| Page 767 571 A.2d 767
58 USLW 2618, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
95,310 Ted SPIEGEL, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
Dean L. BUNTROCK, Jerry E. Dempsey, Peter H.
Huizenga, James
E. Koenig, Alexander Trowbridge, Lee L.
Morgan, Peer
Pedersen, Olin N. Emmons, James R. Peterson,
Donald F.
Flynn, Phillip B. Rooney and Waste
Management, Inc.,
Defendants Below, Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: Dec. 12, 1989.
Decided: March 19, 1990. Joseph A. Rosenthal (argued), and
Kevin Gross of Morris, Rosenthal, Monhait &
Gross, P.A., Wilmington, and Mordecai
Rosenfeld, New York City, on behalf of
appellant.
Clark W. Furlow (argued), of
Lassen, Smith, Katzenstein & Furlow,
Wilmington, Wallace L. Timmeny (argued),
James E. Ballowe, Jr. of McGuire, Woods,
Battle & Booth, Washington, D.C., and F.L.
Peter Stone of Connolly, Bove, Lodge & Hutz,
Wilmington, on behalf of appellees.
Before HORSEY, WALSH and HOLLAND,
Justices.
HOLLAND, Justice:
This is an appeal from an order
of the Court of Chancery dismissing a
derivative action filed by the
plaintiff-appellant, Ted Spiegel
("Spiegel"), a shareholder of Waste
Management, Inc. ("Waste Management"). In
his complaint, Spiegel alleged that Dean L.
Buntrock ("Buntrock"), Chairman of the Board
of Directors and Chief Executive Officer of
Waste Management; Jerry E. Dempsey
("Dempsey"), Vice Chairman; Peter H.
Huizenga ("Huizenga"), Vice President and
Secretary; and James E. Koenig ("Koenig"),
Staff Vice President
1
(collectively "management defendants"),
improperly acquired stock in ChemLawn
Corporation ("ChemLawn"), based upon inside
information, during the two years
immediately preceding Waste Management's
tender
Page 770 offer for ChemLawn. Spiegel sought to compel
the management defendants to account to
Waste Management for the personal profits
they made upon the sale of their ChemLawn
stock.
The underlying issue in this
controversy is the often debated subject of
when the requirement that a stockholder make
demand on a board of directors, prior to
filing a derivative lawsuit for the benefit
of a corporation, is excused and when a
demand, which has been made, is properly
refused. Superimposed upon the "demand
excused/demand refused" debate
2
are additional issues relating to the use of
a special litigation committee by the Board
of Waste Management, and the propriety of
continuing to argue that demand was excused,
after a demand has been made. All of the
issues raised implicate the proper standard
of judicial review.
This case presented the Court of
Chancery with a procedural paradox in that
each party's argument was the antithesis of
their action. Spiegel contended that demand
was excused. However, when his failure to
make a pre-suit demand was raised by the
Board of Waste Management ("Board") as a
defense, Spiegel responded by filing a
demand. The Board contended that demand was
required, because it was disinterested and
capable of responding to Spiegel's request
for legal action. However, when a demand for
such action was made by Spiegel, the Board
responded by appointing a special litigation
committee with complete authority to review
and act upon Spiegel's request. Ultimately,
each party used their opponent's legal sword
as their own legal shield. Spiegel argued
that by appointing a special litigation
committee, the Board conceded that demand
was excused and the Board argued that by
filing a demand Spiegel had admitted that
one was required.
The Court of Chancery carefully
reviewed the allegations in Spiegel's
complaint and found that demand was not
excused. Thereafter, the Court of Chancery
proceeded to examine the post-suit demand
for legal action, which was sent to the
Board by Spiegel, and the decision to refuse
that demand. The Court of Chancery held that
the decision to refuse Spiegel's demand was
subject to review according to the
traditional business judgment rule,
notwithstanding the fact that the Board had
delegated its authority to act on Spiegel's
demand to a special litigation committee.
Applying the traditional business judgment
rule, the Court of Chancery held that
Spiegel's demand, for the Board to take
legal action on behalf of Waste Management,
was properly refused.
On appeal, Spiegel contends that,
even though he made a demand, given the
facts of this case, demand was excused
nevertheless. Therefore, Spiegel argues that
the Court of Chancery should have reviewed
the Board's motion to dismiss his complaint
according to the procedures established in
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, Del.Supr.,
430 A.2d 779 (1981), rather than the traditional
business judgment rule. Alternatively,
Spiegel contends that even if the Zapata
procedures are not applicable in this case,
the Court of Chancery erred in dismissing
his derivative complaint because Waste
Management failed to meet its burden under
Chancery Court Rule 56 of showing that there
were no genuine issues of material fact.
