| Page 962 502 A.2d 962
54 USLW 2355, 11 Del. J. Corp. L.
928 Harry B. LEWIS, Plaintiff,
v.
J.B. FUQUA, et al, Defendants. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: June 21, 1985.
Decided: Nov. 12, 1985.
Revised: Nov. 14, 1985.
Page 964
On defendants' motion to dismiss
in response to the recommendation of a
special litigation committee: DENIED.
[11 Del. J. Corp. L. 931] Joseph
A. Rosenthal, and Norman M. Monhait (Morris
and Rosenthal, P.A., Wilmington, of
counsel), Steven Oestreich, Wolf, Popper,
Ross, Wolf & Jones, New York City, for
plaintiff.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, and
Michael Houghton (Morris, Nichols, Arsht &
Tunnell, of counsel), Collin Brown, E.
Norman Veasey, Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, for defendants.
HARTNETT, Vice Chancellor.
The corporate defendant, Fuqua
Industries, Inc., moved to dismiss this
stockholder derivative action pursuant to a
recommendation of a Special Litigation
Committee appointed by the Board of the
corporation to inquire into the validity of
the claims set forth in the Complaint. The
motion must be denied because the movant has
neither borne its burden of showing that the
Special Litigation Committee was independent
nor that the Committee established a
reasonable basis for its conclusions. Nor
would dismissal of the suit at this juncture
be in the best interests of the corporation.
I
Harry Lewis, the plaintiff, a
shareholder of Fuqua Industries, Inc., a
Delaware corporation, filed this stockholder
derivative action on behalf of the
corporation alleging the usurpation of a
corporate opportunity by the individual
defendants. Mr. Lewis alleged that J.B.
Fuqua, Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of Fuqua Industries, along
with thirteen of the other fourteen
individual defendants breached their
fiduciary duty to the corporation by
diverting a valuable corporate opportunity
to themselves. The plaintiff made no
pre-suit demand on the Board of Directors of
the corporation to bring an action to
redress the alleged wrongs but alleged in
his Complaint that any pre-suit demand on
the Board of Fuqua Industries,[11 Del. J.
Corp. L. 932] pursuant to Chancery Rule
23.1, was excused because it would have been
futile.
The Complaint alleged that J.B.
Fuqua diverted an opportunity to purchase
stock in the Triton Group Limited ("Triton")
from Fuqua Industries, Inc. to himself and
fourteen other individual
defendants--thirteen of whom are present or
former directors or officers of the
corporation, or both. Triton is a Delaware
holding company whose primary assets are a
$160 million ($2.59 per share) tax loss, two
real estate projects and some cash. Triton
had two classes of stock outstanding, both
of which were publicly traded: Triton Common
Stock, and Triton Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock. The Triton Preferred Stock
carried voting rights and each share was
convertible into 24.5 shares of Triton
Common Stock. In the fall of 1982 Fuqua
Industries became interested in Triton and
began discussions with American Financial
Corporation ("AFC") about acquiring AFC's
interest in Triton. AFC was Triton's largest
shareholder at this time. Fuqua Industries'
interest in Triton centered around Triton's
substantial tax loss which could be carried
forward and its intention was to acquire one
or more profitably operating companies and
then use Triton's tax loss carry-forward to
shelter the future earnings of these
acquisitions from income taxes. Fuqua
Industries was hopeful that it could
duplicate the success it had in the past
with a similar investment--the acquisition
of Pier 1 corporation. AFC's ownership in
Triton included both Triton Common and
Preferred Stock.
On March 3, 1983, discussions
between Fuqua Industries and AFC culminated
in the purchase of 425,365 shares of Triton
Preferred Stock from AFC by Fuqua Industries
at an equivalent price of $.45 per share.
Prior to this purchase, on February
Page 965
25, 1983, Mr. J.B. Fuqua purchased from AFC
2 million shares of Triton Common Stock. On
March 7, 1983, fourteen of the other
individual defendants--upon the solicitation
of J.B. Fuqua--purchased AFC's remaining
1,260,450 shares of Triton Common Stock. All
of the AFC Triton Common Stock in question
was purchased at a price of $.45 per share.
