| Page 445 592 A.2d 445  Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,107
Charles M. OBERLY, III, Attorney
General of the State of
Delaware, Allan P. Kirby, Jr., Grace K.
Culbertson, and Ann K. Kirby, Plaintiffs
Below, Appellants,
v.
Fred M. KIRBY, II, Walker D. Kirby, Fred M.
Kirby, III, S.
Dillard Kirby, Alice K. Horton, Jefferson W.
Kirby, and F.M. Kirby Foundation, Inc.,
a Delaware corporation,
Defendants Below, Appellees,
v.
Allan P. KIRBY, Jr., Grace K. Culbertson,
and Ann K. Kirby,
Cross-Claim-Defendants Below, Appellees.
No. 467, 1990 Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: April 17, 1990.
Rehearing en banc: Jan. 15, 1991.
Decided: June 4, 1991.
Page 451
Fred S. Silverman, Chief Deputy
Atty. Gen. (argued), and Ann Marie Johnson,
Deputy Atty. Gen. (argued), Dept. of
Justice, Wilmington, for appellant Charles
M. Oberly, III, Atty. Gen. of State of Del.
Edmund N. Carpenter, II (argued),
and Emily B. Horton, Richards, Layton &
Finger, Wilmington, for individual appellees
Fred M. Kirby, II, Walker D. Kirby, Fred M.
Kirby, III, S. Dillard Kirby, Alice K.
Horton and Jefferson W. Kirby.
Aubrey B. Lank and Brian A.
Sullivan, Theisen, Lank, Mulford & Goldberg,
Wilmington, for appellee F.M. Kirby
Foundation, Inc.
Grover C. Brown (argued), Edward
M. McNally and Mary M. Johnston, Morris,
James, Hitchens & Williams, William Prickett
(argued), Wayne N. Elliott and Donna A.
Hoch, Prickett, Jones, Elliott, Kristol &
Schnee, Wilmington (Robert P. Buford and
George R. Pitts, Hunton & Williams,
Richmond, Va., of counsel), for appellants
Allan P. Kirby, Jr., Grace K. Culbertson and
Ann K. Kirby.
Before CHRISTIE, C.J., HORSEY,
MOORE, WALSH and HOLLAND, JJ., constituting
the Court en banc.
WALSH, Justice:
The opinion in this case dated
November 19, 1990, which was released after
argument before a panel of three justices
and which affirmed the decision of the Court
of Chancery, is withdrawn. The following
opinion of the Court en banc is substituted.
This is an appeal from a bench
ruling of the Court of Chancery that granted
a motion to dismiss pursuant to Chancery
Court Rule 41(b). The complex dispute
revolves around the affairs of the F.M.
Kirby Foundation, Inc. (the "Foundation"), a
Delaware nonstock charitable corporation.
The case began as a proceeding under 8
Del.C. § 225 and 10 Del.C. § 6501 to
determine the identity of the directors and
members of the Foundation. Allan P. Kirby,
Jr. ("Allan, Jr."), Grace K. Culbertson
("Grace"), and Ann K. Kirby ("Ann")
(collectively, the "Kirby plaintiffs")
charge that their brother, Fred M. Kirby, II
("Fred"), illegally ousted them from their
positions as directors. They base their
claim primarily upon a bylaw amendment that
purported to remove Fred's wife and children
1 from their
positions as members of the Foundation and
to install the Kirby plaintiffs in their
place. The Kirby plaintiffs also argue that
Fred breached his fiduciary duty to the
Foundation by using his position to advance
his personal business interests. Finally,
the Kirby plaintiffs argue that Fred was
never validly elected as a member of the
Foundation.
After the commencement of this
litigation, Charles M. Oberly, III, the
Attorney General of the State of Delaware,
(the "Attorney General") intervened on
behalf of the public beneficiaries of the
Foundation. In this appeal, the Attorney
General joins the Kirby plaintiffs
(collectively, the "appellants" or the
"plaintiffs") in arguing that Fred had not
been validly elected and that he had sought
to entrench his control and to use the
Foundation for personal ends. In addition,
the Attorney General attacks the propriety
of a 1985 transaction (the "Alleghany
transaction" or the "transaction") between
the Foundation and the Alleghany Corporation
("Alleghany"), charging that both Fred and
the Kirby plaintiffs had breached their
fiduciary duties by voting, as Foundation
directors, to approve that transaction.
Page 452
Although we would have preferred
a more formal ruling by the Court of
Chancery in such a complex case, we find no
error in the decision to dismiss all claims.
The fundamental question underlying many of
the appellants' claims is whether the
defendants acted in a manner that was
consistent with the charitable purposes for
which the Foundation was established. Thus,
even if the transaction challenged by the
Attorney General is viewed as presenting a
conflict of interest to the Foundation's
directors, we conclude that it was a
fundamentally fair transaction and therefore
did not jeopardize the charitable goals of
the Foundation. Similarly, while it is
apparent that Fred exercised tight control
over the Foundation and sought to solidify
that control, none of his challenged actions
impaired the work of the Foundation or were
impermissible under the Certificate of
Incorporation (the "Certificate") and the
bylaws of the Foundation. In contrast, the
bylaw amendment adopted by the Kirby
plaintiffs was wholly inconsistent with the
Certificate. Because the Court of Chancery's
factual findings are amply supported by the
record and because its legal rulings are
correct, we affirm.
I
The parties to this appeal
continue to dispute several of the facts
underlying the litigation. Moreover, the
findings of fact of the Court of Chancery
are scattered throughout several unreported
opinions and a bench ruling. Therefore, an
extended discussion of the events that gave
rise to the case, as reflected in the record
before us, is required.
The Foundation was organized in
1931 by Fred M. Kirby ("Kirby"), the
grandfather of Fred and the Kirby
plaintiffs. Kirby had made his fortune from
a chain of five-and-dime stores that
eventually became a part of the F.W.
Woolworth Corporation. He donated a portion
of his wealth to establish the Foundation,
which, under the terms of the Certificate,
is "[t]o be conducted and operated ...
exclusively for religious, charitable,
scientific, literary and educational
purposes." The Foundation is to be managed
by a board of directors, the size of which
is not specified. Under Delaware law, the
members of a nonstock corporation have the
power to elect its directors. 8 Del.C. §§
141(j)-(k), 215. The original members of the
Foundation were its incorporators: Kirby;
his lawyer, Walter Orr ("Orr"); and E.P.
Schooley ("Schooley"), one of Kirby's
employees. Article EIGHTH of the Certificate
establishes the conditions of membership:
1--Only individuals interested in
the objects and purposes of the corporation
are eligible to become members. New members
of the corporation, without limit as to
number, may be elected by majority vote of
the old members. A member may voluntarily
withdraw from the corporation at any time.
There shall be at all times not less than
three members of the corporation, and if, at
any time, the total membership shall fall
below three members, whether by reason of
death, voluntary withdrawal or otherwise,
the two remaining members, or the one
remaining member, as soon as practicable,
shall elect or select a new member or
members at least sufficient to bring the
total membership up to three members....
[I]n the event there shall at any time cease
to be any members of the corporation, then
the executors or administrators of the last
three members to have their membership
terminated by death, shall elect three new
members. If at the time there shall cease to
be any members of the corporation, there
shall not be as many as three former members
whose membership was terminated by death,
then the executors or administrators of the
last two members or the last one member, as
the case may be, to have their or his
membership terminated by death, shall elect
or select three new members....
In short, the Foundation's
members are entitled to elect both directors
and new members. At least three members must
serve at all times.
The Foundation's first members'
meeting was held on January 15, 1931. At
that
Page 453 meeting, Schooley resigned
2
and the remaining members elected Kirby's
son, Allan P. Kirby, Sr. ("Allan, Sr."), to
replace him. The three members, Kirby, Orr,
and Allan, Sr., then elected themselves
directors. In 1938, Kirby resigned as
director and was replaced by Schooley. Kirby
died two years later and Orr and Allan, Sr.
served as the only members of the Foundation
until May 6, 1942, at which time Schooley
was again chosen to fill out the required
complement of members.
3
By June 12, 1952, Schooley had
apparently again resigned from his position
as member. At that time, a members' meeting
was called and Fred, Allan, Sr.'s son, was
elected a member. On October 6, 1953, Orr
and Schooley resigned as directors and the
members--Allan, Sr., Orr, and Fred--elected
Fred and his three siblings--now the Kirby
plaintiffs--to serve as directors. In 1961,
Orr died and neither Fred nor Allan, Sr. saw
fit to replace him. Thus, the Foundation was
left without the full slate of members
required by the Certificate. In 1967, Allan,
Sr. suffered a debilitating stroke that
incapacitated him until his death in 1973.
At the time, Fred was left as the sole
member of the Foundation, while his siblings
continued to serve with him as directors.
This state of affairs continued unchanged
until 1984.
For the first fifty years of its
existence, the identity of the members and
directors of the Foundation was not a point
of contention. To all appearances, the
Foundation carried about its business in an
expeditious manner, investing its assets
profitably and funding a wide variety of
charitable endeavors. At first, Kirby was
largely responsible for running the
Foundation, later Allan, Sr. took over and
eventually Fred assumed prime
responsibility. The directors met
infrequently, and meetings of the membership
became impossible after 1973 since Fred was
the sole member.
Beginning in 1981, for reasons
that are not apparent, the directors,
consisting of Fred and his three siblings,
began to meet on a much more frequent basis.
