Midterm Outline
Midterm Outline
Midterm Outline
1. Duty of Loyalty
RS: Principals and agents owe duties to each other within an agency relationship. Principal’s
duties include performance of K obligations, good faith & fair dealing, and indemnification
under certain certs.
“An agent has a fiduciary duty to act loyally for the principal's benefit in all matters connected
with the agency relationship.”
Comment b: “The general fiduciary principle requires that the agent subordinate the agent's
interests to those of the principal and place the principal's interests first as to matters
connected with the agency relationship.”
Performance of contract obligations, care, competence, diligence, obedience, disclosure,
o If agent breaches duty of loyalty, the principal’s primary remedies are damages and disgorgement of
profits, if any.
2. Duty of Care
“An agent has a duty to the P to act with the care, competence, and diligence normally
exercised by agents in similar circs”
The duty of care is similar to a negligence standard. It is violated by being a slacker
or stupid. The agent is supposed to conduct the business with the level of competence
expected of someone in that position. To prove a violation, you must show something
beyond negligence (gross negligence, recklessness, etc.)
The duty of care is designed to police the quality of work people do.
We look at the particular individual within the role in the partnership
When Agent has more than 1 Principal- The Restatement (Third) § 8.06(2)
An agent who acts for more than one principal in a transaction between or among them has a
duty
(a) to deal in good faith with each principal,
(b) to disclose to each principal
(i) the fact that the agent acts for the other principal or principals, and
(ii) all other facts that the agent knows, has reason to know, or should know would
reasonably affect the principal’s judgment unless the principal has manifested that such
facts are already known by the principal or that the principal does not wish to know them,
and
(c) otherwise, to deal fairly with each principal.
D. Principles of Attribution
Goals
1. Describe the outward-looking consequences of agency relationships, including by
identifying the elements of actual & implied authority & articulating the differences
between them
2. Actual Authority: identify whether an action undertaken with actual authority involves
express or implied
3. Apparent Authority: identify whether a situation by an agent can be attributed to the
principle under that doctrine
Agents can bind principals by acting with either (1) actual or (2) apparent authority). The agent’s
ability to bind the principal to 3ps is an essential aspect of the agent’s role because it is central to
an agent’s ability to accomplish tasks on behalf of the principal.
1. Actual Authority: When an agent's action is taken "in accordance with the principal's
manifestations to the agent that the principal wishes the agent so to act" (R3A)
Created by a manifestation from the principal to the agent that the principal
consents to the agent taking actions on the principals’ behalf (look at
communications between them)
A. Express Actual Authority: conveyed orally/writing with specific language
a. Does the agent actually believe that that P wishes agent to take specific
action? – look at K & communications between P&A
B. Implied Actual Authority: (1) to do what is necessary, usual, and proper to
accomplish or perform an agent’s express responsibilities; or (2) to act in a
manner in which an agent believes that the principal wishes the agent to act based
on the agent’s reasonable interpretation of the principal’s manifestation in
light of the principal’s objectives and other facts known to the agent.”
Problem 1-3 “Clean, orderly, lawful, and respectable place of business in accordance with the
standards established in the Franchise Agreement & Operation Manual”
Purchasing cleaning supplies? Express authority to clean the bathrooms, therefore
in order to do what’s necessary & proper its implied that he has to purchase
cleaning supplies (its in scope of authority as employee)
Purchasing cash register? Express bc the agreement says exactly which cash
register to purchase
Hiring an interior designer? It depends, we don’t know how the approval process
works.
Closing shop on Sunday? No actual authority bc operating manual says has to be
open for 7 days
Firing unshaven male employee? Implied authority to do what is necessary to
maintain a clean orderly respectable place of business & the appearance of the
employee could fall under any of these three things
2. Apparent Authority
One person may bind another in a transaction with a third person, even in the absence of
actual authority, when the third person reasonably believes – based on "manifestation" by
the purported principal – that the actor is authorized to act on behalf of the purported
principal
Apparent authority may be the basis for liability in two situations
i. (1) where persons appear to be agents, even though they do not qualify under the
definition discussed above (so no agency)
ii. (2) where agents act beyond the scope of their actual authority
Step 1: Does the 3p actually believe the actor has authority to act on behalf of P?
Step 2: Evaluate the manifestations from the P to the 3P
o Ex: giving the agent a business card, giving them letterhead to send out
communications with, giving them a manager name tag.
Step 3: Evaluate manifestations that were not even directly made from P to 3P
o R3 expanded the definition of manifestations to include those reached through an
intermediary (as long as traceable to P) or simply placing a person in a certain
position (a manifestation to the market)
Step 4: Evaluate the reasonableness of 3P’s belief
o What is the past history between P and Third Party?
o What is the industry custom?
o What is the nature of the transaction? Is it for the P’s benefit?
Cefaratti v. Aranow
F: Doctor left sponge in abdomen & π sued surgeon & hospital. Π alleges hospital is liable for
own negligence & vicariously liable for Doctor because they held out Doc. To be their
agent/employee. She attended seminars at the hospital conducted by the doctor & his staff and
she got pamphlets. She assumed Doc was employee bc of his privileges & she relied on this
when she chose to get her surgery there
H: Both doctrine of apparent authority & apparent agency may be applied in tort actions, so
hospital can be vicariously liable - is this something diff?
Reasoning: Following alternative standards for establishing apparent agency in tort cases
First, P may establish apparent agency by proving that:
o (1) the principal held itself out as providing certain services
o (2) the plaintiff selected the principal on the basis of its representations; and
o (3) the plaintiff relied on the principal to select the specific person who performed the
services that resulting in the harm complained of by the plaintiff
Second, P may establish apparent agency in a tort action by proving the traditional elements of
the doctrine of apparent agency, as set forth in our cases involving contract claims, plus
detrimental reliance
o (1) the principal held the apparent agent or employee out to the public as possessing the
authority to engage in the conduct at issue, or knowingly permitted the apparent agent or
employee to act as having such authority
o (2) the plaintiff knew of these acts by the principal, and actually and reasonably believed
that the agent or employee or apparent agent or employee possessed the necessary
authority; and
o (3) the plaintiff detrimentally relied on the principal's acts; i.e. the plaintiff would not
have dealt with the tortfeasor if the plaintiff had known that the tortfeasor was not the
principal's agent or employee
3. Estoppel
Differences from apparent authority:
o Estoppel requires detrimental reliance
Estoppel allows the third party to hold the principal liable but does not give the
principal any rights against the third party (although the principal can often cure
that deficiency by ratifying the transaction)
Case Study Philly Dry Bar: Can Philly Dry Bar sue Alan for breach of fiduciary duty?
