| Page 138 321 A.2d 138  MERRITT-CHAPMAN & SCOTT CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
v.
Louis WOLFSON et al., Defendants.
Marshal STAUB, Plaintiff,
v.
MERRITT-CHAPMAN & SCOTT CORPORATION, a
corporation of the
State of Delaware, Defendant. Superior Court of Delaware, New
Castle County. May 31, 1974.
Page 140
Richard F. Corroon and Michael D.
Goldman, of Potter, Anderson & Corroon,
Wilmington, for Merritt-Chapman & Scott
Corp.
H. Albert Young, Bruce M.
Stargatt, Edward B. Maxwell and Jack B.
Jacobs, of Young, Conaway, Stargatt &
Taylor, Wilmington, for Louis Wolfson, Elkin
Gerbert, and Joseph Kosow.
Louis J. Finger and Richard F.
balotti of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, for Marshal Staub.
BALICK, Judge.
These actions arise over claims
of Louis Wolfson, Elkin Gerbert, Joseph
Kosow and Marshal Staub (claimants) for
indemnification by Merritt-Chapman & Scott
Corporation (MCS) against expenses incurred
in a criminal action. All parties seek
summary judgment.
Claimants were charged by
indictment with participation in a plan to
cause MCS to secretly purchase hundreds of
thousands of shares of its own common stock.
Count one charged all claimants with
conspiracy to violate federal securities
laws. Count two charged Wolfson and count
three charged Gerbert with perjury before
the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). Counts four and five charged Wolfson,
Gerbert, and Staub with filing false annual
reports for 1962 and 1963 respectively with
the SEC and New York Stock Exchange.
At the first trial the court
dismissed part of the conspiracy count but
the jury returned guilty verdicts on all
charges against all claimants. At that stage
this court held that Wolfson, Gerbert, and
Kosow were not entitled to partial
indemnification.
Merritt-Chapman & Scott v. Wolfson,
264 A.2d 358 (Del.Super.1970). Thereafter the
convictions were reversed.
United States v. Wolfson, 437 F.2d 862 (2nd
Cir. 1970).
There were two retrials of the
perjury and filing false annual report
charges against Wolfson and Gerbert. At the
first retrial the court entered a judgment
of acquittal on count four at the end of the
State's case, and the jury could not agree
on the other counts. At the second retrial
the jury returned a guilty verdict on count
three, but could not agree further.
The charges were then settled as
follows: Wolfson entered a plea of Nolo
contendere to count five and the other
charges against him were dropped. He was
fined $10,000 and given a suspended sentence
of eighteen months. Gerbert agreed not to
appeal his conviction of count three, on
which he was fined $2,000 and given a
suspended sentence of eighteen months, and
the other charges against him were dropped.
The prosecution also dropped the charges
against Kosow and Staub.
Indemnification of corporate
agents involved in litigation is the subject
of legislation in Delaware. Title 8 Delaware
Code § 145. Subsection (a), which permits
indemnification, and subsection (c), which
requires indemnification, provide as
follows:
(a) A corporation may indemnify any
person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any
threatened, pending or completed action,
suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal,
administrative or investigative (other than
an action by or in the right of the
corporation) by reason of the fact that he
is or was a director, officer, employee or
agent of the corporation, or is or was
serving at the request of the corporation as
a director, officer, employee or agent of
another corporation, partnership, joint
venture, trust or other enterprise, against
expenses (including attorneys' fees),
judgments, fines and amounts paid in
settlement actually and reasonably incurred
by him in connection with such action, suit
or proceeding if he acted in good faith and
in a manner he reasonably believed to be in
or not opposed
Page 141 to the best interests of the corporation,
and, with respect to any criminal action or
proceeding, had no reasonable cause to
believe his conduct was unlawful. The
termination of any action, suit or
proceeding by judgment, order, settlement,
conviction, or upon a plea of Nolo
contendere or its equivalent, shall not, of
itself, create a presumption that the person
did not act in good faith and in a manner
which he reasonably believed to be in or not
opposed to the best interests of the
corporation, and, with respect to any
criminal action or proceeding, had
reasonable cause to believe that his conduct
was unlawful.
(c) To the extent that a director,
officer, employee or agent of a corporation
has been successful on the merits or
otherwise in defense of any action, suit or
proceeding referred to in (subsection (a)),
or in defense of any claim, issue or matter
therein, he shall be indemnified against
expenses (including attorneys' fees)
actually and reasonably incurred by him in
connection therewith.