We find that the record supports
both of the Court of Chancery's rulings.
Consequently, it is not necessary to address
the other issues raised by Spiegel. We find
that the Court of Chancery's decision to
dismiss Spiegel's complaint should be
affirmed.
Facts
Waste Management is a Delaware
corporation headquartered in Oak Brook,
Illinois. It provides domestic and
international waste removal and disposal
services. In the spring of 1984, Waste
Management decided to diversify its
operations by expanding into new service
areas.
Page 771
In an effort to accomplish its
goal, Waste Management hired Dempsey, who
had led the successful diversification of
Borg Warner Corporation.
3
Buntrock requested Dempsey to perform a
study of service industries which might be
of interest to Waste Management. Dempsey
retained the consulting division of Arthur
Andersen & Co. to assist him with the study.
Dempsey prepared two reports,
dated February 8, 1985 and March 13, 1985.
The reports were titled "Waste Management,
Inc. Acquisition Project Meeting." Both
reports were presented to the Board by
Dempsey. ChemLawn, a leader in the lawn care
industry, was among eight companies included
in each initial analysis. During the next
two years, several additional reports were
prepared to assist the Board in evaluating
companies for potential acquisition.
Waste Management's interest in
ChemLawn gradually intensified until on
February 26, 1987, it launched a cash tender
offer for ChemLawn at $27.00 per share.
4 The tender offer
included a disclosure that the management
defendants owned shares of ChemLawn stock,
which they had acquired during the prior two
years.
5 Waste
Management's tender offer proved to be
unsuccessful.
ChemLawn was purchased by EcoLab,
Inc. for $36.50 per share. On March 30,
1987, the Wall Street Journal carried an
article entitled "ChemLawn's Sale Could
Yield $1 Million In Profit for Officials of
Thwarted Suitor."
6
That same day, Spiegel filed the action
against Waste Management, and its directors,
that is the subject of this appeal.
On April 30, 1987, the Board
filed a motion to dismiss Spiegel's
complaint pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule
23.1. The basis for that motion was that
Spiegel had failed to make a demand upon the
Board prior to instituting his derivative
suit and had failed to allege with
particularity facts demonstrating that such
a demand would have been futile. See
Ch.Ct.R. 23.1.
7
The Board's motion also sought dismissal of
the action against the seven disinterested
directors because Spiegel's complaint
alleged no wrongdoing by them.
Spiegel did not immediately
contest the Board's motion to dismiss in the
Court of Chancery.
8
Instead, Spiegel responded by making a
demand to the Board in a letter which
stated:
Page 772
On behalf of Ted Spiegel, a
shareholder of Waste Management, Inc., we
hereby formally demand that the Board of
Directors take all appropriate action to
redress the wrongs as alleged in the
enclosed complaint.
In response to Spiegel's demand
letter, the Board established a special
litigation committee of outside directors
(the "Committee") "for the purpose of
conducting an independent review of the
transactions in the common stock of ChemLawn
Corporation by officers of the Company."
9 "Pursuant to
Section 141(c) of the Delaware General
Corporation Law and [Waste Management's]
by-laws," the Board delegated authority to
the Committee "to determine, as a result of
its independent review, whatever action may
be appropriate in the interest of the
Company...."
The Committee conducted an
investigation into Spiegel's allegations
that spanned over five months. The Committee
was represented by its own independent
counsel, a Washington, D.C., attorney who
was the former Deputy Director of
Enforcement at the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and who now specializes in
securities law in private practice. The
Committee interviewed a great many people,
both within and without Waste Management.
10 It also
reviewed volumes of documents.
The Committee's report found that
Waste Management had a continuing low level
interest in ChemLawn, as one of many
possible acquisition targets, throughout the
two-year period in question, but that there
was never any "serious interest" until
January and February of 1987. On the basis
of its investigation, and its analysis of
the applicable law, the Committee concluded
that it would not be in the best interests
of Waste Management and its stockholders to
pursue Spiegel's derivative action. The
Committee's report stated, in part:
The Committee has determined to
seek dismissal of the complaints in the
pending derivative litigation. The Committee
believes that the best interests of the
Company would be furthered by terminating
rather than pursuing the derivative
litigation.... There is no question that ...
discovery would be disruptive and burdensome
in the extreme to the Company, its
employees, and its directors. In addition,
the publicity which would accompany the
continuation of the lawsuit would result in
immediate damage to the Company's goodwill
and reputation with its shareholders, its
customers, and the investment community,
even though the allegations in the complaint
ultimately proved meritless.