* Duty of Loyalty: he might be stealing customer base or proprietary info. By doing this, he is
acting in a manner that is averse to his boss -food lion case in exam
II. Partnerships
Two general principles: (RUPA are default rules for inner workings unless partners have agreed
otherwise except eliminate loyalty or good faith, but 3p rules are mandatory)
(1) one partner may be bound to third parties by the act of another partner
(2) partners are personally liable for obligations of the partnership
(3) a partnership is an entity distinct from its partners RUPA §201
Holmes v. Lerner
F: H&L agree to start Urban Decay orally. L handled most of the biz, but H attended board
meetings & worked at the warehouse for a year with no pay & did research on colors and stuff
H asked for allocation of shares & never got it. They offered her 1% she said no so they banned
her
I: Is there a partnership between H&L even though profit share was never discussed?
R: An express agreement to divides profit is not required to prove the existence of a partnership,
a lot of evidence of intent – doesn’t need to be formalized
Problem 2-1: No partnership bc Park maintains full control of the company, and therefore has
some control over Laylock. and equal control is essential for co-ownership. The fact that they
share income isn’t essential to determine that there is a partnership. Moreover, he only gets 25%
and absent an agreement otherwise, the default is for equal shares & no filing of partnership tax
return.
RUPA §402(c) A person may become a partner without acquiring a transferable interest or
making or being obligated to make a contribution to the partnership – then how lol
Can partnership sue partner? Yes RUPA §405(A): A partnership may maintain an action against
a partner for a breach of the partnership agreement, or for the violation of a duty to the
partnership, causing harm to the partnership
Ex: If a 3p sues partnership, under default rules 2 partners are 50/50 liable to the 3p, but the
actual partner who fucked up might be able to be sued to recover that 50%
Vecchitto v. Vecchitto
F: Christopher sues brothers on behalf of the Partnership; Brothers argue that Christopher is not
authorized to sue; Partnership Agreement is silent on filing of lawsuits; CT partnership law must decide
I: Even if they can sue; must figure out if the lawsuit is within the ordinary course of business
H: No, lawsuit is not in the ordinary course of business because primary purpose for partnership: selling
ice cream and frozen ice as per PA
o Clear that filing a lawsuit is not within the ordinary course of the partnership's business
As such, it must be consented to by all partners
Not all partners consented to the lawsuit
o Partnership lacks standing
Problem 2-2 pg 47: Wheeler joins partnership w/o being authorized to practice law and
misappropriates client funds. Under what circs would the law firm or its partners incur liability
for Wheeler’s actions?
* did he have actual or apparent authority to do these things?
- Under Actual Authority, a partner is an agent of the partnership. When we are looking at
what partners do in partnerships, we need to see if it was ordinary or outside the scope of
business first of all to see if they had any authority express or implied
o There was no express authority bc there is a part of the partnership agreement
that says that he can’t practice law, therefore there is also no implied authority bc
it follows from the express statement
- Under Apparent Authority, we would need to show there was a manifestation made my
wheeler & that 3p reasonably believed this guy was acting with authority. There seems to
be apparent authority here.
o Manifestation: law firm’s hiring of that person is a manifestation of that person’s
ability to act on behalf of them in the practice of law, which is in the ordinary
course of business
- Maybe partners were grossly negligent in allowing Wheeler to have signatory access to
the funds, so it violates the duty of care under RUPA so maybe we can also hold them
liable under here
C. Fiduciary Duties: can’t totally eliminate both of them, but can K around and specific what are
violations
RUPA § 409
(a) Partner owes to the partnership and the other partners the duties of loyalty
and care.
(b) The fiduciary duty of loyalty of a partner includes the duties:
(1) Anti-theft: to account to the partnership and hold as trustee for it any
property, profit, or benefit derived by the partner;
(2) No self-dealing: to refrain from dealing with the partnership in the
conduct or winding up of the partnership business as or on behalf of a
person having an interest adverse to the partnership (like being on both
sides of a transaction); and
(3) Anti-Competition: to refrain from competing with the partnership in
the conduct of the partnership’s business before the dissolution of the
partnership.
* acceptable limitation on duty of loyalty: limit duty to self-dealing
if partner is involved in other similar businesses.
(c) The duty of care of a partner in the conduct or winding up of the partnership
business is to refrain from engaging in grossly negligent or reckless conduct,
willful or intentional misconduct, or a knowing violation of law.
* a negligent act does not violate duty of care, does not include ord. neg.
(d) Adds obligation of good faith & fair dealing, non-waivable
RUPA § 105(c)(5) A partnership agreement may not alter or eliminate the duty of care BUT
Can alter duty of care, but may not authorize conduct involving bad faith, willful
or intentional misconduct, or knowing violation of law
RUPA §105(d) For loyalty:
PS can specify the method by which a specific act or transaction that would
otherwise violate the duty of loyalty may be authorized or ratified
Can also alter or eliminate duty of loyalty if not manifestly unreasonable
Identify categories of activities that do not violate the duty of loyalty
RUPA § 105(c) Can’t eliminate contractual obligations of good faith & fair dealing, but the
partnership agreement may prescribe the standards, if not manifestly unreasonable, by which the
performance of the obligation is to be measured
Meinhard v. Salmon
- Facts: Gerry leased Salmon (D) Hotel Bristol for 20 yrs. D and Meinhard (P) formed joint
venture. Lease was up and Salmon executed new lease and didn’t tell Meinhard.
- Issue: Is a co-adventurer (D) required to inform another co-adventurer (P) of a business
opportunity that occurs as a result of participation in a joint venture?
- Holding: Yes. Co-adventurers, like partners, have a fiduciary duty to each other,
including sharing in any benefits that result from the parties’ joint venture.
