| Page 211 407 A.2d 211  A. Elihu MICHELSON, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
Louis C. DUNCAN, G. R. Ellis, Thomas D.
Flynn, Joseph W.
James, Mitchell P. Kartalia, Paul C. Nagel,
Jr., Gordon P.
Osler, Arthur E. Rasmussen, George W. Rauch,
A. O. Steffey,
James W. Tait, Robert C. Trow, Miller Upton,
William E.
Wehner, John C. Whitehead, D. C. Clark, John
T. Gurash and
Household Finance Corporation, Defendants
Below, Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted March 15, 1979.
Decided Oct. 2, 1979.
Page 214
Upon appeal from the Court of
Chancery. Affirmed in part; Reversed in
part.
Bertram Bronzaft, of Garwin &
Bronzaft, New York City, and Joseph A.
Rosenthal of Morris & Rosenthal, P. A.,
Wilmington, for plaintiff-appellant.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, S.
Samuel Arsht and Craig B. Smith, of Morris,
Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, and
Hubachek, Kelly, Rauch & Kirby, Chicago,
Ill., of counsel, for individual
defendants-appellees.
David B. Ripsom and Rodman Ward,
Jr., of Prickett, Ward, Burt & Sanders,
Wilmington, for defendant-appellee Household
Finance Corporation.
Before HERRMANN, C. J., QUILLEN
and HORSEY, JJ.
HORSEY, Justice:
Plaintiff appeals the Court of
Chancery's grant of summary judgment in a
derivative shareholder's suit brought to set
aside stock options granted by the
defendants, officers and directors of
Household Finance Corporation (hereafter,
"HFC") to key employees, including
themselves. The source of the controversy
between the parties is action taken by the
directors in 1971-1974 to modify the
Company's 1966 stock option plan (sometimes
hereafter, "the Plan") and their issuance of
stock options under the Plan as modified.
The principal issue on appeal is whether a
1977 non-unanimous shareholder ratification
of the earlier modifications of the Plan and
of the options granted under the modified
Plan entitled defendants to a grant of
summary judgment.
For the reasons hereafter stated,
we affirm in part and reverse in part the
holdings of the Vice Chancellor. More
specifically, we hold (1) that the Complaint
states a claim for gift or waste of
corporate assets; (2) that such claim was
not waived or conceded by plaintiff before
the court below; (3) that ratification cured
or overcame attack on the options granted
under the Plan as modified on the ground of
lack of director authority but does not
dispose of the claim of gift or waste; and
(4) as to the latter, trial is required as
to the issue of existence and adequacy of
consideration for the grant of the new or
modified options, but shareholder
ratification shifts the burden of proof of
failure or inadequacy of consideration from
defendants to plaintiff.
The relevant facts are lengthy
but are set out in detail in the opinion
below, Michelson v. Duncan, Del.Ch., 386
A.2d 1144 (1978) and need not be repeated
here, except those that are pertinent to
this decision.
Page 215
In 1966, the Board of Directors
of HFC authorized a stock option plan
whereby certain key employees, including a
number of the directors, were granted
options to purchase stock in HFC following a
two year waiting period after grant.
Purchases under the non-tax qualified
portion of the 1966 plan, with which we are
concerned, were to be made at 90% Of the
market price at the time of grant. A grant
limit of 5,000 shares per year per optionee,
later raised to 15,000 shares, was imposed.
The options could be exercised at a rate of
10% A year after the second year with the
final 30% Exercisable following the ninth
anniversary of the grant. The Plan was
described in proxy materials, but not set
out in toto, and was overwhelmingly approved
by the shareholders at their 1966 annual
meeting.
The transactions in question
relate to conduct of the Board of Directors
from 1971 to 1974. In 1971 and again in 1973
the Board, acting on the recommendation of
the Compensation Committee,
*
amended the rate of exercise limit to
increase that limit from 10% Per year to
331/3% Following each of the second, third
and fourth anniversaries of a grant. The net
effect of this modification was to reduce
the minimum time necessary to exercise an
entire option from nine years to four years.
In 1974, following a dramatic
decline in the market price of HFC stock,
the Board of Directors in order to restore
incentive to exercise the options, developed
and adopted a plan (sometimes hereafter
referred to as "the Amended Plan") whereby
the existing options would be cancelled and
new options issued in their place at the
current lower market price. The exercise
price of the new options was some.$7.00 to
$18.00 below the price of the old options.
At the same meeting of the directors,
304,900 old options were exchanged for new
options and 25,000 new options were issued
without exchange. During the next year an
additional 71,800 options were granted
without exchange.
The Complaint attacks the options
granted after December 31, 1973, and
specifically the exchange options granted in
April, 1974 on essentially two grounds: (1)
lack of authority of the Board of Directors
to grant the options as modified without
prior shareholder approval; and (2) the
options issued were void for lack of
consideration.