At the July 22, 1981 meeting, it was
"decided that each Director may bring one
blood-related child to the next meeting for
the purpose of general familiarization with
the affairs of the Foundation and to test
the interest of the younger generation
therein." In April, 1984, notwithstanding
this apparent intention to involve the
children of all the directors in the
Foundation's governance, Fred secretly
selected his wife and four children to serve
as members. At trial, Fred testified that he
had delayed selecting new members for such a
long time because he had been uncertain who
could best serve the Foundation. He claimed
that his selection of his immediate family
was not intended to foreclose election of
other members in the future, but that he
chose his wife and children because he had
great confidence in their abilities.
Nevertheless, he kept the enlargement of the
membership secret from his fellow directors,
apparently because he knew that his siblings
would be upset if they knew.
Throughout Fred's tenure as sole
member, the Kirby plaintiffs had
periodically requested that Fred make them
members as well as directors. They
reiterated this request on April 1, 1986, in
a letter written by Allan, Jr. Fred
responded in a letter dated April 21, in
which he informed his siblings of his secret
decision appointing his wife and children as
members. The Kirby plaintiffs reacted by
demanding that Fred seek the resignation of
his wife and
Page 454 children and appoint a slate of members that
fully represented the various descendants of
Allan, Sr. Fred agreed only to discuss the
dispute at the next directors' meeting on
June 5.
At a luncheon on the day of the
directors' meeting, the Kirby plaintiffs
discussed strategy. They agreed that they
would attempt to convince Fred to alter the
Foundation's membership. However, if
persuasion failed, they resolved to propose
and adopt an amendment to the bylaws that
purported to force out Fred's wife and
children and replace them with the Kirby
plaintiffs. At the subsequent meeting, Fred
refused to entertain his siblings
suggestions. Accordingly, Allan, Jr.
introduced the following resolution:
RESOLVED that the By-laws be amended so
as to provide for the Board of Directors,
and only the Board of Directors, to
constitute the Members of the Corporation.
Fred argued that the resolution
was contrary to the Certificate and illegal
under Delaware law. Nevertheless, the Kirby
plaintiffs adopted the resolution over
Fred's opposition. For two months, the two
factions disputed the legality and
advisability of the new bylaw. Both sides
sought, and received, legal opinions that
supported their respective positions. On
August 13, 1986, however, Fred met with his
wife and children. Purporting to act as
members, they removed the Kirby plaintiffs
from their positions as directors and
elected themselves to serve in their place.
Thus, when the dust had settled, Fred and
his immediate family purported to have
exclusive control over the Foundation.
The Kirby plaintiffs filed this
action on August 29, 1986, in an effort to
regain their positions in the Foundation and
to oust Fred's family. Initially, they
sought declaratory relief pursuant to 8
Del.C. § 225 and 10 Del.C. § 6501, to
determine the identity of the Foundation's
members and directors. The defendants moved
unsuccessfully to dismiss this claim
pursuant to Chancery Court Rule 12(b)(6),
alleging a failure to state a claim upon
which relief could be granted. Thereafter,
the Kirby plaintiffs amended their
complaint, primarily to argue that Fred had
breached his fiduciary duties to the
Foundation by seeking to entrench his
control of it. The Attorney General was
permitted to intervene as a party plaintiff
and joined the Kirby plaintiffs in arguing
that Fred had acted to solidify his control.
4 In addition, the
Attorney General charged that both Fred and
the Kirby plaintiffs had breached their
duties as directors by approving an
interested transaction between the
Foundation and the Alleghany Corporation. We
now turn to the facts relevant to this
aspect of the litigation.
After Kirby had made his fortune
in retail stores, his son, Allan, Sr., went
on to achieve his own successes in the
business world. The primary vehicle for his
endeavors was Alleghany, originally a
railroad holding company. In 1966, Allan,
Sr. bequeathed approximately one million
shares of Alleghany stock to the Foundation;
the bulk of these shares were transferred
when Allan, Sr.'s estate was settled in
1976. From that time forward, Alleghany
stock was by far the Foundation's largest
asset. In 1985, just prior to the
transaction under challenge, the Foundation
held a 15% stake in Alleghany, while
Alleghany stock constituted 80% of the
Foundation's assets. Large blocks of
Alleghany stock also came to be held by Fred
and his siblings.
After Allan, Sr.'s
incapacitation, Fred took over control of
Alleghany, becoming chairman of its board of
directors and its chief operating officer.
Under his direction, the company flourished
by selling its railroad assets and
assembling a diversified array of
subsidiaries, including a financial services
firm called Investors Diversified Services
("IDS"). In a 1984 transaction, Alleghany
sold IDS to the American Express Company
("American Express") in exchange for 11.5
million shares of American Express common
stock, then worth
Page 455 $370 million. This transaction left
Alleghany as the single largest shareholder
of American Express and secured Fred a seat
on the American Express board of directors.
Alleghany's business successes
redounded to the benefit of the Foundation
since the Foundation's assets were composed
primarily of Alleghany stock. However, the
Foundation's reliance upon the value of
Alleghany stock could not continue
indefinitely. In 1969, Congress had enacted
section 4943 of the Internal Revenue Code as
part of the Tax Reform Act of that year.
Under section 4943, a tax-exempt nonprofit
foundation incurs a special excise tax on
so-called "excess business holdings" that it
owns after a certain date. "Excess business
holdings" are defined as an interest in the
stock of any given corporation that exceeds
a specified percentage of the corporation's
outstanding shares. The purpose of this
provision is to discourage the use of
nonprofit foundations as a device for
controlling the governance of a for-profit
corporation. See H.R.Rep. No. 91-413, 91st
Cong., 1st Sess. 1, 27-31, reprinted in 1969
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1645, 1671-75.
Because the Foundation's directors
themselves held large blocks of Alleghany
stock, the Foundation could own no more than
two percent of Alleghany's voting stock nor
more than two percent of the value of all
Alleghany stock. I.R.C. § 4943(c)(2). The
Foundation was required to reduce its
holdings to this level by 1986 or face the
additional tax.
In 1985, as the Foundation's
deadline for divesting its Alleghany stock
approached, Alleghany's management became
aware of a provision of the Internal Revenue
Code that would allow it to avoid paying
capital gains tax on assets used to redeem
its own stock when that stock constituted
"excess business holdings" in the hands of a
foundation. I.R.C. § 311(d)(2)(D) (1985).
5 The American
Express stock that Alleghany had acquired in
exchange for IDS had appreciated
considerably since 1984; as a result, an
exchange of the Foundation's Alleghany stock
for Alleghany's American Express stock
immediately appeared as an attractive
transaction for both entities. Both entities
could realize substantial profits, but
Alleghany would pay no tax and the
Foundation would pay only the two-percent
excise tax that applies to all profits of
private foundations. There was a
complicating factor, however. Fred was both
the chairman of Alleghany and the president
of the Foundation's board. Allan, Jr. was a
director of both Alleghany and the
Foundation. All four Foundation directors
held substantial blocks of Alleghany stock.
Thus, the proposed swap would constitute the
virtual paradigm of an "interested"
transaction.
Fred initially considered hiring
an investment banker to negotiate on behalf
of the Foundation, but ultimately decided to
entrust the matter to the Foundation's
long-time attorney, Harry Weyher ("Weyher").
Weyher was instructed to reach an agreement
with Alleghany that would be fair to the
Foundation, but was not authorized to seek
out other potential buyers of the Alleghany
stock. Alleghany's board, meanwhile,
retained Merrill Lynch Capital Markets
("Merrill Lynch") to represent Alleghany.
Negotiations began on August 1, 1985 and
continued through mid-September, when a
stock purchase agreement was finalized.
Merrill Lynch began negotiations by
suggesting that the Alleghany shares be
bought at a discount below the market price,
since the Foundation had to sell its shares
and since possible alternative transactions
all suffered from significant drawbacks.
Merrill Lynch pointed out that because the
Foundation was an "affiliate" of Alleghany
within the meaning of Securities and
Exchange Commission Rule 144, 17 C.F.R. §
230.144, and because it had received its
Alleghany stock from Allan, Sr., who was
also an Alleghany "affiliate," it could not
sell its stock to another buyer without
either registering it under the Securities
Act of 1933 or complying with the
"safe-harbor" provisions of Rule 144.
Registration would force the Foundation to
incur significant transaction costs, and a
large public sale would likely drive down
Page 456 the market price, since the number of shares
to be sold was large relative to the size of
the existing market. Compliance with Rule
144, on the other hand, would limit the
liquidity of the shares in the hands of the
buyer for a period of two years. As a
result, a substantial discount would likely
be demanded by any potential buyer.
Weyher countered Merrill Lynch's
argument by contending that the important
consideration was the fairness of any
transaction to both parties, not the
Foundation's supposed weak bargaining
position. He suggested that because
Alleghany would gain substantial tax
benefits from dealing with the Foundation,
it should share those benefits with the
Foundation by paying a premium for the
Alleghany shares. In short, Merrill Lynch
insisted on a discount and Weyher demanded a
premium. Price, however, was the only
significant point of contention between the
two sides. After several weeks of
disagreement, the parties finally agreed to
"split the difference" and exchange their
shares at market prices: the Foundation's
1,118,826 Alleghany shares would be swapped
for 2,062,940 shares of unregistered
American Express stock, an exchange ratio
that reflected the market price of the two
stocks on August 23, 1985. Although Merrill
Lynch opined that the transaction was fair
to Alleghany, the Foundation never retained
an investment banker to offer a fairness
opinion.
The Foundation board unanimously
approved the transaction on September 25,
1985. Alleghany's board had approved the
transaction at a September 18 meeting in
which Fred and Allan, Jr. did not
participate. Alleghany shareholders approved
the exchange at a meeting on November 7,
1985, and the exchange was executed shortly
thereafter.
In the three years between the
filing of this action and trial, the Court
of Chancery ruled on a series of preliminary
matters, including a motion by the Kirby
plaintiffs that would have permitted them to
participate in the Foundation's management
pendente lite and various motions to dismiss
by the defendants. The case eventually
proceeded to trial on October 2, 1989.