- R: Loyalty is not just about honesty, “we are looking at application of the default rule. So
if an opportunity comes up related to the JV, he should’ve disclosed it”
- Reasoning
o New lease was extension of an earlier lease
o Salmon opportunity arose out of status as co-adventurer so he had a duty to tell
Meinhard
o Salmon breached fiduciary duty by keeping transaction from Meinhard and
didn’t not allow him to compete. He should’ve disclosed the opportunity & theft
of opportunity is a breach
But actually, they should’ve negotiated a clause that limits the duty of
loyalty to specific dealings about the 1 thing. – good to keep in mind for
test
- Dissent
o Salmon didn’t breach bc the existing lease expired
o Fiduciary duties restricted to matters pertaining to first lease and ended when that
expired
2. Sharing of Profits & Losses: The allocation of profits and losses is usually determined by each
partner's interest in the partnership
* RUPA §401(b) Equal sharing of profits and losses is the default rule
- Losses are usually allocated in the same proportion as profits & partners do not get a salary
* RUPA 401 (c) the partnership must reimburse a partner for payments made & indemnify a
partner for liabilities incurred in the ordinary course of partnership bizz
*RUPA §401(f) partners are entitled to a repayment of any capital contributions or advances
made to the partnership
Kovacik v. Reed
F: Kovacik told Reed he’d invest all the money if Reed did all the labor & that the profits would be
shared 50/50, but nothing was said about losses being split 50/50
- Partnership lost money & Kovacik demanded 50% $ back
I: If losses were never discussed, is the partner who only contributed labor liable? NO
R: When there is no agreement for allocation of losses, it is only divided equally if both parties
contributed capital. If one contributed capital & the other labor, neither is liable to the other for
contribution of the loss sustained
Gimlet Hypo: Alex is speeding and hits a pedestrian while driving to meet a potential new -a&d
advertiser who wants to sponsor Gimlet’s programming.
1. Is Gimlet responsible for the pedestrian’s losses?
2. Is Matt responsible for the pedestrian’s losses?
If You Are Trying to Hold a Good Partner Liable for a Bad Partner’s Acts
F. Dissolution: Refers to the process of a partner leaving the partnership, liquidating & winding up
a partnership
Dissociation: refers to when a partner wants to terminate their right to be in the
partnership RUPA 603 but it does not necessarily terminate the partnership/start the
wind-up. RUPA §602(a): a partner may dissociate at any time
Under UPA, when P leaves PS, it is dissolved, even if the remaining partners continue the
bizz (in which case the new PS is formed among the remaining partners)
In analyzing the effect of dissociation on the rights of the partners, a key issue is whether
the dissociation was "rightful" or "wrongful", and resolution of that issue often depends
on the nature of the partnership
o Generally, "rightful" when it is accomplished without violating the agreement
between the partners
Fischer v. Fischer
Winding Up
Default Member Mgmt; Op Agmt must specify if Mgr Mgmt. DLLCA 18-402; Stat mgmt
rules can be changed by agmt. DLCCA 18-1101(b)
Rights in Member-Mgd Rts allocated in proportion of % of interest in profits; Decisions by majority vote.
LLC DLLCA 18-402
Rightsts in Manager- Whatever the op agmt says. DLLCA 18-402
Mgd LLC
Authority Unless otherwise provided in LLC Agmt, each member/mgr has auth to bind LLC.
DLLCA 18-402
Problem 3-3: DLLCA governs – is the partnership liable for Carder using the customer’s email
addresses “unless otherwise provided in an LLC Ag. Each member and manager has the
authority to bind the LLC”
- but this is a managed member LLC with Drew as the managing partner. So it seems that she
does not have the authority to bind bc we give it do drew, but she probably has apparent
authority
- so the LLC can be bound through by an apparent agency theory through apparent
authority and be liable to a 3p even if Amanda did not have actual authority to bind the
LLC
Taghipour v. Jerez
F: The Articles of Organization designated Jerez as the manager of the LLC. The OA stated that
no loans could be made on LLC’s behalf unless authorized by resolution of all members. Jerez
obtained a loan on behalf of the LLC without other member’s consent & he failed to make the
payments.
R: If two statutes conflict, the provision more specific in application governs over the more
general provision
* here a state statute said that if a manager of an LLC executed a mortgage its valid and
binding on the company.
o Policy: 3rd party is more innocent and thought Jerez had the authority to take out
loans & members chose to elect Jerez
LLC Liability
RULLCA § 304(a) and DLLCA § 303(a): members of an LLC are not personally liable for any
obligation of the LLC simply because they are members or managers
o Members and managers are responsible for their own acts but are not personally liable for
acts of other members
Piercing the Viel: Corporate equity doctrine that has been applied in the LLC context to circumvent
limited liability and hold members personally liable. Personal liability will be imposed when owners have
failed to treat the business entity as a separate legal entity and there is an overall element of injustice or
unfairness
(a) Alter Ego: did they treat the corporation as an extension of themselves? Did they fail to follow
the formalities we usually see in a corp?
(b) Overall element of injustice or unfairness: were they using it as an instrument of fraud? Did they
abuse the corporate forum?
No factor is dispositive
a. Whether the corporation was adequately capitalized for the corporate undertaking
b. Whether the corporation was solvent
c. Whether dividends were paid
d. Whether corporate records were kept,
e. Whether officers and directors functioned properly
f. Other corporate formalities were observed
Point is we don’t want to let ppl who are using the LLC for malfeasance get away w it
We do not need to find that the LLC was formed fraudulently to pierce the viel.
NetJets
F: Zimmerman was the sole manager of LHC, which owns NetJets. LHC didn’t pay their debt and NetJets
went out of business. NetJets sued LHC and tried to hold Zimmerman personally liable. NetJets presented
evidence that, among other things, Zimmerman took more money out of LHC’s account than he put in,
continued withdrawing money for personal uses even while refusing to pay debts LHC owed to NetJets
I: Can NetJets hold Zimmerman personally liable for the debts of LHC?
