCo, and does not in itself impute all her knowledge to PixCo. Notice is
imputed only when the information is material to the agent’s duties.
Paul was aghast when he learned that his friend Arnie had made a deal for him to buy an
old car from Tia. (Paul and Arnie were good, long-time friends, but had never had anything like
a business relationship with one another. Paul had never met Tia.) “What?!?” said Paul, when
Arnie told him. “Good lord, what were you thinking?,” to which Arnie replied “Dude, I got it for
a hundred and forty bucks.” “Oh,” said Paul, falling silent. Paul later told his brother Bob (who
by coincidence knew Tia socially) that he actually thought Arnie had found a rare, great
opportunity. Nevertheless, Paul decided against the deal and called Tia to tell her so. That upset
Tia mightily, and all the more so the next day when Bob called to ask her if the deal had gone
through, repeating what Paul had told him. Tia sued Paul on the contract.
Meanwhile, Paul and Arnie’s friendship had been pretty much wrecked, and they wound
up each filing third-party claims against each other in the same lawsuit, Paul alleging breach of
fiduciary duty and Arnie claiming a right to a “finder’s fee” commission of $50 for his work in
finding the car.
(E) is correct. (B) could succeed because ratification can create an agency relationship, and
agents are entitled to compensation, even if not otherwise agreed to, unless compensation is
explicitly disclaimed or the circumstances indicate that the agency is gratuitous. Re(3)
§8.13 cmt. d. (C) could succeed because Paul’s statement to Bob could constitute a
ratification. (A) will fail because even if the ratification created an agency relationship,
ratification retroactively authorizes the ratified act. Therefore Arnie’s act of entering into
the transaction itself did not breach his fiduciary duties.
Chapter 6: Introduction to the General Partnership
Alex and Barb, platonic friends since childhood, have begun a newsletter or “zine” for
fans of their local music scene. Though they’ve kept their day jobs, they spend most of their free
time together producing the ‘zine, which they create each week in the garage of the house they
rent together. They distribute it for free but earn revenue through sales of advertising, and more
often than not break even or even turn a small profit. Their dreams are much bigger, though, and
plan for it eventually to be their sole employment. The ‘zine was initially Alex’s idea, and he put
the first several issues together by himself in his dorm room while still in college. When he told
Barb about it, she asked if she could help, and said “Just tell me what to do . . . I don’t know
anything about this kind of stuff, so I’ll just do whatever you tell me to do.” They then bought
some printing equipment to do a more professional job, deciding between themselves to “go half-
sies” on the cost. They both worked on the actual production of each issue, made sales of
advertising space, and made deliveries of the ‘zine to newsstands, bars and coffee shops. Alex
and Barb don’t keep formal books (except for the checkbook of their joint checking account, in
which Alex deposits checks from advertising clients, and from which he pays expenses), and
they have never written down any sort of agreement between themselves.
Barb’s uncle Charlie, a well-heeled retiree, was sad to hear that money had been tight,
and he made two offers to help the ‘zine. First, Charlie offered to give Barb and Alex the use of
$5000 in cash to cover expenses. When Barb insisted that the offer was too generous, Charlie
said “hey, don’t worry kid. Pay it back when you can. I’m proud of you.” Second, he introduced
them to a friend named Paul, who runs a local nightclub. Charlie gave Barb Paul’s business card
and, to make a long story short, Alex and Barb were able to use Charlie’s name as their
introduction and land a lucrative advertising contract for the club. As a down-payment, Paul sent
them a check for
$1500.
For reasons that remain unclear, however, and just shortly after striking their deal with
Paul, Barb and Alex closed down their business and absconded with Paul’s $1500. Charlie being
the only viable defendant left to sue, Paul sues him.
1. Which of the following suggests that Alex and Barb formed a partnership?
2. Imagine that Paul manages to track down Alex and Barb, serves them with
process, and joins them as defendants in his case against Charlie. Which of the
following would be the best fact for Barb in defending against liability?
(C) is correct. Barb will avoid liability if she can disprove the existence of the partnership.
She can argue that when Alex asked for her help, she merely followed his directions, and so
was an employee rather than a business partner. Because partners in a partnership enjoy
managerial rights, here Barb can argue that she does not have any managerial rights and
therefore is not a partner.
a. Agency.
b. Partnership.
c. Some limited liability entity.
d. It could be any of the above.
e. It could be “a” or “b.”
(B) is probably correct. Although Barb might be merely an employee, the fact pattern
probably favors partnership. They did business together as they both participated in
production, distribution, and other important business matters, they split the costs of many
expenses and have a joint account, and therefore have manifested an intent to do business
and share profits.
4. Given the informal manner in which they formed their relationship, what would
likely have been the biggest surprise to Alex and Barb about the legal entity that
in fact they formed?
(E) is correct. Some facts indicate that Barb really anticipated no ownership or managerial
responsibility, so both she and Alex may have expected that Barb would be only an
employee.
They might be surprised, if Barb is held to be a partner, to learn that she both faces liability
and has governance rights.
(D) is the correct answer. Based on the facts available, Charlie was obviously not an
employee of the ‘zine, so (B) and (C) are wrong. The facts do not suggest that Charlie was a
promoter of the business, or that he intended to be a surety for the ‘zine, and there is no
mention of any intent to share profits.
6. Because it’s well worth your while to learn it before moving on, define
a partnership.
1. A, B and C form the ABC Partnership. As part of their initial agreement, they
each contribute $10,000 in capital. At the time of formation, C owned a building with some
unused office space. A, B and C agree that the partnership will have the use of this office space
on a month-to-month basis, in exchange for $500 per month paid from the partnership’s funds. C
is permitted to sell this office building at her election and to keep any profits earned thereupon.
True or false?
(B) is correct. Here, the partnership rents C’s building and C did not contribute the
building to the partnership. It therefore remains her personal property.
2. When Larry joined the ABC partnership, his only capital contribution was a pick-
up truck with a fair market value of $5000. Some years later ABC agreed to sell the truck for
$3000. ABC has four members, including Larry, and they have no written partnership agreement
or any other explicit agreement between them, other than to act as co-owners of a business for
profit. Assume that every year since the beginning of Larry’s membership, ABC’s revenues have
precisely equaled its expenses. At the time of the sale of the truck, what amount should be
reflected in Larry’s capital account?
a. $5000.
b. $4500.
c. $3000.
d. None of the above.
(B) is correct. Larry’s initial contribution is $5000, and the firm during these years suffers
no profit or loss except depreciation in the truck’s value. Because he contributed the truck
to the partnership, the truck is partnership property and the partners will share the losses
pursuant to the default rule (because there are no other agreements, written or otherwise,
among them). Therefore, each partner will bear a loss in the amount of ($5000-
$3000)/4=$500.
Questions 3 and 4 relate to the following facts:
JJ&J, an at-will, default partnership among Jen, Janey, and Joe fell on some pretty tough
times last year, and also experienced personal conflicts among the partners. Jen and Janey
appeared to have gotten pretty sick of the whole thing, and appeared likely to seek the firm’s
dissolution. In fact, they were pretty much absent during a period of about a month, and during
that time Joe really had to step in and do it all himself. He estimates he spent an additional
twenty hours per week working in the business. He also personally put an additional $10,000
into the firm’s coffers to keep it afloat (signing a written document to the effect, with the word
“Loan” written at the top, and indicating that he would be repaid “with interest,” but specifying
no interest rate).
(B) is probably correct. While it is a fact question whether accepting the loan is within the
ordinary course of business, so long as it is, then Joe had authority to incur the obligation
on the firm’s behalf. The fact that no rate of interest is specified does not matter.
4. To how much is Joe entitled from JJ&J, now, assuming the “loan” documents by
its terms has become due and payable?
a. Nothing, because his extra efforts are not compensable and, despite the written
“loan” document, his $10,000 constitutes an additional capital contribution.
b. $10,000 plus interest.
c. $10,000 plus the value of his additional efforts.
d. $10,000 only.
(B) is probably correct. Again, assuming the loan was in the ordinary course of business,
Joe is entitled to repayment of the loan with interest. He is not, however, entitled to
compensation for work in the firm, absent contrary agreement.
5. Fill in the blanks: The balance in a partner’s capital account equals his or her
initial contribution, plus share of any profits, less share of any losses, and less
the amount that the partner has withdrawn.
6. Does a partner’s capital account represent an actual amount of money that the
partnership has set aside? Why or why not?
No. A capital account is just a way to keep track of a partner’s changing financial rights
and obligations over time. Absent contrary agreement, the partnership has no obligations
to distribute profits or return contributions until dissolution. Moreover, at any given time
the amounts contributed to or earned by the partnership may well be invested in non-cash
assets, not sitting around as cash.
A drawing account is to record the amount of withdrawals a partner makes. The value of a
drawing account is always negative, but the absolute value of the drawing account reflects
how much a partner has withdrawn rather than something he/she is entitled to receive.
Chapter 8: Management, Control, and Their Legal
Consequences for the Firm and Its Partners
Hank and his friend Biff have developed a new condiment, “Near-Death Experience Hot
Sauce,” for sale in local supermarkets. The idea and culinary talent mostly belong to Hank, but
they agree they’ll make the product using Biff’s equipment, in Biff’s garage. As to the costs and
managerial decisions, the only thing to which they explicitly agree is that it will be “all for one
and one for all.”
a. A mere contract, which in this case is consistent with the statute of frauds.
b. An agency relationship in which Hank is principal and Biff is agent.
c. A partnership.
d. Something other than a partnership because in these particular
circumstances a partnership agreement would have to be in writing.
(C) is correct. Hank and Biff are carrying on a business together and sharing its profits.
The agreement between them and their contributions of idea and capital (equipment and
the use of the garage) are evidence of the existence of the partnership.
2. Assuming Big Billy has not secured any sort of court order to enforce Hank’s
Unyun® debt, he should be able to collect:
(B) is correct. As the holder of a charging order, Big Billy has some limited procedural
rights, like the right to seek a foreclosure of his interest or to seek judicial dissolution and
winding up in the event that he is treated unfairly by the remaining partners. Except where
those remedies are available, however, his only option is to wait until Hank’s share of
profits are distributed, and in the case of a default partnership like this one there is no legal
obligation to distribute profits until dissolution.
4. Assume that Big Billy secures the court order described in Question 3, but Biff
refuses to release any funds to Big Billy. Big Billy can, upon an appropriate
showing in court:
(E) is correct. A creditor with a charging order may seek a court-ordered foreclosure, and
any transferee of a partner’s interest may seek judicial dissolution and judicial winding up.
5. Hank could have tried to settle his debt with Big Billy by:
6. X, Y and Z are the members of the XYZ Partnership (“XYZ”). They are each
skilled craftspeople who make handmade furniture for the partnership to sell, using tools and raw
materials purchased by the partnership. Z has made a chair, in the same manner in which he’s
made all his other products for the partnership, but he is particularly fond of this chair and does
not want to part with it. Z can unilaterally refuse to sell this item, despite X and Y’s desire to sell
it. True or false?
(D) is correct. Z made the chair using tools and raw materials that were themselves
partnership property, and therefore the chair is also partnership property. A partner has
no right to use partnership property for non-partnership purposes.
a. A: $250; B: $50 – they are each entitled to a return of their initial capital.
b. A: $150; B: ($50) – A will take the $100 in remaining proceeds and B will
have to contribute $50 to cover the shortfall.
c. A: $75; B: $25 – they should share 3 to 1, since that was the ratio of their capital
contributions.
d. A: $50; B: $50 – since they did not agree otherwise, they share profits and losses
equally.
(B) is the best answer. Under the law as it exists in most states, the partnership is obliged to
return each partner’s capital (for a total of $300). It is $200 short, and each partner must
bear one-half the loss ($100 each), because of their “share and share alike” agreement. (The
same would be true if they had no agreement on sharing profit or loss.) This means that A
is entitled to $150, leaving A with a loss of $100, and B must contribute $50 in order to
suffer the same loss. The $50 from B will, of course, go to A.
Note, however, that under the latest version of RUPA (not yet the law in any state) partners
do not have to contribute to make one another whole. This means that A would get the
$100 and that would be the end of it.
Y will be entitled to a buy-out of his partnership interest, but it will be reduced by the
value
of:
a. Damages caused.
b. The goodwill of the XY Partnership.
c. Damages and goodwill.
d. Neither damages nor goodwill.
(D) is correct. Language establishing a maximum term, like “the firm will exist no longer
than X years,” does not create a fixed term.
3. A, B and C form a partnership, which they call the ABC Partnership. The
partnership is formed with the purpose of building an office building. The major source of
operating capital for ABC is a $5,000,000 bank loan, which is taken out immediately after
ABC’s formation. The anticipation of the partners is that the building will be sold on completion,
though ABC may rent it out as office space for some period until a suitable buyer is found. The
partners anticipate that ABC will not engage in any other sort of business.
After five years, shortly before completion of the building (and, incidentally, shortly
before the last of the $5,000,000 bank loan will be spent on construction expenses), A retires.
According to the partnership agreement, A is entitled to a buy-out equaling the value of his
capital account at the time of retirement. Much to his surprise, however, he learns only at that
point that the value stated in his capital account is “$0,” even though the market value of the
building upon completion will be quite significant. A’s outside accountant reviews the
partnership’s books and assures him that the statement in his capital account is correct.
This result:
a. Probably gives rise to a cause of action on A’s part against his partners.
b. Suggests self-interested misconduct on the part of B and C.
c. Should have been expected.
d. Might have been expected, though if A is surprised, then it probably suggests
mismanagement by B and C.
(C) is correct. It appears that A left the firm before it had ever earned any revenues, at
least any revenues it could have earned in renting the building, and since the initial $5
million loan was the only source of operating capital, it sounds as if the firm didn’t have
any other meaningful assets or operating businesses. Moreover, it has paid out almost $5
million for the expenses of building the building. And since assets are conventionally
accounted for at their historic acquisition cost, the fact that the nearly complete building
likely has substantial value would not be reflected in the firm’s financial accounting or in
A’s capital account.
The founding partners created FJ&C when they signed their partnership agreement on January 1,
2012. Camille Cadiddlehopper, one of the founding partners, sent a letter to her partners dated
December of 2018, requesting her distribution of $5000, even though none of the partners had
previously requested such a thing. In response, another founding partner named Filbert Flarnstein
immediately insists upon dissolution and winding up of FJ&C.
4. Is FJ&C a partnership at will? Did it even still exist at the time of the events now in
dispute?
Yes. FJ&C is at will because the partnership agreement did not specify a fixed term. (It
stated only a maximum term.) It still existed at the time of the disputed events because, even
though the expiration of the stated maximum term caused an event of dissolution on
January 1, 2000, the partners effectively agreed to waive dissolution and winding up by
their continued performance of the partnership’s ordinary business.
6. What is the effect of Filbert’s effort to dissolve? Will he owe damages? Can he seek a
winding up?
Filbert can dissolve and insist on winding up, and because his dissolution is not wrongful
(since the partnership is at will), he is not liable for damages.
Chapter 10: The Limited Partnership
a. On March 1, a car maker that is one of ABC’s chief customers informs ABC of a
defect affecting a large batch of gaskets. The customer demands repayment of
their value, whereas ABC happens to be sufficiently low on cash at the moment
that satisfying the obligation could make the firm insolvent. Alarmed at these
events, on March 3 Paula engages a law firm to represent ABC in what seems to
be shaping up to be litigation, and she also makes overtures to the car maker’s
executives to try to work out a compromise. If the car maker reduces its claim to
judgment, and the value of it exceeds the net value of ABC, Ltd., for how much of
the excess are Jane and Paula each liable?