Against these burdens, the
Committee has weighed the potential for
success by the plaintiffs on their claim of
insider trading and has concluded that the
plaintiffs have proffered no evidence, and
the Committee in its investigation has
uncovered no evidence, that would support
this serious charge of unlawful conduct.
Consequently, the Committee,
acting for the Board, filed a motion on
behalf of Waste Management, in the Court of
Chancery to dismiss or, alternatively, for
summary judgment, along with the affidavits
of the Committee members and the entire
report which summarized its findings and
analysis.
Derivative Action/Demand Requirement
A basic principle of the General
Corporation Law of the State of Delaware is
that directors, rather than shareholders,
Page 773 manage the business and affairs of the
corporation. Paramount v. Time, Del.Supr.,
571 A.2d 735, 738, 751 (1990); Mills
Acquisition Co. v. Macmillan, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 559 A.2d 1261, 1280 (1989);
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.,
Del.Supr., 540 A.2d 726, 729 (1988);
Pogostin v. Rice, Del.Supr., 480 A.2d 619,
624 (1984); Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr., 473
A.2d 805, 811-12 (1984). "The exercise of
this managerial power is tempered by
fundamental fiduciary obligations owed by
the directors to the corporation and its
shareholders."
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 729. The decision to bring a law
suit or to refrain from litigating a claim
on behalf of a corporation is a decision
concerning the management of the
corporation.
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 782.
Consequently, such decisions are part of the
responsibility of the board of directors. 8
Del.C. § 141(a).
11
Nevertheless, a shareholder may
file a derivative action to redress an
alleged harm to the corporation. The nature
of the derivative action is two-fold.
First, it is the equivalent of a suit by
the shareholders to compel the corporation
to sue. Second, it is a suit by the
corporation, asserted by the shareholders on
its behalf, against those liable to it.
Aronson
v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 811. In essence,
it is a challenge to a board of directors'
managerial power.
Pogostin v. Rice, 480 A.2d at 624. Thus,
by its very nature, "the derivative action
impinges on the managerial freedom of
directors." Id. In fact, the United States
Supreme Court has noted that the shareholder
derivative action "could, if unrestrained,
undermine the basic principle of corporate
governance that the decisions of a
corporation--including the decision to
initiate litigation--should be made by the
board of directors or the majority of
shareholders."
Daily Income Fund, Inc. v. Fox, 464 U.S.
523, 531, 104 S.Ct. 831, 836, 78 L.Ed.2d 645
(1984) (citing
Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450, 26 L.Ed. 827
(1882)).
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 730.
"Because the shareholders'
ability to institute an action on behalf of
the corporation inherently impinges upon the
directors' power to manage the affairs of
the corporation the law imposes certain
prerequisites on a stockholder's right to
sue derivatively."
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 730 (citing
Pogostin v. Rice, 480 A.2d at 624);
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 811. Chancery
Court Rule 23.1 requires that
shareholders seeking to assert a claim on
behalf of the corporation must first exhaust
intracorporate remedies by making a demand
on the directors to obtain the action
desired, or to plead with particularity why
demand is excused. Ch.Ct.R. 23.1;
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 730.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 811-812;
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 783.
12
The purpose of pre-suit demand is
to assure that the stockholder affords the
corporation the opportunity to address an
alleged wrong without litigation, to decide
whether to invest the resources of the
corporation in litigation, and to control
any litigation which does occur.
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 730.
13
"[B]y promoting this form of alternate
dispute resolution, rather than immediate
recourse to litigation, the demand
requirement is a recognition of the
fundamental precept that directors manage
the business and affairs of corporations."
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812.
Standard of Review Demand Excused/Demand
Refused
Since a conscious decision by a
board of directors to refrain from acting
Page 774 may be a valid exercise of business
judgment, "where demand on a board has been
made and refused, [courts] apply the
business judgment rule in reviewing the
board's refusal to act pursuant to a
stockholder's demand" to file a lawsuit. Id.
at 813 (citing
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 784
& n. 10). The business judgment rule is a
presumption that in making a business
decision, not involving self-interest, the
directors of a corporation acted on an
informed basis, in good faith and in the
honest belief that the action taken was in
the best interests of the company. Grobow v.
Perot, Del.Supr., 539 A.2d 180, 187 (1988);
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812.