R: Whether the two entities operated as a single economic entity such that it would be inequitable for the
court to uphold a legal distinction between them
(1) whether the entities in question operated as a single economic entity
(2) whether there was an overall element of injustice or unfairness
A: (1) He often withdrew money from LHC account for personal use and transferred money into LHC
account from his persona. Many withdrawals from LHC’s account were for personal expenses, including
a residence, phone and cleaning bills, a car, and health insurance for his family. Much of the flight time
used by LHC under the lease with NetJets was used by Zimmerman and his family for personal trips. Had
sole control over all financial decisions
(2) It’d be unfair to NetJets for Zimm’s behavior to continue. The LLC was a façade for the dominant
shareholder’s money. (can use the same factors for alter ego)
Fiduciary Duties
DLLC 1101(c) OA may expand/restrict/eliminate duties except for implied contractual covenant
of good faith and fair dealing for members or managers to the extent they have those duties to the
LLC, other members/managers or another person that is member of LLC OA
DLLCA 1101(e) OA “may provide for the limitation or elimination of any and all liabilities for
breach of contract and breach of duties (including fiduciary duties)…; provided, that a [LLC
OA] may not limit or eliminate liability for any act or omission that constitutes a bad faith
violation of the implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.”
o Absent express agreement in OA to the contrary, fiduciary duties apply. 18-1104
o Can’t be unreasonable
Miller v. HCP
F: The members explicitly agreed, under the OA, to waive all fiduciary duties, to one another
and from the managers to the members. They claimed that BoD structured the sale so they would
get the most profit and fuck everyone else in the waterfall. The plaintiffs filed an action seeking
relief under the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing inhering to an LLC operating
agreement
Issue: Does implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing imply terms in a K that address
development of contractual gaps that neither party to the K anticipated at time of contracting?
Transferability/ Admission
DLLCA 702: LLC interest is assignable in whole or in part (except as provided in the OA), but
the assignee shall have no right to participate in the management of the bizz unless all members
consent for them to become a member
- Member ceases to have power to exercise any rights or powers of a member upon
assignment of their interest
- Until assignee becomes a member, they will have no liability as a member.
DLCCA 301(b)(2): In the case of an assignee of a limited liability company interest, as provided
in § 18-704(a) of this title and at the time provided in and upon compliance with the limited
liability company agreement or, if the limited liability company agreement does not so provide,
when any such person's permitted admission is reflected in the records of the limited liability
company.
Assignee cannot establish membership simply by pointing to “records of the LLC” There
must first be a “permitted admission” under 704
o As provided in the LLC OA; or
o Unless otherwise provided in the LLC OA, upon the aff. Vote or written consent
of all the members of the LLC
The need for formal member action comports with the policies concerning
assignment of LLC interest & assignees possible admission
One is generally entitled to select their bizz associates in a closely
held enterprise like an LLC
Dissolution
DLLCA 801: Curbs the ability to withdraw absent a provision for the right of withdrawal in the OA
-> so perpetual unless: (1) 2/3 of members vote for dissolution, (2) there are no other members (3)
judicial dissolution
DLLCA 802: On application by or for a member or manager or the court may decree dissolution of an
LLC whenever it is not reasonably practical to carry on the business in conformity of the OA
+ the Haley v. Talcott case gave us that extra “and no sufficient exit mechanism” juice we got from
corp law
Haley v. Talcot
F: Each owned 50%. LLC took out a mortgage to finance the purchase and both Haley and
Talcott signed personal guaranties for the entire amount of the mortgage. Falling out +
relationship deteriorated. Talcott tried to get Haley to resign from his employment at Redfin, but
Haley took the attempt as a breach of their Redfin contract. Stuck in a stalemate bc both owned
50%. LLC contained exit mechanism in the event the parties could no longer operate together.
But both wanted to keep the LLC for themselves and the exit mechanism didn’t say which party
would keep the LLC in the event of a falling out & exit mechanism wouldn’t relieve Haley of his
personal liabilities on the mortgage even if Talcott retained full control of the LLC.
Issue: May a ct dissolve an LLC when it has an exit mechanism written into an LLC agreement?
Holding: Yes. Dissolved LLC. may dissolve an LLC when it is not reasonably practical to carry
on the business in conformity with the LLC agreement and the LLC agreement does not provide
a sufficient exit mechanism. (DLLCA §18-802)
§273 pre-reqs
1. Must have two 50% stockholders
2. Must be engaged in a joint venture
3. Must be unable to agree upon whether to discontinue the bizz or dispose of assets
If the exit mech is sufficient, courts will not interfere
o Here, the agreement does not state who would regain control, it also does not relieve
Haley of his personal guarantee on the mortgage so it’d be super inequitable to leave
Talcott in control of the LLC while Haley remains personally liable
In re Carlisle
F: Wu Parents & Tom James formed Carlisle LLC (DE). Executed initial LLC Agreement which
they said would work on to create more detailed one. After the Company formed, WU Parent
transferred member interest to a wholly owned subsidiary, Wu Sub. James knew of transfer, did
not object, and treated WU Sub as a member from that point on. For purposes of the DLLCA, the
transfer rendered WU Sub an assignee, not member. WU Parent and James never reached
agreement new operating agreement. Disputes arose & rel. deteriorated. Both then recognized
couldn’t manage Company jointly and that one side needed to buy out the other. WU Sub filed
this action to dissolve the Company. James moved to dismiss bc WU Sub was an assignee, and
that an assignee lacked standing to petition for statutory dissolution under DLLCA §18-802.
I: Did WU Parent or WU Sub have the standing to dissolve the Company?
H: No
R:
o Lacked standing: Wu Sub + Parent lacked standing to seek statutory dissolution
of the LLC bc DLLCA 18-802 permitted only members and managers to do so.
o Not members: Neither WU Parent or Sub was a manager. WU Parent lost its
status as a member when it assigned its member interest to the subsidiary. The
transfer made the subsidiary an assignee, not a member. James did not vote or
give written consent to admit the subsidiary as a member to have “permitted
admission” under 704(a)
o BUT other remedies: § 18-802 was not the sole extra-contractual means of
dissolving an LLC. WU Sub had standing to seek dissolution in equity because
the real relationship between it and James, the sole remaining member, was a
joint venture in which they were equal participants.
Equity comes in when there is no reasonable method to resolve in the law
IV. Corporations
A. Incorporation
1. Draft Articles of Incorporation/Certificate of Incorporation (DE)/Charter
Required DGCL§102(a)/MBCA § 2.02(A)
Name of the corporation – has to denote it’s a corp. or inc.
Describe the various classes of shares, number of each, and the rights, privileges,
limitations and preferences of each (series & class)
o Cannot issue more unless the charter is amended
Name & Address of a registered agent AND incorporator in the state of incorporation
Purpose which can be super general like “to engage in any lawful purpose for which a
corporation may be organized” DGCL §102(a)(3)
These are public documents for 3ps to know who to sue and shit.