They could both be personally liable for the entire amount. Jane has unlimited liability as
the sole general partner. Paula, as a limited partner, would ordinarily enjoy limited
liability, but here, by hiring an attorney and dealing with the customer on the firm’s behalf,
may have impermissibly engaged in management and may take on personal liability.
b. Assume that the gasket conflict is resolved amicably, but that it caused lasting
strife between Jane and Paula. At wit’s end, Paula decides her only option is to
quit ABC altogether. Never one to stand on formalities, she visits Jane in person
to give her the sad news. Paula demands reduction of the value of her partnership
share to cash, with payment within the month. What effect?
By statutory default, Paula may withdraw unilaterally, but she must give 6-month written
notice to Jane. The withdrawal of a limited partner does not cause dissolution, but it does
trigger an obligation to pay the partner the value of her interest.
2. XYZ, Ltd., is a limited partnership with a corporate general partner and 275
limited partners, all of whom are individuals and none of whom have any other relation to the
general partner, and all the limited partnership shares are currently traded on the New York
Stock Exchange. Mark is one of those limited partners.
a. Two years ago, XYZ had a very tough year, and it failed to distribute any profits
at all to its limited partners. Incensed, Mark brings suit, asserting that he was
entitled to a distribution of $5,000. What must be true in order for Mark’s lawsuit
to recover the unpaid distribution to succeed?
There is no right to interim distributions absent a provision in the limited partnership
agreement. So, in order for Mark to succeed, there must either be such a provision or some
other basis on which the refusal breached some enforceable duty. A case might be made for
a distribution in the event of bad faith withholding. Such a case might be established if the
general partner were refusing to make distributions in order to conserve funds for non-
partnership purposes or in order to force the limited partners to sell their interests. In the
case of a publicly traded limited partnership, the latter is very unlikely.
b. At the end of its last taxable year, XYZ distributed $10,000 of its profits to Mark.
Will those profits be subject to two-tier taxation? Do you have enough
information to know?
LPs enjoy pass-through taxation unless they are publicly traded – which XYZ is. There is
an exception, however, for companies in the exploration, development, or distribution of
minerals or natural resources. We do not know what XYZ’s business is, so not enough
information has been provided to determine whether there is two-tier taxation.
3. PQR, L.P., is a limited partnership. The agreement of limited partnership provides
that the limited partners are entitled to receive annual distributions equal to no less than 20
percent of the amount of their capital contributions. At the end of year one, the distributions are
made, leaving PQR, L.P., unable to pay its creditors. If the creditors sue the limited partners,
must they return their distributions?
Yes. No distributions can be made if such distributions will make the LP insolvent, and
creditors can sue the limited partners for their returns of capital contribution when the LP
has insufficient assets. Here, the distributions clearly left PQR unable to pay its debts as
they came due, so the creditors could sue the limited partners.
4. Larry is a limited partner in Limited, L.P., a limited partnership. He also is the 100
percent shareholder of Limited, Inc., the corporate general partner, as well as its only director
and president. At a Rotary Club luncheon, he meets Sue, a supplier of a product that Limited,
L.P. uses. He hands her a business card that says “Larry, Limited Partner, Limited, L.P.” Larry
subsequently phones Sue, identifies himself as “Larry from Limited.” He reminds her where they
met and places a large order. The order is delivered and the product is used, but not paid for. If
Limited, L.P., is unable to pay, will Sue be able to recover from Larry? If so, under what theory
or theories? Does it matter whether RULPA or ULPA (2001) applies?
Because Larry acts within one of the safe harbors of RULPA 303(b), he should not be liable
simply because he was an officer, director and shareholder of the corporate general
partner. On the other hand, he did not indicate he was acting as an agent for the general
partner and in fact never mentioned the general partner when he met Sue and/or made the
call, and therefore might be liable as an agent for an unidentified principal. Moreover,
since he did not indicate he was acting on behalf of the general partner he quite arguably
personally participated in control, in which case under RULPA 303(a) his liability would
depend on whether Sue thought he was a general partner. The fact that he gave her a card
stating that he was a limited partner could be helpful to him, but would not be dispositive.
Under ULPA,
general partners have limited liability, so the possibility that Larry might be treated as
though he were a general partner would not expose him to liability.
Chapter 11: The Limited Liability Company,
Its Special Attributes, and Other Modern Alternatives
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
1. Jim and Joe created a two-member default LLC in an ULLCA state, called Happy
Time Amusements, LLC (Happy Time). Happy Time manufactures large, arcade-style video
game consoles that it distributes to arcades and other public venues. Happy Time has elected to
be taxed as a partnership. After a successful first year of operations, Jim believes he and Joe both
ought to receive payments from the substantial profits the firm earned. Joe is opposed, and Jim is
prepared to sue.
b. Could Happy Time become publicly traded while remaining an LLC? Would it
have to make any changes to its governance or organizational structure? And
assuming it could, could it retain pass-through tax status?
Finally, publicly traded unincorporated firms can retain pass-through tax status, but only
if they have always made most of their profit from the energy or natural resource sectors.
Happy Time is simply not in the right line of business.
c. Given the facts stated, how much will Jim win in his suit for a distribution of
profits?
Probably $0. ULLCA default rules on distribution largely follow the default rules for
general partnerships. Thus, the default is that members of an LLC receive shares of profits
but are not entitled to distributions at their will.
3. Bob is an attorney hired by several individual investors. They desire to establish a firm,
to be known as XYZ, LLC, as a manager-managed limited liability company. Bob drafts the
articles of association and instructs his paralegal to file them with his state’s secretary of state, on
May 1. The paralegal does so, and the next morning Bob phones the investors to tell them. On
May 4, two of the investors execute a lease for office space to serve as XYZ’s headquarters.
They signed only in their representative capacities, as officers of XYZ, making clear that they
did not personally intend to take liability. The following week, on May 9, Bob receives a notice
from the secretary of state indicating that the articles of association were drafted incorrectly and
will be rejected, requiring resubmission. The next day, May 10, XYZ’s financing falls through,
and the investors decide to abandon the project.
The investors who personally signed, since the LLC was not in existence. A person
purporting to act on behalf of a principal they have reason to know does not exist is
personally liable. Re(3) §6.04. Whether the other investors are jointly and severally liable
for this obligation depends on whether they “purported to act” on the firm’s behalf, or
were merely passive investors. (It would be more clear that each of them is liable if they
had elected member-management.)
4. Alice, Bo and Conchita file the necessary paperwork to create the ABC LLC
under state law. They subsequently enter into an operating agreement containing a clause
agreeing that all disputes relating to the LLC will be subject to arbitration in a state other than the
one in which the LLC was formed. Alice, Bo and Conchita sign the agreement but there is no
signature line for the LLC. Which of the following is most true?
(D) is the correct answer. Courts often give the maximum of freedom in written agreements
regarding LLCs, and case law has demonstrated that exclusive forum selection and
arbitration clauses are generally acceptable and can change corresponding default rules.
The LLC need not separately sign – although, for planning purposes, an attorney certainly
should suggest a separate signature.
5. Which of the following represents advice that you would give a client? (Assume that all
of the business forms alluded to would be available and mark all choices that would apply.)
In principle, all of statements (A)-(C) could be true in at least some circumstances, because
the particular needs and details of individual businesses vary so widely. Admittedly,
answers
(A) and (B) are probably true only in limited circumstances. (A) might occasionally be true
in those states that still require some professions to be performed in without limited
liability. There also are occasionally instances in which for regulatory reasons there might
be an advantage to choosing the GP, as when a particular state tax is imposed on LLPs but
not on GPs. It is a little harder to see what advantages the LP has over the LLLP, but the
fact remains that there are large numbers of LPs still in the world while LLLPs remain
rare. (C) is probably the only answer that is very generally true. The LLP and the member-
managed LLC are in fact quite similar.
As for (D), while it is true that the LLC can usually accomplish anything that a Subchapter
S corporation can (including even the Edwards-Gingrich payroll tax loophole, see Chapter
1, since an LLC can take the Subchapter S election), it seems very unwise to say “never.”
True. An LLP essentially is a general partnership whose general partners have limited
liability. An LLLP essentially is a limited partnership whose general partners have limited
liability. Answering “Indeterminable” would also be acceptable, if the reason given is that
an LLLP formed under ULPA (2001) could have limited partners with the right to
participate in management. Nothing about the LLP election enlarges anyone’s possible
management rights.
Indeterminable, because both an LLC and a corporation are sufficiently flexible that each
could be organized to have widely varying characteristics. For example, both a manger-
managed LLC and a corporation with many passive shareholders resemble the LP, in that
both have one or more strong managers and some class of passive investors. But a member-
managed LLC and a closely held corporation whose shares are owned by the officers and
directors are both more like a GP with respect to their management than like an LP.
8. True, false, or indeterminable? Adoption of LLP status means that no partner may
be called upon to contribute amounts that will permit the partnership to satisfy its
obligations.
False. Unless the very latest version of RUPA is adopted, partners still must contribute the
amounts necessary to permit the partnership to satisfy its obligations to return capital. It
also is important to remember that partners are responsible for their own torts and
injuries caused by unauthorized contracts. In addition, it is possible for partners to sign
capital call agreements.
Chapter 12: Fiduciary Duties in Agency and
Unincorporated Entities
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
1. X, Y and Z form the XYZ partnership. They establish their firm through a written
partnership agreement, but it contains very little except their agreement to form the business for
profit with themselves as members. The business is engaged in oil and gas exploration, and its
main activity is identifying new oil and gas deposits and selling them to oil companies. The
partners, however, have made money in other ways, such as investment in securities and loans to
other promising start-ups. Though they didn’t provide for it explicitly in their agreement, they
each understand that they will share all management responsibilities equally. Z recently invested
a significant amount of the firm’s liquid cash in publicly traded securities, which ultimately lost a
lot of money, and the loss of which turned out to be of no tax benefit to the firm.
X and Y sue Z for the entire amount of the loss. This lawsuit most likely will:
2. On the facts of the previous question, assume instead that Z invested the money in
a chain of ice cream stores, indulging a childhood dream of entering that business. His action:
(A) is correct, if it can be shown that Z made the investment in disregard of the firm’s best
interests. That is, if he truly acted to indulge his personal interest either knowing it would
not profit the business or not caring one way or the other, then he has breached his duty of
care.
(C) is correct. Miguel’s conduct breached his duty of care. Greenwood may pursue
monetary damages. Moreover, because fiduciary breach is a material breach of contract,
Greenwood may terminate his employment despite the sixth months remaining on his
contract.
4. On the facts of the previous question, assume that it was not Miguel who spoke
off- color at the industry gathering, but Melinda, a Greenwood member and a retiree who resides
most of the year in North Carolina.
(D) is correct. Because Greenwood is a manager-managed LLC, any member who is not a
manager has no fiduciary duties to the firm.
(B) is the correct answer. Barb owes a fiduciary duty of loyalty not to compete with the
firm, and advising her patients she is leaving and will be available to serve them at a new
location seems explicable only on the basis of a motive to compete. On the other hand, the
various steps she took to prepare to compete—preparing a new office space and engaging a
marketing printer—are mere preparations and are entirely permissible.
6. On the facts of the previous question, assume that one of the events that so soured
Anil and Barb’s relationship was Anil’s unilateral decision to make himself a loan from ABC’s
bank account, pursuant to a written contract that he wrote and executed himself. The contract
obliged him to repay the principal within six months, at 4.25% interest. Had he gotten the loan
from a bank, he likely would have paid something in the range of 4% to 4.5% interest. Only after
executing the writing, withdrawing the funds, and spending them did Anil disclose the facts to
Barb and Chuck.
a. The loan is illegal because Anil did not disclose it to Barb and Chuck before
he executed it.
b. The loan is automatically illegal, regardless of any other facts.
c. The loan is illegal because it is not “intrinsically fair.”
d. The loan is not illegal.
(A) is probably the best answer. As Anil would get an interest rate between 4% to 4.5%
and the loan’s interest is 4.25%, the loan is probably not substantively unfair. However, the
intrinsic fairness test also requires procedural fairness, and Anil’s failure to disclose this
loan to his partners was probably procedurally unfair.
For some time Julie has successfully run a chain of laundromats in Wisconsin and
Minnesota, and she wants to expand her business into jukeboxes placed in bars and restaurants.
But since that market is already rather saturated in her area she thinks her best bet is to buy in to
an existing operation. To help her find one, she engages a business broker named Guadalupe.
Guadalupe’s standard contract provides that she works according to her client’s directions in
return for a stated compensation, that she works only in a fully disclosed capacity—making clear
to sellers that she represents a client—and that she is not responsible for damages arising from
conflict of interest. Guadalupe identifies not one but two promising opportunities for Julie, the
American Amusements Company and Coin-Op Entertainment, Inc. The owners of American
Amusements offer Guadalupe a bonus commission of $1,000 if she can convince Julie to buy
their business; the owners of Coin-Op offer her no commission. Guadalupe tells Julie of the
American Amusements opportunity, and since the $100,000 purchase price is pretty clearly
below market value, Julie jumps at it and buys it outright. Thereafter, Guadalupe purchases the
Coin-Op business herself. She never told Julie about Coin-Op, because she believed American
Amusements was the
better deal, as its purchase price was higher but, in Guadalupe’s opinion, it was of no greater value
than American Amusements.
7. Julie discovers that Guadalupe accepted the $1,000 payment and sues for breach
of fiduciary duty. She may recover:
a. $1,000.
b. $1,000 plus damages.
c. Nothing, because Julie purchased the American Amusements at less than market
value.
d. Nothing, because Guadalupe’s contract waived the relevant fiduciary duty.
(A) is correct. Julie can recover the $1,000 because secret profits are forfeited to the
principal. (C) is therefore incorrect. (B) is also incorrect because there likely are no
damages to recover—the other opportunity was for more money. And (D) is incorrect
because a waiver of loyalty claims as broad as the one in Guadalupe’s contract is
unenforceable.
a. True.
b. False because the relevant duty is usually non-waiveable.
c. False, because of its scope.
d. It’s actually irrelevant, because Guadalupe is not Julie’s agent.
(C) is correct. A fiduciary duty waiver must be reasonable, and cannot destroy the
fundamental fiduciary character. Furthermore, loyalty waivers must be specific. Here, the
language “conduct from conflict of interest” is too broad and is very likely invalid.
a. Probably true, because she learned of it in the course of her duties for Julie.
b. Probably true, because she learned of it using Julie’s property or confidences.
c. Probably false, because it was not as good a deal as American Amusements.
d. Probably false, for some other reason.
(A) is correct. (B) would also be a reason that Guadalupe could not take the opportunity,
but it appears to be factually untrue in this case.
Assume applicability of the most current version of the Model Business Corporations Act.
Frieda believes she has a great idea for a new business: Frieda’s Frozen Fish Pops! Frieda
doesn’t have any money, however; just an idea and a lot of ambition. Fortunately for Frieda, her
mother is a person of some means and has already told Frieda she’d be glad to invest in the
business. Her mother does not care what form of business Frieda chooses, so Frieda tells her
mom she’s going to incorporate, and some days later, in exchange for a check for a substantial
sum, Frieda gives her mom a stack of stock certificates indicating that she’s a shareholder.