The Kirby plaintiffs and the
Attorney General presented evidence for five
days, at the conclusion of which, the
defendants moved to dismiss all claims under
Chancery Court Rule 41(b). In a bench
ruling, the court held that Fred was a valid
member of the Foundation and that he had
acted legally in appointing his wife and
children as members and removing his
siblings from the board. By contrast, the
court found that the bylaw amendment adopted
by the Kirby plaintiffs was invalid under
the Foundation's Certificate. Finally, the
court held that the defendants had breached
none of their fiduciary duties and that the
Alleghany transaction was fundamentally fair
to the Foundation.
II
Having delved deep into the
records of the Foundation's early history,
the appellants have crafted an unusual
argument: they contend that Fred was never
properly elected a member in 1952 and hence
never had the power to appoint his wife and
children as members or to remove his
siblings from the board. This argument stems
from the rather haphazard record-keeping of
the Foundation during much of its history.
Because Kirby, Allan, Sr., and Fred
successively ran the Foundation almost
single-handedly, the members and directors
of the Foundation rarely met and the records
of what transpired at and between meetings
are quite fragmentary. As a result, it is
unclear whether or not E.P. Schooley was a
member in 1952 when Fred was elected a
member. The appellants contend that Schooley
was a member in 1952 and that because he was
not notified of the meeting at which Fred
was elected, the actions undertaken at that
meeting are invalid and void. See Schroder
v. Scotten, Dillon Co., Del.Ch., 299 A.2d
431 (1972); Bryan v. Western Pac. R.R.,
Del.Ch., 35 A.2d 909 (1944). The appellants'
claim hinges upon the factual question of
whether or not Schooley was a member in
1952. The Vice Chancellor ruled that he was
not. However, because
Page 457 the Vice Chancellor based his findings upon
a limited "paper" record, we are not bound
by such findings if they are clearly
erroneous based on our view of the record.
Fiduciary Trust Co. of N.Y. v. Fiduciary
Trust Co. of N.Y., Del.Supr., 445 A.2d 927,
930 (1982).
Without question, Schooley was
one of the founding members of the
Foundation. At its first meeting on January
15, 1931, however, he resigned and was
replaced by Allan, Sr. An undated
resignation was placed in the Foundation's
files along with the minutes of the 1931
meeting, and all parties now agree that this
resignation was executed in 1931. Eleven
years later, on May 6, 1942, Schooley was
once again chosen to serve as a member.
There is no direct evidence, such as a
letter of resignation, to indicate that
Schooley ever resigned from this post.
However, the minutes of the 1952 meeting at
which Fred was elected recite that Allan,
Sr. and Walter Orr were then the only
members of the Foundation. Thus, the Vice
Chancellor concluded that although no record
of Schooley's resignation exists, he had in
fact resigned sometime between 1942 and
1952.
When called upon to base a
factual determination upon such a sparse and
equivocal body of evidence, a trial judge
must establish some rational basis for
favoring one conclusion over another and
answering a question that cannot be answered
with a high degree of certitude. Since
Allan, Sr., Schooley, and Orr are long dead,
no one can be wholly certain whether
Schooley was or was not a member in 1952.
However, the Vice Chancellor decided that
more weight should be given to the
affirmative statements of Allan, Sr. and Orr
in the minutes of the meeting than to mere
inferences that might be drawn from the
absence of a formal resignation. Allan, Sr.
was a highly successful businessman and Orr
was a competent and respected lawyer; the
Vice Chancellor considered it unlikely that
they simply forgot that Schooley was a
member. He found it to be more likely that
Schooley's resignation was lost or was never
formally executed or recorded. Moreover, the
Vice Chancellor found it significant that
Schooley never objected to the validity of
the 1952 meeting, even though he served as a
director of the Foundation until 1953 and
would have been aware of the 1952 members'
meeting.
Under our standard of review, we
cannot conclude that these findings are
incorrect. We might perhaps question the
Vice Chancellor's estimation of Orr and
Allan, Sr.'s attentiveness, since they
undoubtedly either forgot that Schooley was
a member or forgot to insure that Schooley's
resignation was duly preserved in the
Foundation's records. Nevertheless, the Vice
Chancellor's decision to give more weight to
an affirmative statement than to a possible
negative inference clearly constituted a
rational basis for evaluating the available
evidence. Moreover, the burden of proving
the invalidity of Fred's election rested
upon the appellants. Oberly v. Howard Hughes
Medical Inst., Del.Ch., 472 A.2d 366, 386-87
(1984). Before a court declares invalid a
corporate election that was held
thirty-seven years ago and thereby upsets
long-settled expectations and reliance upon
assumed events, it is entitled to demand
clear and convincing evidence that the
election was, in fact, invalid. The
appellants clearly cannot meet this burden
by expecting the court to draw inferences
from a lack of evidence. Accordingly, we
accept the Vice Chancellor's finding that
Fred was validly elected as a member in
1952.
III
We now consider the legality of
the Kirby plaintiffs' bylaw amendment.
Although the bylaw amendment is the focus of
the Kirby plaintiffs' claim to be directors
of the Foundation, the issues involved are
not overly complex. Essentially, we are
called upon to interpret the Certificate of
Incorporation and determine whether the
bylaw amendment is permitted or forbidden by
the Certificate. Because the Certificate is
a document in the nature of a contract, its
construction raises legal questions that are
subject to de novo review by this Court.
Hibbert v. Hollywood Park, Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 339, 342-43 (1983);
Page 458 Rohner v. Niemann, Del.Supr., 380 A.2d 549,
552 (1977).
Article EIGHTH, Section 1 of the
Certificate establishes the means by which
members of the Foundation are chosen: "New
members of the corporation, without limit as
to number, may be elected by majority vote
of the old members." The language of this
provision is clear and unambiguous.
Nevertheless, the Kirby plaintiffs argue
that the Foundation's directors also are
given the power to choose members under
Article EIGHTH, Section 2:
The corporation may establish and put
into effect such further rules, regulations
and orders governing admission to
membership, duties and obligations of
members, provisions for suspension,
reprimands or expulsion from membership and
classification of members as the by-laws
shall from time to time provide and as shall
not be inconsistent with Section 1 of this
Article.
Under Article TENTH, Section 1 of
the Certificate, the directors have the
power to amend the Foundation's bylaws. The
Kirby plaintiffs argue that their bylaw
amendment, which provided that only
directors could be members, was nothing more
than a "further rule[ ] ... governing
admission to membership." Thus, they contend
that the simple expedient of amending the
bylaws allows directors, as well as members,
to elect the Foundation's members.
The Kirby plaintiffs' argument
has some superficial appeal. The language of
Article EIGHTH, Section 2 is quite
expansive; it allows the directors to
oversee virtually all aspects of the
membership, including admission, duties and
obligations, and expulsion. Nevertheless, we
find that the bylaw amendment in question is
inconsistent with the overall structure of
the Foundation and with the specific
requirements of Article EIGHTH, Section 1.
6
The management structure of the
Foundation is roughly analogous to that of a
for-profit corporation. In a corporate
business enterprise, the board of directors
has broad authority to manage the affairs of
the corporation, but the directors hold
their offices at the sufferance of the
shareholders. 8 Del.C. § 141(k). Beyond the
power to vote for directors and to
participate in annual meetings, shareholders
have limited direct authority. But the
enterprise is owned by the shareholders and
they cannot be forced out of the corporation
except in special circumstances, and then
they must be fully compensated for their
interests. E.g., 8 Del.C. § 253 ("short
form" merger statute). The directors wield
more power on a day-to-day basis, but they
are subordinate to the stockholders and have
no control over the identify of the
stockholders.
7
Under its Certificate, the
Foundation is to be managed by the
directors, who are elected by the members.
The members, in turn, have no other duties;
however, they hold their positions by virtue
of being "interested in the objects and
purposes of the corporation." The original
members were the Foundation's founder and
his handpicked associates; their successors
have been the direct descendants of the
founder. Thus, while the members do not
"own" the Foundation in the sense of having
a pecuniary interest in its existence, they
have been responsible for its creation and
continued endowment. They have been the
Foundation's "investors."
The analogy between members and
stockholders is, perhaps, an imperfect one.
Notably, stockholders do not elect other
stockholders. Moreover, the Foundation must
be managed on behalf of its beneficiaries,
not its members. In light of the role of the
members in creating the Foundation and
electing its directors, however, we think it
clear that the members' power was intended
to resemble that of stockholders.
8
Page 459
As a result, we
do not believe that the Foundation's members
can be ousted by the very directors whom
they have elected. Any other interpretation
would render the Foundation's corporate
structure fundamentally unstable.
The rules of contractual
construction also support our interpretation
of the Certificate. Article EIGHTH, Section
1 unambiguously vests the members with the
power to elect new members. Section 2, while
giving the directors power to regulate
membership, does not mention the election of
members. If the drafters of the Certificate
had intended to give the directors such
power, they could have done so explicitly,
by using language similar to that found in
Section 1. Instead, Section 2 speaks in
extremely general terms. Thus, we believe,
as the Vice Chancellor found, that Section 2
empowers the directors to establish general
criteria for membership or mechanisms for
disciplining or removing members. It does
not, however, empower directors to make
specific decisions about which individuals
should or should not be members. The Kirby
plaintiffs' bylaw amendment may be cast in
neutral-sounding language, but it was
clearly designed to remove certain
individuals from membership and replace them
with others. Accordingly, it is directly in
conflict with the election mechanism
established by Section 1.
The Kirby plaintiffs place heavy
reliance upon two decisions to support their
claim. First, they cite Denckla v.