More specifically, plaintiff
claims that the Board lacked authority: to
grant options in excess of 15,000 shares per
optionee per 12 month period; to reduce the
option purchase price below that provided
under the 1966 plan; to increase the yearly
percentage limit of options exercisable; and
to exceed the total number of shares
available for option under the 1966 Plan.
The Complaint seeks (a) cancellation of all
the options issued to all optionees,
including defendants; (b) an accounting by
the individual defendants for all profits
realized by them under any options received;
and (c) recovery from the individual
defendants of all losses and damages
sustained by HFC.
Admitting generally the
amendments to the 1966 Plan but claiming
that they were not contrary to the Plan,
defendants, shortly after answer and before
any extensive discovery had been undertaken
by plaintiff or defendants, moved for
summary judgment. In their opening brief
filed with their motion, defendants argued:
(1) that the cancellation of existing stock
options in exchange for the issuance of new
stock options at reduced prices is
permissible under Delaware law as stated in
Dann v. Chrysler Corp., Del.Ch., 41 Del.Ch.
438,
198 A.2d 185 (1963); aff'd sub nom.
Hoffman v. Dann, Del.Supr.,
205 A.2d 343
(1964), cert. denied 380 U.S. 973, 85 S.Ct.
1332, 14 L.Ed.2d 269 (1965); (2) that there
was consideration for the new grants in that
the optionee-employees were induced to
remain with the corporation for an
additional two
Page 216 years; and (3) that the grant of the new
options in exchange for the old was not in
violation of the terms of the 1966 Plan.
Plaintiff countered with a
cross-motion for summary judgment asserting
a contrary position; but in his opening
brief below, plaintiff did not argue lack of
consideration for the options granted or
that they represented gifts or waste of
corporate assets. Instead, plaintiff limited
his argument to alleged lack of director
authority.
Defendants then proceeded to
obtain from the shareholders of HFC at its
up-coming 1977 annual meeting a ratification
that was less than unanimous of the actions
of the directors complained of in this
lawsuit concerning the Amended Plan and
stock options issued thereunder by the
directors over the period 1971-1974. More or
less simultaneously with this shareholder
action, defendants filed their reply brief
in support of summary judgment, referred to
the recently accomplished shareholder
ratification and argued that such
shareholder action constituted a complete
defense to the instant action and in
particular to plaintiff's claim of lack of
shareholder authority for the Amended Plan
and options issued thereunder. Defendants
argued that the director action was, at
most, voidable, rather than void, and as
such, any alleged defect that was the
subject of the Complaint was curable by
shareholder ratification. Defendants added
that plaintiff had, in his briefing of the
cross summary judgment motions, abandoned
any claim of gift or waste of corporate
assets which might have constituted a
non-ratifiable action.
Plaintiff responded by
supplemental memorandum that the HFC
shareholder ratification action had injected
a new fact element into the litigation not
present at time of filing of his answering
brief; that he had not abandoned his claim
that the new options were granted without
consideration and constituted gifts or waste
of corporate assets; and plaintiff proceeded
to argue that non-unanimous shareholder
ratification was not a legal defense to a
claim of gift or waste of corporate assets,
even if it were a defense to his claim of
lack of shareholder authority.
The Vice-Chancellor, following
oral argument, granted summary judgment on
defendants' motion and denied summary
judgment on plaintiff's cross-motion. The
Vice-Chancellor stated that while he would
have been required to deny defendants
summary judgment had plaintiff alleged gift
or waste of corporate assets and presented
sufficient evidence in support of such
claim, he concluded that plaintiff had
failed to plead, or, if pleaded, had later
abandoned any claim that the Amended Plan
and options granted thereunder amounted to
gift or waste of corporate assets. He then
found the 1977 shareholder ratification of
the directors' 1971-1974 actions to have
been fair and complete and thus, the
ratification to be "intrinsically valid."
The Vice-Chancellor further found no
evidence of breach of fiduciary duty by the
directors in delegating authority to grant
options to the compensation Committee of the
Board; and the Vice-Chancellor concluded
that the 1977 shareholder ratification cured
all remaining challenges to the acts of the
defendants-directors. It is that decision
which is appealed by plaintiff, A. Elihu
Michelson.
I
Michelson contends that the
Court's initial error was its ruling that
plaintiff had not alleged a claim of gift or
waste of corporate assets. We agree.
Paragraph 17 of the Complaint fairly clearly
assets two separate and distinct claims:
First, that the Board's modifications of the
option Plan were invalid because contrary to
and not authorized under the terms of the
1966 Plan; and Second, that the "new"
options granted in and subsequent to 1974
were without consideration.
By subparagraph 17(a) through (f)
and (h) of the Complaint, plaintiff alleged
that the directors lacked the authority to
modify the 1966 Plan and that the
shareholders had not approved the directors'
action. By subparagraph 17(g), plaintiff
alleged, that the "new" options granted in
and subsequent to 1974 were without
consideration.
