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MONICA A.
BEAM,
derivatively on behalf of MARTHA
STEWART LIVING OMNIMEDIA, INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
MARTHA
STEWART; SHARON L. PATRICK; ARTHUR C.
MARTINEZ; NAOMI O. SELIGMAN; DARLA D. MOORE;
JEFFREY W. UBBEN; and L. JOHN DOERR,
Defendants, and
MARTHA
STEWART LIVING OMNIMEDIA, INC.,
Nominal Defendants.
C.A. No. 19844-NC.
Chancery Court of Delaware, New
Castle County.
Submitted July 17, 2003. Decided September 30, 2003.
Pamela S. Tikellis, Robert J.
Kriner and Brian D. Long, of CHIMICLES &
TIKELLIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF
COUNSEL: Nicholas E. Chimicles and James R.
Malone, Jr., of CHIMICLES & TIKELLIS LLP,
Haverford, Pennsylvania; Lawrence A.
Sucharow and Joel Bernstein, of GOODKIND,
LABATON, RUDOFF & SUCHAROW LLP, New York,
New York; and Reginald A. Krasney, Wayne,
Pennsylvania, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
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Andre G. Bouchard, of BOUCHARD
MARGULES & FRIEDLANDER, Wilmington,
Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Barbara Moses, Tracey
Kitzman and Alicia D'Angelo, of MORVILLO,
ABRAMOWITZ, GRAND, IASON & SILBERBERG, P.C.,
New York, New York, Attorneys for Defendant
Martha
Stewart.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III and S.
Mark Hurd, of MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT &
TUNNELL, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL:
Barry G. Sher and Brett D. Jaffe, of FRIED,
FRANK, HARRIS, SHRTVER & JACOBSON, New York,
New York, Attorneys for Defendants Sharon L.
Patrick, Arthur C. Martinez, Naomi O.
Seligrnan, Darla D. Moore, Jeffrey W. Ubben
and Nominal Defendant Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc.
Gregory V. Varallo, Lisa A.
Schmidt, Kelly A. Green and Richard P.
Rollo, of RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER,
Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: David M.
Furbush and Braden O. Wilhelm, of O'MELVENY
& MYERS LLP, Menlo Park, California,
Attorneys for L. John Doerr.
OPINION
CHANDLER, Chancellor
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Monica A.
Beam,
a shareholder of Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc.
("MS,"), brings this derivative action
against the defendants, all current
directors and a former director of MSO, and
against MSO as a nominal defendant. The
defendants have filed three separate motions
seeking (1) to dismiss Counts II, III, and
IV under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for
failure to state claims upon which relief
may be granted; (2) to dismiss the amended
complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1
for failure to comply with the demand
requirement and for failure adequately to
plead demand excusal; or alternatively (3)
to stay this action in favor of litigation
currently pending in the U.S. District Court
for the Southern District of New York.1
This is the Court's ruling on these motions.
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I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND2
Plaintiff Monica A.
Beam
is a shareholder of MSO and has been since 5
August 200 1. Derivative plaintiff and
nominal defendant MSO is a Delaware
corporation that operates in the publishing,
television, merchandising, and intemet
industries marketing products bearing the
"Martha
Stewart" brand name.
Defendant Martha
Stewart ("Stewart")
is a director of the company and its
founder, chairman, chief executive officer,
and by far its majority shareholder. MSO's
common stock is comprised of Class A and
Class B shares. Class A shares are traded on
the New York Stock Exchange and are entitled
to cast one vote per share on matters voted
upon by common stockholders. Class B shares
are not publicly traded and are entitled to
cast ten votes per share on all matters
voted upon by common stockholders.
Stewart owns or beneficially holds
100% of the B shares in conjunction with
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a sufficient number of A shares that she
controls roughly 94.4% of the shareholder
vote.
Stewart, a former stockbroker, has in
the past twenty years become a household
icon, known for her advice and expertise on
virtually all aspects of cooking,
decorating, entertaining, and household
affairs generally.
Defendant Sharon L. Patrick
("Patrick") is a director of MSO and its
president and chief operating officer. The
amended complaint reports that in 2001, MSO
paid Patrick a salary of $700,000, a
$280,000 bonus, and granted her options for
130,000 Class A shares. She also serves as
the secretary of M.
Stewart, Inc., which is described in
the complaint as "one of Stewart's personal
companies."3 Prior
to Patrick's employment at MSO, she was a
consultant to the magazine, Martha
Stewart Living, and developed
extensive experience in the media,
entertainment, and consulting businesses.
Patrick is also a longtime personal friend
of
Stewart.
Defendant Arthur C. Martinez
("Martinez") has been a director of MSO
since January 200 1. Martinez is the former
chairman of the board of directors and chief
executive officer of Sears Roebuck and Co.
Martinez was also the chairman and chief
executive officer of that company's retail
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arm, Sears Merchandise Group. Sears was a
high-volume retailer of MSO products during
Martinez's tenure there. He has served on
the boards of Sears Roebuck and Co., Sears
Merchandise Group, and Saks Fifth Avenue. In
addition, Martinez now serves as a director
of MSO, PepsiCo, Inc., Liz Claibome, Inc.,
and International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.
and as the chairman of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Chicago. A March 2001 article in
Directors & Boards reported that Patrick
and
Stewart both consider Martinez to be
"an old friend."4
Also, Martinez was recruited to serve on
MSO's board by then-board member Charlotte
Beers ("Beers"), another "longtime friend
and confidante"5
of
Stewart.