The end result of these transactions was
that Fuqua Industries acquired all of AFC's
Triton Preferred Stock and J.B. Fuqua and
other individual defendants acquired all of
AFC's Triton Common Stock.
After this sale AFC suggested
that in order to assure a more orderly
change in control of Triton, someone should
also buy out the interest of Anthony B.
Walsh in Triton. Mr. Walsh, along with [11
Del. J. Corp. L. 933] two other persons
allied with him, occupied three seats on
Triton's Board of Directors. In response to
AFC's suggestion, J.B. Fuqua caused Fuqua
Industries to purchase the Walsh Block's
shares of Triton at a price equal to $.30
more per share than was paid to AFC for its
stock in Triton. The Walsh Block included
79,420 shares of Triton Preferred Stock and
315,780 shares of Triton Common Stock (1.1%
of the outstanding Triton Common Stock).
Following the purchase of the Walsh Block,
Mr. Walsh and the two other directors
alligned with him resigned from Triton's
Board of Directors. J.B. Fuqua, thereupon,
became the Chairman of Triton's Board of
Directors, naming two nominees to fill the
two remaining seats. The Board of Fuqua
Industries never formally rejected the
opportunity of the corporation to purchase
the Common Stock shares of Triton owned by
AFC.
II
Plaintiff contends that the
purchase of the Triton Common Stock by J.B.
Fuqua and the other individual defendants
amounted to the usurpation of a corporate
opportunity which belonged to Fuqua
Industries, Inc. The Complaint alleged that
Fuqua Industries never abandoned its
interest in acquiring Triton Common Stock,
nor did the Board of Directors of the
corporation formally reject the opportunity
of the corporation to purchase the Triton
Common Stock on behalf of Fuqua Industries.
In response to these allegations in the
Complaint, the Board of Directors of Fuqua
Industries formed a Special Litigation
Committee of one person to review the merits
of plaintiff's claims.
The Board of Directors named
Terry Sanford as the single member
Committee. Mr. Sanford, although a member of
the Board of Directors of Fuqua Industries,
had not participated in the purchase of the
Triton stock. He was, however, named as a
defendant in this action and was a member of
the Board at the time of the alleged wrongs.
Mr. Sanford, who is well known nationally,
has had a distinguished career, including
being President of Duke University and
Governor of North Carolina. Through his
affiliation with Duke University and his
extensive political career, Mr. Sanford has
had numerous contacts with J.B. Fuqua. J.B.
Fuqua, in turn, has made several
contributions to Duke University and is
presently a Trustee of the University.
The Sanford Committee, along with
its counsel--the distinguished law firm of
Rogers and Hardin--employed an array of [11
Del. J. Corp. L. 934] methods to gather the
information upon which to base the
conclusions of the Committee. In its
investigation, the Sanford Committee and its
counsel reviewed the pleadings and numerous
documents and interviewed many people whom
the Committee thought could provide relevant
information, taking four and a half months
to perform its investigation. During this
time Mr. Sanford kept in touch with the
Committee's counsel through telephone
conferences and three personal meetings. The
final result of the Sanford Committee
investigation, not surprisingly, was a
recommendation that Fuqua Industries not
pursue any legal action against any present
or former officer or director of the Company
or any of its wholly owned subsidiaries and
Page 966 that the corporation seek to have the suit
dismissed.
III
The Delaware Supreme Court in
Zapata v. Maldonado, Del.Supr.,
430 A.2d 779
(1981) set forth a procedure for Court
review of a report of a Special Litigation
Committee appointed to review a
stockholder's derivative suit where the
committee recommends that a motion to
dismiss suit be filed.
A motion to dismiss brought in
response to a report of a Special Litigation
Committee is a hybrid motion created by
Zapata which takes qualities from a Chancery
Rule 41(a)(2) motion to dismiss and a
Chancery Rule 56 motion for summary
judgment.
According to the Zapata Court:
"After an objective and thorough
investigation of a derivative suit, an
independent committee may cause its
corporation to file a pretrial motion to
dismiss in the Court of Chancery. The basis
of the motion is the best interests of the
corporation, as determined by the committee.
The motion should include a thorough written
record of the investigation and its findings
and recommendations. Under appropriate Court
supervision, akin to proceedings on summary
judgment, each side should have an
opportunity to make a record on the motion.