Independence Foundation, Del.Ch., 181 A.2d
78 (1962), aff'd, Del.Supr., 193 A.2d 538
(1963). Denckla also involved a dispute over
the control of a charitable corporation, the
Independence Foundation ("Independence"),
which had a structure similar to that of the
Kirby Foundation, in that it was governed by
directors who were chosen by members. At
some point in the course of the Denckla
dispute, the Independence directors met and
"the By-Laws were amended to provide that
the officers of the Foundation should ex
officio be members." 193 A.2d at 540. Thus,
the Kirby plaintiffs suggest that the power
that they claim for themselves is
permissible under Delaware law. It should be
noted, however, that the validity of the
bylaw amendment was not at issue in Denckla.
More important, the bylaw amendment there
did not conflict with Independence's
certificate of incorporation. The method for
electing members was established by
Independence's bylaws, rather than by its
certificate. See Denckla, 181 A.2d at 80-81.
Thus, the directors were free to alter the
method simply by amending the bylaws. By
arguing that Denckla establishes the power
of directors to elect members under Delaware
law, the Kirby plaintiffs misapprehend the
meaning of the lower court's ruling. Their
proposed amendment is invalid not primarily
because it violates Delaware law, but
because it is contrary to the Foundation's
Certificate. It violates Delaware law only
because it is contrary to the Certificate.
The Kirby plaintiffs also rely
upon a series of cases involving the affairs
of the Osteopathic Hospital Association of
Delaware (the "Hospital"). In re Osteopathic
Hospital Ass'n of Del., Del.Ch.,
191 A.2d 333 (1963), aff'd, Del.Supr.,
195 A.2d 759
(1963). There, the Hospital was governed by
a board of trustees and by a large body of
members who were primarily physicians. Under
the explicit and unambiguous terms of the
Hospital's certificate of incorporation,
members elected trustees and the trustees
selected physicians for admission to
membership. Thus, the structure of the
Hospital was quite different from that of
the Foundation. Under the Hospital's bylaws,
however, nonphysicians could be selected as
members only with the concurrence of a
majority of the members. Notwithstanding
this provision, the trustees amended the
bylaws to make themselves
Page 460 members. As a result, laymen became members
of the Foundation without any input from
existing members. In the ensuing litigation,
it was ruled that although the bylaw
amendment was facially valid, it was legally
unreasonable because it upset the members'
settled expectation of being able to vote
upon the admission of laymen. Thus, rather
than supporting the Kirby plaintiffs'
argument that directors of a nonstock
corporation have power to elect its members,
the Osteopathic Hospital cases stand for the
principle that even where directors are
given such power by a certificate of
incorporation, they may not exercise it
unreasonably. The case now before this Court
is one in which the directors have no such
power to begin with.
9
The Kirby plaintiffs also point
to the minutes of a meeting of the board of
directors held on May 6, 1942 to support
their contentions. The minutes reflect that
the then-directors--Allan, Sr., Orr, and
Schooley--were all present. They then
recite:
The Chairman [Allan, Sr.] stated
that it was necessary to elect a new member
of the Corporation. Mr. E.P. Schooley was
thereupon nominated to be a member of the
Corporation and upon motion duly made,
seconded and unanimously carried, Mr.
Schooley was declared duly elected a member
of the Corporation. Mr. Schooley accepted
membership in the Corporation.
The Kirby plaintiffs view these
minutes as proof that all three of the
directors, including Schooley himself, voted
to elect Schooley as a member. They then
claim that this incident supports their
contention that directors may elect members.
The Vice Chancellor found, however, that
Allan, Sr. and Orr acted in their capacity
as members to elect Schooley. We agree. If
the directors had sought to exercise the
power that the Kirby plaintiffs claim they
enjoy, they would have had to amend the
bylaws in order to elect Schooley. Article
EIGHTH, Section 2 clearly states that "[t]he
corporation may establish ... such further
rules ... governing ... membership ... as
the by-laws shall from time to time
provide." (emphasis added). There is no
mention of a bylaw amendment in the minutes
of the 1942 meeting. Thus, we can conclude
either that the directors were purporting to
exercise a power that even the Kirby
plaintiffs do not claim they have, or that
Allan, Sr. and Orr acted as members when
they elected Schooley. The Vice Chancellor
reached the latter conclusion, and we have
no reason to disagree.
Finally, the Kirby plaintiffs
argue that the Vice Chancellor's
interpretation of the Certificate was
erroneous in that it contradicted an earlier
ruling by another Vice Chancellor in the
same case. On July 29, 1987, Vice Chancellor
Berger denied the defendants' motion to
dismiss under Chancery Court Rule 12(b)(6).
In doing so, she found that the terms of the
Certificate governing the election of
members were arguably ambiguous and that
they would have to be construed on the basis
of evidence presented at trial. The Kirby
plaintiffs contend that this ruling
established the "law of the case" and that
as a member of the same court that had
rendered this ruling, the trial judge, Vice
Chancellor Chandler, could not contradict
it. We must confess to finding this argument
somewhat abstruse. The procedural posture of
the case when each of the Vice Chancellors
examined it was quite different. Under Rule
12(b)(6), the trial court must decide
whether the plaintiffs state a claim under
any possible set of facts that they might
prove. Thus, Vice Chancellor Berger found
that if, for example, the appellants
Page 461 proved that Kirby had intended directors to
have the power to select members, the
plaintiffs might be entitled to relief. When
the case came before Vice Chancellor
Chandler under Chancery Court Rule 41(b),
however, the trial court was called upon to
decide whether, on the evidence presented,
the plaintiffs had succeeded in proving that
their interpretation of the Certificate was
the correct one. He found that they had not
and ruled that the defendants' construction
of the Certificate was the only reading that
was logically consistent with the overall
structure of the Foundation. Thus, Vice
Chancellor Chandler simply resolved the
ambiguity that Vice Chancellor Berger had
identified under a different procedural
standard. Cf. Farmer in the Dell Enters. v.
Farmers Mut. Ins. Co. of Del., Del.Supr.,
514 A.2d 1097, 1099 (1986).
10
In sum, we find that the Vice
Chancellor's decision under 8 Del.C. § 225
and 10 Del.C. § 6501 must be affirmed. Fred
was validly elected a member in 1952. As a
member, he clearly had the power to elect
other members. Under the Certificate, the
Foundation's directors have no power to
elect members. Thus, the June 5, 1986 bylaw
amendment was invalid as a matter of law and
did not have the effect of removing Fred's
wife and children from the membership or of
replacing them with the Kirby plaintiffs. As
validly elected members, Fred and his wife
and children had the power to remove the
Kirby plaintiffs from their seats as
directors and to elect themselves in their
place.
IV
We now turn to the more complex
question of whether Fred's actions violated
his fiduciary duty to the Foundation. In
essence, the appellants argue that Fred
engaged in practices designed to place him
in personal control of the Foundation and to
promote his business interests rather than
the welfare of the Foundation and its
beneficiaries. Specifically, they criticize
his failure to appoint two additional
members during the first eleven years after
Allan, Sr.'s death, his decision to conceal
the appointment of his wife and children
from his fellow directors, his alleged
falsification of the minutes of the June 5,
1986 directors meeting, and his decision to
oust the Kirby plaintiffs as directors and
replace them with five individuals who have
only limited business and philanthropic
experience. In addition to these charges,
the Attorney General argues that Fred
breached his fiduciary duty by directing
that shares of stock held by the Foundation
be voted to support his election to the
boards of directors of Alleghany, American
Express, the F.W. Woolworth Corporation, and
the Pittston Company.
11
To resolve these claims, we are
required to delineate the exact scope of the
fiduciary duties imposed on Fred and, to a
lesser degree, the other individuals who
functioned as members and/or directors of
the Foundation. Accordingly, it is important
that we apply a searching standard of review
in determining the legal standards that
govern the appellees' actions. Fiduciary
Trust Co., 445 A.2d at 930. However, to the
extent that the appellants' claims call into
question the trial court's factual findings,
its rulings are entitled to greater
deference. Levitt v. Bouvier, Del.Supr., 287
A.2d 671, 673 (1972).
The Kirby plaintiffs agree that
Fred's fiduciary duty is measured under
standards developed in the jurisprudence of
for-profit corporations.
12
Although the Foundation was established for
limited charitable purposes, as its
certificate attests, the "extent and measure
of that
Page 462 trust" must be determined by the
Certificate of Incorporation and the
Corporate By-Laws. Denckla v. Independence
Foundation, 193 A.2d at 541. Fred's
status as the surviving member created a
fiduciary responsibility comparable to that
owed by a controlling shareholder to the
corporation, and to other shareholders, to
act with fairness and loyalty, devoid of
considerations of self-interest. Guth v.
Loft Inc., Del.Supr., 5 A.2d 503, 510
(1939); Smith v. Van Gorkom, Del.Supr., 488
A.2d 858, 872 (1985).
The Kirby plaintiffs are not
shareholders, however, and have no
legitimate expectation of financial benefit
from the operation of the Foundation. While
they have the right, as ousted directors, to
seek judicial review of Fred's actions as a
fiduciary, the focus of that scrutiny is
limited to (a) any financial harm or
jeopardy to the Foundation itself and its
beneficiaries and (b) any personal benefit
to Fred or his family, notwithstanding the
absence of harm to the Foundation.
A.
Although the Vice Chancellor made
no explicit findings upon the question, it
seems clear to us that Fred engaged in a
course of behavior designed to enhance his
immediate family's control of the
Foundation. Moreover, whether or not he had
a long-standing plan to exclude other
branches of the Kirby clan from the
Foundation, his decision to remove his
siblings from the board assuredly achieved
that result. Thus, if we assume that Fred's
influence over his wife and children is
strong, the appellants are correct in their
assertion that Fred now enjoys "entrenched"
control of the Foundation.
