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Page 369 965 F.2d 369  Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,813
Daniel E. HEFFERNAN,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PACIFIC DUNLOP GNB CORPORATION, a Delaware
corporation, and
GNB Incorporated, a Delaware corporation,
Defendants-Appellees. No. 91-2762. United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit. Argued April 2, 1992.
Decided June 5, 1992.
Page 370
Gerald A. Novack (argued), George
W. Arnett, III, Lord, Day, Lord, Barrett &
Smith, New York City, Derke J. Price, Nick
J. DiGiovanni, Lord, Bissell & Brook,
Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellant.
Peter J. Meyer, Michael J.
Koenigsknecht (argued), Daniel J. Sheridan,
Gardner, Carton & Douglas, Chicago, Ill.,
Lewis S. Black, Jr., Morris, Nichols, Arsht
& Tunnell, Wilmington, Del., for
defendants-appellees.
Before FLAUM and RIPPLE, Circuit
Judges, and ESCHBACH, Senior Circuit Judge.
ESCHBACH, Senior Circuit Judge.
Litigation is an occupational
hazard for corporate directors, albeit one
that may often be shifted to the corporation
through indemnification. In this diversity
case, we consider whether Delaware law
precludes a former director from obtaining
indemnification
Page 371
from the corporations he served. For the
reasons that follow, we hold that the
district court prematurely dismissed this
case under Rule 12(b)(6) by concluding that
it was one in which the director could prove
no set of facts entitling him to
indemnification. Accordingly, we reverse and
remand for further proceedings.
I.
Daniel E. Heffernan is a former
director and 6.7% shareholder of GNB
Holdings, Inc. (Holdings) and its
wholly-owned subsidiary, GNB Inc. (GNB). In
October 1987, a third firm, Pacific Dunlop
Holdings, Inc.
1
(Pacific) acquired control of Holdings (and
in turn, GNB) pursuant to a stock purchase
transaction whereby Pacific acquired
approximately 60% of Holdings' stock,
boosting its total ownership to 92%. Prior
to Pacific's stock purchase, Holdings had
filed a registration statement with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in
contemplation of an initial public offering
of its stock. Holdings later abandoned the
public offering, opting instead to structure
a private transaction with Pacific. The
transaction was pursuant to an agreement
(the Stock Purchase Agreement) by and among
Pacific, Holdings, certain management
shareholders, Heffernan and Allen & Co. (an
investment company that owned approximately
20% of Holdings' stock and for which
Heffernan was a vice president). Pursuant to
the Stock Purchase Agreement, which
apparently incorporated the material that
Holdings previously had prepared for the
SEC, Heffernan sold Pacific his 6.7%
interest in Holdings and ceased to be a
director.
Litigation subsequently arose out
of the Stock Purchase Agreement. In
September 1990, Pacific sued Heffernan and
Allen & Co. under section 12(2) of the
Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77l(2),
and under Illinois securities law. See
Pacific Dunlop Holdings, Inc. v. Allen &
Co., No. 90-C-5678 slip op., 1991 U.S. Dist.
Lexis 6748 (N.D.Ill. May 15, 1991). Pacific
sought to rescind its purchase of
Heffernan's and Allen & Co.'s shares in
Holdings on the ground that the Stock
Purchase Agreement was materially misleading
in regard to its disclosure of certain
liabilities facing Holdings and GNB. At oral
argument, the parties indicated that Pacific
has sued some of the other parties to the
Stock Purchase Agreement as well, although
the record leaves unclear specifically whom
it sued. Heffernan requested indemnification
and an advance on his litigation expenses
from Holdings and GNB pursuant to section
145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law
and the companies' corporate bylaws. See
Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 145; R. 1-1 Exhibits
A, B. When Holdings refused (and GNB failed
to respond to) Heffernan's request, he
initiated this action against the two
companies seeking to establish his rights to
indemnification and advances.
Under Delaware law, "a
corporation may indemnify any person who was
or is a party to any [suit] by reason of the
fact that he is or was a director...." §
145(a).