As to the limited issues presented by the
motion noted below, the moving party should
be prepared to meet the normal burden under
Rule 56 that there is no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that the moving party
is entitled to dismiss as a matter of law.
The Court should apply a two-step test to
the motion.
First, the Court should inquire
into the independence and good faith of the
committee and the bases supporting [11 Del.
J. Corp. L. 935] its conclusions. Limited
discovery may be ordered to facilitate such
inquiries. The corporation should have the
burden of proving independence, good faith
and a reasonable investigation, rather than
presuming independence, good faith and
reasonableness. If the Court determines
either that the committee is not independent
or has not shown reasonable bases for its
conclusions, or, if the Court is not
satisfied for other reasons relating to the
process, including but not limited to the
good faith of the committee, the Court shall
deny the corporation's motion. If, however,
the Court is satisfied under Rule 56
standards that the committee was independent
and showed reasonable bases for good faith
findings and recommendations, the Court may
proceed, in its discretion, to the next
step." 430 A.2d at 788 (citations omitted)
IV
The first matter to be
considered, therefore, is whether the moving
parties have sustained their burden of
showing that the Special Litigation
Committee was independent. As set forth in
Zapata, in making that determination I must
apply Chancery Rule 56 standards. The
standard for a Rule 56 motion for summary
judgment is that the movant has the burden
of demonstrating the absence of any material
issue of fact, and any doubt as to the
existence of such an issue will be resolved
against him. Nash v. Connell, Del.Ch., 99
A.2d 242 (1953); Brown v. Ocean Drilling &
Exploration Co., Del.Supr., 403 A.2d 1114
(1979).
Unlike in Kaplan v. Wyatt,
Del.Ch., 484 A.2d 501 (1984), aff'd.,
Del.Supr., 51 A.2d 572 (1985), where the
Special Litigation Committee consisted of
two members, the Committee here consisted of
but one person--Terry Sanford. Although Mr.
Sanford is well renowned, there are
circumstances which must lead the Court to
have questions as to his independence. He
was a member of the Board of Directors of
Fuqua Industries at the time the challenged
actions took place; he is one of the
defendants in this suit; he has had numerous
political and financial dealings with J.B.
Fuqua who is the chief executive officer
Page 967 of Fuqua Industries and who allegedly
controls the Board; he is President of Duke
University which is a recent recipient of a
$10 million pledge from Fuqua Industries and
J.B. Fuqua; and J.B. Fuqua has, in the past,
made several contributions to Duke
University and is a Trustee of that
University.
[11 Del. J. Corp. L. 936] These
potential conflicts of interest or divided
loyalties, when considered as a whole, raise
a question of fact as to whether Terry
Sanford could act independently. This is not
to say that he actually acted improperly,
but I find that the moving party has not
borne its burden of showing the absence of
any possible issue of fact material to the
issue of the independence of Mr. Sanford.
See Warsaw v. Calhoun, Del.Ch., 213 A.2d 539
(1965), aff'd., Del.Supr.,
221 A.2d 494
(1966).
The only instance in American
Jurisprudence where a defendant can free
itself from a suit by merely appointing a
committee to review the allegations of the
complaint is in the context of a stockholder
derivative suit. A defendant who desires to
avail itself of this unique power to self
destruct a suit brought against it ought to
make certain that the Special Litigation
Committee is truly independent. If a single
member committee is to be used, the member
should, like Caesar's wife, be above
reproach.
Terry Sanford is, unfortunately,
the sole member of the Committee. His past
and present associations raise a question of
fact as to his independence. This alone is
grounds to deny the motion to dismiss under
the first test set forth in Zapata.
V
Although not necessary to do so
in view of my holding that there is a
question of fact as to whether the Special
Litigation Committee was independent, I will
also consider the issue of the
reasonableness of the investigation by the
Sanford Committee, and the reasonableness of
the basis for the findings and
recommendations of the Committee. Kaplan v.
Wyatt, Del.Ch., 484 A.2d 501, 508 (1984),
aff'd., Del.Supr., 499 A.2d 1184 (1985).