In arguing that such entrenchment
constitutes a breach of fiduciary duties,
the Kirby plaintiffs characterize Fred's
actions as a "takeover" and then cite
several decisions of this Court that arose
out of battles for control of large,
publicly held, business enterprises. E.g.,
Mills Acquisition Co. v. MacMillan, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
559 A.2d 1261 (1989); Moran v.
Household Int'l, Inc., Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985); Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum
Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946 (1985).
However, the parties' struggle for control
of the Foundation is in no way comparable to
a takeover scenario. As controlling member,
Fred was not called upon to evaluate the
advisability of a course of action that
promised an increased short-term value for
beneficiaries but that posed a threat to his
position in the Foundation. In electing new
members and replacing the former directors,
he was simply exercising one of the basic
powers of membership granted to him, qua
member, under the Certificate. Moreover, his
decisions were not fundamentally financial
ones; at most, they could have only an
indirect effect upon disbursements to
beneficiaries. Unless his conduct reflects
disloyalty to the Foundation or threatens
the interests of its beneficiaries, it may
not be a basis for his removal.
A court cannot second-guess the
wisdom of facially valid decisions made by
charitable fiduciaries, any more than it can
question the business judgment of the
directors of a for-profit corporation.
However, because the Foundation was created
for a limited charitable purpose rather than
a generalized business purpose, those who
control it have a special duty to advance
its charitable goals and protect its assets.
Any action that poses a palpable and
identifiable threat to those goals, or that
jeopardizes its assets would be contrary to
the Certificate and hence ultra vires. See
Denckla, 193 A.2d at 541. Since Fred owes
fiduciary loyalty to the Foundation in his
capacity as member as well as director, we
must consider whether his selection of his
wife and children as members and directors
meets this fiduciary standard. Only by
applying this standard can a court of equity
fully protect the interests of the
Foundation's beneficiaries. It is not clear
from the Vice Chancellor's bench ruling
whether he applied such a standard or
whether he simply deferred to the elective
power of Fred. However, because this Court
reviews questions of law and equity de novo,
we are required to apply this standard to
the facts as they appear on the record.
Page 463
The Vice Chancellor ruled that
Fred's "deceits" in delaying the appointment
of new members and then secretly appointing
persons from his immediate family as
directors created "no legally cognizable
harm" sufficient to justify equitable
relief. Appellants complain that even though
no financial loss is attributable to Fred's
machinations, his actions placed the
Foundation at risk and reflected disloyalty
to the Foundation sufficient to justify his
removal. We agree with the Vice Chancellor,
however, that while Fred's conduct may have
"harmed" the appellants' interests in
continuing as directors of the Foundation,
their legal entitlement to remain as
directors was subject to Fred's authority to
elect new members. Fred's deceit in
concealing their replacement merely delayed
the litigation which validated that result.
We also agree with the Vice
Chancellor's determination that the
appellants failed to prove that Fred's
conduct created any financial harm to the
beneficiaries of the trust, thus justifying
his removal as a director. It should be
noted, however, that the absence of specific
damage to a beneficiary is not the sole test
for determining disloyalty by one occupying
a fiduciary position. It is an act of
disloyalty for a fiduciary to profit
personally from the use of information
secured in a confidential relationship, even
if such profit or advantage is not gained at
the expense of the fiduciary. The result is
nonetheless one of unjust enrichment which
will not be countenanced by a Court of
Equity. Brophy v. Cities Service Co.,
Del.Ch., 70 A.2d 5, 7 (1949). Although
Fred's secretive acts may have advanced his
personal goals and had the potential for
impairing the Foundation, as the Vice
Chancellor noted, the broad power bestowed
upon surviving members in the articles of
incorporation created that risk. In the
absence of proof that the Foundation
suffered financial harm or that Fred
benefitted financially from his conduct as a
fiduciary, there is no basis for his
removal.
Viewed objectively, Fred appears
to have managed the Foundation, quite
capably for the past twenty-three years.
Under his direction, the value of Foundation
assets has grown from $15 million to $195
million, while annual disbursements have
grown from $200,000 to $8 million. It is
true that some of this growth was due to
Allan, Sr.'s bequest of Alleghany stock and
that Fred relied heavily upon an
undiversified portfolio of that stock during
much of his tenure. Nevertheless,
Alleghany's excellent performance during
that period justifies Fred's reliance.
Moreover, redemption of the Foundation's
Alleghany stock has now enabled Fred to
diversify its holdings, a move that will
certainly place it on a more stable footing.
As for the possibility that Fred might die
and leave the Foundation in allegedly
inexperienced hands, we consider this to be
an inadequate basis for finding a threat to
the Foundation's well-being. Certainly, Fred
was under an obligation to bring new blood
into the Foundation's management to insure
informed continuity. Unless we were to hold
that only professionally trained asset
managers are equipped to serve the
Foundation, there is no basis for
challenging Fred's decision to entrust his
own family with the future management of the
Foundation.
In essence, the appellants' claim
that Fred "entrenched" his family's control
of the Foundation is simply a complaint that
he treated his siblings unfairly. As the
Vice Chancellor noted, Fred's actions may
well be viewed as exhibiting "a lack of
brotherly regard" but in his capacity as
member and director of the Foundation, Fred
owed no fiduciary duties to other directors,
only to the Foundation. As long as his
actions posed no threat to the Foundation,
his status as member gave Fred the power to
oust his siblings for any reason or even for
no reason at all. See 8 Del.C. § 141(k).
In an effort to suggest that Fred
indeed had a legal duty to treat his
siblings with greater consideration, the
Kirby plaintiffs rely heavily upon a letter
written by Allan, Sr. in 1966 in which he
expressed his wish that "members of our
family down through the generations, will be
interested in managing the Foundation."
Although
Page 464 we have no doubt that Allan, Sr. would have
wished for Foundation involvement as well as
harmony among his children, his letter and
our own estimation of what he might have
wanted have no legal significance. Had
either the elder Fred Kirby or Allan, Sr.
been intent on ensuring a place for all
Kirbys in the Foundation, either could have
drafted or amended the corporate documents
to reflect that intention. If the
Certificate were arguably ambiguous on this
point, Allan, Sr.'s letter might serve as an
aid in resolving that ambiguity. However,
neither the certificate nor any original
bylaw reflects an attempt to guarantee a
place for any Kirby in the Foundation. Thus,
we can view Allan, Sr.'s letter as no more
than a legally insignificant expression of
his hopes for the future.
B.
The appellants' charge that Fred
acted illegally by serving as the
Foundation's only member for eleven years is
the most substantial of their claims. The
Certificate clearly requires that there be
at least three members at all times and that
vacancies be filled "as soon as
practicable." We find no merit in Fred's
contention that he could not decide who was
best qualified to serve the Foundation and
therefore did not find it "practicable" to
appoint new members. Given the mandatory
language of the Certificate, eleven years
was clearly too long to delay in performing
his duty as the sole member.
Nevertheless, the time during
which anyone could seek equitable redress
for this violation has now passed. We
believe that a timely action to compel Fred
to appoint members would have been
successful. However, since Fred has now
validly appointed a full complement of
members, this claim is moot. Moreover,
although two individuals were deprived of
the right to serve as Foundation members for
eleven years, it is impossible to fashion
any retrospective remedy since it cannot be
said who Fred would have appointed if he had
been compelled to do so. Since there is no
evidence that Fred's failure to appoint new
members posed any threat to the Foundation,
his inaction does not raise the question of
his loyalty to the Foundation.
Next, the appellants contend that
Fred's failure to disclose his appointment
of new members for a period of two years
harmed the Foundation, arguing that it posed
a threat to the validity of the Foundation's
sales of its Alleghany stock and later of
its American Express stock. They contend
that both of these transactions constituted
sales of substantially all of the
Foundation's assets under 8 Del.C. § 271,
and that as such, the full membership was
required to approve them. It is argued that
Fred's determination to deceive his siblings
prevented him from seeking the required
approval and laid the transactions open to
legal challenge. We find, however, that the
transactions did not involve sales of
substantially all of the Foundation's
assets. Although the magnitude of the
transactions was unquestionably large, the
rule announced in Gimbel v. Signal Cos.,
Del.Ch.,
316 A.2d 599 (1974), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
316 A.2d 619 (1974), makes it
clear that the need for shareholder (or
member) approval is to be measured not by
the size of a sale alone, but also by its
qualitative effect upon the corporation.
Thus, it is relevant to ask whether a
transaction "is out of the ordinary and
substantially affects the existence and
purpose of the corporation...." Id. at 606.
The Foundation is in the "business" of
holding investment securities and donating
its profits to charity. The exchange of one
portfolio of securities for another
portfolio of similar value does not
substantially affect this corporate purpose.
Accordingly, we find that member approval
was not required and that Fred's failure to
seek it did not taint the transaction.
Next, the appellants allege that
Fred falsified the minutes of the June 5,
1986 directors' meeting at which the Kirby
plaintiffs enacted their bylaw amendment. As
recorded, the minutes state that "[a]
majority of directors ... insisted on voting
on the proposed resolution but agreed to
submit it to counsel for recommendations
prior to deciding what to do about the
inclusion of the resolution in the minutes
at
Page 465 the next Board of Directors meeting." The
Kirby plaintiffs contend that they agreed to
seek advice of counsel but that they did not
make adoption of the resolution contingent
upon counsel's approval. The Vice Chancellor
made no specific finding as to what actually
transpired at the meeting; however, he ruled
that no cognizable harm occurred if the
minutes had been falsified, and we agree.
Under appropriate circumstances, the
falsification of a corporation's minutes
might constitute a breach of a director's
duty of candor. Here, however, the
appellants offered no evidence that anyone
was or even could have been deceived by the
alleged falsification or that the Foundation
or its beneficiaries were harmed.