Newly infused with her mother’s cash, Frieda goes about her efforts to get Frieda’s
Frozen Fish Pops up and running, and, among many other steps she takes, she signs a lease for
retail space. At length, however, her business goes awry and Frieda never makes enough money
to pay any rent on the lease.
Incidentally, Frieda lied to her mother and never filed any articles of incorporation.
a. Yes.
b. Yes, unless Frieda told the lessor the corporation had not yet been formed.
c. Yes, unless Frieda told the lessor she was acting on behalf of a
corporation.
d. No, unless Frieda told the lessor the corporation had not yet been formed.
(A) is correct. Under both the MBCA and the common law of agency, a person is liable on a
contract made purportedly on behalf of a principal they had reason to know did not exist.
3. Suppose (changing the facts stated above) that Frieda did file articles of incorporation
subsequent to the date she entered the lease agreement, and that the articles are accepted
by the Secretary of State before Frieda’s business went awry. Is Frieda liable on the lease
she signed?
a. Yes, because at the time the lease was signed she knew the corporation had not
been formed.
b. No, because the lessor was not harmed by the delay in filing.
c. Yes, unless the lessor knew the corporation had not yet been formed
and agreed not to hold Frieda liable.
d. Yes, and so is Frieda’s mother.
Because Frieda knew she was acting on behalf of a non-existent principal, she would be
liable under the common law of agency, as well as under the MBCA. If, however, the third
party knew of the non-existence and nonetheless agreed not to hold Frieda liable, then
there is a lack of consideration and the contract would not be binding on anyone.
The MBCA provides a clear line with respect to when corporate existence commences: It is
when the articles are filed. Although one colloquially refers to the incorporator as being the
one who files the articles, a quick look at the statute makes it clear that the incorporator
causes the delivery of the articles to the Secretary of State for filing. The filing is, however,
retroactive to the date of delivery.
Some time ago, Joe Johnson and his friend Bill Baxter started a business selling leather
apparel, called “Johnson’s Leather.” Joe put up the money for the business and has pretty much
called the shots. Bill didn’t put in any money, but agreed he would contribute his physical labor.
In return, each week since they started Joe has given Bill $100 in cash from the company’s
receipts. They never wrote down any agreement between them. The business is located in a
Model Business Corporation Act (“MBCA”) jurisdiction.
Last week was a crazy one for Johnson’s Leather. The following things happened:
Monday: Joe drafted and filed articles of incorporation on behalf of the business,
naming it “Johnson’s Leather, Inc.,” and filed them with the Secretary of
State. The articles specified that Joe would be the corporation’s initial
director.
Tuesday: Joe signed two written agreements, signing both “By Joe Johnson, CEO,
Johnson’s Leather, Inc.” First he signed a contract with Bill promising a
paycheck of $100 per week in exchange for his continued labor, for the
next year. Second, he signed a written agreement with his longtime
supplier of leather handbags, Gucci, providing for a large purchase of new
bags.
Wednesday: A clerk from the Secretary of State’s office called to tell Joe the articles of
incorporation had been rejected for technical reasons.
Thursday: Joe filed corrected articles of incorporation and they were immediately
accepted for filing by the office of the Secretary of State.
Friday: Joe cut a check in the amount of $100, payable to Bill, drawn on the
company’s bank account.
a. A partner in a partnership.
b. An employee of a sole proprietorship.
c. An employee of a partnership.
d. A shareholder.
Note that neither (A) nor answer (C) are theoretically impossible, but they are much less
likely than (B). It does not appear that Bill has sufficient control to qualify as an “owner”
for purposes of the test for the existence of a partnership. (D) is wrong because at that time
no corporation was in existence, and even had there been one, the facts do not indicate that
any issuance of shares to Bill was ever authorized.
6. If Bill now has an enforceable right to payment as against Joe, for the next year, it is
because of:
a. MBCA § 2.01.
b. MBCA § 2.04.
c. The common law of agency.
d. b and c are correct.
This is a bit of a trick question. Section 2.04 says that where a person acts on behalf of a
corporation not yet formed he takes on personal liability, but only if he knows that no
corporation is yet in existence. Here it seems likely that Joe did not know that the
corporation didn’t exist. However, as we know, promoters can be liable for pre-
incorporation contracts by operation of agency law even though § 2.04 itself otherwise
would not impose liability. Thus if Bill has an enforceable right against Joe, it would be on
that basis. (A) is incorrect because § 2.01 provides for incorporators but does not impose
liability on them.
7. If Bill now has an enforceable right to payment as against Johnson’s Leathers, Inc., it is
because of:
a. Informal ratification.
b. Informal adoption.
c. Explicit novation.
d. None of the above.
(A) is wrong because a corporation cannot ratify – that is, cannot bind itself retroactively –
to a pre-incorporation contract. Since there is no trace of an explicit novation in the fact
pattern, (C) is wrong. (D) is wrong because (B) is correct.
a. Ratification.
b. Adoption.
c. Facts believed to be true by Gucci.
d. None of the above.
If Gucci believed that Johnson’s Leathers had been incorporated at the time of contracting
and intended that it bind only the company, Joe may have a defense of “corporation by
estoppel.” His case would be bolstered by the manner in which he signed the contract,
apparently with Gucci’s acquiescence. Thus, (C) is correct. (A) and (B) are incorrect
because the corporation has taken no acts with respect to the Gucci contract subsequent to
incorporation and because, while those are theories under which a corporation might be
liable, they do not establish defenses for individual actors.
a. MBCA §2.01.
b. MBCA §2.04.
c. The common law of agency.
d. None of the above.
1. If someone were to say “the purpose of the corporation is to make money for its
shareholders,” he or she would, as a legal matter –
a. generally be correct.
b. be correct unless the relevant jurisdiction had adopted a corporate constituency
statute.
c. be correct only if the relevant jurisdiction had adopted a corporate constituency
statute.
d. generally be incorrect.
(A) is correct. The purpose of a corporation is to make money for its shareholders. Even if
a state adopts a corporate constituency statute, the statute does not frustrate the purpose of
making money for its shareholders. In fact, the statute allows factors other than money in
decision making while reserving making money for its shareholders as a main goal.
2. Which of the following most accurately describes the doctrine of ultra vires?
(C) is correct. The ultra vires doctrine is old and fading in significance, but it is still the law.
Because most corporate planners prefer managerial flexibility, its main modern
significance is to cause corporations usually to favor very broad purpose clause. (A) is
incorrect because there are still a few applications of the doctrine. (B) is incorrect because
corporations have all the powers of individuals. It is true those powers are to be exercised
for carrying on the corporate business, so if the directors decided to give away all the
corporate assets, an ultra vires issue might arise. (D) is incorrect because the corporation
can invoke the doctrine against decision makers causing it to take ultra vires acts, and the
doctrine can also be invoked by the state.
3. PC, Inc. is limited in its articles of incorporation to the business of manufacturing and
selling pollution control equipment. Which of the following is most true?
a. PC, Inc.’s purpose is not valid because it arguably is in the public interest, rather
than the best interests of shareholders.
b. PC, Inc. lawfully may engage in any business its managers choose because of the
permissive nature of modern statutes.
c. PC, Inc. lawfully may engage only in the business of manufacturing and
selling pollution control equipment.
d. PC, Inc.’s issuance of debt would be ultra vires because it is something other than
the manufacture or sale of pollution control equipment.
(C) is correct. (A) and (B) are incorrect because the ultra vires doctrine is perfectly alive
and effective where a corporation has in fact adopted a limiting purpose clause. (D) is
incorrect because issuance of debt is a question of power, not purpose. Nothing indicates
that PC, Inc. has limited powers.
Harry owns 75 percent of the stock of Harry Corp.; his ex-wife, Esther owns the rest.
Harry is the president and controls the board of directors. Harry decides he wants to donate to a
worthy cause the maximum amount of the corporation’s substantial income that will be
deductible for federal income tax purposes. When he can’t find a cause quite worthy enough, he
decides to create his own foundation, to be known as the Harry Charitable Foundation (“HCF”).
The purpose of the HCF is to operate a ranch so that children from homeless shelters in urban
locations can spend time in another type of environment.
4. Harry explains to Esther that the board will be unable to declare dividends in the near
future because it has determined that it needs to reinvest all of the company’s earnings in excess
of the intended donation in expanding Harry Corp.’s facilities. Esther consults you about whether
a suit demanding that the board be ordered to pay dividends would be successful. Your advice to
her is that:
(C) is correct, because both decisions are within the bounds of intra vires and will be subject
to the business judgment rule.
5. If the donation is made and Esther brings litigation, which of the following is most likely
to be true?
(D) is correct, for the reasons just stated. It is true that some gifts to pet charities have been
struck down, but so long as the amount is within what is allowed as a tax deduction (which
keys off of the concept of reasonable business expenses) it almost certainly will not be
problematic.
Chapter 15: Introduction to Shares, Shareholders, and
Corporate Debt
a. It earns fixed periodic returns, casts no vote, and is not subject to federal
securities law.
b. It earns fixed periodic returns and must be retired according to its terms.
c. It earns fixed periodic returns and enjoys a liquidation preference.
d. Preferred stock does not resemble debt.
(C) is the best answer. Preferred stock generally enjoys a dividend preference, which means
that so long as the company pays a dividend in a given year, the preferred enjoy some
return. But it is a fixed return, because each preferred share will only get the fixed amount
to which it is entitled. The common shares may then be paid their own dividend, which in a
profitable year might be much larger than the dividend paid to the preferred. Likewise,
preferred stock is generally entitled to a liquidation preference, which means that when the
company is liquidated, and assuming that funds are available after the creditors are paid,
each preferred share must receive some payout. But again that preference is fixed. Even if
there are proceeds left, each preferred share gets only the fixed amount to which it is
entitled. Whatever is left after that is then shared by the common stock, and in principle it
can be more than the preferred shares got. But on the other hand, the common
stockholders are not actually entitled to receive anything, so the preferred shareholders
have an entitlement to some payment of dividends and liquidation proceeds before the
common stock can have anything. Situations are common in which the preferred can
receive something and the common are left with nothing. In other words, the common stock
—the paradigmatic “equity” ownership interest in a corporation—takes more risk, in that
it may not receive anything in dividends or liquidation when times are tight, but also enjoys
an unlimited upside, and can receive an unlimited share in whatever profits or liquidation
proceeds there might be, when times are good. The preferred are therefore more like debt,
in that these risks are more limited, but the benefits of the upside are as well.
(A) is wrong because preferred stock is subject to federal security law just as are other
securities. (B) is incorrect because, while preferred stock can be redeemable if its terms so
provide, they do not routinely do so. (D) is incorrect because, as answer (C) demonstrates,
there are indeed similarities between debt and preferred stock.
a. Big Bank will recover $5,000 from Ali and $10,000 from Bonita.
b. Big Bank will recover nothing from Ali but will recover $10,000 from Bonita.
c. Big Bank will recover $5,000 from Ali but will recover nothing from Bonita.
d. Big Bank will not recover from either Ali or Bonita.
(D) is correct. Ali acquired her stock for less than the par value, the difference being
$5,000. Under earlier versions of the MBCA, this would result in what is known as
“watered stock liability” and the $5,000 would be subject to recovery for purposes of
paying corporate debt. Now, however, par value has no legal meaning – shareholders
simply must pay the agreed upon consideration for shares, which Ali evidently did. This
means (A) and (C) are incorrect.
(B) is incorrect (as is (A)) because, although predecessors to the current version of the
MBCA prohibiting issuing stock in return for future services, that is no longer the case.
Neither are the facts sufficient to justify a piercing of the corporate veil. Therefore, Big
Bank can recover nothing from Ali or Bonita.
a. Bo has the right to insist that an equal number of shares be offered to him on the
same terms.
b. Bo has the right to prevent the sale to Carl.
c. Bo has no rights with respect to the sale to Carl.
d. Bo has the right to require that the sale to Carl be made at a fair price.
(D) is correct. First, we know that Bo, as a common shareholder, does not have preemptive
rights, because we are told that the articles do not have anything in them that would affect
the answer and, under the current MBCA, preemptive rights are “opt in.” That is, they
must be specified in the articles. However, all shareholders have rights against unfair
dilution. While we don’t know what Start-up’s current stock value is, Bo can require Angus
to issue Carl the stock at a fair value.
4. Which of the following statements is most true with regard to the similarities and
differences between debt and equity?
(B) is correct. (A) is backwards—interest is deductible by the corporation but dividends are
not. (C) is wrong because dividends are subject to legal limits, most importantly that they
cannot be paid if they would make the corporation insolvent. (D) is wrong because debt and
equity each have pros and cons, from the investor’s perspective, and indeed many investors
prefer to have a diversified portfolio including both.
5. Carlos is a creditor of Sketchy Co., while Sara is a shareholder. There is substantial doubt
as to whether Sketchy Co. will be able to pay off its debt to Carlos as it comes due.
Which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
a. The directors of Sketchy Co. owe a duty to Carlos to see that the company’s debt
to him is paid.
b. If Sketchy Co. cannot pay Carlos, Sara will be obligated to do so.
c. In the event Sketchy Co. actually becomes insolvent, Carlos’s claims as a
creditor will be satisfied before Sara’s claims as a shareholder.
d. In the event Sketchy Co. actually becomes insolvent, Carlo’s claims as a creditor
will be satisfied before Sara’s claims as a shareholder only if he is a bondholder.
(C) is clearly correct. (A) is tempting because some courts have held that corporate
fiduciaries owe duties to creditors when the corporation is in the “zone of insolvency,” but
it is not as clearly correct as (C). (B) is wrong because a shareholder would be liable to a
creditor only where the stock has not been paid for or if facts suggest the creditor could
pierce the corporate veil. (D) is wrong because all creditor claims are superior to those of
shareholders. Technically, bondholders may have a preference over other creditors, because
they are entitled to satisfaction out of the collateral that secures the bonds before unsecured
creditors can be paid, but all creditors must be satisfied before shareholders can get
anything.
6. Hugham holds 51 percent of the shares of Votex, Inc. He also is one of the two
members of the board of directors, but is not an officer. If he learns of a piece of
property that he believes Votex should purchase,
a. He can enter into a binding purchase contract in the name of Votex, Inc., signing
as its majority shareholder.
b. Whether he can enter into a binding purchase contract in the name of Votex, Inc.,
depends on whether the shares he holds are common or preferred.
c. He can enter into a binding purchase contract in the name of Votex, Inc., signing
as a member of the board of directors.
d. He cannot, without the approval of the other director, enter into a binding
purchase contract in the name of Votex, Inc.
(D) is correct. (A) and (B) are incorrect because shareholders have very limited
involvement in management; usually they can only approve fundamental transactions, such
as M&A and liquidations. Here, purchasing property is not a fundamental transaction and
even if it were, the board of directors would have to recommend it before the shareholders
would have the right to approve it. Members of the board are not agents of the corporation,
so (C) is incorrect. Hugham can only enter the contract if he is actually or apparently
authorized to do so, but there is no indication that the corporation has manifested to
Hugham or to the seller of the property that he is authorized.
