Posted by
Peter Atkins, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, on Friday April
11, 2014 at
9:01 am
Editor’s
Note:
Peter Atkins
is a partner of corporate and securities law matters at Skadden,
Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. This post is based on a Skadden,
Arps memorandum by Mr. Atkins. The views expressed in this post
are those of Peter Atkins, a senior partner of the firm, and are
not presented as those of the firm. This post is part of the
Delaware law
series, which is cosponsored by the Forum and
Corporation Service Company; links to other posts in the series
are available
here. |
In its
recent decision in
In Re Rural Metro Corporation Stockholders Litigation,
[1] the
Delaware Court of Chancery, in a footnote, touches on what it means
for directors to be “fully protected” by §141(e) of the Delaware
General Corporation Law when they rely on information, opinions,
reports or statements provided to them by officers, employees, board
committees or experts. While not central to the Rural Metro
decision, this is an issue that should be of interest to conscientious
public company directors. Below I suggest that, as currently applied,
§141(e) does not sufficiently protect conscientious directors, examine
why that may be so, highlight the need for alternative approaches to
provide truly full protection without undermining other important
conduct imperatives Delaware law imposes on directors and others, and
offer some suggestions toward that end.
Life as a
Public Company Director
Serving as a
director of a public company these days is serious business. Directors are
supposed to act in a disinterested and independent manner, know their
fiduciary duties of loyalty, care and disclosure, and abide by them in the
myriad factual circumstances that can arise. Moreover, they are
increasingly subject to adequacy and accountability assessments through,
among other means, shareholder litigation, activist shareholder campaigns
(including election contests), corporate governance initiatives, proxy
advisory firm policies and recommendations, government oversight and media
commentary. Reputations as well as pocket books are at stake. So it should
be no surprise to a public company director these days that he or she
needs to be demonstrably conscientious in performing the job of a
director.
Happily,
there are a great many directors who understand and subscribe to this
basic point—and not simply because it is drilled into them repeatedly by
their lawyers. They are willing to serve in the belief that,
notwithstanding the enhanced reputational and monetary risk,
conscientiously trying to do the right thing will protect them in the end.
Reliance on
Others
Key to that
judgment is the ability to rely responsibly on others. This commonsensical
point is embedded in U.S. corporate law. A prime example is §141(e), which
provides, in part:
A
member of the board of directors … shall, in the performance of such
members’ duties, be fully protected in relying in good faith upon …
such information, opinions, reports or statements presented to the
corporation by any of the corporation’s officers or employees or
committees of the board of directors, or by any other person as to
matters the member reasonably believes are within such other
person’s professional or expert competence and who has been selected
with reasonable care by or on behalf of the corporation. |
This
seemingly straightforward statutory protection provides important and
appropriate comfort for conscientious directors, who cannot be expected to
be able to affirm the existence, accuracy or completeness of much of the
important information involved in board decision-making, including the
opinions of management and outside experts and the bases for them. So, for
example, it would seem that a conscientious director—that is, one who acts
in good-faith reliance on the advice received from a financial advisor
reasonably believed to be a competent expert and selected with reasonable
care—would be “fully protected” from a claim of breach of the director’s
fiduciary duty in relying on that advice, both against harm to reputation
and monetary liability.
The Meaning
of “Fully Protected”—Rural Metro Footnote 13
Not so fast.
As usual, the devil is in the details—and the details here involve the
meaning of “fully protected.” In its recent decision in Rural Metro,
the Delaware Court of Chancery describes the protection afforded by
§141(e) and, in so doing, highlights a zone of inadequate protection for
conscientious directors.
Section
141(e) was not at issue in the case. However, in presenting its analysis
the Court thought §141(e) supportive of the proposition that directors
could be found to have breached their fiduciary duty even if exculpated
from monetary liability by a charter provision adopted under DGCL
§102(b)(7). Accordingly, the Court referred to §141(e) in footnote 13, as
follows:
Along
similar lines, if the directors followed a process or reached a
result falling outside the range of reasonableness, but did so in
reliance on the advice of experts, they could be found to have
breached their fiduciary duties under the applicable standard of
review and yet be “fully protected” against liability under Section
141 of the DGCL. 8 Del. C. §141(e) [citations omitted] |
A Clash of
Legitimate Interests
This is a
troubling proposition. The Court defines “fully protected” uncomfortably
narrowly. Notwithstanding that the conscientious director adheres to the
statutory standards for selection of and reliance on an expert, and
presumably takes no decision that falls outside the range of
reasonableness except in reliance on the expert’s advice, the director is
“fully protected” only from liability but not from a finding of a breach
of fiduciary duty when it follows such advice. To put the point as a
question: If conscientious directors properly engage an expert financial
advisor to run a sale process for their company and properly follow its
advice, why should they be said to have breached their fiduciary duty
based on following the advice from the advisor (whether just poor advice
or motivated by the interests of the advisor) that later is found by a
court to fall outside the range of reasonableness? The question seems
particularly apt in light of the Court’s own observation in Rural Metro:
“Directors are not expected to have the expertise to determine a
corporation’s value for themselves, or to have the time or ability to
design and carry out a sale process. Financial advisors provide these
expert services.”