Page 217
By subparagraph 17(a) through (f)
and (h) of the Complaint, plaintiff alleged
that the directors lacked the authority to
modify the 1966 Plan and that the
shareholders had not approved the directors'
action. By subparagraph 17(g), plaintiff
alleged, "There was no consideration for the
grant of the options." By paragraphs 19 and
20 of the Complaint, plaintiff asserted:
that there was "no consideration" for the
extension of the period during which options
could be exercised . . ."; that the
cancellation of the outstanding options in
exchange for the "new" options enabled "the
optionees to acquire HFC's shares at grossly
inadequate prices in violation of the terms
of the 1966 Plan"; and that modifications of
the option price and extension of the
"period during which said options could be
exercised" were "granted for no
consideration and solely in order to enrich
the optionees, and particularly said
optionees who were officers and directors of
HFC."
In view of these averments of the
Complaint, the Vice-Chancellor's conclusion
that plaintiff had not alleged a claim of
gift or waste of corporate assets is not
supported by the record. While the Complaint
does not use the words "gift or waste", the
averments that the options were granted for
"no consideration" is tantamount to an
allegation of gift or waste of assets. The
essence of a claim of gift is lack of
consideration. The essence of a claim of
waste of corporate assets is the diversion
of corporate assets for improper or
unnecessary purposes. Although directors are
given wide latitude in making business
judgments, they are bound to act out of
fidelity and honesty in their roles as
fiduciaries. See, e. g., Warshaw v. Calhoun,
Del.Supr., 43 Del.Ch. 148,
221 A.2d 487
(1966); 19 Am.Jur.2d, Corporations, § 1145
et seq. And they may not, simply because of
their position, "by way of excessive
salaries and other devices, oust the
minority of a fair return upon its
investment." Baker v. Cohn, N.Y.Supr., 42
N.Y.S.2d 159 at 166 (1942). It is common
sense that a transfer for no consideration
amounts to a gift or waste of corporate
assets.
A complaint in a civil action
need only give defendant fair notice of a
claim and is to be liberally construed. Wier
v. Fairfield Galleries, Inc., Del.Ch., 377
A.2d 28 (1977). A claimant need not
necessarily expressly aver "gift" or "waste"
in order to make out a claim on these
theories. So long as claimant alleges facts
in his description of a series of events
from which a gift or waste may reasonably be
inferred and makes a specific claim for the
relief he hopes to obtain, he need not
announce with any greater particularity the
precise legal theory he is using. See Vale
v. Atlantic Coast & Inland Corp., Del.Ch.,
34 Del.Ch. 50, 99 A.2d 396 (1953).
Under our "notice" form of
pleadings, an assertion of a claim of lack
of consideration for grant of options should
be sufficient to put an opposing party on
notice of the probable assertion of a claim
of gift or waste. Here defendants have not
argued that the Complaint failed to state a
claim for gift or waste or moved to dismiss
the Complaint for failure to allege such a
claim. Rather, defendants state only that
the Complaint "left considerable doubt" as
to what theories of liability plaintiff was
pursuing. We conclude that plaintiff did
assert a claim for gift or waste of
corporate assets. See Gottlieb v. Heyden
Chemical Corp., Del.Supr., 33 Del.Ch. 82,
90 A.2d 660 (1952), Rosenthal v. Burry Biscuit
Corp., Del.Ch., 30 Del.Ch. 299, 60 A.2d 106
(1948). Since the Vice-Chancellor found to
the contrary, his ruling must be reversed.
II
We next consider whether
plaintiff, having pleaded a claim of gift or
waste, waived, disavowed or abandoned such
claim, as the Vice-Chancellor found he had.
The Vice-Chancellor relies entirely for such
finding on the following statement of
Michelson's attorney made in his opening
brief in the course of answering opposing
counsel's reliance upon Dann v. Chrysler,
supra, as being dispositive of plaintiff's
case:
"In any comparison between Dann (Dann v.
Chrysler Corp., infra) and the instant case
it must be borne in mind that the
Page 218 objector in Dann proceeded on a 'corporate
waste' theory, whereas plaintiff in the
instant case asserts a director sanctioned
violation of the 1966 plan." 386 A.2d 1144
at 1151, n.10.
On the basis of this statement,
and apparently only this statement, the
Vice-Chancellor concluded, "Michelson does
not, however, argue that the amendments of
the Plan constituted a corporate gift of
assets." 386 A.2d at 1151. The
Vice-Chancellor cites no confirmatory
statement in the record for counsel's
concession other than the above-quoted
sentence from counsel's brief; and it
appears that the Vice-Chancellor accepted
defendants' argument that plaintiff, by the
above statement, intended to waive or
abandon any claim of gift or waste of assets
even if pleaded.