I find that the Sanford Committee
addressed all the issues presented in the
complaint and also researched an additional
issue of whether the Company's directors had
a personal interest in the challenged
transaction. The investigation spanned four
and a half months and was thorough and
exhaustive as to all possible claims for
recovery. I therefore find that the
investigation conducted by the Committee was
reasonable.
The plaintiff also attacks the
reasonableness of the basis of the Sanford
Committee's conclusions. I find that the
movant has not borne its burden of
establishing a reasonable basis for the
conclusions of the Sanford Committee.
[11 Del. J. Corp. L. 937] VI
The Sanford Committee
investigation focused on two possible
theories of recovery by plaintiff: a
corporate opportunity theory and an
interested director theory. As to the
corporate opportunity theory, the Committee
concluded that, under applicable Delaware
law, the opportunity to purchase Triton
Common Stock was not a corporate opportunity
at all, but instead an opportunity which the
individuals were entitled to treat as their
own. As will be seen, the conclusion reached
by the Committee on this issue is flawed and
therefore did not have a reasonable basis.
A.
In determining the possible
existence of a corporate opportunity the
Sanford Committee recognized three possible
tests: (1) the expectancy test, (2) the line
of business test, and (3) the fairness test.
Claiming that the application of any of
these tests by this Court has been varying
and imprecise, the Sanford Committee chose
to find that the most often used test is the
fairness test. In reviewing the fairness
test, as it applies to the challenged
transaction, the
Page 968 Sanford Committee pinpointed a so-called
"Delaware Variation". It found that the
initial formulation of the fairness test was
announced in Guth v. Loft, Del.Supr., 5 A.2d
503 (1939). The Sanford Committee, however,
decided that later Delaware cases have
modified the Guth fairness test so that, in
its view, it is no longer necessary to
consider whether an opportunity came to the
attention of a corporate manager or director
in his individual or corporate capacity.
See, Science Accessories v. Summagraphics,
Del.Supr., 425 A.2d 957, 963 (1980). The
Sanford Committee therefore decided that
four elements now must be considered in
determining the existence of a corporate
opportunity under the fairness test: (1) the
"interest or expectancy" test, also called
the "essential" test; (2) the "line of
business" test; (3) the "practical
advantage" test; and (4) the "use of
corporate resources" test. The Sanford
Committee concluded that none of the
elements necessary as to these four tests
were present in the challenged transaction
and, therefore, no corporate opportunity
existed to have been diverted.
B.
In the application of the first
so-called "interest or expectancy" test to
determine whether a corporate opportunity
existed at all, the [11 Del. J. Corp. L.
938] Sanford Committee found that the
opportunity to purchase Triton Common Stock
was not essential to Fuqua Industries, nor
did the failure to purchase Triton Common
Stock cause any affirmative harm to the
Corporation. The Sanford Committee concluded
that when the directors decided to purchase
the Triton Common Stock for themselves, the
corporation had no contractual right to
purchase the stock and, therefore, had no
present interest in the purchase of the
stock. The Sanford Committee also decided
that Fuqua Industries ceased to have an
expectancy in the purchase of the Triton
Common Stock because although the
corporation had an apparent expectancy in
the purchase of the stock, it had rejected
the opportunity--thus negating its
expectancy.
The Sanford Committee did
concede, however, a necessity for a scrutiny
of Fuqua Industries' alleged decision not to
purchase the Triton Common Stock because the
decision was made by the very people who
ultimately bought the stock. The Sanford
Committee decided, however, that because the
Board of Fuqua Industries had rejected the
opportunity to purchase the stock on behalf
of the corporation before the directors
decided to purchase the stock for
themselves, the directors were disinterested
when they voted to reject the purchase. The
Sanford Committee therefore found that a
court would scrutinize the decision not to
purchase the stock for the corporation under
the business judgment test as opposed to the
much more burdensome intrinsic fairness
test.
By relying on the business
judgment test, the Sanford Committee
concluded that the directors had a valid
business reason for rejecting the
opportunity to purchase the Triton Common
Stock: the fear of adverse consequences in
the reflection of Triton's losses on Fuqua
Industries' financial statement. The Sanford
Committee therefore concluded that there was
no identifiable corporate opportunity under
the first "interest", "expectancy", or
"essential" test.