Incidentally, as to answer (D), note that Hugham would require not only a vote of the
board to authorize the transaction, but a unanimous vote. It is irrelevant that he holds 51%
of the stock, because as a director he only casts one of two votes. And if the other director
opposes the purchase, then there is not a majority in favor of it.
(B) is correct. The gravamen of Delilah’s claim is breach of the fiduciary duty of care,
which is a claim that belongs to the corporation and therefore can be brought by a
shareholder only derivatively. She is unlikely to win, given the breadth of the business
judgment rule, but that is a different question.
Chapter 16: Piercing the Veil of Limited Liability
1. BigCo, Inc., a publicly traded holding company, owns 100% of the shares of LilCo., a
corporation engaged in oil exploration. LilCo’s board is appointed and elected entirely by BigCo.
BigCo has often instructed LilCo’s board to distribute funds to BigCo, without interest, when
BigCo is in need of cash. Recently LilCo announced that because of poor earnings it will be
unable adequately to fund employee pension obligations, which are a contractual obligation of
LilCo. LilCo’s employees bring a “piercing the corporate veil” cause of action against BigCo
and its shareholders for this breach of contract. This action most likely will:
(B) is probably the correct answer, because BigCo failed to treat LilCo as a genuinely
separate entity. There are no apparent grounds for holding BigCo’s shareholders liable
(such as undercapitalization or syphoning of funds) so (A) and (C) are incorrect. In fact,
there are virtually no cases in which the shareholders of a publicly held corporation
have been held liable for its debts.
Shortly thereafter, a LilMoo employee named Biff, a delivery driver for the company,
drove a LilMoo delivery truck at ten miles over a posted speed limit. During this delivery, which
was in the normal course of his duties, Biff struck and seriously injured a pedestrian.
2. Which of the following facts, if true, would most help the injured pedestrian to get
recovery directly from AgBeast?
a. AgBeast has occasionally caused LilMoo to make distributions to AgBeast when
AgBeast itself has had cashflow needs.
b. Bob is an employee of LilMoo.
c. Bob is not an employee of LilMoo.
d. The CEO and chairman of LilMoo is also an AgBeast director.
(C) is correct because the most likely theory of liability against AgBeast is that it is directly
liable for having caused the tortious injury through its own agents, the theory identified in
Bestfoods. That case will be easier to make if Bob is not also employed by LilMoo, because
in that case plaintiff would have to prove that at the time he wrote the memo Bob was not
acting on LilMoo’s behalf. (A) is tempting but is not correct because no one factor alone
would not be sufficient to pierce the corporate veil. (B) and (D) are not correct because,
under Bestfoods, corporate actors working for parents and subsidiaries essentially are
presumed to be wearing the correct “hat” when they make decisions.
3. Assume that under the new LilMoo delivery driving policy, injuries involving LilMoo
drivers increased 400%. On those facts, Bob’s wrongdoing would strongly support
piercing AgBeast’s corporate veil. True or false?
a. True. The doctrine of piercing the veil is applied very flexibly to “prevent fraud or
injustice.”
b. True. The facts suggest that Bob considered LilMoo to be AgBeast’s “alter ego.”
c. False. On these facts there could be no showing that LilMoo was AgBeast’s
“alter ego.”
d. False for some other reason.
(C) is probably correct. Certainly the facts as stated give no hint that LilMoo has been
treated with the disregard of formality and legal distinctness needed to pierce the veil. In
fact, unless LilMoo is wholly owned (the facts do not state), it is very unlikely that the kind
of disregard necessary could occur, without inviting shareholder litigation or objection by
LilMoo’s management. (A) is incorrect because, although the doctrine is applied to
“prevent fraud or injustice,” application is not particularly flexible. Limited liability is
statutory, and courts attempt to honor it. (B) is incorrect because the state of mind of one
corporate agent should have nothing to do with the liability of the shareholders. (D) is false
because (C) is correct.
4. Assume that AgBeast has caused LilMoo to sell its products exclusively to other AgBeast
subsidiaries, and to do so at cost. As a result, LilMoo has never operated at a profit.
Which of the following is most true?
(A) is correct, because of the enterprise liability theory – which is essentially “horizontal”
veil piercing. (Moreover, if LilMoo has outside shareholders, they may well have an action
for breach of the duty of loyalty against AgBeast.) (B) and (C) can be discarded as logically
mutually exclusive. (D) is incorrect because corporate veils can be pierced for both tort and
contract claims.
5. Chas and Jana decide to incorporate for the purpose of operating a limousine service.
Each pays $1,000 to the corporation and receives 1,000 shares of stock. In addition, Chas lends
$15,000 to the corporation. The $15,000 is used for the down payment on a limousine the
corporation purchases.
One week after the service begins, the limousine is involved in an accident, resulting in
two wrongful death judgments against the corporation. Jana was driving the limo at the time of
the accident. These judgments exceed the corporation’s liability insurance (which is $1,000,000)
by $500,000. The corporation then files a voluntary bankruptcy petition.
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be correct?
a. Chas and Jana are personally liable for the corporation’s debts.
b. Assuming strict adherence to the necessary formalities for incorporation and the
conduct of corporate business, Chas and Jana have no personal liability.
c. The existence of a statute mandating a certain level of insurance for a
limousine service could have some relevance to a court’s willingness to pierce
the corporation’s veil.
d. There are no grounds for imposing personal liability on Chas and Jana.
(C) is the correct answer. The company’s assets were small at the time of formation—$2000
in cash and the value of the limousine—and undercapitalization is a fact relevant to
piercing the veil. However, as in Walkovsky v. Carlton, if Chas and Jana insured the vehicle
consistently with state law, that fact may undercut a claim for undercapitalization. (A) is
incorrect because it is too definite and in conflict with (C). (B) is incorrect because
compliance with corporate formalities is not dispositive with respect to veil piercing
inquiries. (D) is not a bad answer, but it disregards the deference courts give to legislatures
in determing the amount of mandatory insurance.
6. Three of the factors taken into account by courts in deciding whether to pierce a
corporate veil are alter ego, fraud or injustice, and undercapitalization.
These are only a few of the long list of factors many courts identify as relevant, so answers
may vary. Importantly, many courts—as in Complex Computing—write that two factors are
most important, and probably subsume the others. First, a plaintiff may prove that
defendant used the corporation as an “alter ego,” a showing that can be made by the many
other frequently discussed factual considerations, like undercapitalization, commingling of
funds, and failure to observe formalities. Second, the plaintiff may show that that disregard
of the corporate form caused some fraud or injustice, which must be something more than
merely that the corporation itself is unable to satisfy the plaintiff’s claims. It could be
shown, for example, by evidence that defendant deliberately caused the company to be
undercapitalized at the time of plaintiff’s claim to avoid liability, or commingled funds
among various companies that defendant controls, in order to avoid their creditors.
Chapter 17: The Basics of Corporate Governance
a. Out of order because it was not covered by the notice of the meeting.
b. Out of order because it does not relate to legitimate shareholder action.
c. Permissible only if the moving shareholder owns at least 5% of the stock of the
corporation.
d. Permissible because it is so innocuous.
(A) is the correct answer. A special meeting can only be about topics specified in the notice
or fairly within the meaning of the notice. (B) is incorrect because endorsing the board is no
more than advisory, and therefore something shareholders validly may do. (C) is incorrect
because the amount of stock owned is relevant to federal securities matters, but not to state
law with respect to the validity of motions. (D) is incorrect because (a) correctly reflects the
state of the law. There is no exclusion for “innocuous” motions.
2. Joe, John and Jim are three shareholders of XYZ, Inc., and together they own 45% of its
shares. They know that voting together they can control a large portion of the company’s board
of directors. They also know that Joe is brightest among them and most involved in the
company’s affairs, so they provide in a written agreement among them that they will each vote
all of the shares at each annual shareholders’ meeting exactly as Joe directs them to do. This
arrangement is legally unenforceable because:
(D) is the correct answer. Shareholder voting agreements are generally binding, except
where they are void as against public policy for undermining the authority of the board.
Merely coordinating votes for board elections, even where the effect will be to control the
election, does not violate that rule.
3. Nellie owns 50% of the shares of the N&N corporation. Nancy owns the other 50%. Both
have served on the two-person board of directors for some years. Nancy refuses to attend
shareholders meetings.
a. Nellie can elect both directors at the next annual meeting.
b. Nellie can elect both directors at the next annual meeting unless the corporation’s
articles provide for cumulative voting.
c. Nellie can elect one director at the next annual meeting if the corporation’s
articles provide for cumulative voting.
d. No annual meeting can be held.
(D) is correct. If Nancy refuses to attend the meeting, only 50% of N&N’s shares will be
present at the shareholder meeting, less than the minimum requirement for a quorum
(more than 50%). Therefore, any votes at the meeting will not be valid.
(D) is the best answer, because this contract is void as against public policy. While
shareholders can agree as to how they will vote, including as to how they will vote in board
elections and even if the effect is to secure control of the board, they cannot bind the board
to decisions that must remain in the board’s discretion. Strictly speaking, although (D)
clearly is true, the same result would follow in closely held firms so long as at least some
shareholders are not parties to the agreement. There is some authority that where all
shareholders are parties to a voting agreement in a closely held firm, the parties have more
leeway to bind director votes, even as to sensitive discretionary matters like dividends.
5. BigCo’s board of directors has thirteen authorized seats, nine of which are
currently filled. A quorum of BigCo’s board is:
a. 13.
b. 7.
c. 6.
d. 5.
(B) is the correct answer. By default a quorum is a majority of authorized seats, regardless
how many are currently filled.
6. ABC, Inc., has 100 shares of stock outstanding. Assuming that the votes of all shares
represented at a meeting are cast either for or against a proposal, the absolute minimum number
of shares that must be voted in favor of a proposal for it to carry is:
a. 1.
b. 26.
c. 51.
d. 100.
(B) is the correct answer. The absolute minimum “in favor” votes should be the majority of
voted shares. To take valid shareholder action, the shares present must satisfy the quorum
requirement (which is to say that a majority of the shares with voting power must be
present at the beginning and throughout the meeting). Therefore, with 100 outstanding
shares, the quorum is 51. If 51 shares are present, the proposal needs at least 26 votes to
pass.
7. XYZ, Inc.’s board of directors has nine seats, two of which are unfilled. The absolute
minimum number of votes at any meeting of this board needed to take effective action is:
a. One.
b. Three.
c. Four.
d. Five.
(B) is the correct answer. The Board needs a majority of votes cast to take effective action.
That is on top of satisfaction of the quorum requirement, which is a majority of authorized
seats. A quorum of a nine-member board (regardless of vacancies) is five, and so the
minimum votes that could be cast and approve an action is three.
8. Due to recent retirements, five of the nine authorized seats on ABA Corp.’s board are
currently unfilled, and the annual shareholders’ meeting will not be held for another seven
months. ABC’s board:
a. Cannot take legally effective action on behalf of the corporation until the annual
shareholders’ meeting.
b. Can take legally effective action on behalf of the corporation only by calling a
special shareholders’ meeting.
c. Can take legally effective action on behalf of the corporation by appointing
one new director to the board.
d. None of the above.
(C) is correct. Board vacancies can be filled in three ways: 1) at the next shareholder
meeting,
2) at a special shareholder election (meeting), or 3) by the board itself. If there are fewer
board members in office than the quorum requirement demands, they still can act to fill
vacancies (although if there are more than a quorum in office the quorum requirement
must be satisfied). Therefore, C is the correct answer.
Chapter 18: Fiduciary Duties
in the Corporate Context: Duty of Care
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
After a lengthy and detailed process of study, the Board decides to build a "company
town" surrounding its new factory. Houses are built for employees and sold to them at cost,
stores are built to provide a variety of consumer goods at reasonable prices, and a new
entertainment complex is constructed, with sports and theater facilities that the Board expects to
be used by employees as well as for sports and entertainment events sponsored by the
corporation.
1. A stockholder of LAMC brings a derivative suit challenging the development of the new
company town. If the suit proceeds to the merits, the shareholder most likely will
a. Win, because the board is favoring the employees over the stockholders.
b. Win, there is a strong argument that the board has breached its duty of care.
c. Lose, because such expenditures are within the legitimate range of the
board's business judgment.
d. Lose, because the expenditures obviously are fair.
(C) is the correct answer. This action will be likely be based on breach of the duty of care,
which means the directors will have the benefit of the business judgment rule. Here, the
directors spent time studying the new plan, analyzed pros and cons, and the final proposal
is a comprehensive response to their discussions and study. Therefore, it will likely fall
under the business judgment rule and the stockholder will lose.
2. Despite the allure of this company town, not all of the company's employees wish to
move. In order to help these employees find new jobs, or obtain training for new careers if
similar jobs are unavailable, the Board retains a professional career counseling and vocational
training firm, for a period of a year, at a cost of approximately ten percent of LAMC’s net
income. A shareholder again sues derivatively. If the suit proceeds to the merits, the shareholder
most likely will
3. Suppose that the board’s planning process before deciding to move the plant, build the
company town, and retain the career counseling and vocational training firm was not “a lengthy
and detailed process of study.” Instead, these decisions were made in a two-hour meeting
following a presentation by the Chief Executive Officer, who has a vacation home in the Mojave
Desert. If a shareholder were to bring a derivative suit seeking to impose monetary liability on
the members of the board, the shareholder probably would
(A) is probably correct. If, however, there were no “raincoat” provision protecting against
the monetary liability the shareholder is seeking, (c) would probably be correct. To receive
the benefit of business judgment rule, directors must go through an adequate procedure in
decision making. Here, moving the factory, building a new “town,” and retaining a
professional training company for a year are all big decisions. They do not require
immediate action, there are many important factors and details to consider, and therefore a
2-hour meeting with a presentation by someone who may have personal interest on the
subject is far from sufficient. The procedural defects are very obvious and the stockholder
will probably win.
4. The duty of care obliges corporate directors to act with the diligence, skill, and prudence
of an ordinary person in similar circumstances.
5. A “raincoat” provision can protect a director from monetary liability for breaches of the
duty of care but not for breaches of the duty of loyalty.
6. The theoretical limits on the application of the business judgment rule include illegality
and intentional wrongdoing. [Other answers may also be correct.]
Chapter 19: The Duty of Loyalty and Conflicts of
Interest: Self-Dealing Transactions and Corporate
Opportunities
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
ABC, Inc., a Delaware corporation, owns 65 percent of the voting stock of another
Delaware company, XYZ, Inc. Another 25 percent of XYZ’s shares are owned by the California
Public Employees Retirement System (“CalPERS”), a major pension fund, which is not
otherwise affiliated with either company. An XYZ bylaw provides that board candidates will be
nominated by any shareholder with more than 50% of XYZ’s voting stock. XYZ’s articles of
incorporation contain what commonly is known as a “raincoat” provision.
CalPERS has brought suit against ABC and against XYZ’s entire board. CalPERS seeks
money damages against ABC and an injunction against the XYZ directors, to remedy what
CalPERS believes was an improperly motivated distribution of dividends to XYZ’s shareholders.
CalPERS puts on uncontroverted evidence that: (1) at the time of the dividends, ABC was in
great need of ready cash, and (2) the dividends in question exceeded XYZ’s entire revenues for
the year.
1. ABC:
(B) is correct. Shareholders usually do not have fiduciary duties to the corporation, but
here ABC itself has the majority of XYZ’s voting shares, and based on the bylaw, ABC is
the only shareholder with the power to nominate director candidates. Therefore, the facts
demonstrate that ABC is a controlling shareholder.