Plaintiff denies any intent to
waive a claim of gift or waste or that his
attorney's quoted statement should be so
construed. He states that the Court
apparently did not consider the time or
context in which the statement was made,
that is, that his claim of gift or waste did
not become relevant or essential to sustain
plaintiff's case until the after-the-fact
shareholder ratification. Further, Michelson
contends the Court entirely overlooked
plaintiff's Supplemental Memorandum
submitted after the ratification and
counsel's argument before the Court several
months later. An examination of those
documents,
1
including transcript of argument before the
Court, confirms Michelson's position that he
did not waive his claim of gift or waste of
corporate assets and that defendants
acknowledged it.
2
Since plaintiff pled dual theories for
relief, lack of directoral authority as well
as waste of corporate assets, his assertion
of one theory cannot be said to have implied
or amounted to an abandonment of the other.
Based on the foregoing, we think it clear
that plaintiff did not waive, abandon or
concede his claim of gift or waste; and we
hold that the Vice-Chancellor erred in his
finding to the contrary.
III
We now consider the correctness
of the Vice-Chancellor's ruling that the
1977 shareholder ratification was fairly
accomplished and thus was sufficient to cure
any invalidity of the Plan's amendments
based on the contention that the 1971-1974
director action was contrary to the terms of
the 1966 Plan.
In order to hold the 1977
ratification effective to cure otherwise
wrongful acts of the defendant directors,
the Vice-Chancellor found (1) that their
1971-1974 acts were merely voidable, not
void; and (2) that the ratification was
fairly accomplished. These are essential
elements to an effective shareholder
ratification. See Kerbs v. California
Eastern Airways, Del.Supr., 33 Del.Ch. 69,
90 A.2d 652 (1952); Hannigan v. Italo
Petroleum Corporation of America, Del.Supr.,
4 Terry 333, 47 A.2d 169 (1945). We will
separately consider these two elements of
the decision below.
A.
The essential distinction between
voidable and void acts is that the former
are those which may be found to
Page 219 have been performed in the interest of the
corporation but beyond the authority of
management, as distinguished from acts which
are Ultra vires, fraudulent or gifts or
waste of corporate assets. 19 Am.Jur.2d,
Corporations, § 1247. The practical
distinction, for our purposes, is that
voidable acts are susceptible to cure by
shareholder approval while void acts are
not. See Kerbs, supra; Keenan v. Eshleman,
Del.Supr., 23 Del.Ch. 234, 2 A.2d 904
(1938).
The parties disagree as to
whether the Vice-Chancellor actually found
the directors' action in amending the Plan
and granting new options in exchange for
outstanding, unexercised options to be
contrary to the Plan's terms and therefore
voidable. It would appear that he did,
3 but it would be
sufficient that he made that assumption as a
basis for determining the fairness of the
ratification issue. Plaintiff also contends
that even if the ratification were found to
be fairly accomplished and to relate back to
cure otherwise unauthorized director
actions, actions for consequential damages
against the directors survive.
It is the law of Delaware, and
general corporate law, that a validly
accomplished shareholder ratification
relates back to cure otherwise unauthorized
acts of officers and directors. Hannigan v.
Italo Petroleum Corporation of America,
supra; 19 Am.Jur.2d, Corporations, § 1241.
As stated in 5 Fletcher, Cyclopedia of
Corporations, § 2139 (perm.ed.rev.1976):
"Generally, any act of the board of
directors or of any of the officers beyond
the scope of their authority fixing or
increasing compensation may be ratified by
the stockholders when the stockholders have
originally authorized such act, and this may
be done even after suit is filed, provided
the ratification is voted by bona fide
stockholders . . .. (W)here a majority of
the stockholders of the corporation at a
special meeting ratify a stock option plan
for key executives which was authorized by
interested directors, such ratification
cures any voidable defect in the action by
the board of directors."
It is only where a claim of gift
or waste of assets, fraud or Ultra vires is
asserted that a less than unanimous
shareholder ratification is not a full
defense.
Plaintiff's argument and
authority to the contrary are not
persuasive. Plaintiff relies on Gottfried v.
Gottfried Baking Co., N.Y.App.Div., 1 A.D.2d
994, 151 N.Y.S.2d 583 (1956); but that case
is not contrary authority. Apart from the
fact that New York, not Delaware, law was in
issue, the Court recognized that the
question of the effect of subsequent
shareholder ratification upon an otherwise
invalid act of directors was not before it.
Furthermore, Michelson's argument that
ratification may cure an invalid act of a
director but leave open the question of his
liability for consequent losses to the
corporation must be rejected as inherently
inconsistent. If shareholders have approved
an otherwise voidable act, their approval
extinguishes any claim for losses based on
prior lack of
Page 220 authority of the directors to undertake such
action.
We hold that the Vice-Chancellor
properly found the directors' action to be
voidable to the extent attack on the Plan
was premised on lack of director authority
and that after-the-fact shareholder
ratification related back to cure such
invalidity unless the ratification procedure
proved to be lacking in fairness or
procedurally defective.
B.