14 "The burden is
on the party challenging the decision to
establish facts rebutting th[is]
presumption."
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812. Thus,
the business judgment rule operates as a
judicial acknowledgement of a board of
directors' managerial prerogatives. Id.
Spiegel submits that judicial
review according to the traditional business
judgment rule was inappropriate in his case.
Spiegel sets forth two separate arguments in
support of his position. First, that the
allegations set forth in his complaint
support a finding that demand was excused,
according to this Court's holding in
Aronson, notwithstanding the fact that he
made a demand upon the Board. Second, and
alternatively, that by appointing a special
litigation committee with full authority to
respond to his demand, the Board waived its
right to challenge his allegation that
demand was excused, and thereby invoked the
special procedures for judicial review
established in Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado,
Del.Supr.,
430 A.2d 779 (1981). We shall
examine each of Spiegel's contentions.
Demand Made/Futility Waived
Spiegel filed a derivative action
on behalf of Waste Management, alleging that
a pre-suit demand on the Board was excused,
i.e., would have been a futile gesture.
However, Spiegel then filed a demand with
the Board to take legal action and "redress
the wrongs" set forth in his complaint.
Spiegel alleges that he was entitled to
simultaneously argue these inconsistent
arguments. The Board argues that when
Spiegel filed his demand, he waived his
right to continue asserting that demand was
excused. The Court of Chancery gave implicit
recognition to the validity of Spiegel's
position by examining the merits of both of
his arguments.
15
"When deciding a motion to
dismiss for failure to make a demand under
Chancery Rule 23.1 the record before the
court must be restricted to the allegations
of the complaint."
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 727-28.
Grobow v. Perot, 539 A.2d at 187;
Pogostin v. Rice, 480 A.2d at 622-24;
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 809. In
determining demand futility, the Court of
Chancery must decide whether, under the
particularized facts alleged in the
complaint:
[A] reasonable doubt is created that: (1)
the directors are disinterested and
independent and (2) the challenged
transaction was otherwise the product of a
valid exercise of business judgment.
Aronson
v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 814. In this case,
the Court of Chancery concluded that the
facts alleged in Spiegel's complaint did not
raise a reasonable doubt that the Board was
disabled from responding to Spiegel's demand
and passing upon whether it was in Waste
Management's interest to pursue Spiegel's
claims.
Spiegel argues that, even though
he made a demand, the Court of Chancery
properly reviewed the merits of his
complaint, which alleged that demand was
excused. Spiegel submits that demand
Page 775 should be encouraged by permitting a demand
to be made, while at the same time
permitting the argument, that demand was
excused, to be preserved. Spiegel finds some
support for his position in other
jurisdictions.
Bach v. National W. Life Ins. Co., 810 F.2d
509, 513 (5th Cir.1987);
Joy v. North, 692 F.2d 880, 888 n. 7 (2d
Cir.1982), cert. denied, 460 U.S. 1051, 103
S.Ct. 1498, 75 L.Ed.2d 930 (1983);
Alford v. Shaw, 72 N.C.App. 537, 324 S.E.2d
878, 883 n. 2 (1985), aff'd and modified
on other grounds, 320 N.C. 465, 358 S.E.2d
323 (1987). However, this Court has held
that by making a demand, a shareholder
thereby makes his original contention, that
demand was excused, moot. Stotland v. GAF
Corp., Del.Supr.,
469 A.2d 421 (1983).
In Stotland, the shareholders'
original derivative complaint did not allege
that a demand had been made on the
corporation's board of directors. The Court
of Chancery denied the shareholders' motion
to amend their complaint, and ordered the
action dismissed due to the shareholders'
failure either to make a demand or properly
demonstrate its futility. Id. at 422.
Following the dismissal, the shareholders
made a demand on the board, and then filed
an appeal from the dismissal, on grounds
that a demand would have been futile. The
board of directors appointed a special
litigation committee to review the demand.
That process was still in progress at the
time when the shareholders' appeal was heard
by this Court. We concluded that, by making
the demand, the shareholder mooted his
appeal, which was based on the issue of
demand futility. We held that "once a demand
has been made, absent a wrongful refusal,
the stockholders' ability to initiate a
derivative suit is terminated." Id. at 422
(citing
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at
784-86).
This Court has recently held that
when a board of directors is confronted with
a derivative action asserted on its behalf,
it cannot stand neutral.
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 731. The Board "must
affirmatively object to or support the
continuation of the [derivative]
litigation." Id. Similarly, a stockholder
who asserts a derivative claim cannot stand
neutral, in effect, with respect to the
board of directors' ability to respond to a
request to take legal action, by
simultaneously making a demand for such
action and continuing to argue that demand
is excused.
