Corporations - DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS (Fiduciary Duties to shareholders) Flashcards
DUTY OF CARE standard
A director must discharge her duties in GOOD FAITH and with that degree of diligence, care and skill that an “ordinarily prudent person would exercise under similar circumstances in like position.”
Nonfeasance
Breach of duty of care by virtue of doing nothing at all (aka lazy director)
However, director will be held liable only if it can be shown that his breach of duty CAUSED a loss to the corporation
e. g. Justin, director of C Corp fails to attend any board meetings or keep up with business in any way.
- always state above the standard first - an ordinarily prudent person would attend some meetings, BUT he is only liable if his breach caused a LOSS to the corporation (must show breach AND causation - ie his laziness CAUSED the loss)
- e.g. where this might be satisfied is if board member is antitrust expert and board decided to take an action that violates antitrust laws - you would have stopped them if youd shown up
Misfeasance
breach of DUTY OF CARE where Board member affirmatively does something that hurts the corporation
here, causation is easily established, the question is whether or not his decision fell under the “Business Judgment Rule” (BJR) - aka if directors did their homework (deliberated and analyzed) they will not be held liable
E.g. directors of a hot tub co. vote to start a new product line of hot tubs with built-in wine coolers and video cameras. Idea ends up being a disaster and company loses money. are directors liable for breach of “duty of care” ? depends, if they deliberated and anaylzed its prospects and it simply didn’t work out, they won’t be held liable (not judged by results in hindsight)
Business Judgment Rule
Courts will not second-guess the business judgment of directors if exercised in good faith, was reasonably informed, and had a rational basis
i.e. if directors did their homework before making the decision, deliberated and analyzed - then won’t be held liable when the decision turns out badly
(a director is NOT a guarantor of success - don’t have to be right, just prudent)
DUTY OF LOYALTY
A director must act in good faith and with the conscientiousness, fairness, morality and honesty that the law requires of fiduciaries
these cases deal with
(1) CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
(2) SELF-DEALING
why does Bus Judgment rule not apply in “duty of loyalty” cases? bc it cannot apply when there is a CONFLICT OF INTEREST - so whenever see conflict of interest, you know it is a “duty of loyalty” problem
INTERESTED DIRECTOR TRANSACTIONS (ie conflicts of interest)
DUTY OF LOYALTY
This is any deal between the corporation and one of its directors (or business of which its director is also a director or officer or in which he has a substantial financial interest) - CONFLICT OF INTEREST
INTERESTED DIRECTOR TRANSACTIONS will be SET ASIDE UNLESS the director shows either
(1) the deal was FAIR AND REASONABLE to the corporation when approved OR
(2) the material facts and her interest were disclosed or known AND the deal was approved by any of these:
- -(i) SHAREHOLDER ACTION
- -(ii) BOARD APPROVAL by a sufficient vote NOT counting votes of interested directors
- -(iii) UNANIMOUS VOTE of DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS if disinterested directors are insufficient to take a board act
NOTE: Interested directors COUNT TOWARDS A QUORUM and they can participate in the meeting, but as stated before, their vote doesn’t count
e.g. Martha is director of XYZ, inc. If she sells wreaths to the corp, it is an interested director transaction. is she in trouble? depends on if she satisfies the test
Duty of Loyalty Standard - Interested director transactions will be set aside UNLESS the director shows:
(DUTY OF LOYALTY)
either
(1) the deal was fair and reasonable to the corporation when approved OR
(2) the material facts and her interest were disclosed or known AND the deal was approved by any of the following:
- –(a) Shareholder action
- –(b) Board approval by a sufficient vote NOT counting votes of interested directors
- –(c) Unanimous vote of disinterested directors if disinterested directors are insufficient to take a board action
Do interested directors count toward a QUORUM of the board?