Highly recommended provisions (bc its harder to amend the charter)
Initial Directors: if not named, the incorporators must hold a meeting to elect.
However, if the power of the incorporate terminates after filing the charter, the
charter needs to name the initial director/s
Voting provisions (like the supermaj shit)
Management Provisions: helps insulate directors from shareholder-initiated changes/
makes it harder for outsiders to gain control
Bylaw Provisions: any required or permitted to be in the bylaws
o Prevents the amendment of the provision without approval by both the BoD &
shareholders
Indemnification & Exculpatory Clauses (limit liability of directors for money
damages)
Not Required: duration or initial capital
Internal Affairs Doctrine: the place of incorporation governs the relationship among the parties
in the corporation (but not if there is a k dispute between diff corps)
Post Incorporation
o Bylaws: internal document which govern the basic internal operations of the corporation
and its relations with its shareholders, officers, and directors
o DGCL§109/MBCA § 10.20: shareholders have exclusive power to amend bylaws,
unless articles permit board nonexclusive power to amend. Also need to be
consistence with Board’s power to manage the corporation. This is a check on the
board’s powers
o The existence of the corporation does not depend on the maintenance of corporate
formalities, but the benefits of limited liability may depend on the maintenance of
corporate formality
o Promoter Liability: Promoters participate in the formation of the corporation, usually in
arranging compliance and entering into Ks. promoters are personally liable on all pre-
incorporation contracts
Grant v. Mitchell
F: Grant, Mitchell, and Meltzer formed a DE LLC. Grant owned 42%, others owned 29% each.
Grant invested the money and Mitchell invested sweat equity. Grant made himself the
incorporator of Epasys in the charter. Some issues came up and he tried to name himself the sole
director and everyone else was like no we are all also directors
o One document elects Grant as Prez & Mitchell as Treasurer that was made by the atty. It
had two signature lines for each and no one signed it, but it indicates that atty thought
they were both directors.
o Another document was sent to be signed by both. By state law, this document must
identify the directors & be signed by both & they both did
o No evidence they formally met as a BoD, but they met on a regular basis to disucss bizz
H: Grant & Mitchel are the initial directors.
R: Lack of corporate formalities does not mean no BoD was formally elected after incorporation.
Once incorporator signs a document that clearly names the initial BoD, that’s it bro.
A: (1) Grant probably didn’t create a 1 person board as incorporator bc even his testimony
admits he told the other guy one of them would be on the board. (2) the signature on the doc he
don’t remember is reliable evidence that clearly listed them as both directors, it wasn’t hard to
read
Grimes v. Alteon
I: Whether an alleged oral promise to a stockholder by the CEO to sell 10% of the corp’s future
private stock + the stockholder saying back that they are going to buy it, if there is no approval
from the board of directors and it was not memorialized in a written instrument
H: No. Board of Directors has exclusive authority to issue stock and regulate a corporation’s
capital structure.
if Grimes’ agreement, that lacks all formalities, is allowed, it will encumber BoD
judgement or ability to run the capital structure of the corporation. When
investors are contracting to invest capital or purchase stock, statutory scheme
requires board approval and that there be written instrument that evidences those
arrangement
2. Directors= statutory power to manage the corporation DGCL §141(a)/MBCA §8.01(a)
Each public corporation must have a Board of Directors, but closely held corporations
can do away with this requirement by an agreement among the shareholders
o Inside director= individual who works with the company, but who also serves
as a director such as CEOs
o Outside director= not an employee, they do not work with the company
o Independent directors= not employees who do not have substantial ties to the
corporation
o Disinterested directors= directors without a financial interest in the relevant
transaction
Board Size
o One director is enough MBCA §8.03(a) and the number of directors (or range) is
usually fixed by the charter or a bylaw § MBCA §8.03(c)
o Sach public corporation must have a board of directors, while closely held
corporations can do away with the board of directors by agreement among the
shareholders DGCL §§ 141(a) and 351:
o Elected by shareholders to supervise the officers
Elections: directors elected at annual meeting of shareholders MBCA §8.03(d)
o Plurality win means that there are more votes for him than other candidates
o Staggered boards: classes of directors are re-elected for different multi-year
terms. This is a powerful anti-takeover device because it would take someone
many years to get control of the board. Put this in the charter since it is harder
to amend. (bc the typical rule is annual ellections)
Meetings of the Board
o Eliminated the requirement that board meetings must meet within the state of incorporation
MBCA §8.20(a); DGCL §141(g):
o permit directors to be considered "present" at a meeting (even if not physically present) if the
director participates in the meeting by telephone or other similar communications device that
allows the directors to hear each other MBCA §8.20(b); DGCL §141(i):
o MBCA §8.21; DGCL §141(f): permit directors to act without holding meeting
o Written consent if all the directors consent the action, as long as charter or bylaws
do not provide otherwise
Common in close corporations
o Directors may act in any meeting held regularly or a special meeting. MBCA § 8.22
o Directors may waive notice of a meeting, either in writing or simply by participating in the
meeting MBCA § 8.23
o Model Act §8.24(a) and (b); DGCL §141(b): majority of directors satisfies statutory
requirements; but the charter can specify more or less than a majority
o Model Act §8.24(c); DGCL §141(b): majority vote is required to act unless otherwise
prescribed in the charter
Board Committees
A Board may act through committees composed of one or more directors
o Committees cannot act on items that require shareholder vote, nor may a committee
adopt, amend, or repeal bylaws of the corporation. DGCL § 141(c)(2)
o Cannot fill vacancies on the board or authorize or deauthorize dividends, except
pursuant to formulas the whole board has adopted. MBCA §8.25(e)
o Committees cannot act on items that require shareholder vote, nor may a committee adopt,
amend, or repeal bylaws of the corporation DGCL §141(c)(2)
Removal of Directors
Generally, directors may be removed from the board by shareholders, with or without cause,
unless the Charter provides that only for cause
o Can be removed with judicial proceeding for fraudulent, dishonest conduct, or
gross abuse of authority MBCA §8.09
o If you have a staggered board, then only for cause unless charter provides
otherwise DCGL §141(k).
How do you amend the charter?