The second consideration in
determining the effectiveness of the
shareholder ratification is whether such
ratification was fairly effected and
intrinsically valid, as found by the Court
below. Shareholder ratification is valid
only where the stockholders so ratifying are
adequately informed of the consequences of
their acts and the reasons therefor. The
settled rule in Delaware is that "where a
majority of fully Informed stockholders
ratify action of even interested directors,
an attack on the ratified transaction
normally must fail." (emphasis added).
Gerlach v. Gillam, Del.Ch., 37 Del.Ch. 244,
139 A.2d 591 at 593 (1958).
Whether the shareholders were
informed, and thus their ratification valid,
turns on the fairness and completeness of
the proxy materials submitted by the
management to the HFC shareholders prior to
the annual meeting in April, 1977. Plaintiff
attacks the adequacy of that notice, which
the Court below found to be complete and
fair.
The notice of annual meeting
stated that one of the purposes of the
meeting was to seek ratification of
corporate action relating to the 1966 stock
option Plan; and a predominant portion of
the proxy statement was devoted to this
subject. The introductory explanation of the
proposed resolution of the Board of
Directors to be put to the stockholders
provided, in part:
"Household's Board of Directors
proposes, and recommends that the
stockholders vote for, the resolution (set
forth in Appendix A hereto) authorizing,
approving, ratifying and confirming the
actions, described below, of the Board of
Directors, its Compensation Committee and
other Household officers and employees with
respect to the cancellations and grant of
new options on April 9, 1974 under the 1966
Employee Stock Option Plan ("Plan") and the
periodic waivers of share limitations and
percentage limitations on exercise since
inception of the Plan. Adoption of the
resolution requires the affirmative vote of
a majority of all shares represented at the
meeting, a quorum being present.
On April 9, 1974, the Corporation
cancelled non-tax-qualified options to
purchase 304,900 shares of the Corporation's
common stock issued pursuant to the Plan
then held by directors, officers and
employees of the Corporation and its
subsidiaries with the agreement of such
optionees. Each individual whose
non-tax-qualified options were cancelled was
granted a new option for the same number of
shares but with an exercise price equal to
the fair market value of Household's common
stock on April 9, 1974. The exercise price
of the new options was substantially lower
than the exercise prices of the cancelled
options. The purpose of these actions was to
restore the incentive value of the
non-tax-qualified options, which value had
been lost because the exercise prices of the
options were considerably in excess of the
then fair market value of Household's common
stock. These actions were similar to actions
taken by a number of other corporations and
resulted in keeping Household's executive
benefits comparable to those of other
corporations. See 'Cancellations and Grant
of Options' below.
The Plan contemplates the waiver
of certain limitations set forth in the Plan
and, from time to time after November 1967,
the Board of Directors and its Compensation
Committee waived certain provisions of the
Plan limiting the number of shares which can
be subject to options granted to any one
individual in any consecutive twelve month
period and limiting
Page 221 the annual percentage rates at which the
options may be exercised. See 'Waivers of
Share Limitation and Exercise Rate
Limitation' below.
The April 9, 1974 cancellations
and grant of new options increased the
opportunity for directors, officers and
other optionees to acquire shares of the
Corporation's common stock and realize
profits upon their subsequent resale, which
profits may or may not exist or be
substantial, depending upon prevailing
market conditions after exercise of the
options. The waivers of share limitations
and percentage limitations on exercise may
have further enhanced opportunities for such
profits. See 'Stock Options of Directors and
Officers' below. For additional information
concerning directors' and officers' salaries
and other employee benefits, see
'Remuneration of Officers and Directors'
above."
The proxy statement then informed
the stockholders of the Michelson suit, the
acts of the directors complained of by
Michelson and summarized the action of
management for which ratification was
sought. Particular focus was on the Board's
action of April 9, 1974 as well as its
related action of waiving share limitation
and exercise rate limitations prior thereto.
The resolution itself, a five page document,
attached to the proxy statement, further
detailed the past actions of the Board of
Directors sought to be ratified. Of the
37,724,220 shares represented in person or
by proxy at the 1977 meeting, 32,670,527
shares (about 87%) were voted in favor of
the resolution, 2,444,172 shares (about 6%)
were voted against, and the remaining
2,509,521 shares were not voted with respect
to the resolution.
The Vice-Chancellor found that
the proxy statement "described in detail the
stock option plan, the present litigation,
and the actions which led to this lawsuit.
The proxy statement also contained the
complete text of the Stock Option Plan and
the Complaint in its appendix." 386 A.2d at
1150. He further found the proxy materials
informed the shareholders that the exercise
price of the new options was substantially
lower than the exercise prices of the
cancelled options; that the purpose of the
April 9, 1974 action was to restore the
incentive value of the options, (a value
which had been lost because the exercise
prices of the options were considerably in
excess of the then fair market value of
Household's common stock that it was
contended that the April 9, 1974
cancellations and grant of new options, as
well as the periodic waivers of share
limitations and percentage limitations on
exercise by the Board of Directors and its
Compensation Committee, violated the terms
of the Plan; that the Board of Directors
believed that both the cancellation and
grant of new options and waivers were
authorized by the Plan; and that the
Complaint of Michelson alleged the action of
management constituted a breach of the
individual defendants' fiduciary duty, and
the grant of the new options was without
consideration.