Finally, the Attorney General
argues that Fred breached his fiduciary duty
to the Foundation by directing that the
shares of stock it held in various
corporations be voted in favor of his
election to the boards of directors of those
corporations. As the defendants point out,
Fred's election to these boards was at no
point contested. Moreover, the Attorney
General cites no authority to support his
claim, and we know of no authority that
would require a corporation to abstain from
voting its shares as its directors choose,
in the absence of some threat or harm to the
corporation's interests.
In sum, we affirm the Vice
Chancellor's determination that the
appellants failed to prove a cognizable
claim justifying Fred's removal. Fred did
violate the terms of the Certificate by
failing to appoint additional members for
eleven years, but any claim arising from
that failure has been mooted by his
appointment of his wife and children. Thus,
we find no basis for questioning the right
of any of the defendants to continue serving
in their present offices.
V
We turn now to the Attorney
General's challenge to the fairness of the
Foundation's sale of Alleghany stock. It is
alleged that Kirbys stood on both sides of
the Alleghany transaction and that the
negotiated exchange was unfair to the
Foundation and its beneficiaries. Because
Fred and the Kirby plaintiffs approved this
transaction as directors, the Attorney
General directs this claim against all four
directors. However, the Attorney General's
complaint sought neither rescission of the
transaction nor removal of directors.
Rather, the Court of Chancery was requested
to appoint independent directors to the
Foundation in sufficient numbers to deprive
the Kirby family of ultimate control. The
Attorney General also asked that the
Foundation be ordered to seek an investment
bank's opinion of the fairness of the
transaction, to enable the newly-appointed
outside directors independently to evaluate
the fairness of the transaction. At oral
argument, the Attorney General suggested
that the independent directors might then
either ratify the transaction or reject it,
and that if they rejected it, Fred and the
Kirby plaintiffs might be liable to the
Foundation for damages.
13
Preliminarily, we note that the
relief requested by the Attorney General
appears to be inconsistent with his
allegations of unfairness in the transaction
and lack of fidelity by the fiduciaries who
approved it. Apparently, the Attorney
General is willing to permit allegedly
unfaithful directors to remain in office, as
long as their power is diminished by the
appointment of outside directors. In
addition, the Attorney General asked the
Court of Chancery to declare the transaction
unfair to the Foundation as a matter of law,
but permit outside directors to declare it
fair and ratify it on the basis of an
investment bank's opinion.
14
Page 466 With these reservations concerning the
appropriateness of the requested remedies,
we examine the Court of Chancery's ruling
upholding the fairness of the Alleghany
exchange.
The Attorney General argues that
the standards governing the decision of a
nonstock, charitable corporation to engage
in a transaction in which its directors have
an interest are unsettled under Delaware
law. It is true that our courts have never
been called upon to examine directly the
propriety of such a transaction. However, as
noted in Part IV, supra, in Denckla this
Court stated that "the test as to the
legality of action taken by the governing
board of the [charitable] corporation is to
be determined in accordance with principles
of corporate law rather than the principles
governing the fiduciary relationship between
trustees of a technical trust and their
trust." 193 A.2d at 541. Although the narrow
question addressed in Denckla was the
propriety of one charitable corporation's
decision to convey part of its assets to a
similar corporation, the broad language
quoted above finds application to the
questions now before us. See also Stern v.
Lucy Webb Hayes Nat'l Training School for
Deaconesses & Missionaries, D.D.C., 381
F.Supp. 1003, 1013 (1974) ("modern trend" is
to apply corporate law to charitable
corporations). Nevertheless, the Attorney
General takes the position that the
Alleghany transaction should be judged under
principles of trust law, rather than
corporate law.
Under trust law, self-dealing on
the part of a trustee is virtually
prohibited. Vredenburgh v. Jones, Del.Ch.,
349 A.2d 22, 33 (1975);
In re Thomas, Del.Supr., 311 A.2d 112, 114
(1973). An interested transaction is not
void but is voidable, and a court will
uphold such a transaction against a
beneficiary challenge only if the trustee
can show that the transaction was fair and
that the beneficiaries consented to the
transaction after receiving full disclosure
of its terms. Vredenburgh, 349 A.2d at 33.
However, a court of equity has the power to
approve a transaction on behalf of the
trust's beneficiaries if they are not sui
juris and if it finds the transaction to be
in their best interest. See Equitable Trust
Co. v. Gallagher, Del.Supr., 102 A.2d 538,
545 (1954); see also Restatement (Second) of
Trusts § 170 comment f (1959).
By contrast, the restrictions
upon interested transactions by a stock
corporation are less stringent. At common
law, a corporation's stockholders did have
the power to nullify an interested
transaction, although considerations of the
transaction's fairness appear to have played
some part in judicial decisions applying
this rule. See, e.g., Potter v. Sanitary Co.
of Am., Del.Ch., 194 A. 87 (1937); see also
Marciano v. Nakash, Del.Supr., 535 A.2d 400,
403 (1987). The enactment of 8 Del.C. § 144
in 1967 limited the stockholders' power in
two ways. First, section 144 allows a
committee of disinterested directors to
approve a transaction and bring it within
the scope of the business judgment rule.
Second, where an independent committee is
not available, the stockholders may either
ratify the transaction or challenge its
fairness in a judicial forum, but they lack
the power automatically to nullify it. When
a challenge to fairness is raised, the
directors carry the burden of "establishing
... [the transaction's] entire fairness,
sufficient to pass the test of careful
scrutiny by the courts." Weinberger v. UOP,
Inc., Del.Supr., 457 A.2d 701, 710 (1983).
If a transaction is found to be unfair to
the corporation, the stockholders may then
demand rescission of the transaction or, if
that is impractical, the payment of
rescissory damages. Id. at 714. If, however,
the directors meet their burden of proving
entire fairness, the transaction is
protected from stockholder challenge.
The Attorney General argues that
a charitable trust and a charitable
corporation are created for the same
purpose, and that to apply different
standards to the two entities would elevate
form over function. In this context,
however, form is not an
Page 467 unimportant consideration. For example, a
business enterprise may be established as
either a corporation or a partnership, and
the choice of form results in very different
legal consequences. Similarly, the creator
of a charitable enterprise recognizes that
different legal rules govern the operation
of charitable trusts and charitable
corporations and selects a form with those
rules in mind. The founder of a charitable
trust binds its funds by the express
limitations and conditions of the trust
document and imposes upon its trustees the
strict and unyielding principles of trust
law. By contrast, the founder of a
charitable corporation makes a gift
"outright to the corporation to be used for
its corporate purposes," Denckla, 193 A.2d
at 541, and invokes the far more flexible
and adaptable principles of corporate law.
Both forms are fully recognized by our law
and each has its function. One of the
cardinal principles of trust law is that the
intention of the settlor is paramount.
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§ 23-27. We
believe that the decision of Fred M. Kirby
to endow a corporation rather than a trust
in 1931 is equally entitled to deference.
15
Deciding that corporate, rather
than trust principles should apply to the
Foundation does not end our inquiry into the
standards according to which the Alleghany
transaction should be judged. 8 Del.C. § 144
is not, by its terms, directly applicable to
a nonstock corporation. The language of the
statute is directed to the power of
stockholders to ratify or attack an
interested transaction. Since a for-profit
corporation is to be managed for the benefit
of its stockholders, the statute sets out
the conditions under which stockholders may
assert that the directors have acted in
their own interests rather those of the
stockholders. The Foundation, however, must
be managed on behalf of its beneficiaries,
who are represented by the Attorney General.
Since the statute does not address the roles
of the beneficiaries or the Attorney General
in challenging the conduct of the directors
of charitable corporations, we cannot apply
it directly to the Foundation. We find,
however, that standards similar to those set
forth in section 144 should govern the
Foundation.
The fact that some interested
transactions are permitted under our
corporate law demonstrates that they are not
inherently detrimental to a corporation. As
long as a given transaction is fair to the
corporation, and no confidential
relationship betrayed, it may not matter
that certain corporate officers will profit
as the result of it. The fact that a
corporation is to be managed on behalf of
charitable beneficiaries rather than
stockholders does not alter the basic
premise that interested transactions are not
inherently wrong. The key to upholding an
interested transaction is the approval of
some neutral decision-making body. Under 8
Del.C. § 144, a transaction will be
sheltered from shareholder challenge if
approved by either a committee of
independent directors, the shareholders, or
the courts. We see no reason why independent
directors and courts should not also have
the power to evaluate the fairness of an
interested transaction undertaken by a
charitable corporation. As for the
beneficiaries, who logically stand in the
same position as the
Page 468 stockholders of a for-profit corporation,
their interests must be represented by the
Attorney General. The Attorney General holds
the power and bears the duty of invoking the
jurisdiction of the courts to evaluate the
fairness of any interested transaction that
has not been approved by an independent
committee and that the Attorney General
feels is detrimental to the charitable
corporation. By failing to challenge a given
transaction, the Attorney General would
effectively ratify it on behalf of the
beneficiaries.
The Attorney General argues that
it is unfair to force the beneficiaries to
rely upon "the inclination and budget of a
public official to vindicate their rights."
Attorney General's Opening Brief at 16.
However, Delaware law unambiguously places
the burden of protecting the interests of
beneficiaries upon the
Attorney General. Wier v. Howard Hughes
Medical Inst., 407 A.2d at 1057.
Moreover, if we adopted the standard of
conduct suggested by the Attorney General
and barred all interested transactions by
charitable corporations, the restriction
could not be self-enforcing. The
beneficiaries would still have to rely upon
the "inclination" of the Attorney General to
come forward and seek injunction or
rescission of the tainted transaction.