By making a demand, a stockholder
tacitly acknowledges the absence of facts to
support a finding of futility.
Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540
A.2d at 731. Thus, when a demand is
made, the question of whether demand was
excused is moot.
Stotland v. GAF Corp., 469 A.2d at 422-23.
Our decision in Stotland is applicable to
Spiegel's case. Therefore, we hold once
Spiegel made a demand, it was unnecessary
for the Court of Chancery to consider the
merits of Spiegel's argument that demand was
excused. Id. at 423.
A shareholder who makes a demand
can no longer argue that demand is excused.
Id.
16 The effect
of a demand is to place control of the
derivative litigation in the hands of the
board of directors.
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at
784-86.
17
Consequently, stockholders who,
Page 776 like Spiegel, make a demand which is
refused, subject the board's decision to
judicial review according to the traditional
business judgment rule.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 813;
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 784
n. 10.
Special Litigation Committee
Alternatively, Spiegel argues
that even though demand was made, the Board
admitted that demand was excused by
referring his demand to a special litigation
committee, and by delegating to that
committee the complete power to determine
the Board's litigation posture.
18 Therefore, Spiegel argues
that the Board's rejection of his demand was
subject to judicial review according to the
special procedures set forth in Zapata, and
not the traditional business judgment rule.
19 In support of
that position, Spiegel cites Abbey v.
Computer & Comm. Tech. Corp., Del.Ch., 457
A.2d 368 (1983). The Court of Chancery found
Abbey to be distinguishable and rejected
Spiegel's argument. We agree with the Court
of Chancery.
The facts upon which the Abbey
decision was based are different from the
facts of this case. In Abbey, the plaintiff
made demand on the corporation's board of
directors and then filed suit alleging that
demand was excused. The board responded to
the complaint in Abbey by appointing a new
board member to serve as a one-man special
litigation committee, and delegated full
authority to him to handle the derivative
action. The board in Abbey never made any
attempt to address the derivative litigation
itself. The Court of Chancery concluded, in
Abbey, that the board had, "in effect,
conceded its disqualification, and ...
thereby conceded [that demand was excused
and that] the plaintiff [was entitled] to
bring the [derivative] suit without awaiting
word from it...." 457 A.2d at 374.
This case is the procedural
reverse of Abbey. Spiegel filed his
derivative suit without first making demand.
The Board immediately took charge of the
litigation and filed a motion to dismiss
Spiegel's complaint for his failure to make
a demand in accordance with Rule 23.1.
Spiegel responded to the Board's motion by
making a demand. In response to Spiegel's
demand, the Board created a special
litigation committee.
The significance of this
procedural distinction was recognized by the
Court of Chancery in Richardson v. Graves,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 6617, Longobardi, V.C.
(June
Page 777 17, 1983). The plaintiff in Richardson, like
Spiegel, relying on Abbey, argued that the
board of directors had conceded that demand
was excused as futile by the appointment of
a special litigation committee. In
Richardson, the Court of Chancery
distinguished Abbey on the grounds that the
board in Abbey did not file a motion to
dismiss pursuant to Rule 23.1 until after it
had surrendered exclusive control of the
derivative action to a special litigation
committee. Richardson v. Graves, slip op. at
10-11. By contrast, the Richardson board,
like the Waste Management board, first filed
a motion to dismiss Spiegel's complaint due
to his failure to make a demand and later,
after Spiegel did make a demand, appointed a
special litigation committee to respond to
that demand. In Richardson, the court held:
[T]he facts here do not support a finding
of concession on the part of the Defendants
[, the board of directors,] or divestment of
their power at the time they moved to
dismiss. The Defendants here filed a proper
motion to dismiss and consistent with the
policy of [Rule] 23.1 must in the first
instance be afforded the opportunity to
control the litigation.
Richardson v. Graves, slip op. at
11.
In this case, we find that the
Court of Chancery properly rejected
Spiegel's argument that Abbey stands for the
proposition that a board of directors, ipso
facto, waives its right to challenge a
shareholder plaintiff's allegation that
demand is excused by the act of appointing a
special litigation committee and delegating
to that committee the authority to act on
the demand. Not only are the facts in Abbey
procedurally different from those of the
present case, but Abbey itself specifically
recognizes the right of a board of directors
to appoint committees to address derivative
litigation, without automatically subjecting
the committee's decision to the two-tier
level of judicial scrutiny established in
Zapata. In Abbey, the Court of Chancery
properly concluded that the special review
procedure which this Court set up in Zapata
applies:
only in a situation where, because of
some alleged self-interest, the board of
directors is disqualified from acting
itself. Otherwise, but for the disqualifying
self-interest factor, the board could make
its decision for itself, whether it chose to
do so through a committee or not, and cause
an appropriate motion to be made on behalf
of the corporation just as in any normal
suit in which the corporation was named as a
party defendant.