1. Board of Directors adopt a resolution saying they want to change the Charter
2. Board then needs to care a shareholder meeting for them to approve it. All the proper
meeting calling rules need to be followed
3. Shareholders approve
4. The company then files the amended certification of incorporation with the Secretary of
State
Alderstein
F: On July 9th, Alderstein founder of Corp, called a board meeting to discuss an arbitration issue.
Then directors presented him with the proposal for Reich to take control, which he rejected.
Board majority voted to issue Reich supervoting preferred stock, giving Reich majority. Then,
Board voted to remove Alderstein for cause as CEO and strip him of Chairman title
I: Was this a proper meeting of BoD? If so, will the decision to keep Alderstein uninformed
about the Reich proposal prior to the meeting invalidate the board approval?
H: The meeting was called properly, but the action taken must be invalidated.
Piercing the Veil
Will happen most likely in a tort cause because tort victims don’t get a chance up to negotiate
with shareholders about who should be liable. K creditors did have a chance to negotiate the
amount & risk upfront
1. Check first for direct liability: people will always be liable for their own torts.
Some Ks will insist on personal guarantees from shareholders. But absent this,
the injured party will have to get past corp. veil to recover
2. Corporate Formalities & Alter Ego
3. Showing of Inequity/Unfairness
a. courts almost always pierce when there is a material misrepresentation and
rarely pierce without one
b. the corporation doesn’t need to be fraudulently created, just engaging in
fraudulent acts
c. Nicole says here we require direct proof of a shame or fraud or crime unlike
LLc.
d. Best case for π is to suggest unjust enrichment
Closely Held Corporations= a corporation without a ready market for its shares
o Shareholders cannot easily sell their shares so there is no easy exit strategy
o Shareholders receive a salary from the corporation bc they are also often
employees
o
A. Shareholder Agreements
Setting up a shareholder’s agreement to allocate control is (1) simple and (2) a way to protect
minority shareholders because majority has complete control
(1) Vote Pooling Agreement: obligates shareholders to vote in a specified manner;
expressly allowed DGCL§218(c)
Under straight voting, the candidates who obtain plurality win. Under
cumulative voting, the votes necessary to elect one or more directors is fixed by
formula.
Some words: Incorporating and receiving shares proportionate to capital
contributions would be a grave mistake for shareholders who barely contributed
as they would become minority shareholders.
o The majority shareholder would elect all the directors under straight
voting & these are the directors who make all the management
decisions. It would affect the minority shareholders as they would be
powerless
Salamone v. Gorman
I: May a shareholder agreement modify default rule that a majority of relevant shares can elect a
Board Members? YES
In Delaware, you need to follow a set of rules to set up a shareholder agreement for
closely held corporations that can limit board authority.
Rule: A voting agreement, if it is to be given the effect that deprives a majority of shareholders of power
to elect directors at an annual meeting or through written consent must quite clearly intend to have it. A
court ought not to resolve doubts in favor of disenfranchisement. In order to overcome the default rule
and establish a per-capita voting scheme, the party must demonstrate that intent by clear and convincing
evidence
Reasoning: The Voting Agreement did not violate the Delaware General Corporation Law, Del. Code
Ann. tit. 8, § 212(a), because the Agreement provided for a per capita scheme for the designation of two
nominees, who were then elected by a vote of the stockholders consistent with the "one share/one vote"
default rule and the Certificate of Incorporation
Problem 5-1: If there is no shareholder agreement, we can remove with or without cause unless
charter says it has to be for cause (default rule). We can include such a restriction, but we need
to make sure that the putative shareholder sees the restriction before they become a shareholder.
So this restriction is enforceable. If we go 33/33/33 no one has more power than the
other.
If Luke is removed, can Duncan (40%) be entitled to fill the resulting vacancy over
Stewart’s objections? Yes
o Directors can fill vacancies with majority vote.
o Just because Luke loses his seat, doesn’t mean he loses his shares. Can use
shareholder power to appoint
If we kick out one of these directors and require unanimity moving forward, theres
probably going to be deadlock.
B. Transfer Restrictions
Transfer restrictions are widely used to control selection of business associates, to provide
certainty in estate planning, and to ensure that the corporation complies with close corporation
statutes + protect fam bizz
May appear in charter, bylaw, or separate agreement DGCL §202(b)
Requirements: (1) must be noted conspicuously on stock certificates (2) must be
“reasonable” (for a proper purpose)
General Reasonableness Test DGCL §202(c)
o (1) the shareholder must offer the corporation or other shareholders the option to
purchase the shares, either at a price specified by prior agreement or at the price offered
by the prospective third-party purchaser
o (2) the corporation or other shareholders are obligated to purchase the shares (a "buy-
sell" agreement)
o (3) the corporation or other shareholders must approve the transfer of the shares ((a "prior
approval" or "consent" requirement)
o (4) the shareholder is simply prohibited from transferring to certain persons or classes of
persons
Flat prohibitions on transfer are viewed very skeptically by courts and usually would be struck
down as unreasonable
Types of Transfer Restrictions
o Options (right of first refusal, right of first offer)
o Buybacks= gives minority exit so they don’t get stuck
o Consent= you can sell if remaining investors say it’s okay
o Forced sale provision= gives remaining shareholders right to regain control
Most common: buy-sell agreements
o Solve many problems in close corporations
(1) they provide liquidity for shareholders who wish to withdraw
(2) they determine the price of the shares at a time when none of the parties to the
agreement knows which of them will be the sellers and which will be the
purchasers
Thus providing an incentive to all to provide for a "fair" price
(3) they allow the principals of the corporation to plan with some certainty
o Prices in a buy-sell agreement take one of four forms
(1) fixed price: must be updated constantly to reflect the current value of the
shares
(2) book value, the most popular measure because of ease of determination, but it
is based on historical costs and may not reflect true underlying values
(3) appraisal, which has the potential to be very good, but the parties should
decide beforehand on what basis the business should be appraised
(4) formula, which suffers from being very complicated
Henry v. Phixios
F: Henry was fired bc they alledge he was competing with the Co. & this was okay under the
stock transfer restriction. But restrictions were not noted in the stock certificate, so he claims he
was not aware before he bought the stock. Under DGCL §202(a), actual knowledge is required
before.