2
Holdings' and GNB's bylaws make mandatory
the provision for permissive indemnification
in section 145(a). See R. 1-1 Exhibit A §
6.01; Exhibit B § 7. Holdings' bylaws state
that "the Corporation shall, to the fullest
extent permitted by the Delaware General
Corporation law ... indemnify and hold
harmless any person who is or was a party
[to] any [suit] by reason of his status as,
or the fact that he is or was or has agreed
to become, a director [of] the Corporation
or of an affiliate, and as to acts performed
in the course of the [director's] duty to
the Corporation...."
Page 372
* R. 1-1 Exhibit A § 6.01(a). GNB's bylaws
simply state that "[t]he corporation shall
indemnify its officers, directors, employees
and agents to the extent permitted by the
law of Delaware." Id. at Exhibit B § 7.
Heffernan does not argue that
there is a material difference between the
statutory requirement that a director be
sued "by reason of the fact that" he was a
director and Holdings' bylaw requirement
that a director be sued "by reason of his
status as, or the fact that" he was a
director.
3 And
Holdings' brief footnote argument that its
bylaw standard is narrower in scope than the
statutory one fails in light of its bylaws'
stated objective to indemnify directors "to
the fullest extent permitted" by Delaware
law. Thus, we focus our inquiry on whether
Pacific may have sued Heffernan "by reason
of the fact that" he was a director of
Holdings and GNB.
II.
The district court dismissed
Heffernan's complaint, holding that he was
not entitled to indemnification under the
terms of the statute and bylaws because he
had been sued for "wrongs he committed as an
individual, not as a director."
Heffernan v. Pacific Dunlop GNB Corp., 767
F.Supp. 913, 916 (N.D.Ill.1991).
Furthermore, the district court reasoned
that because "Heffernan's status as a
director is not a necessary element of the
section 12(2) claim" he was not sued by
reason of the fact that he was a director.
Id. On appeal, Heffernan argues that
although he was sued over a transaction in
which he sold his own stock in Holdings, it
does not necessarily follow as a matter of
law that he was not sued "by reason of the
fact that" he was a director of Holdings and
GNB. He asserts that Delaware's "by reason
of the fact that" phrase reaches Pacific's
suit against him because the suit involves
his status as a director. Conversely,
appellees Holdings and GNB contend that
Pacific's complaint against Heffernan has
nothing whatsoever to do with Heffernan's
former status as a director for Holdings and
GNB. They argue that Delaware's "by reason
of the fact that" requirement means that a
director must be sued for a breach of duty
to the corporation or for a wrong committed
on behalf of the corporation to be entitled
to indemnification. Accordingly, Holdings
and GNB assert that Heffernan is not
entitled to indemnification because the
"sale of his stock was a personal
transaction which did not involve his duties
or status as a director." Brief of Appellees
at 3.
Despite a surprising dearth of
case law addressing the reach of Delaware's
"by reason of the fact that" language, our
review of the substance of Pacific's
complaint against Heffernan in light of the
language and purpose of Delaware'
indemnification law convinces us that the
district court's view of Pacific's complaint
and Delaware's indemnification law is too
restrictive. Standing alone, neither the
fact that Heffernan sold his own shares in
Holdings during the transaction nor the
particular statutory provision on which
Pacific's suit is based thwarts Heffernan's
right to indemnification as a matter of law.
Rather, the substance of Pacific's
allegations and the nature and context of
the transaction giving rise to the complaint
indicate that Heffernan may have been sued,
at least in part, because he was a director
of Holdings and GNB. Furthermore, we find no
support in the language and purpose of
Delaware's indemnification statute for the
defendants' argument that it limits
indemnification to suits asserted against a
director for breaching a duty of his
directorship or for acting wrongfully on
behalf of the corporation he serves. Thus,
we conclude that Heffernan's complaint was
improperly dismissed; it does not appear
beyond doubt that Heffernan can prove no set
of facts in support of his claim that would
entitle him to the advances or
indemnification he requests. See Illinois
Health Care
Ass'n. v. Illinois Dept. of Public Health,
879 F.2d 286, 288 (7th Cir.1989), citing
Conley v.