In defending against the Attorney
General's allegations, the Kirby plaintiffs
argue that the Alleghany transaction did not
really involve a conflict of interest.
16 Although Fred
and Allan, Jr. served as directors of both
the Foundation and Alleghany, the Kirby
plaintiffs argue that they were not
interested directors because they absented
themselves from the Alleghany board meetings
at which the transaction was approved and
because they did not negotiate on behalf of
either corporation. For our purposes, these
facts are legally irrelevant. Although the
approval of the transaction by Alleghany's
disinterested directors shelters it from
challenge by Alleghany stockholders, the
fact remains that Fred and Allan, Jr. voted
to approve the transaction as Foundation
directors. Accordingly, they were in a
position to approve a transaction that could
favor Alleghany at the expense of the
Foundation. The fact that they were on the
Alleghany board conceivably gave them motive
to do so. Similarly, the fact that the
Foundation's attorney negotiated on its
behalf did not affect the ultimate power of
the Foundation's board to approve or reject
the transaction.
The Kirby plaintiffs also argue
that Grace and Ann were not interested
directors because they merely owned stock in
Alleghany. They then cite Unocal and several
other cases for the proposition that a
transaction does not "become an 'interested'
director transaction merely because certain
board members are large stockholders." 493
A.2d at 958. This language is quoted wholly
out of context. Unocal held that a
director's ownership of stock in his own
corporation does not give rise to a conflict
of interest unless the director somehow
contrives to favor his own interests over
those of other stockholders. All of the
Foundation directors held large blocks of
Alleghany stock, a fact that could have
induced them to advance Alleghany's
interests at the expense of the Foundation
and its beneficiaries. Thus, the Alleghany
transaction was unquestionably an
"interested" transaction within the meaning
of 8 Del.C. § 144 or any other analogous
standard.
Because all four Foundation
directors had an interest in the
transaction, approval by an independent
committee was not possible.
17
Thus, the Alleghany transaction
Page 469 presents a situation similar to that in
Marciano v. Nakash, where "the sole forum
for demonstrating intrinsic fairness ...
[is] a judicial one." 535 A.2d at 404. The
standard for intrinsic fairness is the
searching test announced in Weinberger. The
interested directors bear the burden of
proving the entire fairness of the
transaction in all its aspects, including
both the fairness of the price and the
fairness of the directors' dealings.
18
Before we turn to the task of
analyzing the Vice Chancellor's ruling under
this standard, we must first address a
procedural defect alleged by the Attorney
General. Under Weinberger, the burden of
proving fairness is placed upon the
defendants. However, the Vice Chancellor
dismissed the Attorney General's action
before the defendants had presented any
evidence "on the ground that upon the facts
and the law the plaintiff has shown no right
to relief." Chancery Court Rule 41(b). The
Attorney General argues that the Vice
Chancellor improperly required the Attorney
General to prove that the transaction was
unfair rather than requiring the directors
to prove that it was fair.
From a procedural perspective,
this argument has some merit. The Vice
Chancellor did state in his bench ruling
that "there has been a complete failure of
proof on the part of the Attorney General."
Nevertheless, when the entire ruling is
examined, it is apparent that the Vice
Chancellor fully examined the fairness of
the Alleghany transaction and ruled that it
was fundamentally fair to the Foundation.
For example, the Vice Chancellor stated that
"the uncontradicted evidence indicates that
... the Foundation received a higher amount
than it would have realized by pursuing the
available alternatives." Thus, he clearly
ruled that the negotiated price of the
Alleghany stock was fair, rather than that
the Attorney General had failed to prove
that it was unfair. Elsewhere, he ruled that
the negotiations between the Foundation and
Alleghany were at arm's length and that the
Foundation suffered no untoward tax
consequences as the result of the sale. In
short, his factual findings were consistent
with a decision to dismiss the Attorney
General's claim after a full review of all
the evidence touching upon the fairness
issue. The directors could meet their burden
only if the transaction was fair, and the
Vice Chancellor found that it was.
It is true that the directors
never had the opportunity to introduce
evidence as part of their case. However, the
Attorney General presented a comprehensive
portrait of the Alleghany transaction and
called all relevant parties as witnesses.
The directors had the opportunity fully to
cross-examine these witnesses. By moving for
dismissal under Rule 41(b), the directors
were informing the court that they had
nothing more to add, that the Attorney
General had presented an extensive body of
evidence that would allow the Vice
Chancellor to rule on the merits. The Vice
Chancellor's finding that the transaction
was fair was essentially a finding that the
Page 470 Attorney General had carried the directors'
burden of proof for them, by offering
evidence that was uniformly consistent with
a finding of fairness. While it is not the
usual pattern, there is no prohibition
against one party relying upon evidence
introduced by his opponent to meet his
burden of proof.
Having established that the Vice
Chancellor did not err procedurally in
granting the directors' Rule 41(b) motion,
we must now consider the correctness of his
ruling that the transaction was, in fact,
fair to the Foundation. Under Weinberger,
the first element of intrinsic fairness is
fair dealing. The Vice Chancellor found that
negotiations between Alleghany and the
Foundation were "lengthy, vigorous and arm's
length." We agree.
Although the Foundation's
representative in its negotiations with
Alleghany, Harry Weyher, was not instructed
to seek alternatives to a deal with
Alleghany, he was given full authority to
seek the best possible price for the
Foundation. The directors did not attempt to
impose upon Weyher any preconceived notions
of what the outcome of the negotiations
should be. Nevertheless, the Attorney
General criticizes the directors' failure
vigorously to explore alternative
transactions. He argues that this failure is
evidence of the directors' dogged insistence
on concluding a deal with Alleghany. Because
a deal with Alleghany was inevitable, the
Attorney General argues, a course of fair
dealing during the negotiations was
impossible.
In Barkan v. Amsted Indus., Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
567 A.2d 1279 (1989), we
evaluated the propriety of a board's
decision to approve a management-sponsored
leveraged buyout of their corporation
without actively seeking alternate buyers.
We held that the key to an adequate
evaluation of the fairness of a transaction
is reliable and complete information. Thus,
"[w]hen ... the directors possess a body of
reliable evidence with which to evaluate the
fairness of a transaction, they may approve
that transaction without conducting an
active survey of the market." Id. at 1287.
We find that several factors supported the
decision of the Foundation's directors not
to seek alternatives to Alleghany
transaction.
The Attorney General concedes
that I.R.C. § 4943 imposed an obligation
upon the Foundation to sell its stock to
someone. If the Foundation had eschewed the
Alleghany transaction, it could have sold
its shares either on the market or through a
private placement. However, because the
Foundation was an "affiliate" of Alleghany,
it would have had to register the stock
under the Securities Act of 1933 prior to a
sale on the open market. The transaction
costs associated with registration can be
quite high. Moreover, because the amount of
Alleghany stock trading on the open
market--about two-and-a-half to three
million shares--was small relative to the
block held by the Foundation, a sudden
public sale would depress the market price.
This effect might have been ameliorated if
the Foundation had made several small sales
of the course of a few years, but the need
for registration would have remained. On the
other hand, if the Foundation had sought to
avoid registration through a private
placement, it would have had to comply with
SEC Rule 144, 17 C.F.R. § 230.144, which
would bar resale by the buyer for a period
of two years. As a result, any buyer would
have demanded a significant discount below
market to compensate for this reduced
liquidity.
The Attorney General makes little
effort to suggest that alternatives to the
Alleghany transaction did not suffer from
these defects. He merely cites a 1981
transaction in which Alleghany paid a
premium for a large block of stock that it
repurchased from an individual named Jacob
Kaplan. He then argues that the Foundation's
block of shares could have commanded a
similar premium due to its size. We fail to
see the logic of this argument. A large
block of stock will carry a premium if its
size gives its owner some special advantage.
Thus, if a block is large enough to give a
buyer control of corporation, the stock will
command a "control premium." If, as appears
to have been the case with the Kaplan stock,
a corporation's directors believe that
Page 471 a large stockholder poses a threat to the
corporation, the corporation may pay a
premium to eliminate that threat. See Cheff
v. Mathes, Del.Supr.,
199 A.2d 548 (1964).
On the other hand, if a large block has no
special value, its size will depress the
market price. It is a basic law of economics
that the price of any commodity falls when
its supply increases dramatically.
We find that the obvious
drawbacks attached to other possible
alternatives to the Alleghany transaction
justified the directors' decision not to
explore alternative transactions. This does
not mean, of course, that the Foundation was
free to sell at any price. Weyher remained
under a duty to negotiate vigorously on the
directors behalf and the directors were
under a duty to approve a price that was
fair. If Alleghany's offers had proven to be
less than the price that was likely to
obtain in alternative transactions, the
Foundation would have been forced to look
elsewhere. With these considerations in
mind, we find that both the negotiations and
the final price were fair to Alleghany.
Weyher and Alleghany's
representative, Merrill Lynch, negotiated
for over a month. Merrill Lynch correctly
pointed out that the Foundation's need to
sell, together with the lack of good
alternative transactions, left the
Foundation with little bargaining power.
Weyher countered that the tax advantages
that Alleghany stood to gain by redeeming
the Foundation's stock made it unlikely that
Alleghany would ever break off negotiations.
Thus, Weyher actively sought to extract a
premium from Alleghany, while Merrill Lynch
demanded a discount. The record shows that
Weyher continued to demand a premium,
notwithstanding Merrill Lynch's insistence
that it had no authority from Alleghany to
purchase except at a discount. Finally,
after seeking new authority from Alleghany,
Merrill Lynch offered to buy the
Foundation's stock at market prices, an
offer that Weyher and the directors
ultimately accepted. Thus, the record
reflects that Weyher negotiated vigorously
on behalf of the Foundation and managed to
extract important concessions from the
initially intractable Alleghany
representatives. His actions were fully in
keeping with the most exacting standards of
fair dealing.