The policy of the statute and its
predecessor has been described as follows,
Folk, The Delaware General Corporation Law,
98 (1972):
The invariant policy of Delaware
legislation on indemnification is to
'promote the desirable end that corporate
officials will resist what they consider'
unjustified suits and claims, 'secure in the
knowledge that their reasonable expenses
will be borne by the corporation they have
served if they are vindicated.' (Essential
Enterprises Corp. v. Automatic Steel Prods.,
Inc., 39 Del.Ch. 371,
164 A.2d 437, 441--442
(Del.Chanc.1960).) Beyond that, its
larger purpose is 'to encourage capable men
to serve as corporate directors, secure in
the knowledge that expenses incurred by them
in upholding their honesty and integrity as
directors will be borne by the corporation
they serve.' (Mooney
v. Willys-Overland Motors, Inc., 204 F.2d
888, 898 (3d Cir. 1953)).
MCS argues that the statute and
sound public policy require indemnification
only where there has been vindication by a
finding or concession of innocence. It
contends that the charges against claimants
were dropped for practical reasons, not
because of their innocence, and that in
light of the conspiracy charged in the
indictment, the judgment of acquittal on
count four alone is not vindication.
The statute requires
indemnification to the extent that the
claimant 'has been successful on the merits
or otherwise.' Success is vindication. In a
criminal action, any result other than
conviction must be considered success. Going
behind the result, as MCS attempts, is
neither authorized by subsection (c) nor
consistent with the presumption of
innocence.
The statute does not require
complete success. It provides for
indemnification to the extent of success 'in
defense of any claim, issue or matter' in an
action. Claimants are therefore entitled to
partial indemnification if successful on a
count of an indictment, which is an
independent criminal charge, even if
unsuccessful on another, related count.
MCS contends that Kosow is not
entitled to the benefit of the statute
because he was not 'a director, officer,
employee or agent' of MCS. Kosow was
chairman of the board and president of
Industrial Finance Corporation, a wholly
owned subsidiary of MCS. He served in these
positions because of an employment agreement
with MCS in which Kosow agreed to manage
private financing and lending business
activities of MCS, 'subject to (its) control
and direction.' MCS argues that the phrase
in subsection (a) expressly covering persons
who serve one corporation at the request of
another was intentionally omitted from
subsection (c). I need not consider this
argument because I conclude, based on the
agreement, that
Page 142 Kosow was an 'employee or agent' of MCS.
Because of Kosow's affidavit to the
contrary, MCS has abandoned its position
that he is not entitled to any benefit under
the statute because it went into effect
after his relationship with MCS ended.
MCS contends that the indictment
was not related to the area of Kosow's
employment or agency, and he was therefore
not 'made a party . . . by reason of the
fact that' he was an employee or agent of
MCS. The conspiracy count charged that the
stock repurchase plan 'would operate as a
fraud and deceit upon the stockholders of
(MCS)' in violation of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b),
and SEC Rule 10b--5. The charge was based
upon failure to disclose inside information.
Kosow participated in the plan, shared the
inside information, and was prosecuted
because of his employment or agency
relationship with MCS. He is therefore
entitled to indemnification.
Wolfson and Gerbert based their
claims for indemnification against expenses
incurred in defense of counts three and five
on subsection (a) of the statute and by-law
of MCS. This is the pertinent by-law:
Each person (and his heirs, executors and
administrators) who is or has been a
director or officer of the Corporation shall
be indemnified by the Corporation against
expenses (which shall not include any
amounts paid in settlement) reasonably
incurred by him or them in connection with
any action, suit or proceeding to which he
may be a party or with which he shall be
threatened by reason of his being or having
been a director or officer of the
Corporation, Except in relation to matters
as to which he shall finally be adjudged in
such action, suit or proceeding (or, in case
such action, suit or proceeding shall be
settled, shall be determined by the
Corporation) to have been derelict in the
performance of his duty as such director or
officer. The foregoing right of
indemnification shall be in addition to any
other rights to which any such director or
officer may be entitled as a matter of law.
(emphasis added.)
They contend that the by-law
makes indemnification, as permitted by
subsection (a) of the statute, mandatory;
that they met the standard of conduct set by
subsection (a); and that they did not
violate their fiduciary duties to MCS under
Deleware law.
Although a corporation may pass a
by-law making mandatory the provision for
permissive indemnification in subsection
(a), the MCS by-law does not do this. It
comes closer to doing so with reference to
the predecessor of the present statute. The
former statute (8 Del.C. § 122(10)), which
was in effect when the by-law was adopted,
specifically empowered corporations to
indemnify,
except in relation to matters as to which
any such director or officer or former
director or officer or person shall be
adjudged in such action, suit or proceeding
to be liable for negligence or misconduct in
the performance of duty.
Compare this with the emphasized
part of the MCS by-law, as quoted above.
The right of Wolfson and Gerbert
to indemnification under the by-law, which
is independent of any right under the
statute, see subsection (f), depends on
whether they were 'adjudged in such action .