Page 373
Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46, 78 S.Ct. 99,
102, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957).
III.
To determine whether Heffernan
was sued "by reason of the fact" that he was
a director of Holdings and GNB, we begin by
reviewing the allegations in the underlying
action's complaint.
Mooney v. Willys-Overland Motors, Inc., 204
F.2d 888, 896 (3d Cir.1953). Here, the
underlying complaint is based on Heffernan's
sale of his shares in Holdings to Pacific
pursuant to the Stock Purchase Agreement.
More specifically, Pacific contends that
Heffernan violated section 12(2) of the
Securities Act by selling those securities
pursuant to a misleading prospectus--that
is, the Stock Purchase Agreement.
4 Under section 12(2), a
person who offers or sells a security
through a prospectus or oral communication
containing a material misrepresentation or
omission may be liable to the purchaser.
5
Ballay v. Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc.,
925 F.2d 682, 687-88 (3d Cir.1991), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 112 S.Ct. 79, 116
L.Ed.2d 52 (1991);
Sanders v. John Nuveen & Co.,
619 F.2d 1222
(7th Cir.1980), cert. denied, 450 U.S.
1005, 101 S.Ct. 1719, 68 L.Ed.2d 210 (1981).
To avoid liability, the seller must prove
that he did not know, and in the exercise of
reasonable care could not have known, of the
misrepresentation or omission. Id.
In complaining of Heffernan's
alleged failure to disclose environmental
and other liabilities of Holdings and GNB in
the Stock Purchase Agreement, Pacific's
complaint repeatedly states that Heffernan's
status as a director put him in a position
where, in the performance of his duties as a
director, he either learned or should have
learned of those liabilities. See R. 1-1,
Exhibit C pp 5, 16, 19, 21. Because Pacific
realleges these provisions under both counts
of its complaint, see id. pp 42, 47, its
argument that Heffernan's status as a
director was not specifically alleged in the
complaint is without merit. Moreover,
assuming for the moment that Pacific's
section 12(2) claim against Heffernan is
viable, his status as a director is directly
relevant to his defense. As noted earlier,
to avoid liability under section 12(2), a
defendant must prove that he did not know,
and in the exercise of reasonable care could
not have known, of the misrepresentation or
omission. The defendant's position gives
content to the term "reasonable care." For
instance, reasonable care for a director
requires more than does reasonable care for
an individual owning a few shares of stock
with no other connection to the corporation.
See Sanders, 619 F.2d at 1228 n. 12; J.
William Hicks, Civil Liabilities:
Enforcement and Litigation Under the 1933
Act § 6.12[a][ii], at 6-297 n. 2 (1991). It
is accordingly no answer to our inquiry as
to whether Heffernan was sued "by reason of
the fact that" he was a director to label
his participation in Pacific's acquisition
of Holdings a "personal" transaction.
Despite the fact that Heffernan sold his own
shares to Pacific, a nexus exists between
Heffernan's status as a director and
Pacific's suit.
Moreover, the transaction at the
heart of Pacific's complaint is not a purely
personal transaction of Heffernan's. Despite
Holdings' and GNB's arguments to the
contrary,
Page 374
Heffernan was not "trading securities for
his own account" in the usual meaning of
that phrase. That is, this is not a
situation in which Heffernan maintained a
personal trading portfolio and encountered
litigation over his individual sale of a
security in an unrelated company. In such a
scenario, "there is no reason why the
corporation should be obligated or permitted
to bear the executives' [litigation]
expenses." Joseph W. Bishop, Jr., The Law of
Corporate Officers and Directors:
Indemnification and Insurance § 2.03 at 4
(1988). Rather, this was a structured sale
of control transaction pursuant to one
agreement--all of the stock that Pacific
acquired in this transaction was pursuant to
the Stock Purchase Agreement.
6
We decline to distort the context in which
Pacific's complaint arose by accepting
Holdings' and GNB's unsupported invitation
to carve Pacific's acquisition of Holdings'
into various component parts.