Even assuming, arguendo, that the
Sanford Committee was correct and the rule
of Guth has been modified, the conclusions
of the Committee ignore the fact that no
Delaware court has yet gone so far as to
extend the protection of the business
judgment rule to a transaction in which the
directors who are passing on the transaction
have a conflict of interest or divided
loyalties. Cf. Pogostin v. Rice, Del.Supr.,
480 A.2d 619 (1984); Aronson v. Lewis,
Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805 (1984); Weinberger
v. UOP, Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983). It
also ignores the fact that it is undisputed
that the Board never formally rejected the
opportunity and it is a question of fact as
to whether the Board actually so agreed.
Page 969 This conclusion of the Sanford Committee
therefore did not have a reasonable basis.
[11 Del. J. Corp. L. 939] C.
The Sanford Committee's analysis
of the other three tests to determine if a
corporate opportunity existed, also led the
Committee to conclude that there was none.
In the application of the second or
so-called "line of business" test the
Sanford Committee conceded that the
opportunity to purchase the Triton Common
Stock was in Fuqua Industries' line of
business. The Committee, however,
interpreted case law as suggesting that if
there is evidence of a company policy
against acquiring a particular opportunity
it will negate a finding that the
opportunity was in the corporation's line of
business. See, e.g.,
Equity Corp. v. Milton, 221 A.2d 494, 497
(1966); American Investment Co. v.
Lichtenstein, E.D.Mo., 134 F.Supp. 857
(1959) (applying Delaware law).
The Sanford Committee found that
Fuqua Industries would have to put Triton's
losses on its financial statement, if it
acquired any Triton Common Stock, and that
this was inconsistent with Fuqua's then
policy of maintaining a high earnings
profile. This inconsistent policy, in the
view of the Sanford Committee, negated the
fact that the opportunity to purchase the
Triton Common Stock was in Fuqua Industries'
line of business. In all the cases cited by
the Committee in support of that
proposition, however, the Corporations
involved were able to show that they had
actually turned down a chance to realize a
similar prior opportunity. Here, Fuqua
Industries had not only not turned down a
similar opportunity; it had actually
exploited a similar opportunity in the Pier
1 acquisition. As will be discussed, there
is also a factual question as to whether
Triton's losses would have to be shown on
Fuqua Industries' Financial Statement. The
Sanford Committee has therefore not borne
its burden of showing that its conclusion on
this issue had a reasonable basis.
D.
The Sanford Committee further
concluded, in analyzing the third so-called
"practical advantage" test to determine if a
corporate opportunity existed, that the
acquisition of the Triton Common Stock would
not have been a practical advantage to Fuqua
Industries. In making this determination,
the Sanford Committee cited Equity Corp.,
supra, for the proposition that one must
take a short term view in determining the
practical advantage to the Corporation. The
Committee decided that the application of
this principle to the challenged transaction
showed that the placement of Triton's losses
on [11 Del. J. Corp. L. 940] Fuqua
Industries' financial statements would have
hampered the Company's high earnings profile
and would therefore have been a short term
disadvantage. There is a factual question,
however, as to whether Triton's losses would
have had to have been shown on Fuqua
Industries financial statements. Plaintiff
calls attention to Accounting Principles
Board Opinion No. 18 which appears to
require a corporation which holds 20% or
more of the voting stock of an investee
company to place the losses of the investee
company on its books only in proportion to
its share of the investee company's common
stock. Plaintiff argues that if Fuqua
Industries had purchased the common stock of
Triton which the directors ended up
purchasing for themselves, Fuqua Industries
would have had over 20% of the voting stock
of Triton (Triton Preferred Stock has voting
rights), but it would have owned only 1.1%
of Triton's common stock. Plaintiff
therefore argues that Fuqua Industries would
only have had to place 1.1% of Triton's
losses on its financial statement. Plaintiff
has, therefore, raised a question of fact as
to whether the purchase of all the available
Triton stock by Fuqua Industries would have
had an undesirable effect on Fuqua
Industries Financial Statements. The Sanford
Committee has, therefore, not borne its
burden of showing that its conclusion on
this issue had a reasonable basis.
Page 970
E.