Defendant Darla D. Moore
("Moore") has been a director of MSO since
September 2001, when Beers resigned and
Moore replaced her. Moore's professional
background includes a partnership at
Rainwater, Inc., a private investment firm,
a managing directorship with Chase Bank, and
service as a trustee of Magellan Health
Services, Inc. Moore, too, is I reported to
be a longtime friend of both
Stewart and Beers, as evidenced by
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a 1996 Fortune magazine article
highlighting the close friendship among the
three women and by the amended complaint's
report of Moore's attendance at a wedding
reception in 1995, which was attended by
both
Stewart and Samuel Waksal and hosted
by Stewart's lawyer, Allen Grubman.
Defendant Naomi O. Seligman
("Seligman") has been a director of MSO
since 1999. She is a co-founder and senior
partner of Cassius Advisors and a co-founder
and former senior partner of Research Board,
Inc. Seligman serves as a director of
several public companies, including John
Wiley & Sons ("JWS"), a publisher. The
amended complaint relates a Wall Street
Journal report that Seligman contacted
the chief executive officer of JWS on behalf
of
Stewart to express concern over an
unflattering biography of
Stewart that was scheduled for
publication by JWS.
Defendant Jeffery W. Ubben
("Ubben") has been a director of MSO since
January 2002. He is the founder and managing
partner of ValueAct Capital Partners, L.P.
and'a director of Insurance Auto Auctions,
Inc. Ubben has formerly served as a managing
partner and as a portfolio manager, working
in the investment industry since at least
1987.
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Defendant L. John Doer-r
("Doer-r"), is a former director of MSO. His
tenure as a director ended in March 2002.
Doer-r is the general partner of a venture
capital firm, Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield &
Byers ("Kleiner, Perkins").
The amended complaint states that
compensation paid to MSO's directors
includes all of the following:
$20,000 as an annual retainer;
$1,000 for each meeting
attended in person;
$500 for each meeting attended
telephonically; and
$5,000 annually for serving as
chairman of any committee.
Twenty-five percent of directors'
fees are paid in shares of MSO's Class A
common stock, with the remaining 75% payable
either in Class A shares or cash at the
choice of the director. In addition, MSO has
a stock option plan for the directors.
The plaintiff seeks relief in
relation to three distinct types of
activities. The first involves the
well-publicized matters6
surrounding Stewart's alleged
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improper trading of shares of ImClone
Systems, Inc. ("ImClone") and her public
statements in the wake of those allegations.
The second relates to the private sale of
sizeable blocks of MSO stock by both
Stewart and Doerr in early 2002. The
third challenges the board's decisions with
regard to the provision of "split-dollar"
insurance for
Stewart.
A. Stewart's ImClone Trading
The market for MSO products is
uniquely tied to the personal image and
reputation of its founder,
Stewart. MSO retains "an exclusive,
worldwide, perpetual royalty-free license to
use [Stewart's] name, likeness, image, voice
and signature for its products and
services."7 In its
initial public offering prospectus, MSO
recognized that impairment of Stewart's
services to the company, including the
tarnishing of her public reputation, would
have a material adverse effect on its
business. The prospectus distinguished
Stewart's importance to MSO's business
success from that of other executives of the
company noting that, "Martha
Stewart remains the personification
of our brands as well as our senior
executive and primary creative force."8
In fact, under the terms of her employment
agreement,
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Stewart may be terminated for gross
misconduct or felony conviction that results
in harm to MSO's business or reputation but
is permitted discretion over the management
of her personal, financial, and legal
affairs to the it extent that Stewart's
management of her own life does not
compromise her ability to serve the company.
Stewart's alleged misadventures
with ImClone arise in part out of a
longstanding personal friendship with Samuel
D. Waksal ("Waksal"). Waksal is the former
chief executive officer of ImClone as well
as a former suitor of Stewart's daughter.
More pertinently, with respect to the
allegations of the amended complaint, Waksal
and
Stewart have provided one another
with reciprocal investment advice and
assistance, and they share a stockbroker,
Peter E. Bacanovic ("Bacanovic") of Merrill
Lynch. Bacanovic, coincidentally, is a
former employee of ImClone. When MSO made
its initial public offering of Class A
common stock in 1999, Bacanovic sold $10
million of the shares to Stewart's friends
and family members, including Waksal and
members of his family. Waksal has encouraged
and assisted
Stewart not only with regard to the
purchase of ImClone stock but also has
persuaded
Stewart to invest in a venture fund
he started, Scientia Health Group, and has
helped
Stewart and her friend, Beers, to
become
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private investors in Cadus Pharmaceutical
Corp. prior to its initial public offering
in 1996. Although the other investments
recommended and facilitated by Waksal have
thus far proven to be of no great news
value, the ImClone investment-or more
particularly Stewart's December 27, 2001
ImClone divestment-has been found to be
somewhat more noteworthy. The speculative
value of ImClone stock was tied quite
directly to the likely success of its
application for FDA approval to market the
cancer treatment drug Erbitux. On December
26, Waksal received information that the FDA
was rejecting the application to market
Erbitux. The following day, December 27, he
tried to sell his own shares and tipped his
father and daughter to do the same.