We now turn to the fairness of
price, the second element of entire fairness
under Weinberger. In this context, the most
economically meaningful way of judging
fairness is to compare the price paid with
the price that was likely to be available in
alternative transactions. As we have already
noted, all possible alternatives were
seriously flawed. If the Foundation had sold
to any buyer other than Alleghany, it would
have undoubtedly sold at a discount.
The Attorney General emphasizes
the $26 million of tax savings that
Alleghany gained from the transaction. He
argues that a fair price would have taken
account of these savings and made a portion
of them available to the Foundation in the
form of a premium. We find no merit in this
contention. Although the Attorney General
seems to imply that Alleghany's tax savings
were somehow gained through subterfuge,
Alleghany has simply taken advantage of the
clear and unambiguous terms of the tax code.
By enacting I.R.C. § 311(d)(2)(D), Congress
intended to encourage precisely the type of
transaction that Alleghany and the
Foundation entered into. The code provision
reflected Congress' judgment that
corporations should be encouraged to redeem
large blocks of their stock held by private
foundations. Congress could have made
similar tax benefits available to
foundations, but did not. Thus, any tax
savings to be garnered through a stock
redemption belonged solely to Alleghany. The
Foundation had no means of sharing in these
benefits; if Alleghany had refused to deal
with the Foundation, the benefits would have
disappeared and the Foundation would have
been left to seek out the next best
alternative. In the final analysis, the
fairness of the price that the Foundation
received for its Alleghany stock must be
judged by the value of that stock in the
Foundation's hands, not in Alleghany's
hands. The Foundation had to sell, and
alternatives to the Alleghany transaction
all involved selling at a discount. Any
price higher than that available
Page 472 in the next best alternative must be
considered fair.
Of course, the Foundation could,
and did, encourage Alleghany to pay more
than the discounted price available in a
public offering or private placement. The
Foundation had some bargaining power because
Alleghany was reluctant to abandon its
potential tax savings. Thus, to the extent
that the Foundation received a price higher
than the next best price, it did exactly
what the Attorney General argues it should
have done: it convinced Alleghany to pay
more than it had originally intended. Since
the market price exchange that the parties
eventually agreed to was higher than the
next best price, it was clearly fair to the
Foundation.
The Attorney General also alleges
that the Foundation was forced to pay an
excessive tax on the transaction; he points
out that while Alleghany could deduct $25
million, the Foundation incurred a $1.5
million tax bill on its $75 million gain.
First, it should be pointed out that I.R.C.
§ 4940 imposes a flat two-percent tax on a
foundation's investment income gains. Thus,
there was no way for the Foundation to avoid
paying tax on any sale of Alleghany stock.
Nevertheless, the Attorney General argues
that the Foundation was harmed by incurring
such a large tax bill in one year; he
contends that the Foundation would have been
better served if it sold its stock
gradually. The force of this argument eludes
us. If the Foundation had started selling
its stock earlier, it undoubtedly would have
been selling at a lower price, since the
market price of Alleghany stock rose
steadily from approximately $45 per share in
1981 to about $77 per share in 1985. As the
Vice Chancellor pointed out, the Foundation
would have saved "two cents for every dollar
of profit lost."
The Attorney General also argues
that the purchase price of the Alleghany
stock should have reflected the Foundation's
tax bill. By this, we presume that the
Attorney General believes that Alleghany
should have absorbed the Foundation's $1.5
million tax bill. However, as we have
already established, the market price itself
was in excess of the value of the stock in
any alternative transaction. By paying what
amounts to a premium above the next best
price, Alleghany was in fact helping the
Foundation to cover its tax bill.
Finally, the Attorney General
argues that the Foundation should have
sought an investment bank's opinion of the
fairness of the transaction. Although
Delaware law requires that corporate
directors evaluate the propriety of a given
transaction on the basis of a full
complement of information, it does not
require that they seek a formal fairness
opinion. Smith v. Van Gorkom, Del.Supr., 488
A.2d 858, 881 (1985). In some situations, a
formal opinion may be helpful; in others, it
will not significantly amplify the
information already available to directors.
Here, we have found that the Foundation's
directors were correct in concluding that
alternatives to the Alleghany transaction
were flawed. At best, a fairness opinion
might have made precise estimates of the
discounted price that the Foundation would
have received in various alternative
transactions; we do not believe that it
would have affected the basic conclusion
that the Alleghany deal was the best
available option. In light of the high cost
of a fairness opinion, we do not believe
that the directors erred in failing to seek
one.
For the foregoing reasons, we
find that the Vice Chancellor correctly
determined that the Alleghany transaction
was intrinsically fair. In making that
determination, he was entitled to rely upon
evidence introduced by the Attorney General,
even though the burden of proving fairness
rested upon the directors. Accordingly, we
find that the Attorney General is entitled
to seek no relief on behalf of the
Foundation's beneficiaries.
VI
In conclusion, we find that the
trial court's decision to dismiss was
correct. In addition, we have made an effort
to clarify the standards according to which
the conduct of the fiduciaries of a nonstock
charitable corporation should be judged.
Although principles of corporate law
generally
Page 473 govern the activities of such a corporation,
its fiduciaries have a special duty to
advance its charitable goals and protect its
assets. However, a charitable corporation is
not barred from engaging in transactions in
which its directors have an interest, as
long as such transactions are intrinsically
fair or are approved by a committee of
independent directors. Because the ruling of
the Court of Chancery is in conformity with
these principles, it is AFFIRMED.
1 Fred's wife, Walker D. Kirby, and their
four children, Fred M. Kirby, III, S.
Dillard Kirby, Alice K. Horton, and
Jefferson W. Kirby, are named together with
him and the Foundation itself as defendants.
We refer to them collectively as the
"appellees" or the "defendants."
2 Schooley was reelected as a member in
1942 and apparently resigned again sometime
prior to 1952. However, there is only one
written resignation surviving in the
Foundation's records and it is undated.
During discovery, the defendants temporarily
contended that the undated resignation was
executed following 1942. However, all
parties now agree, and the lower court
found, that the undated resignation was
executed in 1931. Schooley's irregular
service as a member, which we discuss
further below, is a source of contention
between the parties.
3 The circumstances underlying this
election are still in dispute. To bolster
their contention that directors as well as
members may elect members, the Kirby
plaintiffs argue that Schooley was elected
by all three directors--Allan, Sr., Orr, and
Schooley himself. The lower court found,
however, that Schooley had been elected by
Allan, Sr. and Orr alone.
4 The Attorney General was acting
pursuant to his common law power to protect
the beneficiaries of charitable corporations
and trusts. See Wier v. Howard Hughes
Medical Inst., Del.Ch., 407 A.2d 1051
(1979).
5 I.R.C. § 311(d) was repealed by the Tax
Reform Act of 1986.
6 In reality, the language of Section 2
barring inconsistency is legally redundant,
since a corporation's bylaws may never
contradict its certificate of incorporation.
8 Del.C. § 109(b); Brooks v. State ex rel.
Richards, Del.Supr., 79 A. 790 (1911).
7 Of course, a corporation's stockholders
may elect themselves directors, but there is
a fundamental distinction between the powers
that they exercise in each capacity.
8 The parallel between stockholders and
members is clearly contemplated in relevant
statutory law. For example, 8 Del.C. §
141(j), which governs the relationship
between the members and directors of a
nonstock corporation, states "[e]xcept as
may be otherwise provided by the certificate
..., section shall apply to ... a [nonstock]
corporation, and when so applied, all
references to ... stockholders shall be
deemed to refer to ... the members of the
corporation...."
9 The Kirby plaintiffs also cite a third
Osteopathic Hospital case, In re Osteopathic
Hospital Ass'n of Del., Del.Ch., 197 A.2d
630 (1964). The recitation of the facts in
that case contradicts the recitation in the
earlier cases, in that it cites a
certificate provision allowing members to
"be elected in the manner provided by the
By-laws." 197 A.2d at 631. The earlier cases
quote a certificate provision that directly
empowers trustees to elect members. We can
only conclude that the certificate had been
amended before the 1964 case. Under either
provision, however, the trustees of the
Hospital were given far more power to
control the election of its members than are
the directors of the Foundation. Thus, the
case provides no support for the Kirby
plaintiffs' argument.
10 Even if Vice Chancellor Chandler had
contradicted the "law of the case," our own
standard of review would render any appeal
from such error moot. We review the
interpretation of the Certificate de novo.
Thus, because we find Vice Chancellor
Chandler's reading of the Certificate to be
clearly correct, we could affirm that
interpretation even if it had contradicted
an earlier ruling of the Court of Chancery.
11 The Kirby plaintiffs also originally
challenged the voting of proxies but have
abandoned this claim upon appeal.
12 The Attorney General would hold all
Kirbys to a higher standard evolving from
trust principles. See infra, Part V.
13 In so far as the Attorney General
seeks to wrest control of the Foundation
from the directors who approved the
transaction, his appeal against the Kirby
plaintiffs is mooted by our ruling that the
Kirby plaintiffs are no longer directors.
However, the Attorney General's intimations
that the Foundation might try to seek
damages from the directors who approved the
transaction suggest that the Kirby
plaintiffs still have a tangential interest
in the outcome of this phase of the
litigation.
14 A court will defer to the business
judgment of outside directors that an
interested transaction is fair to the
corporation. 8 Del.C. § 144(a)(1). However,
if a court were to declare a transaction
unfair, there is no mechanism under Delaware
law for allowing a new slate of
disinterested directors to gainsay the
judgment of the court.
15 Even under principles applicable to
charitable trusts, it is |