In summary, the resolution sought
ratification of all of the past action of
management concerning the cancellation of
existing options and the grant of new
options and change in exercise limitations
and waiver of grant limitations.
Plaintiff contended before the
Court below, and before this Court similarly
contends, that the proxy materials were
defectively misleading in five principal
respects so as to render the ratification
ineffective: (1) it was misleading for
management to state that they relied upon a
provision in the 1966 Plan as to termination
of options for the validity of their April
9, 1974 action without disclosing to the
shareholders that the "termination"
provision of the Plan had not been included
in 1966 in the original proxy materials'
description of the Plan; (2) management
should have been required in the 1977 proxy
materials to inform HFC shareholders that
the 1966 Plan was not "intended" to permit
the management to cancel options and reissue
new options as done on April 9, 1974; (3)
management should have informed the
shareholders that management had
"deliberately excluded" from the provisions
of the 1966 Plan a provision that had been
included in HFC's 1963 stock option plan
permitting cancellation
Page 222 and reissuance of options at lower current
market prices; (4) management should have
informed shareholders that the Compensation
Committee was both "interested" and
"dominated" by management and that it had
"abdicated" its duty in awarding options to
determine a reasonable relationship between
the value of the options granted and the
particular optionee's future benefit to the
Corporation; and (5) management had misled
the shareholders to believe that the entire
terms of the 1966 Plan had been submitted to
them in 1966 when in fact substantial
omissions were made in the 1966 proxy
materials.
The Vice-Chancellor rejected each
of plaintiff's contentions and found the
proxy and accompanying resolution fully
complied with the requirements set forth by
this Court in Lynch v. Vickers Energy
Corporation, Del.Supr.,
383 A.2d 278 (1977)
requiring not merely adequate but complete
disclosure of all relevant matters. The
Vice-Chancellor stated:
"It is my opinion, however, that there
was complete candor in the disclosure of the
facts which a reasonable stockholder would
consider important in making an informed
decision to ratify the transactions at
issue, and that defendants have met the
burden of showing complete disclosure of all
the germane facts. Cahall v. Lofland,
Del.Ch. (12 Del.Ch. 299), 114 A. 224 (1921),
aff'd Del.Supr., 118 A. 1 (1922); Lynch v.
Vickers, supra. I find that the stockholders
were informed of the essential facts
surrounding the instant suit. They were
provided with the complete text of
plaintiff's complaint, and, all alleged
wrongs for which ratification was sought
were enumerated in detail." 386 A.2d at
1154.
We agree with the Vice-Chancellor
that it was not error, as Michelson
contends, for management to fail to inform
the shareholders of the items enumerated by
Michelson. We say so because it would have
been wholly the unreasonable for management
to be required to have made such
declarations in 1977 proxy materials. Such
statements (a) were not factual assertions;
(b) in some respects were not factually
correct; (c) were inconsistent with
management's position; or (d) called for
legal conclusions. Therefore, we affirm the
Vice-Chancellor's holding that the
ratification was effective and
"intrinsically valid."
Having found (a) the 1971-1974
directors' actions to be voidable only to
the extent such actions are claimed to have
been contrary to the Plan's terms; and (b)
the shareholder ratification thereof to have
been intrinsically valid, we affirm the
Vice-Chancellor's grant of summary judgment
for defendants as to plaintiff's claim that
the shareholder ratification was not
adequate to rectify unauthorized director
action. However, as previously stated,
ratification does not dispose of plaintiff's
claim that there was no consideration for
the option grants and that they constituted
gifts or waste of corporate assets.
IV
This brings us to the final
question, namely, whether Michelson
presented sufficient evidence as to gift or
waste to preclude summary judgment in
defendants' favor.
Defendants make essentially two
arguments in support of their position that
there is no triable issue as to gift or
waste. First, they contend plaintiff has
failed to establish any material issue of
fact relating to the question of adequacy of
consideration for the cancellation of the
old options in exchange for grant of the new
options. Second, defendants claim that there
is sufficiency of consideration as a matter
of law by application of the pertinent facts
to Delaware statute law, 8 Del.C. § 157,
4 and
Page 223 decisional law under Hoffman v. Dann, supra.
We will now take up each of these arguments.
A.
Defendants contend that under
Gottlieb v. Heyden, Supra, and Kaufman v.
Schoenberg, Del.Ch., 33 Del.Ch. 211,
91 A.2d 786 (1952), shareholder ratification shifted
the burden of proof of lack of consideration
to plaintiff. Since plaintiff has failed to
offer any evidence thereof, defendants claim
that summary judgment below should be
affirmed.
Plaintiff does not agree that
there is insufficient evidence in the record
of gift or waste of assets to raise a
triable issue of fact. Plaintiff states this
evidence includes the following director
action: across the board, indiscriminate
modifications of the 1966 Plan; lowering the
exercise prices; accelerating the exercise
rates; and the granting of new options in
1974 with no parity of services rendered to
value of options granted.