DUTY OF LOYALTY
Yes, and they can participate in the meeting but their votes do not count
e.g. X corp has 9 directors. 5 are interested in an interested director transaction. All 9 attend the meeting to consider approving the deal. After appropriate disclosure, what vote can approve the deal?
you need ALL 4 disinterested directors bc if 9 are at meeting would need 5 to take a a valid board action, but can’t here because only 4 are disinterested, therefore, need it to be unanimous
Who sets compensation for DIRECTORS?
The board can set compensation of directors BUT the compensation must be REASONABLE and in GOOD FAITH. If excessive, it is WASTE of corporate assets
COMPETING VENTURES
DUTY OF LOYALTY
A director CANNOT compete with his corporation. He owes a duty of loyalty as a fiduciary.
If he DOES compete with the corporation, his profits will be placed in CONSTRUCTIVE TRUST for the benefit of the corporation and the corporation MAY get damages if the competition hurt it.
e.g. Sharon is director of Ozzie Corp. She can also serve as director of Home Depot bc Home Depot does not compete with Ozzie corp. BUT if Sharon starts her own music business Ozzie Corp. will get a CONSTRUCTIVE TRUST on Sharon’s profit and ozzie corp may sue and get damages if the competition hurt it.
CORPORATE OPPORTUNITY DOCTRINE
DUTY OF LOYALTY
A Director cannot USURP a corporate opportunity. This means it cannot take until
(1) he tells the board about it and
(2) he waits for the board to reject it
What qualifies as a “Corporate Opportunity?”
something the corporation NEEDS, or has an interest or tangible expectancy in, or that is logically related to its business
USUAL REMEDY FOR USURPATION: property acquired in violation of this duty may be impressed with a CONSTRUCTIVE TRUST for the benefit of the corporation
-conceivably damages as well if harmed corp by diverting opportunity or assets, but relatively rare
Corporate opportunity doctrine DOES NOT APPLY to acquisitions that the corporation has refused, or opportunities that it would not have been able to take advantage of, or that are not appropriate or logically related to the corporation’s business
HOWEVER, if corpration cannot AFFORD the opportunity is this a defense? probably not, he is a fiduciary so arguably he should help the co. get financing
Alternatively stated: (from NY Book)
Directors (nor officers, nor controlling shareholders) may acquire or divert to themselves property or opportunities that the corporation needs or is seeking, or as to which the corporation as a “tangible expectancy” or that the directors, officers, or controlling shareholders were otherwise under a duty to acquire for the corporation
Corporate Opportunity Doctrine example
Cheatem is a director of C Realty Corp. which develops condo projects. Cheatem learns of some land that has been zoned for condos and buys it for himself as an investment. What are C’s rights against Cheatem?
step 1: state the duty of loyalty standard.
then say: a director cannot USURP a corporate opportunity unless he (1) tells the board and (2) waits for the board to reject it
Cheatem has to account for it. If he still has it, he must sell it to the corporation AT HIS COST. If Cheatem has sold it for a profit, the corporation gets the profit.
Other Bases of Director Liability: IMPROPER LOANS OF CORPORATE FUNDS
e. g. board of directors votes to lend a director $100k of corporate funds or to guarantee a director’s personal obligation - this is allowed ONLY IF
(1) APPROVED BY SHAREHOLDERS - OR
(2) if the board finds it will benefit the corporation (e.g. lending $$ to director so director can afford to take courses at a business college to make him a better director)
Sarbanes-Oxley Act (federal)
restricts loans to executives in REGISTERED (ie publicly-traded) corporations. It requires the board of such a large corporation to
(1) establish an audit committee and oversee work of registered public accounting firm.
(2) Chief executive and financial officers must certify accuracy and completeness of financial reports
Improper distrubutions
covered later - but basically
corporation can make distributions even though it lost money last year; BUT corporation CANNOT make distributions if it is INSOLVENT or if the distribution would RENDER IT INSOLVENT (.ie. company unable to pay its debts)
DIrectors are personally liable for unlawful distributions (so are SHs who knew i was unlawful when they received it)