Abbey
v. Computer & Comm. Tech. Corp., 457 A.2d at
373. In this case, the Court of Chancery
held that the decision of a board of
directors to appoint a special litigation
committee, with a delegation of complete
authority to act on a demand, is not, in all
instances, an acknowledgement that demand
was excused and ergo that a shareholder's
lawsuit was properly initiated as a
derivative action. We affirm that holding.
Standard of Review Demand Refused/Motion
to Dismiss
Whenever any action or inaction
by a board of directors is subject to review
according to the traditional business
judgment rule, the issues before the Court
are independence, the reasonableness of its
investigation and good faith. By electing to
make a demand, a shareholder plaintiff
tacitly concedes the independence of a
majority of the board to respond. Therefore,
when a board refuses a demand, the only
issues to be examined are the good faith and
reasonableness of its investigation.
Absent an abuse of discretion, if
the requirements of the traditional business
judgment rule are met, the board of
directors' decision not to pursue the
derivative claim will be respected by the
courts.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812;
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at
784-85. In such cases, a board of
directors' motion to dismiss an action filed
by a shareholder, whose demand has been
rejected, must be granted.
20
"If Courts would not respect
Page 778 the directors' decision not to file suit,
then demand would be an empty formality."
Starrels v. First Nat. Bank of Chicago, 870
F.2d 1168, 1174 (7th Cir.1989)
(Easterbrook, J., concurring).
The same standard of judicial
review is applicable when a board delegates
authority to respond to a demand to a
special litigation committee. The issues are
solely the good faith and the reasonableness
of the committee's investigation.
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 787.
"The ultimate conclusion of the [special
litigation] committee ... is not subject to
judicial review." Id. (emphasis added).
Judicial review of the merits of a special
litigation committee's decision to refuse a
demand is limited to those cases where
demand upon the board of directors is
excused and the board has decided to regain
control of litigation through the use of an
independent special litigation committee.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 813-14;
Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d at 787.
Alford v. Shaw, 320 N.C. 465, 358 S.E.2d
323, 327 (1987).
The Court of Chancery
specifically recognized this important
distinction. In this case, the Court of
Chancery found there was no material dispute
that the Board, through its Committee, had
"function[ed] effectively ... in a way that
fully satisfies the prerequisites for the
application of the business judgment rule."
21 Consequently,
the Court of Chancery concluded that, in
accordance with the business judgment
expressed by the Board, through its
Committee, Spiegel's derivative action had
to be dismissed. Grobow v. Perot, Del.Supr.,
539 A.2d 180 (1988); Aronson v. Lewis,
Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805 (1984). We agree.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated in this
opinion, the ultimate decision of the Court
of Chancery, dismissing Spiegel's complaint
is AFFIRMED.
1 All of the management defendants,
except Koenig, are also directors of Waste
Management.
2 See Dooley & Veasey, The Role of the
Board in Derivative Litigation: Delaware Law
and the Current ALI Proposals Compared, 44
Bus.Law. 503 (1989).
Bach v. National W. Life Ins. Co., 810 F.2d
509, 513-14 (5th Cir.1987).
3 With Dempsey's leadership, Borg Warner
Corporation evolved from a primarily
manufacturing enterprise, to the point where
service industries comprised the majority of
its overall operations.
4 On February 25, 1987, Waste Management
sued ChemLawn to invalidate the
anti-takeover laws of Ohio, ChemLawn's state
of incorporation. ChemLawn counterclaimed,
seeking to enjoin Waste Management's
takeover bid. Among the allegations in
ChemLawn's counterclaim was the charge that
Buntrock, Huizenga, Dempsey and Koenig had
acquired ChemLawn shares in violation of
federal and state prohibitions against
trading on inside information. After EcoLab,
Inc. acquired ChemLawn, the Ohio litigation
was voluntarily dismissed.
5 The purchases of ChemLawn stock
occurred between May 8, 1985, and February
5, 1987. They may be summarized as follows:
Purchaser # of Shares
--------- -----------
Mr. Buntrock (*) 35,000
Huizenga 8,000
Dempsey 4,000
Koenig 400
*Mr. Buntrock's total purchases include not only his personal purchases, but
also those made by his wife and by trust funds established for the Buntrocks'
children.