Delaware decisional law supports
plaintiff's position. Claims of gift or
waste of corporate assets are seldom subject
to disposition by summary judgment; and when
there are genuine issues of fact as to the
existence of consideration, a full hearing
is required regardless of shareholder
ratification. See Kerbs v. California
Eastern Airways, supra; Gottlieb v. Heyden
Chemical Corp., supra. "The determination of
whether or not there has been in any given
situation a gift of corporate assets does
not rest upon any hard and fast rule. It is
largely a question of fact." Gottlieb v.
McKee, Del.Ch., 34 Del.Ch. 537, 107 A.2d 240
at 243 (1954). In Saxe v. Brady, Del.Ch., 40
Del.Ch. 474,
184 A.2d 602 (1962), Chancellor
Seitz stated, "Where waste of corporate
assets is alleged, the court,
notwithstanding independent stockholder
ratification, must examine the facts of the
situation." (184 A.2d at 610). In Heyden,
this Court stated:
"An important question, which is not yet
answered, is whether these services and
these options can sensibly be deemed to be
the subject of a fair exchange. This is
obviously not a mere question of law. An
issue of fact is raised, as to which, as
yet, no evidence has been taken." 33 Del.Ch.
177,
91 A.2d 57 at 59.
Similarly, in Gottlieb v. McKee,
supra, the Court of Chancery, finding
affidavits insufficient and otherwise
inadequate for determination of an issue of
gift or waste of assets, denied summary
judgment for defendants as to a corporate
opportunity claim and held a full hearing
was required, notwithstanding shareholder
ratification. See also Gamble v. Penn Valley
Crude Oil Corp., Del.Ch., 34 Del.Ch. 359,
104 A.2d 257 (1954), cross-motions for
summary judgment as to right of plaintiff to
exercise and receive stock options were
denied on the state of the record, the Court
stating, "Vital facts are either lacking or
in conflict and it would therefore be
inappropriate to attempt either to assume
them or to evaluate them on cross-motions
for summary judgment." 104 A.2d at 263.
While, of course, each case must
be determined on its own facts, the above
cases indicate a strong disfavor for summary
judgment in stock option claims where waste
of corporate assets is alleged. Here,
Michelson has, by his Complaint and
affidavit of his attorney, raised material
issues of fact as to the existence of
consideration for grant of options, thus
making summary judgment inappropriate on the
issue of waste of corporate assets.
B.
Defendants alternatively argue
that 8 Del.C. § 157 rules out any fact issue
by making any consideration sufficient as a
matter of law, relying on the following
language of that section: "In the absence of
actual fraud in the transaction, the
judgment
Page 224 of the directors as to the consideration for
the issuance of such rights or options and
the sufficiency thereof shall be
conclusive." The meaning of the quoted
sentence is clear. However, defendant goes
too far in his reliance on this section.
Implicit in that section is the existence of
some consideration, and assuming that fact
begs the question at issue in a challenge of
wasting corporate assets. See Kerbs, supra;
Frankel v. Donovan, Del.Ch., 35 Del.Ch. 433,
120 A.2d 311 (1956).
Section 157 was intended to
protect directors' business judgment in
consideration inuring to the corporation in
exchange for creating and issuing stock
options. However, to assert that there was
no consideration for the cancellation of the
existing options in exchange for new options
as asserted here is far different from
asserting that there was inadequate
consideration for doing so. Whether or not §
157 disposes of an inadequacy of
consideration claim is not the issue before
us. Here, the contention is made that there
was No consideration received by HFC from
the grant of the new or exchange options in
1974. We do not read § 157 as intended to
erect a legal barrier to any claim for
relief as to an alleged gift or waste of
corporate assets in the issuance of stock
options where the claim asserted is one of
absolute failure of consideration.
Defendants also claim that under
Hoffman v. Dann, supra, the grant of options
by disinterested directors and ratification
by stockholders precludes any attack on the
option plan. Defendant's reliance on this
case is misplaced. It is important to note
that Hoffman arose in the context of
approval of a contested settlement. The
standard for approval of a settlement is
significantly different from that used for
grant of summary judgment. In response to
the challenge of wasting corporate assets,
in Hoffman This Court found that there was
not a "probability of substantial recovery"
by the challenging shareholders. The
question we must resolve here is not the
likelihood of success, but rather whether or
not there is a material issue of fact in
question. Hoffman should not be interpreted
as contradicting the well-established rule
that non-unanimous shareholder approval
cannot cure an act of waste of corporate
assets. Kerbs, supra.
Reinforcing our conclusion that
the case should be remanded for further
proceedings is plaintiff's contention that
there has not been an adequate time provided
for discovery; that discovery has not
included any depositions or extensive
interrogatories to date; and that since the
pendency of the motion for summary judgment,
all further discovery has been stayed.