2. Assuming that ABC does owe fiduciary duties to XYZ, in the CalPERS suit, ABC:
(D) is correct, and the Delaware Supreme Court so held on essentially identical facts in
Sinclair v. Levien. Though ABC had a pecuniary interest in dividend payments, it did not
have a conflict of interest because the decision affected all shareholders equally. Thus, the
question is one of a possible breach of the duty of care, affording ABC the protection of the
business judgment rule.
(D) is correct. The claim against the directors, like the claim against ABC, will be about
breach of duty of care, because there is no indication that any of the directors has a
financial interest in this transaction.
Billy Bob Tattooson is among the founders and is still a shareholder in Tough Guys, Inc.,
though he has been largely uninvolved in the company’s affairs for some time. Billy Bob learns
of Rufus’s investment and he brings suit, alleging that in fact Tough Guys, Inc., should have
been given the opportunity to invest in the 10% block of stock.
4. If the matter goes to trial, which of the following would be most damaging to Rufus?
a. Dark Alley, Inc., was looking for an investor experienced in the magazine business.
b. Rufus’s friend contacted him in his official capacity as CEO of Tough Guys,
Inc.
c. Dark Alley’s business probably will compete with Tough Guys’ business.
d. Rufus’s failure to offer the Dark Alley investment opportunity to Tough Guys, Inc.
(B) is correct. Courts take it as a key indicator to ask in what capacity an opportunity is
offered to the defendant fiduciary. Certainly, (D) would also be important in a jurisdiction
that follows the ALI approach to corporate opportunity, but the logically prior question is
whether what was taken was a corporate opportunity in the first place.
5. Rufus’s purchase of the 10% block of stock creates a conflict of interest. True or false?
a. True, because his fiduciary obligations to Tough Guys, Inc. may now be in
conflict with his fiduciary obligations to Dark Alley, Inc.
b. True, because his fiduciary obligations to Tough Guys, Inc. may be at odds
with his own pecuniary interest.
c. Answers “a” and “b” are both correct.
d. False.
(B) is correct. (A) is incorrect because it is extremely unlikely that Rufus owes fiduciary
duties to Dark Alley. Therefore, (C) and (D) are both incorrect.
6. If Tough Guys, Inc. were incorporated in a state following the ALI approach to corporate
opportunity, which of the following would be most damaging to Rufus at trial?
a. Dark Alley, Inc., was looking for an investor experienced in the magazine business.
b. Rufus’s friend contacted him in his official capacity as CEO of Tough Guys,
Inc.
c. Dark Alley’s business probably will compete with Tough Guys’ business.
d. Rufus’s failure to offer the Dark Alley investment opportunity to Tough Guys, Inc.
(B) is correct. In an ALI jurisdiction this fact makes the opportunity a corporate one as a
matter of law, and it cannot be taken by the fiduciary without a prior presentation and a
proper rejection by a corporate representative with authority to do so. Once again, (D) is
attractive, but the question resolved by (B) (that the investment was a corporate
opportunity) is logically prior.
John is the chief executive officer and chairman of the board of BigCo, a publicly traded
Delaware corporation. John believes the company should adopt a new compensation package in
order to attract top quality young executives. In particular, he would like the company to adopt a
plan he has devised that would entitle all executives of the company to receive shares of BigCo’s
stock as annual bonus compensation, based on performance. Concerned about structuring the
plan properly, John seeks the opinion of an outside law firm and an outside corporate financial
advisor. After some weeks of study, both reply favorably on the proposal and suggest it would be
both legal and in the company’s best interests. In particular, the financial advisor suggested that
similar plans are in place at many similarly sized firms in BigCo’s industry.
BigCo’s board of directors has thirteen authorized seats, nine of which are currently
filled. Of those nine, five are outside directors. At the meeting at which the stock compensation
plan was first considered by the board, seven directors attended, including the four inside
directors. After receiving a lengthy report from the same attorney and financial advisor who had
given John their
opinions, the seven board members present voted unanimously in favor of the stock
compensation plan. The board members were concerned about potential conflicts of interest,
however, so the three outside directors present then convened separately to consider the proposal
again, and they unanimously approved it.
7. At the initial board meeting at which the stock compensation plan was first adopted, four
of the seven board members who voted had conflicts of interest, and therefore the board’s
vote was ineffective and the plan in fact was not adopted. True or false?
a. True, because the board lacked a quorum as to the stock compensation plan.
b. True, because the conflicted votes cannot be counted and therefore the plan did
not receive a majority of the votes.
c. True, unless the plan was later presented to the full board and approved again.
d. False.
(D) is correct. A self-interested transaction is no longer invalid just for this reason, and the
modern statutory approach is to permit conflicted votes to be counted for quorum and
purposes of authorization.
8. The subsequent vote by outside directors was ineffective as a ratification. True or false?
a. True, because the board did not formally delegate authority to the committee.
b. True, because the committee lacked a quorum.
c. True, because the board that appointed the committee lacked a quorum.
d. False.
(D) is correct. Three out of five disinterested directors approved this deal. That means that
most courts would (like Delaware courts) hold that the transaction would stand unless
proven by the plaintiff to be unfair.
9. The opinions presented by the outside attorney and financial advisor are relevant to
which of the following?
(D) is correct. The opinions themselves go to show that the plan is comparable to plans at
similar firms and are substantively desirable to BigCo, and therefore they tend to show
substantive fairness. The fact that they were secured at all, and prepared with due time for
the board and management of BigCo to consider them, goes to procedural fairness. Both
issues would be relevant if the plan is challenged in a duty of loyalty claim, and procedural
propriety would be relevant to a duty of care claim.
10. If John is personally sued for his role in establishing the stock compensation plan, what
standard will govern his liability?
(B) is correct. Under Delaware law, the effective ratification by a majority of disinterested
directors modifies a duty of loyalty claim against John by shifting the burden to plaintiff.
11. Marge N. O’Verra, a statistician and accountant by trade, has formed an accounting firm
she calls Count de Monet, Inc. Marge has made herself CEO, sole director, and sole shareholder
of Count de Monet. As she makes an outlandish number of errors, however, she thought it wise
to secure some reliable source of White Out® correction fluid. For this purpose she formed a
company with her friend Bob to provide this and other office supplies, which they call Supply,
Inc. Bob was just a passive investor. He took 49% of Supply, Inc.’s stock and allowed Marge to
act as CEO and sole director. If Bob were to sue Marge to challenge a contract for White Out®
between Count de Monet, Inc. and Supply, Inc., which of the following facts, if true, would be
most helpful to Marge in defending herself?
a. In her capacity as CEO and director of Count de Monet, she observed all
“corporate formalities.”
b. In her capacity as CEO and director of Supply, Inc., she observed all “corporate
formalities.”
c. The contract’s terms were comparable to those offered to other companies
on similar supply arrangements.
d. She really should not worry too much about such a suit, because it will be
governed by the business judgment rule.
(C) is the correct answer. Marge will be open to duty of loyalty challenge, and so evidence
of substantive fairness will be important to carrying her burden to show intrinsic fairness.
12. A corporate vice president who is also the Treasurer of the corporation makes a loan of
company funds to his best friend, subject to a stated rate of interest to be paid by the friend, to
help the friend start a new business. The vice president:
(D) is correct. The VP acted in conflict of interest, but if he can carry the burden of
showing that the loan was intrinsically fair, and not in excess of his authority (in which case
it would breach his duty of care), it does not breach his fiduciary duties.
13. In Delaware, informed, disinterested ratification of ultra vires board action renders the
action:
a. Void.
b. Voidable at the election of the corporation.
c. Subject to duty of care scrutiny under the business judgment rule.
d. Impervious to legal challenge.
Technically, we can’t know the answer for sure without knowing the identity of the would-
be ratifier, and the short answer is that either (A) or (D) could be correct. If it is the board
that attempts to ratify, (A) clearly is correct. Ultra vires board actions are invalid per se
and board ratification cannot help. On the other hand, ratification by the disinterested
shareholders could render the action impervious to legal challenge. Then, (D) would be
correct.
Chapter 20: Further Problems in the Duty of Loyalty: Good
Faith and Disclosure
1. Meds for Feds, Inc., a Delaware corporation, is one of the prescription medicine insurers
from among which federal employees may choose. Its directors receive a report from a whistle-
blower that the company is paying kickbacks to certain federal benefit administrators to push for
employees to elect Meds for Feds coverage. They reason that, although the practice clearly is
illegal, it is resulting in great success for Meds for Feds and that any fine the company might
have to pay would be less than the amount the kickbacks earn. They therefore decline to
implement any program to detect or prevent kickbacks. Which of the following is most true?
This is a difficult question, but the correct answer is (A). The duty of good faith may be
“housed” in the duty of loyalty, but it nonetheless exists and requires that the directors
avoid conscious dereliction of duty. Answer (A) merely says, then, that the failure to
implement such a program might be derelict, which seems correct. Failing to monitor for
on-going, known wrongdoing seems like dereliction, even though the directors might not
ultimately liable for any damages. (B) is framed in the abstract, and is too broad. If the
directors have reason to believe that kickbacks are being paid and that the corporation
might suffer as a result, failure to monitor would be conscious dereliction. (C) is incorrect
because if the directors know kickbacks are being paid they might be required to respond;
failure to do so could be dereliction. (D) is incorrect because it is too conclusive.
2. Theo, a director of Hypoxico, a New York corporation that is publicly traded, learns that
Fidel, the Chief Financial Officer, has been “cooking the books” to make Hypoxico appear much
more profitable than it really is. Which of the following is most true?
(D) is correct. Duty of good faith now is generally classified as a matter of loyalty. This
means that plaintiffs can recover monetary damages even if the corporation has adopted a
“raincoat” provision.
(A) is the best answer. Clearly, failure to disclose information will render any attempted
ratification ineffective. (B) is incorrect because the selection says it will give rise to
monetary damages. Damages would have to be proven. (C) is incorrect because failure to
disclose material information can stand alone as a breach of fiduciary duty. (D) is not a bad
answer, because failure to disclose is both a breach of the duty of care and a breach of the
duty of loyalty, but there is no case law saying it is “prima facie” evidence. It simply is a
breach.
(D) is the most correct, since, as Chapter 20 indicates, both are traditionally recognized
duties. The duty of good faith is, at least in Delaware, regarded as part of the duty of
loyalty, but some disclosure obligations are not. Thus, (C) is incorrect. (A) is incorrect
because duty of care recoveries for lack of disclosure would not give rise to monetary
liability if the
relevant corporation had a “raincoat” provision in effect. Similarly, (B) is incorrect since
lack of good faith and, in some cases, lack of disclosure in the loyalty context will give rise
to monetary damages.
Chapter 21: Exculpation, Indemnification, and Insurance
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
For each of the following questions, assume that the corporation’s articles of incorporation
provide for indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law.
a. Must be indemnified by the corporation for any fines, costs and attorney fees.
b. Can be indemnified by the corporation for any fines, fees or costs, at the
corporation’s election.
c. Must be indemnified by the corporation for attorney fees and costs, but cannot be
indemnified for any fines.
d. None of the above.
(D) is correct. (B) is tempting, since under §145(a), a Delaware corporation has the power
to elect indemnification of its officers, directors, and employees/agents for liabilities that
arise “by reason of the fact” of that person’s position. (Note that §145(a) does not cover
fiduciary claims or other actions “by or in right of the corporation.” They are subject to
somewhat different rules under §145(b).) There must, however, be a finding that the person
seeking indemnification acted in good faith and in a manner not reasonably believed to be
in the corporation’s best interests (and in a criminal matter without reason to believe the
person’s conduct was criminal), so (B) is too broad. Just as importantly, the SEC takes the
position that indemnification against liability under the federal securities laws is against
public policy. Under §145(c) indemnification is mandatory only where the person was
“successful on the merits or otherwise,” So (A) and (C) are incorrect. Do note, though, that
the articles provide for indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law. This would
create a mandate of indemnification for the expenditures that are left discretionary by
§145(a) – so if the state of mind requirements were satisfied and the public policy concern
absent, (A) would be correct.
3. Several of the employees of Hypoxico, Inc., are found to have engaged in a pattern of
paying illegal bribes to local officials. Any reasonable director would have been aware of
what was going on, but director Francis was oblivious because, although he went to
meetings, he simply didn’t understand the first thing about Hypoxico or its business.
Which of the following is most likely to be true?
(A) is correct. Here, Francis attended meetings and followed procedures, and appears to
have acted in good faith. Under VA law, which is said to “protect the utterly inept, but
well- meaning, good faith director,” that is all that his duty of care requires. Under
Delaware law, he may have failed his duty to take reasonable care to avoid injury through
his own laxity or nonfeasance. (Remember, breach of duty, which is what the question is
asking about, is different than liability for monetary damages.)
a. A Delaware corporation must not indemnify its fiduciaries against third party
claims if the fiduciaries acted in conscious violation of law.
b. A Delaware corporation must not indemnify its fiduciaries against third
party claims if the fiduciaries acted in conscious violation of criminal law.
c. A Delaware corporation must indemnify its fiduciaries against third party claims
unless the fiduciaries acted in conscious violation of law.
d. A Delaware corporation must indemnify its fiduciaries against third party claims
unless the fiduciaries acted in conscious violation of criminal law.
(B) is correct. See §145(a) and (c). (A) is incorrect because outside the criminal context the
test is one of good faith and reasonable belief the act is not contrary to the corporation’s
best interests. (C) and (D) are incorrect because mandatory indemnification is available
only in the event of success on the merits.
5. [Short Answer] Explain the difference between the Delaware and Virginia approaches
to the exculpation of officers and directors.
Virginia changed the standard for the fiduciary duty of care itself. In most jurisdictions, a
fiduciary complies with the duty of care if they act in good faith, with reasonable
information, and with a rational belief that their acts are in the best interests of the
corporation. But in Virginia, a fiduciary is required only to act in good faith. So long as the
director actually believes the decision is in the company’s interest, the decision need not be
informed, and it need not even be rational.
Delaware’s approach to exculpation has been to retain the traditional duty of care, but to
adopt §102(b)(7), under which directors can be exempted from monetary liability for
breaches of care, so long as they are in good faith.
Chapter 22: Derivative Litigation
(D) is correct. An effective demand must be “on the corporation,” meaning addressed to a
person with authority properly to act on it. It must also be in writing. Here, Kent is just an
employee and the communication was not in writing at all. Therefore, the demand is not
effective at all.
Paul Plaintiff owns one share of stock in DotBomb, Inc., a publicly held Delaware
company that launched a briefly successful internet service that since has failed and gone
through bankruptcy. Paul, who is not the sharpest knife in the drawer, bought his share shortly
after DotBomb emerged from those bankruptcy proceedings, not knowing that the company had
gone through difficult times. In fact, at the time of his purchase, Paul was under the impression
that DotBomb’s website was still active and profitable, and accordingly he bought his share at
the high price of $15. At that point, however, DotBomb was actually engaged in no business
whatsoever, and Paul has discovered that if he were try to sell his share of stock, it would be
worth something more like 5¢. Paul has also learned that the company has given up any plans to
resume its business, and in fact its board has already voted to recommend to the shareholders that
they dissolve the company.