6 In March and April, 1987, the
management defendants tendered all of their
47,400 shares of ChemLawn stock to EcoLab,
Inc. during its successful tender offer, at
prices ranging from $36.25 to $36.50 per
share.
7 Chancery Court Rule 23.1 states, in
part:
The complaint shall also allege with
particularity the efforts, if any, made by
the plaintiff to obtain the action he [or
she] desires from the directors or
comparable authority and the reasons for his
[or her] failure to obtain the action or for
not making the effort.
8 The Court of Chancery set a brief
schedule in order to properly act upon the
Board's motion. That brief schedule was
apparently abandoned by the parties after
Spiegel filed his demand. The Court of
Chancery's docket sheet indicates the next
action taken with respect to this case was
the filing of a motion to dismiss or,
alternatively, for summary judgment by a
special litigation committee appointed by
the Board to investigate and respond to
Spiegel's claims.
Purchaser # of Shares
--------- -----------
Mr. Buntrock * 35,000
Huizenga 8,000
Dempsey 4,000
Koenig 400
*Mr. Buntrock's total purchases include not only his personal purchases, but
also those made by his wife and by trust funds established for the Buntrocks'
children.
9 The Committee's chairman was Lee L.
Morgan, the most recent appointee to the
Board and the retired chairman of
Caterpillar, Inc. The other two members of
the Committee were Olin Neill Emmons, a
financial analyst and vice-president of
Oberweis Securities, Inc., and James R.
Peterson, a former officer and director of
the Pillsbury Company, R.J. Reynolds
Industries, Inc., and the Parker Pen
Company.
10 The Committee interviewed Spiegel's
attorney. Spiegel's counsel advised the
Committee that the allegations in the
complaint were based solely on the article
reported on March 30, 1987, in the Wall
Street Journal.
11 8 Del.C. § 141(a) provides, in
pertinent part:
The business and affairs of every
corporation organized under this chapter
shall be managed by a board of directors,
except as may be otherwise provided in this
chapter or in its certificate of
incorporation.
12 The United States Supreme Court
recognized the demand requirement, as an
embodiment of the director's prerogative to
control a corporation's business and
affairs, over a century ago
Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450, 26 L.Ed. 827
(1882).
13 See DeMott, Demand in Derivative
Actions: Problems of Interpretation and
Function, 19 U.C.Davis L.Rev. 461, 484-94
(1986).
14 The protections of the business
judgment rule can only be invoked by
disinterested directors.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812, 815
n. 8. However, the fact that all directors
are named as defendants in a derivative
complaint is not determinative of their lack
of independence. Id. at 817-18;
Pogostin v. Rice, 480 A.2d at 625.
15 The federal district court in Delaware
has also reviewed a futility of demand
argument subsequent to the filing of a
demand. Allison on Behalf of
G.M.C. v. General Motors Corp., 604 F.Supp.
1106 (D.Del.), aff'd, 782 F.2d 1026 (3d
Cir.1985).
16 The federal district court in Delaware
recognized the potential for the
establishment of a rule in Delaware that a
derivative plaintiff's assertion that demand
is excused is mooted once demand is made.
Allison on Behalf of
G.M.C. v. General Motors Corp., 604 F.Supp.
at 1119 n. 12.
17 "[Stotland ] thus treats the demand
requirement as an aspect of the allocation
of managerial powers within the corporation.
The case also creates a substantial
practical dilemma for the plaintiff: if no
demand is made, the suit may and probably
will be dismissed, but once the demand is
made, the plaintiff can no longer maintain
that demand should be excused." D. DeMott,
Shareholder Derivative Actions: Law and
Practice, § 5:03 (1987). We recognize this
reaffirmation of our decision in Stotland
requires a shareholder to make an election
between filing a demand and filing a
derivative action without a demand. We also
recognize that "the entire question of
demand futility is inextricably bound to
issues of business judgment and the
standards of that doctrine's applicability."
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812.
However, this shareholder "dilemma" is not a
Hobson's choice. "[U]nder Zapata and its
progeny, a plaintiff who can establish
demand futility not only avoids the need to
make a demand which the corporation may
refuse, but, at least in Delaware, also may
be able to obtain judicial review of the
merits of the case as part of the court's
evaluation of any motion to terminate made
by a special litigation committee acting on
behalf of the corporation." D. Block, N.