1. Was the transfer restriction conspicuously noted?
No
2. Was he informed/had actual knowledge before he
joined on? No- then fails under 202(a)
3. Did he affirmatively assent to be bound either
through a vote or through shareholder agreement? No- then fails under 202(b)
Even though he had actual knowledge after signing on; this does not count unless P
affirmatively assented
o No evidence that P was on notice that he was modifying his legal rights when he
acknowledged receipt of the August 10, 2015 email
Problem 5-2
1. No stock of the corp shall be transferred unless approved by Directors thereof
a. Retain control by the remaining shareholders: consent provision
2. If offered for sale, Corp has right of first dibs at no more than book value
a. Providing mechanism for sale gives us certainty and results in less disputes bc it is clear
3. If Corp isn’t interested and can’t afford it, stockholders will be given the chance
4. If they can’t, could be sold to blood members of family
a. Might not be reasonable in this scenario bc uncle is my marriage and it exceeds the goal
of keeping it in the fam
E. Oppression of Minorities
DIRECTORS FIDUCIARY DUTIES
Gagliardi
Facts: π brings a derivative claim on behalf of the corporation because he claims that board made
some questional business decisions since they outsted him as Chairman of the Board.
If there is no conflict of interest, the director is not responsible for decisions made
in good faith. We need to incentivize directors to take informed risks and we do
not want to penalize them for taking a risk, even if it turns out badly
Issue: Is an independent and disinterested corporate director liable for a corporate loss if the
director acted in good faith?
Holding: No
The standard of liability is gross negligence as to whether a business judgement reached
by a BoD was an informed one
What do courts look at to assess if it has been violated? The process of reaching
the decision based on the information that was reasonably available π cannot
state a claim for relief no matter how foolish the decision may appear if it was
done through and informed process and in good faith.
As in Gagliardi, the plaintiff here only believes that there were poor business
transactions made by the board without explaining why the facts demonstrate they
were uninformed or grossly negligence. To permit the possibility of director
liability on that basis would be very destructive of shareholder welfare in the
long-term.
Unlike Gagliardi, the plaintiff here has pointed to facts that demonstrate that the
board failed to gather the requisite information to make this business decision,
rather than just expressing dissatisfaction with the board’s decisions.
Van Gorkom
Van Gorkom Elements: Directors breached their duty of care by their failure to inform
themselves of all information reasonably available to them and relevant to their decision to
recommend the merger and by their failure to disclose all material information such as a
reasonably stockholder would consider important in deciding whether to approve.
Directors failed to inquire into Van Gorkom’s role in forcing the “sale” of the Company and
in establishing the per share purchase price and were uninformed as to the intrinsic value of
the company
o Two-hour meeting without prior notice & there being no emergency
o Did not inquire into the fairness of the $55 price & value of company. Van Gorkom
had not read merger documents and he suggested the $55
o CFO did not evaluate offer
o No investment bank advisory opinion
o Directors were not given documentation to support adequacy
o Failed to review merger docs- No written document with terms of the merger
So we need to disclose all material facts (objective standard)
- look for length of meeting, negotiation, amount of work put in before giving board materials,
how came up with price, was it time pressure
Board members can rely on DGCL 141(e) and be protected by relying in good faith upon records
reports or statements. But in Van Gorkom no investigation was done so can’t rely on what was
said
Necessary conditions predicate for director oversight liability: (a) the directors utterly failed to implement
any reporting or information system or controls OR (b) having implemented such a system or controls,
consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations thus disabling themselves from being informed of
risks or problems requiring their attention
Disney (2006)
F: The Walt Disney Company (Disney) hired Michael Ovitz b/c friends with CEO and chair of
board as its president. Ovitz was founder of a talent agency (CAA) where he made 20mil a year
so he contracted for generous payment w/ Disney. The board of director’s compensation
committee approved an employment agreement with Ovitz, which contained a non-fault
termination provision providing that if Ovitz left his employment with Disney through no fault of
his own, he was entitled to generous payments under a non-fault termination (NFT).
If NFT, receive $1 million per year and the annual bonus payment of $7.5 million for the
rest of the K term
$10M termination fee, and acceleration of his options for 3 million shares
He was terminated after 14 months and received $130 million.
Issue: Is bad faith properly defined as an intentional dereliction of duty and conscious disregard
for one’s responsibilities?
Holding: Yes. And bad faith is not gross negligence. So all their arguments fail.
Three possibilities for bad faith
Subjective bad faith – “actual intent to do harm”
o “That such conduct constitutes classic, quintessential bad faith is a proposition so well
accepted in the liturgy of fiduciary law that it borders on axiomatic.”
Lack of due care – what Ps in Disney argued as gross negligence
o “However, gross negligence, including the failure to inform of reasonably available
material facts, cannot by itself constitute bad faith, since both the Delaware statutes and
the common law distinguish between conduct that is grossly negligent and conduct that is
not in good faith.
While there are best practices and none of them are implemented, it is not enough to overcome the BJ
rule. It’s not failure to implement best practices, it is a systematic utter failure to exercise oversight before
they can be subject to liability.
The law presumes that in making a business decision the directors of a corporation acted on an informed
basis, in good faith and in the honest belief that the action taken was in the best interest of the company. If
that is shown, the burden shifts to the director defendants to demonstrate that the challenged act or
transaction was entirely fair to the corporation and its shareholders
Stone v. Ritter
F: AmSouth failed to report suspicious account activity and did not comply with federal anti-money
laundering requirements; “Classic Caremark claim”
Disney: failure to act in good faith requires conduct that is qualitatively different from, and more culpable
than, the conduct giving rise to a violation of the fiduciary duty of care (gross neg)
Fiduciary intentionally acts with a purpose other than that of advancing the best interest
of the corporation
Fiduciary acts with the intent to violate applicable positive law
Intentionally fails to act in the face of a known duty to act, demonstrating a conscious
disregard for his duties – apparently in Caremark we held this was necessary to establish
liability for director oversight
The fiduciary duty of loyalty is not limited to cases involving a financial or other cognizable fiduciary
conflict of interest. It also encompasses cases where the fiduciary fails to act in good faith.
Where directors fail to act in the fact of a known duty to act, thereby demonstrating a conscious disregard
for their responsibilities, they breach the duty of loyalty by failing to discharge that fiduciary obligation in
good faith.
Analysis
They did have a reasonable reporting system set up to alert them of things is just employee fuck up
Conflicts of Interest !!