Frustrated, Paul decides legal action is required. First, he makes a number of telephone
calls to the company’s board and management, and manages to speak with a few of the
company’s directors and senior officers. To each of these persons Paul states his complaint, and
insists that if
the board votes in favor of dissolving the company either he or someone within the company
should sue the board members for breach of fiduciary duty. Some days later Paul received a letter
from DotBomb’s General Counsel which stated in polite but firm language that the company had
considered his views and had decided to take no legal action.
Paul immediately files suit, naming each member of the board of directors and all of the
senior officers of DotBomb, alleging that their failure to exercise adequate care caused the drop
in value of his stock price. DotBomb’s board directs the company’s General Counsel to file a
motion to dismiss.
(A) is correct. The nature of this claim would require Paul, as a shareholder, to sue through
derivative action. Demand is required because these facts alone are not sufficient to raise a
doubt that the majority of the Board are disinterested/independent, or that the transaction
is protected by the business judgment rule.
3. What risk did Paul take by communicating directly with DotBomb’s management?
a. That he will have admitted as a matter of law that his demand was inadequate.
b. That he will have admitted as a matter of law that demand was futile.
c. That he will have admitted as a matter of law that the suit should be
dismissed unless the board’s motion was irrational, uninformed, or
conflicted.
d. None at all – in fact it was wise for him to do so, since demand plainly is required
in this case.
(C) is correct. By communicating directly with the management, Paul implicitly admits that
the matter is a question for management to resolve, meaning that a demand is required if
he wishes to pursue a derivative lawsuit. If a demand is required, a corporation’s motion to
dismiss will be granted unless the motion violates the business judgment rule, which is to
say that it is not rational, informed, or without conflict.
4. In considering the board’s motion, what standard will the court most likely employ to
decide whether or not to dismiss Paul’s complaint?
5. Could Paul have brought a derivative action to challenge the decisions that led the
company into bankruptcy in the first place?
a. Yes, though he would be unlikely to win because the relevant conduct would
likely be judged under the business judgment rule.
b. Yes, and he would be likely to win, since business choices leading to bankruptcy
were likely so bad as not to be “rationally related to the best interests of the
corporation.”
c. No, because on these special facts he could not possibly make out a
substantive cause of action.
d. No, for procedural reasons.
(C) is correct. When the business filed for bankruptcy, Paul was not yet a shareholder.
Therefore, he would not have a valid cause of action.
6. ABC, Inc., a Delaware corporation, owns 65% of the voting stock of another company,
XYZ, Inc. Another twenty-five percent of the shares are owned by the California Public
Employees Retirement System (“CalPERS”), a major pension fund, which is not otherwise
affiliated with either company. An XYZ bylaw provides that board candidates will be nominated
by any shareholder with more than 50% of XYZ’s voting stock.
CalPERS has brought suit against ABC and against XYZ’s entire board. CalPERS seeks
money damages against ABC and injunction against the XYZ directors, all to remedy what
CalPERS believes was an improperly motivated distribution of dividends to XYZ’s shareholders.
CalPERS puts on uncontroverted evidence that: (1) at the time of the dividends, ABC was in
great need of ready cash, and (2) the dividends in question exceeded XYZ’s entire revenues for
the year.
(A) is correct. The lawsuit alleges indifference to the interests of XYZ and, presumably,
breach of duty of loyalty. CalPERS presumably received a pro rata share of the dividends
and thus did not suffer a “personal” injury. Therefore, the lawsuit is derivative in nature.
7. Jenny, a shareholder in the Delaware holding company known as BigCo, Inc., believes
that a recent, spectacularly failed investment by BigCo was the fault of the company’s bumbling
board of directors, and she sues each of them for breach of fiduciary duty. Among many other
things, her complaint alleges the following: “Internal remedies would be ineffective because
the entire
board are incompetent, and because they each only do the bidding of BigCo’s chief executive
officer, who is also named as defendant herein.” Jenny has one share of BigCo’s one million
shares of stock, and the lawsuit is the first that anyone within the company has ever heard of her.
On only these facts, Jenny’s failure to seek intra-corporate remedies:
(C) is correct. Demand futility requires pleading with particularity facts that create serious
doubts about the board’s fitness to manage the firm, and Aronson itself held that facts like
those that Jenny plead are inadequate.
Chapter 23: Corporate Control Transactions, Part I:
Introduction, Negotiated Transactions, and Sales of
Control
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
1. In Model Act jurisdictions, which of the following states the difference in consequences
between mergers and share exchanges?
(A) is correct. The Model Act requires both boards’ approval in share exchanges and share
exchanges will trigger appraisal rights, so (B) and (C) are incorrect. However, share
exchanges will not require an acquiring company to take on the acquired company’s
liabilities.
2. Myron is a shareholder in a closely held corporation called XYZ, Inc., which has one
class of common, voting stock. Myron is annoyed that 51 percent of the shares of the
company were recently voted in favor of a one-for-one share exchange for the stock of
ZYX, Inc. ZYX is a publicly held company the shares of which are trading at $10 per
share. Myron believes that his stock is worth more than that, so he should wait and try to
sell it at a higher price. True or false?
a. True. The pendency of a share exchange would likely give rise to a “control
premium” and the value of Myron’s stock to a third party is probably quite high.
b. True, but only because ZYX is a publicly held company.
c. False, because close corporation stock is illiquid and therefore Myron could
probably not sell it for much.
d. False for some other reason.
(D) is correct. A share exchange means all of XYZ’s shares will be exchanged for shares of
ZYX. Although Myron does not like the exchange plan, it has been approved and he cannot
retain his shares or refuse to engage in the exchange. However, if XYZ is in a Model Act
jurisdiction, Myron will be able to invoke his right to an appraisal, alleging that the
consideration received is not sufficient.
(C) is correct. XYZ owns 92% of ABC’s voting stock, more than 90% of control in ABC.
To merge ABC into XYZ itself, XYZ does not need shareholder approval. The two boards’
approval is sufficient.
(D) is correct. Tender offers are regulated by federal and state law, but unlike friendly
change-in-control transactions (that is, mergers, share exchanges, and asset purchases),
tender offers do not trigger appraisal rights. Because it merely entails buying shares
directly from shareholders, and each individual sale is voluntary, the prices paid are set by
market and are unlikely to be inadequate.
A leading maker of vision care equipment that is not very concerned with its consumers’
personal desires, C. F. Eyecare, Inc., is incorporated in a Model Act jurisdiction. C. F. Eyecare
has 4000 outside shareholders who hold between them about 35 million shares. Those 35 million
shares in total have a market value of about $350 million. Another corporation, the large
diversified holding company known as XYZ, Inc., enters into an agreement with the
management of C. F. Eyecare under which XYZ will purchase all the assets of C. F. Eyecare in
exchange for shares of XYZ. Following the purchase, C. F. Eyecare agreed that it would
distribute its XYZ stock as an in-kind dividend to its shareholders, and then it would dissolve.
This plan was recommended by C. F. Eyecare’s board to its shareholders, and they approved it
by a vote of more than 70%. The plan was not submitted to XYZ’s shareholders, but 75% of
XYZ’s stock is owned by one man who favored the plan.
John is a former shareholder of C. F. Eyecare who voted against the plan and is now
unhappy with his shares of XYZ stock. He thinks the shares he received did not reflect the fair
market value of the C. F. Eyecare stock that he formerly held, and he brings a lawsuit against
C.F. Eyecare and XYZ seeking payment of the fair market value of his stock.
5. Defendants move to dismiss John’s lawsuit, alleging that he is not entitled to this kind of
relief. How should a court rule on this motion?
a. Grant it, because John no longer holds any shares and therefore lacks standing.
b. Grant it if John failed to make demand on the board of directors of either company.
c. Grant it for some other reason.
d. Deny it. In Model Act jurisdictions, appraisal is an appropriate remedy in
cases such as this and that is essentially what he is seeking.
(D) is correct. In Model Act jurisdictions, merger, share exchange, and sale of substantially
all assets can trigger appraisal. This was a sale of substantially all assets in exchange for
XYZ stock.
6. In a jurisdiction that recognizes the “de facto merger” doctrine, the transaction between
XYZ and C. F. Eyecare could be described as a “de facto merger.” True or false?
a. True, because the nature of the business in which C.F. Eyecare’s former
shareholders now own stock has changed.
b. True, because C.F. Eyecare’s former shareholders now have a very different
relationship with the management of the company in which they own stock.
c. True, because C. F. Eyecare’s shareholders were entitled to vote as to the
transaction.
d. All of the above answers are correct.
e. Answers “a” and “b” are correct.
(E) is correct. To determine whether a transaction is a de facto merger, a court will not only
look at the agreement itself but also the consequences of the transaction. Whether or not
the shareholders of the company that ceases to exist had a right to vote is not
determinative. The schemes giving rise to de facto merger litigation often are attempts to
avoid shareholder votes as well as appraisal rights.
7. If this transaction were held to be a “de facto merger,” how would John’s situation be
changed?
(D) is correct. Here, John was in fact entitled to vote and to appraisal rights, which are all
he would get by proving de facto merger.
(C) is correct. (A) is incorrect because acquiring firm shareholders would never enjoy
appraisal rights. (B) could be relevant if the transaction involved a conflict of interest on
the part of XYZ’s controlling shareholder. For example, if he caused the purchase of some
asset in which he had a pecuniary interest, the transaction would expose him to challenge
for beach of his duty of loyalty. In that case, had the transaction been open to approval by
the outside shareholders, approval by a majority of them would have constituted a
ratification and modified the standard under which any fiduciary claim against him would
be brought. But in this case there does not appear to be a conflict, and so any claim against
him would already be under the business judgment rule. Ratification by the minority
would not modify that standard.
Chapter 24: Corporate Control Transactions, Part II:
Tender Offer Defenses, and Special Fiduciary Duties in
Hostile Take-Over Situations
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
Sitting Duck, Inc., is a publicly traded Delaware corporation. Shortly after the company
was formed, its board of directors received a presentation from an outside investment banker,
advising them that because of the nature of the company’s business, it was likely to enjoy large
cashflows and might have a large amount of cash on hand at any given time. The banker’s advice
was that Sitting Duck was therefore at a serious risk of hostile takeover.
Recently Sitting Duck’s management was dismayed to learn that Greedy McGreederson,
a notorious corporate greenmailer, had already acquired 5% of the company’s outstanding stock
and that he would shortly initiate a tender offer for the rest. McGreederson soon announced a
front- loaded, two-tier tender offer, in which he would first acquire another 46% of the
company’s stock and then merge Sitting Duck into his own holding company. Pursuant to the
plan of merger, McGreederson’s holding company would acquire the remaining 49% of Sitting
Duck by exchanging them for junk bonds, which McGreederson claims will be equal in value to
the Sitting Duck shares so acquired. On the same day that he announced his tender offer,
McGreederson filed suit in Delaware Chancery Court seeking injunction of the Rights Plan.
Now at wit’s end, Sitting Duck’s board contacts WiteNite Industries, Inc., another
publicly traded company, to negotiate a friendly merger plan. The two companies quickly strike
an agreement under which Sitting Duck will be merged into WiteNite. The parties agreed that if
Sitting Duck were to breach the contract, WiteNite would receive a cancellation fee of $100
million.
1. In McGreederson’s challenge to the Rights Plan, to what standard should Sitting Duck’s
outside directors be held?
a. Reasonable care, because no tender offer was pending when the plan was adopted.
b. The business judgment rule, because no tender offer was pending when the plan
was adopted.
c. The Cheff standard.
d. The Unocal standard.
e. The Revlon standard.
(D) is correct. The provision is a poison pill to respond to threat of hostile takeover.
Therefore, it should be subject to the Unocal standard, pursuant to which the Board should
(1) have a reasonable belief there is a threat to corporate policy and effectiveness and (2)
tailor a reasonable response. It does not matter that no hostile takeover effort was pending
when the plan was adopted. Unocal applies to any actions meant to defend against
takeover.
2. Even without the defenses adopted by Sitting Duck’s board, Greedy McGreederson could
not go forward with the takeover transaction that he proposed. True or false?
(B) is correct, by operation of Delaware General Corporate Law § 203. Under this law, a
corporation may not enter into a “business combination” with any “interested stockholder”
for three years after that person becomes the interested stockholder, unless prior to that
time the board approved the action, the interested stockholder owns 85% of the stock, or
two thirds of the other stockholders approve it. The law was intended to frustrate coercive
two- tiered deals like the one McGreenderson proposes.
3. Why would Sitting Duck adopt the Rights Plan as a way to deter a hostile takeover?
a. Because it will increase the number of voting shares McGreederson will have to
buy to secure control.
b. Because it will decrease the number of voting shares McGreederson will have to
buy to secure control.
c. Because it will tend to make Sitting Duck more expensive to purchase.
d. None of the above.
(C) is correct. Service of the high-interest bonds will be very expensive and put the firm
under substantial pressure if McGreederson acquires it.
4. Assume that the initial adoption of the Rights Plan is subject to the Revlon standard.
Would it be consistent with the board’s duties under that standard?
a. Probably, as shown by the fact that a hostile tender offer in fact was made, and it
was highly coercive in nature.
b. Probably, because the Rights Plan was revocable at the board’s election.
c. Probably not, because the Rights Plan plainly was not “proportional” to any
“threat to corporate policy and effectiveness.”
d. No, because there is no evidence that the board in good faith determined that there
was a “threat to corporate policy and effectiveness.”
This is a difficult question, but (B) is correct. The question assumes applicability of Revlon,
not Unocal. (C) and (D) relate to Unocal and therefore are incorrect. Revlon applies when it
is a foregone conclusion that the company will be taken over or broken up; it then is the
duty of the Board to maximize value to the shareholders. Keeping the company intact is no
longer a valid consideration, and therefore threat to corporate policy and effectiveness
becomes irrelevant. The fact that a “highly coercive” tender is made does not really suggest
that the directors are doing their best to auction off the company, so (A) is incorrect. The
fact that the directors could still call off implementation of the rights plan provides a
bargaining chip, so (B) seems best.
a. Revlon, because the huge cancellation fee renders the merger “inevitable.”
b. Unocal, because Sitting Duck and WiteNite are both publicly traded; there will be
no “change of control.”
c. Intrinsic fairness.
d. Business judgment rule.
(D) is correct. Here, WiteNite is the acquiring company, and, on these facts at least, it is not
facing any threat of takeover or taking action defensive to takeover. Therefore, its board is
not subject in this case to Revlon and Unocal. There is likewise no indication of self-interest.
1. Joe, John and Jim are three shareholders of XYZ, Inc., and together they own 45% of its
shares. They know that voting together they can control a large portion of the company’s board
of directors. They also know that Joe is brightest among them and most involved in the
company’s affairs, so they provide in a written agreement among them that they will each vote
all of their shares at each annual shareholders’ meeting exactly as Joe directs them to do. The
arrangement is for an indefinite term and can be revoked only by the parties’ unanimous
agreement. This arrangement is legally unenforceable because:
(D) is correct. (A) is incorrect because, at least on these facts, there is no interference with
the board’s authority. (B) is incorrect because this agreement is not a “voting trust”—it
does not separate the right to vote the shares from beneficial ownership—and so need not
be limited to 10 years in duration. Lehrman v. Cohen. (C) is incorrect because it plainly is
supported by the consideration of the parties’ mutual promises.