Furthermore, neither the specific
statutory provision under which a director
is sued nor the mere form of the underlying
complaint is dispositive of his right to
indemnification. The logical extension of
the district court's reliance on the
"necessary elements" of section 12(2) in
denying Heffernan indemnification as a
matter of law is that Delaware did not
intend for any suit under section 12(2) to
fall within its indemnification provisions.
Delaware's case-by-case approach to
indemnification counsels against such a
formalistic gloss. See, e.g.,
MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Wanzer, 1990
WL 91100, 1990 Del.Super. Lexis 222;
Green v. Westcap Corp.,
492 A.2d 260
(Del.Super.Ct.1985);
Essential Enterprises Corp. v. Automatic
Steel Products, Inc.,
164 A.2d 437
(Del.Ch.1960). Otherwise, a director
could be forced to bear the costs of
unfounded, harassing litigation just because
the particular cause of action does not
specify a breach of a duty to the
corporation, regardless of the connection
between the suit and the individual's
service as a director.
7
As a practical matter, it is unsurprising
that Pacific's complaint is not more
explicit in its reliance on Heffernan's role
as a director of Holdings and GNB. Because
Pacific now controls Holdings and GNB, those
three corporations' interests are aligned;
thus Pacific has the incentive and
opportunity to structure its complaint so as
to avoid triggering its subsidiaries' duty
of indemnification.
8
Nevertheless, artful drafting cannot
disguise the fact that the gravamen of
Pacific's complaint is that Heffernan, at
least in part because he
Page 375
was a director of Holdings and GNB, either
knew or should have known that Holdings and
GNB may be subject to environmental and
other liabilities inadequately reflected in
the Stock Purchase Agreement. We recognize
that because Heffernan wore three
hats--director, shareholder and investment
banker--his director status may not be the
only reason that he was sued by Pacific. But
at this stage of this litigation, we cannot,
as a matter of law, rule out the fact that
it may have been one reason.
IV.
Having established that Pacific's
complaint is connected to Heffernan's status
as a director, we now turn to whether
Delaware's "by reason of" requirement
necessarily requires more than the nexus
present here. Without delineating the
precise contours of the "by reason of"
phrase, we conclude that it may be broad
enough to encompass the litigation that
Heffernan has incurred, at least in part,
because of his status as a director of
Holdings and GNB. Both the language and the
purpose of Delaware's indemnification
statute support interpreting its scope
expansively.
First, Delaware is no neophyte in
corporate law matters. Had it desired to
limit permissible indemnification solely to
those suits in which a director is sued for
breaching a duty of his directorship or for
certain enumerated causes of action, it
would have jettisoned the supple "by reason
of the fact that" phrase in favor of more
specific language. Had Delaware desired to
so limit its indemnification statute, we are
confident that it could have found the
words. Holdings and GNB have given us no
reason to doubt that Delaware's choice of
language was anything but purposeful and
strategic. We believe that Delaware's "by
reason of the fact that" phrase is broad
enough to encompass suits against a director
in his official capacity as well as suits
against a director that arise more
tangentially from his role, position or
status as a director. Flexibility of
language is vexing as well as liberating. In
employing its "by reason of" phrase,
Delaware is able to cover a myriad of
potential factual scenarios that cannot be
anticipated ex ante by the legislature or by
corporate officials in drafting their
articles and bylaws. The task of giving
content to that flexible phrase, however,
falls on the courts when the parties
encounter interpretive differences.
Finally, we think that the policy
of Delaware's indemnification statute
supports permitting Heffernan to proceed to
establish his right to advances and
indemnification from Holdings and GNB. One
of the primary purposes of Delaware's
indemnification statute is to encourage
capable individuals "to serve as corporate
directors, secure in the knowledge that
expenses incurred by them in upholding their
honesty and integrity as directors will be
borne by the corporation they serve."
MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Wanzer, 1990
Del.Super. Lexis 222 (citations
omitted). Additionally, the statute ought to
promote the "desirable end that corporate
officials will resist what they consider
unjustified suits and claims, secure in the
knowledge that their reasonable expenses
will be borne by the corporation they have
served if they are vindicated." Id. Delaware
has effectuated these policies by gradually
expanding its indemnification provisions to
cover the everchanging contexts in which a
director may encounter litigation.