Barton & S. Radin, The Business Judgment
Rule: Fiduciary Duties of Corporate
Directors, 484 (3d Ed.1989).
18 A board of directors may delegate its
managerial authority to a committee of
directors. 8 Del.C. § 141(c). Even when a
majority of a board of directors is
independent, one advantage of establishing a
special litigation committee is to isolate
the interested directors from material
information during either the investigative
or decisional process. Cf. Mills Acquisition
Co. v. Macmillan, Inc., Del.Supr.,
559 A.2d 1261 (1988). In this case, Spiegel
emphasizes the difference between a Board's
"delegation of its decision-making
authority--as opposed to its investigative
authority--" to a committee. See D. Block,
N. Barton & S. Radin, The Business Judgment
Rule: Fiduciary Duties of Corporate
Directors, 476-77 n. 180, 485-88 (3d
Ed.1989). See also, D. Drexler, L. Black,
and G. Sparks, Delaware Corporate Law &
Practice, § 42.03[c] (1990).
19 As this Court noted in Aronson:
The thrust of Zapata is that in either
the demand-refused or the demand-excused
case, the board still retains its Section
141(a) managerial authority to make
decisions regarding corporate litigation....
Thus, even in a demand-excused case, a board
has the power to appoint a committee of one
or more independent disinterested directors
to determine whether the derivative action
should be pursued or dismissal sought. Under
Zapata, the Court of Chancery, in passing on
a committee's motion to dismiss a derivative
action in a demand excused case, must apply
a two-step test. First, the court must
inquire into the independence and good faith
of the committee and review the
reasonableness and good faith of the
committee's investigation. Second, the court
must apply its own independent business
judgment to decide whether the motion to
dismiss should be granted.
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 813
(citations omitted).
20 "The function of the business judgment
rule is of paramount significance in the
context of a derivative action. It comes
into play in several ways--in addressing a
demand, in the determination of demand
futility, in efforts by independent
disinterested directors to dismiss the
action as inimical to the corporation's best
interests, and generally, as a defense to
the merits of the suit."
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d at 812. "When
used in this manner, the rule is said to be
applied 'offensively'--it is used not to
defend the propriety of the underlying
action but rather to secure dismissal of the
suit without reaching the merits of the
claim." D. Block, N. Barton & S. Radin, The
Business Judgment Rule: Fiduciary Duties of
Corporate Directors, 492 (3d Ed.1989)
(citing D. DeMott, Shareholder Derivative
Actions: Law and Practice § 5:04 (1987));
Block & Prussin, Termination of Derivative
Suits Against Directors on Business Judgment
Grounds: From Zapata to Aronson, 39 Bus.Law.
1503 (1984); Block, Prussin & Wachtel,
Dismissal of Derivative Actions Under the
Business Judgment Rule: Zapata One Year
Later, 38 Bus.Law. 401 (1983); Sparks &
Conan, Litigation Committees, 16 Rev.Sec.Reg.
817 (1983); Cox, Searching for the
Corporation's Voice in Derivative Suit
Litigation: A Critique of Zapata and the ALI
Project, 1982 Duke L.J. 959 (1982); Payson,
Goldman & Inskip, After Maldonado--The Role
of the Special Litigation Committee in the
Investigation and Dismissal of Derivative
Suits, 37 Bus.Law. 1199 (1982); Veasey,
Seeking a Safe Harbor from Judicial Scrutiny
of Directors' Business Decisions--An
Analytical Framework for Litigation Strategy
and Counselling Directors, 37 Bus.Law. 1247
(1982); Block & Prussin, The Business
Judgment Rule and Shareholder Derivative
Actions: Viva Zapata?, 37 Bus.Law. 27
(1981).
21 Although the Court of Chancery held
that a pre-suit demand was required and not
made, it did not dismiss Spiegel's complaint
on that basis alone. Thereafter, it
re-examined Spiegel's complaint, following
the rejection of his post-suit demand, based
upon the Committee's motion to dismiss.
Weiss v. Temporary Inv. Fund, Inc., 692 F.2d
928, 943 (3d Cir.1982), aff'g 520 F.Supp.
1098, 1100 (D.Del.1981), vacated and
remanded on other grounds, 465 U.S. 1001,
104 S.Ct. 989, 79 L.Ed.2d 224 (1984);
Grossman v. Johnson, 674 F.2d 115, 125-26
(1st Cir.), cert. denied, 459 U.S. 838, 103
S.Ct. 85, 74 L.Ed.2d 80 (1982). |