Bernie and his twin brother Bart, now in their seventies, founded a grocery store long
ago, and have operated it together ever since. Immediately upon its founding Bernie and Bart
incorporated their business, and called it B&B Grocery, Inc. They have each always served as
the two members of B&B Grocery’s board of directors, and they each own 50% of the
company’s outstanding stock. Shortly after the company’s incorporation they executed a
shareholder’s agreement between them, which they intended to help them avoid problems in the
management of the business.
As parties to the shareholder’s agreement, Bernie and Bart agreed that they would always
vote for themselves as the two members of B&B Grocery’s board. They also included the
following provision, under the heading “Designated Tiebreaker”:
“In any case, as to a matter for which either board action or shareholder action is required, if the
board or the shareholders reach unresolveable disagreement, the matter shall be referred to the
Designated Tiebreaker, who shall be the person designated herein, and whose decision as to such
matters shall be final.”
The shareholder’s agreement included another provision appointing B&B Grocery’s outside
attorney, Bob Shady, as the “Designated Tiebreaker.” Bob has agreed so to act.
Finally, pursuant to the shareholder’s agreement Bernie and Bart promised that as the
company’s directors, they would each always vote for an annual payment of dividends in the
amount of $500 per share.
2. If Bernie chose to vote for someone other than Bart for the position of director, could
Bart enforce the shareholder’s agreement against him?
a. No. Although shareholders may normally agree as to whom they will vote for,
they are not permitted to make board elections a foregone conclusion.
b. No, because proxies may not be given by shareholders in close corporations.
c. No, because irrevocable proxies may not be given by shareholders in close
corporations.
d. None of the above.
(D) is probably correct. Voting agreements are generally enforceable except where void as
against public policy. Here there is actually a significant public policy concern with the
parties’ agreement, because they constrain themselves with respect to votes they will cast as
director. However, the agreement with respect to the election of directors still would be
enforceable. See McQuade v. Stoneham. Moreover, Galler and similar caselaw suggests
that concerns with agreements with respect to action of the board are lessened where all
shareholders are parties to the agreement. And, in any case, the other answers are
incorrect.
(A) is simply false, and (B) and (C) are incorrect because the agreement in this case does
not involve the giving of any proxies. The parties to the agreement vote their own shares.
3. If B&B Grocery, Inc., were incorporated in Delaware, would Bernie and Bart’s
agreement constitute an illegal voting trust?
(E) is correct. The agreement did not separate voting power from the shares.
4. If it were not for the “Designated Tiebreaker” provision in their shareholder’s agreement,
Bernie and Bart would each be at a significant risk of oppression. True or false?
a. True. They are both effectively minority shareholders – neither holds a majority.
b. True, if they are both dependent on their salaries and/or dividends from B&B
Grocery.
c. True. “Oppression,” as a practical matter, is a risk in all closely held corporations.
d. False, as a practical matter.
(D) is correct. They each have 50% of the shares, and if they do not agree on certain things,
there will be deadlock. Neither has power to coerce or oppress the other one, because
neither of them is majority.
5. Which of the following best characterizes the enforceability of the provision of the
shareholder’s agreement concerning the payment of dividends?
(D) is correct. (A) is incorrect because shareholders are not the ones who are supposed to
approve dividends. (B) and (C) are incorrect for the reasons given in the answer to question
2, above.
6. What risks has Bob Shady undertaken by agreeing to act as “Designated Tiebreaker”?
a. None.
b. Probably none, because the nature of his duties as attorney are so unlike to
conflict with his duties as Designated Tiebreaker.
c. He may risk conflict of interest, since he also acts as the company’s attorney.
d. Probably none, since his is not an officer or director and therefore will not owe
any fiduciary duties.
(C) is correct. As an attorney, the company is Bob’s principal; as an arbitrator, Bob can be
influenced by factors that may impact his ability to serve the company’s interest best. For
example, Bob may be tempted by his own pecuniary interest if a question is raised about
whether he should be retained for specific legal work.
Chapter 26: Special Considerations in the Close
Corporation Context, Part II: Fiduciary Duty and
Oppression
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
1. Hypo, Inc., a closely held company, is incorporated in Massachusetts. Adam, who owns
15 of Hypo’s 100 shares, was recently fired by the company and is now the only one of its
shareholders not employed by it. At the same time, the company discontinued the dividend
payments it traditionally had made, and reverted instead to annual employee “bonuses,” based on
the number of shares held by each employee. Adam likely will be entitled to a recovery from the
other shareholders. True or false?
a. True, because there probably is not a business reason for linking employee
bonuses to the number of shares held.
b. False, because dividend decisions are within the business judgment discretion of
management.
c. False, because employee termination decisions are within the business judgment
discretion of management.
d. False, because the “equal opportunity” rule no longer applies, even in
Massachusetts.
(A) is correct. In Massachusetts, majority shareholders owe an utmost good faith and
loyalty duty to minority shareholders, and this duty extends to minority shareholders’
employment. Accordingly, changes in employment that disproportionately affect the
minority must be justified for reasonable business reasons. Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype.
Here, we know of no showing with respect to such business reasons, either with respect to
the firing or the linkage of bonus to shares.
2. Joe is considering taking a new job as CEO of a closely held Massachusetts corporation.
Joe is unsure whether he should accept all the comforting promises concerning the job made to
him by the company’s Chairman, Hugh Lyon. He is also annoyed by a company bylaw
prohibiting company officers from owning the company’s stock. Anyway, which of the
following is the best reason for Joe to insist on an employment contract with employment and
salary protections?
(C) is correct. Donahue–Wilkes protections only extend to shareholders. Here, Joe is not a
shareholder; in fact, he is banned from owning any of the company’s stock. Therefore, the
doctrine will not be available to Joe.
Questions 3-4 relate to the following facts:
Ever since John and Jerry incorporated their business as a Massachusetts corporation,
about eight years ago, they’ve managed the company’s affairs together. Though they don’t have
official job titles, they’ve always paid themselves annual salaries. Until recently they had never
held either a shareholder or board meeting, and there had never been an election of directors.
Strictly speaking, John has voting control of the company. Since John invested quite a bit more
money, they agreed that he would take 60% of the shares and Jerry would take 40%. Several
years ago, John hired two employees to work for the company, and they are still in its employ.
Last month Jerry got a letter signed by John, indicating that he was signing on behalf of
the company as “controlling shareholder.” The letter announced that the company would hold a
shareholder meeting, the only listed agenda item being the election of a board of directors. In his
own handwriting, John included the following note at the bottom of the otherwise typed letter:
“Hey, bud, don’t worry about this shareholder meeting business. You know we’re in this
together.” Relying on John’s words, Jerry neither attended the meeting nor gave his proxy to
anyone to vote his shares.
At the meeting, John cast his entire 60% for himself as director. His first act as director
was to hire himself as CEO. His first act as CEO was to fire Jerry as an employee and terminate
any future right to salary. Jerry files suit to challenge the manner of his termination, and John
immediately moves to dismiss.
3. John’s actions violated his fiduciary duties as a shareholder in a closely held corporation.
True or false?
a. True, because the business has only two shareholders, is not publicly traded, and
the shareholders are directly involved in management.
b. False. John’s actions could not violate any such duty because of the state in which
the business is incorporated.
c. True, if there was no valid business purpose for the termination.
d. False. John’s actions could not violate any such duty because corporate fiduciaries
owe their duties to the corporation, not to individual shareholders.
(C) is correct. This Massachusetts company will qualify as a “close corporation” for
Donahue-Wilkes purposes, and that special fiduciary rule will apply. It is not breached,
however, if there is some valid business purpose for the action complained of and there are
no plausible, less-harmful means to accomplish it.
4. Assuming John and Jerry incorporated their business in Delaware, rather than
Massachusetts, John’s actions violated his fiduciary duties as a controlling shareholder.
True or false?
a. True, because the business has only two shareholders, is not publicly traded, and
the shareholders are directly involved in management.
b. False. John’s actions could not violate any such duty because of the state in
which the business is incorporated.
c. True, if there was no valid business purpose for the termination.
d. False. John’s actions could not violate any such duty because corporate fiduciaries
owe their duties to the corporation, not to individual shareholders.
(B) is the best answer. Delaware does not recognize the Donahue-Wilkes duty, so a claim
against John would have to be on the basis of the traditional duties of care or loyalty owed
by directors to the corporation. That is really all you need to know to pick the right answer.
However, to amplify a bit, consider the following. John’s election of himself as director is
not governed by any duty. Termination of Jerry involves no conflict of interest and so
would be subject to the business judgment rule. Appointment of himself as CEO involves a
conflict of interest, because he will be paid salary, and that means he will bear the burden
of establishing intrinsic fairness. (D) may be confusingly similar to (B), but makes a
sweeping statement that suggests the outcome would be the same in all jurisdictions.
Arno, Benny and Chuck form a Massachusetts corporation that they call ABC, Inc. They
themselves are the company’s sole shareholders; Arno owns 10 of the company’s 100 shares,
and Benny and Chuck each own 45. They verbally agreed, upon formation of the corporation,
that they would employ themselves in the company, and would pay themselves each a salary.
Following a recent personal disagreement, Benny and Chuck voted as two of ABC’s
three directors to eject Arno from the board and to fire him from his job at ABC. They then
voted to discontinue ABC’s traditional annual dividends.
Arno sues Benny and Chuck, alleging that his termination violated their fiduciary duties.
5. Is ABC, Inc. a “close corporation” within the meaning of Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype?
(A) is correct. A close corporation under Donahue has 1) a small number of shareholders,
2) substantial shareholders involvement in management, and 3) no ready market for its
shares. You cannot change the character of the corporation by freezing one of the
shareholders out of management.
6. Chuck, who happens to be an attorney, files a motion on behalf of ABC to dismiss Arno’s
claim, alleging that Arno does not adequately represent the other shareholders. Which of
the following most likely describes how the court will rule on this motion?
a. Grant it because Arno is now the only shareholder not employed by ABC.
b. Grant it because Arno is the only shareholder who has suffered this particular
injury.
c. Deny it because of the nature of Arno’s cause of action.
d. Deny it for some other reason.
(C) is correct. Arno’s claim under Donahue-Wilkes is direct and his representativeness is
irrelevant.
7. Which of the following best explains why Arno’s cause of action differs from a claim for
breach of the fiduciary duty of loyalty?
(C) is correct. Duty of loyalty claims require proof of conflict of interest, but Donahue-
Wilkes claims, in principle, do not. (Often Donahue-Wilkes claims will involve conflict of
interest, but it is not necessary to prove that there is one.) In Donahue-Wilkes what is key is
that there be some different access to liquidity or other benefits, whether or not the
individual challenged decision itself creates conflict of interest. In Arno’s case, for example,
the decision to fire him does not in itself create or involve a conflict of interest on the part of
Chuck or Benny. They already had conflicts of interest with respect to their own jobs and
salaries, but that was not changed by the decision to fire Arno. It did however exclude him
from agreed- upon access to the firm’s assets. So it would not expose them to duty of loyalty
liability, but it would expose them to Donahue-Wilkes liability.
a. It wouldn’t.
b. It would most likely be judged under the intrinsic fairness test and it would be
derivative in nature.
c. It would most likely be judged under the business judgment rule and it
would be derivative in nature.
d. It would most likely be judged under the business judgment rule, but it would be
direct in nature since Arno challenges a personal harm.
(C) is correct. Since Delaware does not recognize the Donahue-Wilkes rule, and since no
shareholder has any right to employment or access to corporate assets in absence of that
right (or in absence of some binding contract right to it), Arno’s claim could only be
derivative, and his only challenge would be to a business judgment as to which there is no
conflict of interest.
Chapter 27: Special Considerations in the Close
Corporation Context, Part III: Deadlock and Dissolution
1. Nellie owns 50% of the shares of the N&N Corporation. Nancy owns the other 50%.
Nancy is the President and the sole officer of the corporation; Nellie is not employed by N&N.
Nancy has refused to attend shareholders meetings for some years, and therefore Nellie has been
unable to vote to replace Nancy as a director, a great desire for Nellie because the company has
also refused to pay any dividends, thus rendering Nellie’s shares largely without value to her.
Nellie’s best remedy is probably:
(D) is correct. (A) is incorrect because there is no ready market for this stock, and no
outside buyer is likely to pay a fair price to replace Nellie as minority owner of a highly
illiquid stock.
(B) and (C) are of no value to Nellie because, even if a court were willing to grant them, she
would still be in the same position. Either of them would just necessitate a shareholder
meeting that Nancy could refuse to attend, thus defeating quorum, or at which, if she did
attend, the two would vote their shares differently and thus be deadlocked.
2. Hypo, Inc., is a closely held corporation. Adam, who owns 15 of Hypo’s 100 shares, was
recently fired by the company and is now the only one of its shareholders not employed by it. At
the same time, the company discontinued the dividend payments it traditionally had made, and
reverted instead to annual employee “bonuses,” based on the number of shares held by each
employee. Adam likely could seek judicial dissolution of ABC. True or false?
a. True.
b. False, because dividend decisions are within the business judgment discretion of
management, and are unlikely to constitute “oppression.”
c. False, because employee termination decisions are within the business judgment
discretion of management, and are unlikely to constitute “oppression.”
d. False, because he does not own at least 20% of ABC’s stock.
e. False, because there is no evidence of fraud or other misconduct.
Following a recent personal disagreement, Benny and Chuck voted as two of ABC’s
three directors to eject Arno from the board and to fire him from his job at ABC. They then voted
to discontinue ABC’s traditional annual dividends, even though the company is very profitable.
Arno seeks judicial dissolution on the grounds of oppression. Which of the following is most
true?
(D) is correct. Arno can request dissolution on grounds of oppression, as Arno’s substantial
reasonable expectations of his investments are defeated. However, as a practical matter, the
two parties will most likely settle and Benny and Chuck will buy out Arno’s shares.
4. [Short Answer] Assume that the two 50 percent shareholders of a corporation are
deadlocked and unable to elect directors. Under what circumstances would you expect a judge to
grant a petition for dissolution?
Among the various grounds for judicial dissolution, deadlock will be sufficient only if it
seriously frustrates the ongoing operation of the firm. In Model Act jurisdictions, for
example, it is appropriate only where “irreparable injury to the corporation is threatened
or being suffered, or the business and affairs of the corporation can no longer be conducted
to the advantage of the shareholders.”
1. Think for a moment, about what the word “security” means for purposes of the Securities
Act of 1933.
(C) is correct. An LP’s interest is a passive investment the returns from which are solely
from other people’s efforts. It would be incautious, however, to say that it always is one.
2. The promoter of a viatical settlement fund collects money from investors and uses it to
purchase from persons diagnosed as terminally ill (“investees”) the right to be named beneficiary
of the investees’ life insurance contracts. Thinking, again, about what the word “security” means
for purposes of the Securities Act of 1933, which of the following is most true?
(D) is correct. The promoter’s efforts in selecting the pool of insureds are the managerial or
entrepreneurial efforts on which the profitability of the scheme relies.
3. Thinking, yet again, about what the word “security” means for purposes of the
Securities Act of 1933, which of the following is most true?
(C) is correct. The real question is whether the LLC is member-managed or manager-
managed. Because securities generate returns from the efforts of others, only a manager-
managed LLC’s interest is likely a security. Whether an LLC is member-managed depends
on the state only if the members have chosen to allow default rules apply; otherwise, it is a
matter of their agreement.