[2]
The answer
from a legal analysis standpoint is tied to the enhanced scrutiny judicial
standards of review developed by the Delaware courts and applied in
certain circumstances—the Revlon standard, applied in change of
control transactions; the Unocal/Unitrin standard, applied to
defensive responses to threatened changes of control; and the Blasius
standard, applied to actions impairing shareholder voting rights. Each
involves judicial application of a test beyond the informed, honest belief
by directors that they are acting in the best interests of
shareholders—“reasonableness” in Revlon and Unocal/Unitrin
situations and “compelling justification” in Blasius situations. By
introducing this judicial second-guessing, directors who act with loyalty
and care are, nonetheless, exposed to the risk of breaching their
fiduciary duty by taking actions that do not measure up under the judicial
application of an enhanced scrutiny standard. As “unfair” as that might
seem to some, it has become an integral part of the directorial landscape
in Delaware. Moreover, it is probably the case that in almost all
situations where enhanced scrutiny applies the directors have some
“responsibility” for the claimed unreasonable or not compellingly
justified act.
[3]
However,
footnote 13 of Rural Metro starkly spotlights the visceral trouble
spot in the enhanced scrutiny paradigm—that even the conscientious
director, who does everything right that he or she can, including
relying on the statutorily sanctioned use of necessary third-party
expertise to satisfy the duty of care (or, perhaps, loyalty), may
still be branded as breaching her or his fiduciary duty by following
advice received from the expert.
[4] This is
particularly troubling in the context of §141(e)’s promise that directors
will be “fully protected” if they conscientiously comply.
One might
ask: So what’s the big deal? Section 141(e) protects the conscientious
director’s pocket book. And narrowly interpreting “fully protected”
permits judicial monitoring of director decision-making regarding certain
important corporate circumstances, where a higher standard of review than
the less stringent traditional business judgment standard should apply
because those circumstances place inherent pressures on director
motivations and conduct. If accomplishing this requires burdening
conscientious directors with the risk, and on occasion the reality, of “no
fault fiduciary duty breach,” it’s a price worth paying, isn’t it?
Make “Fully
Protected” Real
I, for one,
do not think so. In any event, it is a question worth debating. Directors
have a genuine interest in their reputations—as do the companies they
serve. And Delaware also has an important interest in not having directors
who have acted conscientiously, in reliance on advice and information on
which they are statutorily permitted to rely, be found to have committed
the ultimate directorial bad act—a breach of fiduciary duty—based on the
misconduct of experts on which the directors were entitled to rely.
Delaware should encourage the service of conscientious directors. The best
way to do so is by really “fully protecting” them—including from a finding
of fiduciary duty breach when they act conscientiously in accordance with
the requirements of §141(e), and from the reputational stain such a
finding would represent.
Close One
Gap, Create Another? A Possible Resolution
Admittedly,
by closing the gap in what it means for directors to be “fully protected”
under §141(e), a loophole arguably could be opened for the misbehaving
advisor and in other remedial circumstances. In the advisor case, as noted
in Rural Metro, a key element of an aiding and abetting finding is
that there is a primary breach of fiduciary duty by directors. If applying
§141(e) to conscientious directors exonerates them from a breach of
fiduciary duty, will this provide an opportunity for the faithless advisor
to escape aiding and abetting liability? One would hope not—or at least
not without an alternate theory of liability applying. More broadly, if in
those enhanced scrutiny cases where the only “outside the range of
reasonableness” circumstances involved §141(e)-permitted reliance by
conscientious directors on experts (or on management, employees or a board
committee), would the exoneration of the directors from any fiduciary duty
breach by virtue of §141(e) leave the Court without a predicate breach for
an injunction or other appropriate remedy relating to the transaction?
Again, one would hope not.
Clearly
those problems should be solved, whether legislatively or judicially. As
creative as Delaware has been over the years, one would hope that a
solution would be fashioned to get the actual bad actor or to order
appropriate equitable relief without the need to have conscientious
directors, acting in reliance on §141(e), declared in breach of their
fiduciary duty.