. . to have been derelict in the performance
of (their) duty as . . . director or
officer.' Wolfson was sentenced upon a plea
of Nolo contendere to count five of the
indictment which charged that he
. . . unlawfully, wilfully and knowingly,
made and caused to be made a false and
misleading statement of material fact in a
balance sheet which was part of an annual
report for Merritt for the year 1963 which
was required to be filed and was filed with
the New York Stock Exchange and the
Securities and Exchange Commission, . . .
Page 143
Gerbert was sentenced upon a
guilty verdict on count three, which charged
that,
. . . having duly taken an oath as a
witness that he would testify truly before a
competent officer of the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission, . . .
did unlawfully, wilfully and knowingly and
contrary to said oath state material matters
which he did not believe to be true . . .
Although a plea of Nolo
contendere may not be used as an admission
in another action, upon acceptance by the
court and imposition of sentence there is a
judgment of conviction against the
defendant. See Fed.Rules Crim.Proc., Rules
11, 32(b);
Lott v. United States, 367 U.S. 421, 426, 81
S.Ct. 1563, 6 L.Ed.2d 940 (1961). The
by-law, unlike subsection (a) of the
statute, does not require this court to look
behind the judgment. If an action does not
go to judgment because of a settlement, the
by-law gives MCS the power to determine
whether the director or officer has been
derelict in the performance of duty. Nor
does the by-law prohibit indemnification
only where directors or officers have been
adjudged derelict in the performance of
their fiduciary duty to MCS under Delaware
law. Conviction of these offenses
establishes that Wolfson and Gerbert were
adjudged to have been derelict in the
performance of their duty as director or
officer, and they are therefore not entitled
to indemnification against expenses incurred
in connection with counts three and five.
MCS contends that the attorneys'
fees claimed by Wolfson were not 'reasonably
incurred.' While his appeal was pending
after the original trial, Wolfson, although
satisfied with his attorneys thus far,
retained Williams, Connolly & Califano to
seek a reversal by the United States Supreme
Court, if necessary. That firm, assisted by
the one that represented him at the first
trial, represented Wolfson at the second and
third trials. Its fee was $250,000 for each
trial. It attributes 10 percent of its fee
to defense of count five. MCS contends that
the average hourly rate received by the firm
($190) is substantially higher than the rate
charged by the other equally distinguished
firms representing Wolfson and his
co-defendants, and is therefore
unreasonable.
The standards used in determining
whether fees have been 'reasonably incurred'
are similar to standards used by courts in
awarding fees.
Husband S. v. Wife S., 249 A.2d 89, 93
(Del.Supr.1972);
Galdi v. Berg, 359 F.Supp. 698, 700
(D.Del.1973). While fixing a reasonable
hourly rate is 'a logical beginning,'
Lindy Bros. Bldrs., Inc. of Phila. v.
American R. & S. San. Corp., 487 F.2d 161,
167 (3rd Cir., Seitz, C.J. 1973), other
factors may be considered. Where
indemnification is sought, the claimant will
have usually assumed the risk of not being
indemnified. His position when he incurred
the expenses should be considered. In this
case, Wolfson retained the Williams firm
after he had been convicted of all counts.
He faced the possibility of a prison
sentence, not to mention other consequences
of criminal convictions. The indictment
against Wolfson, which presented novel legal
and complex factual problems, was vigorously
and persistently prosecuted. In retaining
the Williams firm, particularly its senior
partner, Edward Bennett Williams, Wolfson
sought the best possible legal counsel.
Williams has acquired a national reputation
based upon twenty-eight years of experience
in active trial practice, often in major
criminal cases. He personally spent about
1600 of his firm's 2633 hours in preparation
for and in two long trials, while he had to
lay all other work aside. He does not charge
by the hour. Partners in the firm, who
customarily charge a minimum hourly rate of
$100, spent about 52 hours. Associates,
whose hourly rate is between $50 and $100,
account for the balance of the firm's hours.
Charging a flat fee for each
trial is not inherently unreasonable. For
example,
Page 144 it might be shown that the fee was based in
part on a reasonable estimate of the hours
that would be required. It is of course
possible that the hourly rate will turn out
to be low. Here the fees were based on the
rare skill necessary to increase the hope of
a successful result in an unusual and
difficult case. In view of the statutory
policy of indemnification for those who
successfully defend actions arising from the
performance of their corporate duties, I
find that Wolfson's attorneys' fees were
reasonably incurred.
Claimants seek and MCS opposes
interest on the expenses incurred. The
opposition is based upon the failure of the
statute to provide for interest and the
absence of wrongdoing on the part of MCS.
Without interest on expenses actually paid,
indemnification would be incomplete. I find
no reason to deprive claimants of full
indemnification, in accordance with the
policy of the statute. Interest is not
awarded because of wrongdoing by MCS but
because it has had the use of the money
while claimants were entitled to it. |