Finally, in addressing the fourth
so-called "use of corporate resources" test
to determine if a corporate opportunity
existed, the Sanford Committee found no
showing that defendants used any corporate
funds in acquiring the opportunity, or that
there was any abusive use of corporate
resources. The Committee was undoubtedly
correct in its finding that no corporate
funds were used by the directors when they
purchased the Triton stock for themselves
but this is not dispositive as to whether a
corporate opportunity existed.
VII
The Sanford Committee next
addressed the second possible theory of
recovery--the interested director issue.
This theory of recovery focuses on the Walsh
Block transaction in which Fuqua Industries
purchased Triton Common and Preferred Stock
at $.30 more per share than paid by the
individual defendants. In regard [11 Del. J.
Corp. L. 941] to this interested director
issue, the Committee recognized three
separate tests of liability: (1) a test
based on Section 144 of the Delaware General
Corporation Law (8 Del.C. § 144); (2) the
business judgment test; and (3) the
intrinsic fairness test.
A.
Title 8, § 144, Del.C. provides
that if a majority of disinterested
directors approve a transaction after full
disclosure of all material facts as to such
transaction the transaction cannot be
challenged. The Sanford Committee conceded
that 8 Del.C. § 144 was not applicable here,
however, because, although the transaction
may have been approved, the approval did not
take place at a formal Board meeting or
necessarily after full disclosure of all
material facts. In the eyes of the Sanford
Committee, therefore, the business judgment
rule test and the intrinsic fairness rule
test were the only viable tests which could
be used.
B.
The business judgment rule would
only be applicable, however, if there was a
majority of disinterested directors and
there had been no domination of the Board by
one or more directors. Conversely, the
intrinsic fairness test must be used if
there was a majority of interested directors
or a dominating director. The significant
difference between the two tests is who has
the burden of proof. Cf. Schreiber v.
Pennzoil Co., Del.Ch.,
419 A.2d 952 (1980).
The Sanford Committee decided
that a determination of whether the AFC and
Walsh deals were one or two separate
transactions would govern whether a court
would deem the directors to have been free
of conflict of interest or not. The Sanford
Committee never specifically addressed the
question of domination but merely opined
that if the AFC and Walsh deals were treated
as two separate transactions, then the Fuqua
Industries directors would not have had any
conflict of interest, and therefore, the
Court would apply the business judgment
rule. To the contrary, the Sanford Committee
at least impliedly conceded that if the
Court treated the AFC and Walsh deals as one
transaction then the defendants would appear
to have been personally interested in the
transaction and the Court would apply the
intrinsic fairness test. From a review of
facts, it seems likely that the AFC and
Walsh transactions were inter-related and
not separate transactions. By the
Committee's own analysis, therefore,[11 Del.
J. Corp. L. 942] the appropriate test would
be the intrinsic fairness test. The
Committee's conclusion on this issue,
therefore, did not have a reasonable basis.
C.
The possible application of the
intrinsic fairness test itself presents
problems for the directors, as the Sanford
Committee conceded. The Sanford Committee's
analysis of Delaware case law uncovered two
primary points of focus the Committee
believed a Court would use in applying the
Page 971 intrinsic fairness test to the challenged
transactions: (1) the profit motive of the
interested directors or (2) the intrinsic
fairness of the transaction to the
Corporation. The Sanford Committee conceded
that, as the individual defendants surely
entered into the transaction with a profit
motive in mind, the profit motive point of
focus presented the more probable chance of
recovery for the plaintiffs. After deciding
that $.75 per share was a fair price for the
Triton stock, the Sanford Committee
concluded that the intrinsic fairness of the
transaction to Fuqua Industries made
recovery by the plaintiff less probable.
The value of the Triton stock is
debatable, however, and the Committee,
therefore, has not borne its burden of
showing that $.75 was a fair price for the
Triton stock and that its conclusion on this
issue had a reasonable basis.
D.
In concluding its analysis of the
interested director issue, the Sanford
Committee decided that there would be little
chance of recovery for plaintiff if the
Court found the directors to be
disinterested and therefore applied the
business judgment rule. The Sanford
Committee conceded, however, that if the
Court found the directors to be interested
and applied the intrinsic fairness test the
probability of recovery was greater, and was
even better if the Court accepted the profit
motive point of focus. I agree with the
Committee's conclusion that it seems
reasonably likely, from the present record,
that the individual defendant-directors were
interested directors and therefore the
business judgment rule would afford no
defense to the defendants.