4. New Company’s shares of common stock are closely held. It proposes to conduct an
initial public offering, as the result of which it will (for the first time) have in excess of
$10,000,000 of assets and more than 500 holders of its common shares. It expects that these
shares will not be traded on a registered stock exchange but will be thinly traded over the
counter. It also has a class of preferred shares outstanding in the hands of 50 holders. No shares
of preferred will be issued in the proposed offering.
With respect to the preferred shares, which of the following is most true?
(A) is correct. Where a firm is not listed on a national securities exchange, but nevertheless
has assets in excess of $10 million and a class of equity securities owned by more than 2000
persons or more than 500 unaccredited investors, then it must register that security under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 - but only that security.
5. Referring again to the facts of Question 4, which of the following is most true?
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
(A) is correct. Achmed has more than 1% share, and nothing indicates that his request was
untimely or that he has not held the shares long enough. However, neither proposal would
be a proper subject for shareholder action under state law since they both purport to
directly call for interference by shareholders in management matters.
2. Berto is a shareholder of Beta Corporation. (You may assume this corporation is subject
to Section 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.) He owns approximately 2 percent of the
corporation’s outstanding common stock. Berto has learned that the management of Beta intends
to send out proxy solicitations to its shareholders for the purpose of obtaining their votes to
reelect the present board of directors. Berto makes a written demand on the board to include the
following proposals in their solicitation materials: (1) that a woman be appointed president and
(2) a recommendation that transgender employees be permitted to use the employee restrooms of
their choice in Beta’s manufacturing facility.
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
(D) is correct. The first proposal would be improper for shareholder action as a matter of
state law. The election of the president is a matter for the board, not the shareholders. The
second proposal, however, is framed as a recommendation, which is appropriate as a
matter of state law. Moreover, it relates to a policy matter and thus does not fall under the
ordinary operation of the business and de minimis exclusion grounds, and therefore should
be included in the proposal.
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
(B) is correct. Chunhua has owned the share for more than 12 months and the shares have
a value of at least $2,000. In addition, if phrased in terms of social policy the topic is
significant enough to overcome the common hurdles to putting the proposal in the material.
However, the proposal must be no more than 500 words.
4. Dre is a director of Delta Corporation. (You may assume this corporation is subject to
Section 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.) The board of Delta solicited proxies for their
reelection. Although other members of the board had, from time to time, heard rumors of Dre’s
criminal background, no conclusive proof of this background had ever been brought to their
attention. However, a reasonably thorough investigation would have disclosed that, before his
first election to the board, Dre had been convicted of several crimes involving breach of trust.
The proxy solicitation failed to make mention of Dre’s prior contacts with the criminal
justice system, and Dre was elected. Following the election, Pru, a shareholder with less than 1
percent of Delta’s stock who did not want Dre to sit on Delta’s board, commenced an action to
rescind the proxy votes obtained by Dre immediately before the election. (You may assume Pru
gave her proxy to reelect the board and that Dre would not have been elected but for the proxies
obtained via the solicitation.)
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
(A) is correct. Pru’s suit is not derivative, and so any rules about number of shares that
must be owned to bring such a suit would not be relevant. The timing (after Dre’s election)
should not be relevant, as an election is something easily undone. Moreover, Dre’s past
conduct involved breach of trust and would be considered material. Pru need not show
causation as the proxy solicitation was an essential link in bringing about Dre’s election.
5. Edith is a shareholder of Epsilon, Inc. (You may assume this corporation is subject to
Section 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.) Epsilon is in the solar energy field. The
board of Epsilon solicited proxies for the approval of the merger of Epsilon into Zeta Corp., even
though a single shareholder (not Zeta Corp.) owned sufficient shares to compel the merger. Zeta
Corp. is in the energy field, but has concentrated on coal and gas. The directors of Epsilon
expressed the opinion that the merger will “in no way change the nature of the enterprise in
which our shareholders have invested.” Edith does not agree and seeks to enjoin the merger,
claiming that the directors’ statement is false and misleading.
Based on the foregoing, which of the following statements is most likely to be true?
a. Whether Edith has standing depends on how many shares she owns.
b. The statement of the board is unlikely to be material.
c. Edith will be unable to prove that the solicitation is an essential link in
accomplishing the transaction.
d. Both (b) and (c).
(D) is correct. The statement is unlikely to be material, as the nature of the two businesses
is public information and is unlikely to change a shareholders’ voting behavior. It is also
hard to prove the essential link, because a single shareholder (who was not the merger
partner) owned enough shares to compel the merger.
Chapter 30: Fraud and Related Issues Under Rule 10b-5
Dora is the president of El Dorado, Inc., a mining company. She is told by Edgar, an
engineer for the company, that he has located a major ore strike. Unfortunately, it is on land that
El Dorado does not own. He suggests that Dora attempt to acquire the land without disclosing to
anyone, including El Dorado’s board, the extent of the strike. Dora comes up with the idea of
telling the board that the land simply will be a good real estate investment. The board balks at
paying cash, but authorizes Dora to negotiate to acquire the land in exchange for shares of the
company.
Unfortunately, Edgar has a drinking problem, and talks freely about the strike at a local
bar. Word begins to spread and Paul, the owner of the land for which Dora is negotiating, gets
wind of it. He asks if the rumor is true, but Dora denies it. As a result, he accepts shares worth
$100,000, which is what he believes to be the fair market value of the land. After the strike
subsequently is announced, his shares double in value.
(D) is correct. Dora’s statement to Paul was false, and it was “in connection with the
purchase or sale” of a security. (C) is false because Rule 10b-5 applies to purchases or sales
of any security, not just those registered under the Exchange Act.
(A) is most correct. Although Dora’s action is within the scope of employment and
therefore arguably attributed to El Dorado, El Dorado is a “control person” and probably
could establish an appropriate defense under Section 20 of the Exchange Act. [NOTE: This
question will be difficult to answer if the material in the online supplement about secondary
liability has not been assigned.]
4. Assuming, for purposes of this question, that Dora is liable under Rule 10b-5, which of
the following best describes the parties who might successfully sue her?
(B) is correct. The SEC and the Department of Justice both can sue Dora (in the
Department of Justice’s case because Dora’s act clearly was willful. It does not appear that
Paul would be able to prove causation of an injury.
5. Assuming, for purposes of this question, that El Dorado is liable under Rule 10b-5, which
of the following best describes the parties who might successfully sue it?
(A) is the most correct. Given Dora’s misrepresentation to the board it probably would be
difficult for the Department of Justice to demonstrate willfulness on the part of the
corporation. Paul would, once again, have a problem satisfying the causation requirement.
6. If you were advising Paul on the likelihood that he would prevail in a suit against Dora,
you would say:
7. If you were advising Paul on the likelihood that he would prevail in a suit against Dora,
you would say:
(D) is correct. Paul’s shares have increased in value and now seem to be equivalent to what
he would have charged for his land had he known about the ore strike. (C) is incorrect
because the in connection with requirement is easily satisfied.
Chapter 31: Trading by Insiders: Rule 10b-5
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
(C) is correct. Section 10(b) section covers purchases or sales of any security, not just those
registered under the Exchange Act.
2. P is the president of Testex, Inc., which manufactures a variety of products out of Flarp.
Testex does not make Flarp itself; rather, it purchases Flarp from whichever of the three Flarp
manufacturers is offering it at the best price. P has, for some times, owned a significant number
of the shares of each of the three Flarp manufacturers. Testex scientists have now determined
that Gloop, rather than Flarp, could be used to manufacture all Testex products. Gloop is cheaper
and more resilient than Flarp, and is produced by different companies than those that produce
Flarp. These findings have not been publicly announced. P suspects that once they are, other
companies relying on Flarp will quickly come to similar conclusions. P immediately sells all of
his shares of the Flarp manufacturers. Which of the following positions is most likely to be taken
by the SEC with respect to P's activities?
a. P has violated his duty to disclose or abstain from trading under §10(b) and Rule
10b-5 of the Exchange Act because he is a “traditional” insider of Testex.
b. P has violated his duty to disclose or abstain from trading under §10(b) and Rule
10b-5 of the Exchange Act because he is a tippee of information relating to the
Flarp manufacturers.
c. P has engaged in deceitful conduct in violation of §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of
the Exchange Act because he has misappropriated proprietary information
belonging to Testex.
d. P has not violated §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Exchange Act.
(C) is correct. Here, P is employed by Testex but traded in Flarp manufacturers’ stocks, so
he is not a traditional insider. However, based on his employment relationship with Testex,
P is a fiduciary in a relationship of trust and confidence precluding him from using
Testex’s information for his personal benefit. Thus, P breached his fiduciary duty in
connection with the sale of a security and he will be liable for insider trading.
3. Continuing the factual assumptions of Question 2, which of the following is most true?
a. Persons purchasing Flarp shares on the days P sold his shares will be able to
recover only if they can establish a causal connection between their purchase and
his sale.
b. Persons purchasing Flarp shares on the days P sold his shares will not be able to
recover, even if P violated a duty to disclose or refrain from trading.
c. Persons purchasing Flarp shares on the days P sold his shares will be able to
recover, assuming he violated a duty to disclose or refrain from trading.
d. Persons purchasing Flarp shares on the days P sold his shares will be able to
recover.
(C) is correct. Section 20A of the Exchange Act provides an express private right for
“contemporaneous” traders against those who violate the Act by trading in possession of
material non-public information. It is not a very important provision, but it does exist. (D)
is less correct than (C) because trading on material non-public information alone does not
give rise to a cause of action – it has to involve a violation.
(B) is correct. The liability of a tippee is derivative – a tippee cannot be found liable unless
the tipper breached a fiduciary duty by making the tip and for personal benefit. The
personal benefit, however, need not come from the specific tippee, because once a tipper
becomes liable, all tippees, either tipped by the tipper or other tippees, can be liable.
5. Jetco, a corporation whose stock is traded on a national stock exchange, has 200,000
shares of $25 par value common stock outstanding. Dan, who owns 100 shares of Jetco stock, is
a director of Jetco. Five months ago, Dan learned that Jetco had developed a secret new invention
to convert organic waste to commercial fuel and that a public announcement of the invention was
soon to be made. Dan immediately emailed three of Jetco’s shareholders who, Dan knew, had
previously announced their willingness to sell their shares for $22 per share, a price that was $3 a
share above book value. Dan offered them $25 per share. They accepted his offer and sold a total
of 4,200 shares to Dan. At this time, Dan also accepted, and immediately exercised, stock option
rights to purchase 1,000 authorized, but previously unissued, shares from Jetco, for which he
paid the option price of $21 per share. A week later, the invention was announced, and the
market value of Jetco stock rose substantially. A few days ago, Dan sold, for $50 per share, the
4,200 shares he had
acquired from the three dissatisfied shareholders. Please devote approximately fifteen minutes to
discussing Dan’s potential liabilities, and to whom, as a result of the above transactions.1
To Jetco: Dan is liable for insider trading under Rule 10(b)-5 as a traditional insider. Here,
the information about the invention was non-public at the time of trading, and it was likely
material as the technology was revolutionary and certain. As a director, Dan also owed a
duty not to use Jetco’s information for personal benefit. Dan’s purchase of the 4200 shares
and the option constituted a breach of his duty to Jetco by trading without disclosure.
To the three shareholders: the three shareholders may seek remedies from Dan as well. In
addition to the elements discussed above, the three shareholders must show that they are
the actual sellers of the stock (which they were). Since the trading was face-to-face, they
would be assisted by the Affiliated Ute presumption with respect to causation in fact. One
might think this would be overcome by Dan’s showing of their earlier willingness to sell at a
lower price. Most probably, the fact that he is a fiduciary trading at an informational
advantage would preserve the ability of the three shareholders to invoke Affiliated Ute.
Thus, Dan’s failure to disclose the new invention and purchase of the 4200 shares also
made him liable for the three shareholders’ damages.
To the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice: Because he
violated Rule 10b-5 with respect to Jetco and the three shareholders, it is easy to conclude
that he also could be sued by the SEC and, because his violations were willful, the
Department of Justice.
1
This question is based on one originally appearing in Siegel’s Corporations and Other Business Entities
(Theresa Gabaldon, ed., 5th ed., 2012).
Chapter 32: Trading by Insiders:
Short-Swing Trading Under
§16(b)
Test Yourself Answers with Explanations
a. Criminal.
b. Criminal only if it is willful.
c. Only a civil violation of the Exchange Act.
d. Not a violation of the Exchange Act.
(D) is correct. Section 16(b) does not make short-swing trading illegal, but only makes
profits from short-swing trading forfeit to the issuers.
a. Include only trades of the equity securities of an issuer that has registered a
class of equity securities under the Exchange Act.
b. Include only trades of the securities of an issuer that has registered a class of
securities under the Exchange Act.
c. Include only trades of the equity securities of an issuer that has registered a class
of any securities under the Exchange Act.
d. Include only trades of the securities of an issuer that has registered a class of
equity securities under the Exchange Act.
(A) is correct. Section 16(a) obligations are triggered by the registration of an equity
security but relate to trades in all the issuer’s equity securities, not just those that are
registered.
(C) is correct. Equity security, for purposes of §16, includes derivative securities, such as
options, and instruments convertible into equity securities.
5. Quizco, Inc., owns nine percent of the common stock of Exam Corp. The class is
registered under the Exchange Act. Veronica, one of Quizco’s vice presidents, sits on the board
of directors of Exam Corp. Which of the following is most true?
(D) is correct. Quizco, as a beneficial owner, does not have a reporting duty under §16(a)
unless it owns at least 10% of Exam Corp.’s equity stock. However, if Veronica is acting as
Quizco’s “deputy,” Quizco is regarded as itself a director and thus must report.
6. On January 2, 2018, Priscilla purchased five percent of the shares of Hypoxico. The
shares are part of a class registered under the Exchange Act. On February 1, 2018, Priscilla, who
previously had no position with Hypoxico, is elected as its president. On March 1, 2018, she
purchases an additional six percent of Hypoxico’s shares. On April 1, she sells two percent. On
May 1, she is fired. On June 1 she sells all of her remaining Hypoxico shares. Which of her
transactions are subject to matching under §16(b)?
a. All of them.
b. None of them.
c. All transactions after she became president of Hypoxico.
d. All transactions while she was president of Hypoxico.
(C) is correct. Any transactions before Priscilla became the president would not be subject
to the reporting requirement because she only had 5% of the shares. Her reporting duty
started when she became the president. Because sales after she is fired may also involve use
of nonpublic information, they are regarded as matchable for six months.
7. Which of the following best describes the rule for when a shareholder may sue under
§16(b)?
a. She must have been a shareholder at the time the transactions giving rise to §16(b)
liability occurred.
b. She must have been a shareholder at the time at least one of the transactions
giving rise to §16(b) liability occurred.
c. She must have been a shareholder at the time at least one of the transactions
giving rise to §16(b) liability occurred and at the time her lawsuit is filed.
d. She must be a shareholder at the time the lawsuit is filed.
(D) is correct. Courts have been taking a liberal approach and allow individuals to sue even
if they purchased shares after the short-swing trading occurred. In other words, as long as
the individuals have the stock at the time of filing the lawsuit, they have standing.
8. Which of the following best describes the method for calculating the amount of §16(b)
profit a defendant has earned within a less than six month period?
(B) is correct. It also generally represents the method that results in the highest figure, so
(A) is the second best answer.