Hibbert v. Hollywood Park, Inc.,
457 A.2d 339 (Del.1983) (indemnification provided
to directors acting as plaintiffs). See
generally Veasey, Finkelstein & Bigler,
Delaware Supports Directors with a
Three-Legged Stool of Limited Liability,
Indemnification and Insurance, 42 Bus.Law.
401 (1987). The district court's restrictive
interpretation of Heffernan's claim
diminishes the broad and expansive flavor of
Delaware's indemnification provisions.
V.
In sum, while a fine line often
separates those suits emanating purely from
a director's personal transactions and those
suits emanating from a director's duties,
role or status, we think the district court
erred in prematurely concluding that
Pacific's
Page 376
suit against Heffernan fell squarely on the
personal side. We emphasize that our inquiry
in this case has been a narrow one, confined
to whether Heffernan's indemnification and
advances claim against Holdings and GNB
should be allowed to proceed. We express no
opinion on the merits of Heffernan's right
to advances,
Citadel Holding Corp. v. Roven,
603 A.2d 818
(Del.Supr.1992), or on his ultimate
right to indemnification. We hold only that
his suit was prematurely dismissed under an
unduly restrictive reading of Delaware's
indemnification law. Holdings' bylaws have
numerous prerequisites that a director must
meet before being entitled to
indemnification. Those remain to be explored
in the district court. In addition, on
remand the district court should first
consider Heffernan's right to advances,
which the Delaware Supreme Court has
recently indicated may present a prior and
distinct inquiry from a director's ultimate
right to indemnification. Citadel Holding
Corp., 603 A.2d 818; see also id. (resolving
entitlement to interest in indemnification
claims).
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
RIPPLE, Circuit Judge,
concurring.
I join the judgment and the
opinion of the court. Given the dearth of
information available to him, my brother has
done an admirable job of feeling his way to
a reasoned solution of the issue before us.
It must be admitted, however, that our
decision involves a significant element of
uncertainty
1a--uncertainty
produced by the lack of sufficient Delaware
authority and by the refusal of that state
to permit this court to seek guidance on the
issue from the
Supreme Court of Delaware. See FDIC v. Blue
Rock Shopping Ctr., Inc., 599 F.Supp. 684,
687 (D.Del.1984); see also Del. Const.
art. IV, § 11(9); Del.Sup.Ct.R. 41.
The inability--or rather the lack
of capacity--of the federal courts to obtain
reasonably clear guidance on state law
matters is having a disastrous impact on the
judicial governance of this country.
Countless hours are spent by conscientious
federal judges attempting to ascertain the
content of state law as required by Erie
R.R. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817,
82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938). Sophisticated
business litigation is subject to an element
of uncertainty that only results in greater
legal fees for the attorneys involved and
greater financial burdens to the parties.
If it is the will of the Congress
that we decide, under our diversity
jurisdiction, matters of corporate
governance regulated by a state five hundred
miles away, perhaps it is time that thought
be given to the development of more
effective devices for obtaining an accurate
reading of the content of that state's law.
While perhaps there is federal power to
effect such a change, our tradition of
federal-state judicial cooperation would
seem the most appropriate avenue to resolve
the current situation.
1 Pacific Dunlop Holdings, Inc.
subsequently changed its name to Pacific
Dunlop GNB Corporation.
2 In addition, section 145(c) provides
for mandatory indemnification of a
director's reasonable legal expenses where
the director has been successful on the
merits or otherwise in defending an action
under sections 145(a) (third-party actions)
or 145(b) (actions by or in the name of the
corporation).
Green v. Westcap Corp., 492 A.2d 260, 265
(Del.Super.Ct.1985);
McLean v. International Harvester Co.,
817 F.2d 1214 (5th Cir.1987).
Advances of litigation expenses are
provided for both by statute, see Del.Code
Ann. tit. 8, § 145(e) (permissive), and
Holdings' bylaws, see R. 1-1 Exhibit A §
6.04 (mandatory).