A useful
expression of this dilemma is contained, in the entire fairness context,
in Valeant Pharm. Int’l v. Jerney,
[5] as
follows:
Jerney
argues that his good faith reliance on the advice of experts
provides a defense, citing 8 Del. C. §141(e). Although
“reasonable reliance on expert counsel is a pertinent factor
in evaluating whether corporate directors have met a standard of
fairness in their dealings with respect to corporate powers,” it’s
existence is not outcome determinative of entire fairness. [Footnote
omitted] To hold otherwise would be to replace this court’s role in
determining entire fairness under 8 Del. C. §144 with that of
various experts hired to give advice to the directors in connection
with challenged transactions, creating a conflict between sections
141(e)
and 144 of the [DGCL]. |
However, the
choice should not and need not be between protecting shareholders (the
ultimate beneficiaries of enhanced scrutiny reviews) and protecting
conscientious directors. One approach that comes to mind for solving this
dilemma is to think of the enhanced scrutiny review not as (or not just
as) a review of director conduct, but as (or also separately as) applying
more rigorous standards to certain types of transactions/circumstances
that must be satisfied even if directors act with loyalty and care. This
conceptual shift would permit continued application of enhanced scrutiny
standards to special circumstance situations (where directors are under
heightened pressure to respond to interests other than solely those of
shareholders) without the need to find a breach of duty by directors to
conclude that the standard was not met. At the same time, it would provide
full scope for testing the directors’ loyalty and care, including in light
of the type of transaction and applicable enhanced scrutiny standard, and
whether claimed reliance on experts (or on officers, employees or board
committees) satisfied the requirements of §141(e). In short, if both the
directors’ conduct and the enhanced scrutiny circumstance itself were
separately tested under the applicable enhanced scrutiny review standard,
there would be no need to choose between innocent shareholders and
conscientious directors.
As to the
aiding and abetting situation, a further fix would be needed, to provide a
substitute for the lack of a predicate breach of fiduciary duty that might
result from the offered solution. Perhaps this could be achieved by
declaring as the basis for a cognizable claim an act taken in furtherance
of material, undisclosed self-interest and knowingly in contravention of
the applicable enhanced scrutiny standard of review that causes a failure
to satisfy such standard of review. I have no doubt the Delaware Bench and
Bar can figure this one out.
An Added
Bonus
Adopting a
complete “fully protected” approach to §141(e) is consistent with
incentivizing directors to do their best, and to be especially attentive
to key information providers (officers, employees, board committees and
experts) in situations where enhanced scrutiny applies—and where the role
of those information providers often is critical. If directors were aware
that, although protected from liability, relying on those information
providers would not necessarily protect the directors from being found to
have engaged in a breach of fiduciary duty due to circumstances relating
to or conduct by any such information provider, to which the directors
should have been more attentive, but that they could gain such
protection if they stayed active and alert, presumably they would be
optimally motivated to do so. In short, directors interested in protecting
their reputations as well as their pocket books would focus carefully on
their duties in the particular situation as they relate to what they
should be asking about and of their information providers.
Endnotes:
[1]
C.A. No. 6350-VCL (Del. Ch. March 7, 2014). In Rural Metro, the
Court found that Rural Metro’s directors (who had settled before trial and
were no longer in the case) breached their fiduciary duty because their
conduct in selling control of the company fell outside the range of
reasonableness required by the enhanced scrutiny standard applied under
Revlon, and that their financial advisor (the only remaining
defendant) knowingly aided and abetted that breach. (To find an aiding and
abetting violation, the Court necessarily needed to find a breach of duty
by the directors.)
(go back)
[2]
Id. at 47.
(go back)
[3]
In Rural Metro, for example, the Court’s analysis was based on its
view that, among other things, separate and apart from what the financial
advisor advised, the board (a) failed to become reasonably informed about
alternatives available to the company by not receiving information about
its value with adequate time to consider the information and (b) failed to
“act reasonably to identify and consider the implications of the
investment banker’s compensation, relationships and potential
conflicts”—and, as a result, effectively took decisions that were not
adequately informed, and in light of the missing information and the lack
of consideration of it, judged to be outside the range of reasonableness.
(go back)
[4]
As indicated in the preceding footnote, Rural Metro is not a case
where the Court concluded the directors had done everything right, but
were directed off course solely by their financial advisors.
(go back)
[5]
2007 WL 2813789, at *14 (Del. Ch. Mar. 1, 2007).
(go back)
All
copyright and trademarks in content on this site are owned by their
respective owners. Other content © 2014 The President and Fellows of
Harvard College. |
|