Conflicts are endemic
o To prohibit all conflict-of-interest transactions in this context might sharply limit the pool
of people who would be willing to serve as directors of America’s public companies
What is a conflict-of-interest transaction? Any transaction in which a controlling shareholder, director, or
officer of the corporation has a material financial or personal interest that does not align with the
corporation’s interest.
DGCL § 144 provide that conflict-of-interest transactions are not invalid IF: (most courts require 1 or 2 +
3
(1) Process: The material facts as to the director's or officer's relationship or interest and as to
the contract or transaction are disclosed or are known to the board of directors or the
committee, and the board or committee in good faith authorizes the contract or transaction by
the affirmative votes of a majority of the disinterested directors, even though the
disinterested directors be less than a quorum; or
(2) Process: The material facts as to the director's or officer's relationship or interest and as
to the contract or transaction are disclosed or are known to the shareholders entitled to vote
thereon, and the contract or transaction is specifically approved in good faith by vote of the
shareholders; or
(3) Substance: The contract or transaction is fair as to the corporation as of the time it is
authorized, approved or ratified, by the board of directors, a committee or the shareholders.
Self-Dealing
Directors who stand on both sides of a transaction have “the burden of establishing its entire
fairness, sufficient to pass the test of careful scrutiny by the courts.” Entire fairness can be
proved only where directors demonstrate fair dealing and fair price. Fair dealing addresses the
questions of when the transaction was timed, how it was initiated, structured, negotiated,
disclosed to the directors, and how the approvals of directors and the stockholders were obtained.
Fair price assures the transaction was substantively fair by examining “the economic and
financial considerations.”
Obv as π we want to bring DOL bc we get no BJR & ∆ has to show entire fairness.
Shareholder Ratification
We need this to do that DCGL § 144 (2). We need material facts as to the directors relationship
or interest to be disclosed duh ;) “required disclosure” to mean a disclosure of (i) the existence
and nature of the director’s conflicting-interest, along with (ii) all facts known to the director,
respecting the subject matter of the transaction, which a director free of the conflicting-interest
would reasonably believe to be material in deciding whether to proceed with the transaction
Zuckerburg
F: A stockholder of Facebook, Inc., Ernesto Espinoza, challenged the decision of Facebook's board of
directors in 2013 to approve compensation for its outside, non-management directors. This comprised six
of the eight directors on Facebook's board at the time. Espinoza asserted claims against the defendant
directors, Zuckerberg et al., for breach of their fiduciary
I: Can a disinterested controlling stockholder ratify a transaction approved by interested board of
directors without adhering to corporate formalities for taking stockholder action and thereby shifting the
standard of review from entire fairness to BJ? NO
o It is therefore of no moment that Zuckerberg undisputedly controls Facebook. Although he can
outvote all other stockholders and thus has the power to effect any stockholder action he chooses,
he still must adhere to corporate formalities (and his fiduciary obligations) when doing so,
because his rights as a stockholder are no greater than the rights of any other stockholder—he
simply holds more voting power.
o Under Delaware law, stockholders can assent to a corporate decision by formal vote or written
consent. Requires prompt notice of such consent to nonconsenting stockholders
H: Motion for summary judgement is denied and the entire fairness standard applies
Corporate Opportunities
In addition to oversight and instances of self-dealing, courts have identified other contexts in
which the duty of loyalty is relevant
o One of these is the diversion of corporate opportunities for the benefit of a corporate
director or officer
o These cases involve competition between the corporation and the director or officer
As an initial matter, the plaintiff claiming redress under the ‘‘corporate opportunity’’ doctrine
must prove that the opportunity was a corporate opportunity
o Courts have identified three tests of corporate opportunity:
(1) The ‘‘interest or expectancy’’ test, which precludes acquisition by corporate
officers of the property of a business opportunity in which the corporation has a
‘‘beachhead’’ in the sense of a legal or equitable interest or expectancy growing
out of a pre-existing right or relationship;
(2) the ‘‘line of business’’ test, which characterizes an opportunity as corporate
whenever a managing officer becomes involved in an activity intimately or
closely associated with the existing or prospective activities of the corporation;
and
(3) the ‘‘fairness’’ test, which determines the existence of a corporate opportunity
by applying ethical standards of what is fair and equitable under the
circumstances
How did the director learn about the opportunity? Was the company in a financial place to go for the
opportunity?
Duty of Loyalty and Corporate Opportunities
o Directors and officers breach the duty of loyalty when they divert corporate opportunities
to themselves or their benefit and are competing with the corporation unless
Offer to corp first or ask for consent after disclosure
Waived: DGCL 122
Waived MBCA 2.02 (narrower, requires advance consent)
Dweck
RS: The doctrine ‘‘holds that a corporate officer or director may not take a business opportunity
for his own if: (1) the corporation is financially able to exploit the opportunity; (2) the
opportunity is within the corporation’s line of business; (3) the corporation has an interest or
expectancy in the opportunity; and (4) by taking the opportunity for his own, the corporate
fiduciary will thereby be placed in a position inimical to his duties to the corporation.’
1. Demand Futility
a. In Delaware, the Court must decide whether
i. (1) The directors are disinterested and independent; and
ii. (2) The challenged transaction was otherwise the product of a valid
exercise of business judgment.
Therefore, demand will not be excused unless π can show a reasonable doubt about
whether the board was either (1) disinterested or independent OR (2) entitled to
protections of BJR
Prong (1) Beam Whether a reasonable doubt exists as to the disinterestedness or independence of
a majority of the board in responding to a demand. Aka could the board have acted
independently?
o Lack of independence: Director is so “beholden” to an interested director that his
or her “discretion would be sterilized.”
o Evaluation of personal friendship and independence: “To render a director unable
to consider demand, a relationship must be of a bias-producing nature”
“Allegations of mere personal friendship or a mere outside business
relationship, standing alone, are insufficient to raise a reasonable doubt
about a director's independence”
In evaluating whether a director is independent for the purposes of determining whether demand
is excused, one of the key questions is whether that individual is dominated and controlled by an
interested director. If they are more willing to risk their reputation, then
Prong (2) π has to plead particularized facts creating a reasonable doubt that a majority of the
board:
(a) Was adequately informed when making the challenged decision, or
(b) Honestly, and in good faith, believed that the challenged decision was in the best
interests of the corporation?