VIII
In summary, the Sanford
Committee, based upon what it deemed to be
the two possible theories of recovery,
recommended that Fuqua [11 Del. J. Corp. L.
943] Industries pursue no further action
against the individual defendants. The
Sanford Committee completely ruled out any
recovery under the corporate opportunity
theory and it decided that any possible
recovery under the interested director
theory would be limited to approximately
$94,000; ($.30 X the number of shares of
Triton Common Stock purchased by the Company
from the Walsh Block). It therefore found
that this would be insufficient to justify
the expense of further litigation.
The Sanford Committee, not
surprisingly, also made a determination that
the continued maintenance of this suit is
not in the best interests of Fuqua
Industries.
It found that the individual
defendants had acted in good faith and
therefore the pursuit of recovery to
vindicate a corporate right was not
justified. It further determined that the
expense, low probability of recovery, the
possible amount of a meager recovery, the
disruptive effect on the corporate
management and morale, and the possible
obligation to indemnify the defendant
directors, were decisive factors in their
recommendation that Fuqua Industries move
for dismissal of this action.
The issue of the good faith of
the defendants is a question of fact which
cannot be resolved on the present record,
before the plaintiffs have had the
opportunity to conduct discovery. As
previously discussed, the other critical
findings of the Committee are not reasonable
considering the present record.
IX
Even if the conclusions and
recommendations of the Special Litigation
Committee had a reasonable basis, this suit
should still not be dismissed at this
preliminary stage of the proceedings before
the plaintiffs have had an opportunity to
conduct discovery.
In Zapata, supra, the Delaware
Supreme Court held that even if the Court
determined that the Special Litigation
Committee was independent, acted in good
faith, and showed a reasonable basis for its
conclusions, the Court could, in its
discretion,
Page 972 proceed to a second step and apply its own
independent business judgment as to whether
the motion to dismiss should be granted. The
Court stated at 430 A.2d 789:
"The second step provides, we
believe, the essential key in striking the
balance between legitimate corporate claims
as expressed in a derivative stockholder
suit and a [11 Del. J. Corp. L. 944]
corporation's best interests as expressed by
an independent investigating committee. The
Court should determine, applying its own
independent business judgment, whether the
motion should be granted. This means, of
course, that instances could arise where a
committee can establish its independence and
sound bases for its good faith decisions and
still have the corporation's motion denied.
The second step is intended to thwart
instances where corporate actions meet the
criteria of step one, but the result does
not appear to satisfy its spirit, or where
corporate actions would simply prematurely
terminate a stockholder grievance deserving
of further consideration in the
corporation's interest. The Court of
Chancery of course must carefully consider
and weigh how compelling the corporate
interest in dismissal is when faced with a
non-frivolous lawsuit. The Court of Chancery
should, when appropriate, give special
consideration to matters of law and public
policy in addition to the corporation's best
interests.
If the Court's independent
business judgment is satisfied, the Court
may proceed to grant the motion, subject, of
course, to any equitable terms or conditions
the Court finds necessary or desirable."
The gravamen of the claim of the
plaintiff in this suit is that the directors
of Fuqua Industries diverted an opportunity
of the corporation to purchase Triton common
stock to themselves for their own personal
financial gain. If this is true, it is
difficult to imagine a more egregious breach
of fiduciary duty. In the present corporate
litigation climate, a stockholder's welfare
rests almost solely on the judgment and
independence of his directors. Any
reasonably valid claim that the directors
acted because of a conflict of interest
involving their own selfish economic
interest should bear close scrutiny by an
impartial tribunal--not a one-man committee
appointed by the alleged wrong doers.
It may be that ultimately the
directors will be able to show that they did
not divert a corporate opportunity to
themselves. Thus far they have not done so.
Plaintiff should be given an opportunity to
pursue discovery so that the truth of his
allegations may be tested.
The motion to dismiss is
therefore dismissed.
IT IS SO ORDERED. |