Though this has been with the consent of the
parties, it would be inappropriate at this
stage of the case for plaintiff's right to
discovery to be said to have been
foreclosed.
C.
We further hold, as the
Vice-Chancellor ruled, that shareholder
ratification shifted the burden of proof of
want or inadequacy of consideration for the
grant of the options from defendants to
plaintiff. See Gottlieb v. Heyden Chemical
Corporation, supra, and Kaufman v.
Schoenberg, Supra. In Gottlieb, this Court
stated that ". . . (T)he entire atmosphere
is freshened and a new set of rules invoked
where formal approval has been given by a
majority of independent, fully informed
stockholders. . . ." 91 A.2d at 59.
Similarly, in Kaufman, the
Chancellor stated that in the absence of
independent stockholder ratification,
interested directors have the burden of
showing that the consideration to be
received for the grant of options
represented a "fair exchange", but the
burden shifts where there has been
shareholder ratification:
"Where there has been independent
stockholder ratification of interested
director action, the objecting stockholder
has the burden of showing that no person of
ordinary sound business judgment would say
that the consideration received for the
options was a fair exchange for the options
granted." 91 A.2d 791.
See also Fidanque v. American
Maracaibo Co., Del.Ch., 33 Del.Ch. 262,
92 A.2d 311 (1952), stating:
Page 225
"Even in cases, such as a case involving
interlocking directorates, where the burden
is upon the directors to prove the validity
of their action and their good faith, a
stockholder ratification shifts the burden
of proof to the objector. Gottlieb v. Heyden
Chemical Co., supra." 92 A.2d at 321.
Affirmed in part and reversed in
part.
* The Compensation Committee was
established under the 1966 Plan and was
composed of non-employee directors. Under
the terms of the Plan they were charged with
selecting employees eligible for the option
plan, determining the number of shares to be
granted and fixing the terms for exercising
each option. Moreover, the Plan provided
that the Compensation Committee could
recommend to the Board to waive the exercise
limitation for selected optionees.
1 In his Supplemental Memorandum,
plaintiff stated:
"By lowering the exercise price on their
outstanding options and by waiving the
exercise price and share limitation for
their own benefit, the director-optionees
breached their fiduciary duty to HFC by
profiting from their own unauthorized acts.
The benefits secured by the director-optionees
were tained (sic) with self-interest
constituting gifts to themselves and a waste
of corporate assets. The other
defendant-directors breached their fiduciary
duty to HFC by permitting officers of the
company to make gifts of corporate assets to
themselves. Under the law of Delaware,
shareholder ratification does not preclude
the plaintiff from prosecuting such claims.
A shareholder ratification is ineffective
for acts which are ultra vires, illegal,
fraudulent or wastes or gifts of corporate
assets."
2 The transcript includes the following
responsive statement of defendants' counsel
that plaintiff's gift or waste argument was
a ". . . new argument raised solely in
response to the ratification . . . (and) now
that the stockholders of HFC have spoken, he
has turned around and now is belatedly
claiming, yes, this is waste. . . ."
3 Vice-Chancellor Hartnett wrote:
"It should be noted that Michelson's
contention that the 1966 plan was violated
in that there was no provision in it for
cancellation and reissuance of options
appears well-founded although of no legal
importance in view of the stockholder
ratification. Termination is provided for in
Paragraph 10 of the tax qualified and
non-tax qualified portions of the plan, but
clearly, even by the most liberal definition
of 'termination' there was no authority
given to immediately reissue terminated
options." 386 A.2d at 1152.
He added later in his opinion by
footnote:
"As further evidence that the
'termination' provisions in the 1966 Plan
did not authorize cancellation and
reissuance of options, and perhaps did not
envision such action, HFC's previous stock
option plan of 1963 specifically provided
for such a procedure. The proxy statement
for the 1963 Plan provided:
'Although the Board of Directors has made
no determination with respect to action to
be taken in the event of market
fluctuations, it is the duty of the Board to
devise ways and means to provide adequate
incentive to attract and retain the best
management talent available. In this effort,
the Board reserves the right, with optionee
approval, to cancel and reissue options at a
lower market price. The Board of Directors
may terminate the Plan at any time by
resolution which, however may not affect
outstanding options.' " 386 A.2d at 1153,
n.12.
4 8 Del.C. § 157 provides in pertinent
part:
"S 157. Rights and options respecting
stock.
Subject to any provisions in the
certificate of incorporation, every
corporation may create and issue . . .
rights or options entitling the holders
thereof to purchase from the corporation any
shares of its capital stock . . . .
"The terms upon which . . . such shares
may be purchased from the corporation upon
the exercise of any such right or option,
shall be such as shall be stated in the
certificate of incorporation, or in a
resolution adopted by the board of directors
. . . . In the absence of actual fraud in
the transaction, the judgment of the
directors as to the consideration for the
issuance of such rights or options and the
sufficiency thereof shall be conclusive." |