3 This is not to imply, however, that
there may not be other provisions of
Holdings' bylaws that diverge from the
Delaware statute.
4 A "prospectus" is defined broadly in
section 2(10) of the Securities Act of 1933.
In short, the term refers to any notice,
circular, advertisement, letter or
communication, written or by radio or
television, which offers any security for
sale or confirms the sale of any security.
See 15 U.S.C. § 77b(10).
5 Some lower federal courts have limited
section 12(2)'s reach to primary offerings,
finding it inapplicable to secondary market
transactions. See J. William Hicks, Civil
Liabilities: Enforcement and Litigation
Under the 1933 Act § 6.01 at 6-13 n. 8
(1991).
Ballay v. Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc.,
925 F.2d 682 (3d Cir.1991), cert. denied,
--- U.S. ----, 112 S.Ct. 79, 116 L.Ed.2d 52
(1991), is the first federal court of
appeals to reach this result. See id. at
687-693. Although we do not reach this issue
here, we note that Pacific's complaint
against Heffernan was dismissed for this
reason. Pacific Dunlop Holdings, Inc. v.
Allen & Co., slip op. No. 90-C-5678, 1991 WL
348493, 1991 U.S. Dist. Lexis 6748 (E.D.Ill.
May 15, 1991). For a thorough collection of
cases addressing this issue and a critique
of those courts restricting the application
of section 12(2) to primary offerings, see
Hicks, supra, at § 6.01.
6 Because Pacific's suit arises from
Heffernan's participation with Holdings in a
structured sale of control transaction, we
find the district court's exclusive reliance
on
Spring v. Moncrieff, 10 Misc.2d 731, 173
N.Y.S.2d 86 (N.Y.Sup.Ct.1958)
unpersuasive. Unlike Heffernan, Moncrieff
subverted his company's planned sale by
selling his stock to a third party rather
than the would-be acquirer. Thus, Moncrieff
was acting in opposition to his company,
unlike Heffernan who was acting in concert
with Holdings. When Moncrieff was later sued
by a broker for commissions the broker lost
when Moncrieff wrecked his company's deal,
the court had little trouble finding that an
individual who had caused litigation by
acting in his own interest rather than in
the corporation's should not be entitled to
indemnification from that corporation.
Additionally, Moncrieff interprets New
York's indemnification statute rather than
Delaware's. Although the two were similar at
the time Moncrieff was decided, Delaware's
statute has since been broadened
significantly. See Sebring, Recent
Legislative Changes in the Law of
Indemnification of Directors, Officers and
Others, 23 Bus.Law. 95 (1967).
7 One commentator has noted that the
language of the Delaware statute is
intended to cover the cost of at least
the successful defense of suits based on
executives' trading in the corporation's
securities for their own account,
particularly suits under Sections 10(b) and
16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934. [T]he policies behind the securities
laws do not preclude indemnification of
legal expenses incurred in the successful
defense of security laws claims.
Joseph W. Bishop, Jr., The Law of
Corporate Officers and Directors:
Indemnification and Insurance § 2.03 at 5-6
(citations omitted).
8 Put differently, in seeking funds from
Pacific's subsidiaries, Heffernan is
effectively assailing Pacific's coffers.
Moreover, the same law firm that is
defending Holdings and GNB in this action
drafted Pacific's complaint against
Heffernan. In arguing that Heffernan is not
entitled to indemnification for his costs in
defending Pacific's suit, Holdings and GNB
make much of the fact that Pacific sued
Heffernan under section 12(2) rather for
"insider trading" (presumably under section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Act
of 1934). We note, however, that when
Pacific sued other parties to the same
transaction (the principal operating
personnel of GNB), for the same disclosure
problems, it employed section 10(b) and Rule
10(b)5 rather than section 12(2). See
Pacific Dunlop Holdings, Inc. v. Barosh, No.
91-C-0002 slip op., 1991 WL 348494, 1991
U.S. Dist. Lexis 6662 (N.D.Ill. May 15,
1991).
1a For this reason, I hardly find fault
with the valiant effort of our colleague in
the district court who reached, after the
same struggle, the opposite conclusion. |