Stewart also sold her shares on
December 27. That day she was traveling with
another friend, Marianna Pasternak
("Pasternak"), when
Stewart spoke with Bacinovic's
assistant, Douglas Faneuil, and sold all of
her ImClone shares. The next day, December
28, Pastemak's husband, Bart Pastemak, also
sold 10,000 shares of ImClone. After the
close of trading on December 28, ImClone
publicly announced the rejection of its
application to market Erbitux. The following
day the trading price closed slightly more
than 20% lower than the closing price on the
date that
Stewart had sold her shares. By
mid-2002, this convergence of events
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had attracted the interest of the New
York Times and other news agencies,
federal prosecutors, and a committee of the
United States House of Representatives.
Stewart's publicized attempts to quell any
suspicion were ineffective at best because
they were undermined by additional
information as it came to light and by the
other parties' accounts of the events.
Ultimately Stewart's prompt efforts to turn
away unwanted media and investigative
attention failed.
Stewart eventually had to'
discontinue her regular guest appearances on
CBS' The Early Show because of
questioning during the show about her sale
of ImClone shares. After barely two months
of such adverse publicity, MSO's stock price
had declined by slightly more than 65%. In
August 2002, James Follo, MSO's chief
financial officer, cited uncertainty
stemming from the investigation of
Stewart in response to questions
about earnings prospects in the future.
B. Private Sales of MSO Stock
In January 2002,
Stewart and the Martha
Stewart Family Partnership sold
3,000,000 shares of Class A stock to
entities designated in the amended
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complaint as "ValueAct."9
In March 2002, Kleiner, Perkins, acting
through its general partner, Doerr, sold
1,999,403 shares of MSO to ValueAct.
C. Split-Dollar Insurance
MSO provides
Stewart with what is commonly termed
a "split-dollar" insurance policy. The
premiums for such policies are paid entirely
or in large part by the employer. Paid-in
premiums grow tax-free over the life of the
policy. Upon the retirement of the employee,
the employer is reimbursed for its premium
contributions out of the cash value of the
policy. The remaining cash balance in the
policy continues to grow tax-free, and the
proceeds are used to pay premiums as they
come due during the remainder
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of the now-retired former employee's
life. In addition, the retired employee can
make periodic tax-free withdrawals from the
policy after the employer's contributions
have been reimbursed, so long as the cash
value of the policy is adequate to generate
sufficient funds to pay the premiums as they
come due.
Some have suggested that
split-dollar insurance constitutes an
interest-free loan to the employee on whose
behalf the policy is purchased. If so, such
policies could run afoul of recent federal
legislation banning loans to corporate
executives and directors.10
A spokesperson for MSO stated that, in light
of the questions raised regarding the nature
and propriety of split-dollar insurance
policies for executives, MSO's lawyers and
accountants would be evaluating the
advisability of paying the premiums in the
future and would make a determination before
the next premium payment came due in
February 2003.
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II. ANALYSIS
A. Motions to Dismiss Counts
II, III, and IV-Court of Chancery Rule
12(b)(6)
In ruling on a motion to dismiss
under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court considers
only the allegations in the amended
complaint, and any documents incorporated by
reference therein.11
For this purpose, the Court accepts as true
all well-pled factual allegations contained
in the amended complaint,`12
but conclusory statements-those unsupported
by well-pled factual allegations-are not
accepted as true.13
The Court will draw all inferences logically
flowing from the amended complaint in favor
of the plaintiff but only if such inferences
are reasonable.14
The Court will not dismiss under Rule
12(b)(6) any claim unless it appears to a
reasonable certainty that the
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plaintiff cannot prevail on any set of
facts which might be proven to support the
allegations in the amended complaint15
1. Count II-Failure to Monitor
Stewart's Personal Activities
Count II of the amended complaint
alleges that the director defendants and
defendant Patrick breached their fiduciary
duties by failing to ensure that
Stewart would not conduct her
personal, financial, and legal affairs in a
manner that would harm the Company, its
intellectual property, or its business.
The "duty to monitor"16
has been litigated in other circumstances,
generally where directors were alleged to
have been negligent in monitoring the
activities of the corporation, activities
that led to corporate liability.17
Plaintiffs allegation, however, that the
Board has a duty to monitor the personal
affairs of an officer or director is quite
novel. That the Company is "closely
identified" with
Stewart is conceded, but it does not
necessarily
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follow that the Board is required to
monitor, much less control, the way
Stewart handles her personal
financial and legal affairs.18
In Graham v.
Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co., the
Delaware Supreme Court held that "absent
cause for suspicion there is no duty upon
the directors to install and operate a
corporate system of espionage to ferret out
wrongdoing which they have no reason to
suspect exists."19
Despite this statement's implication that a
duty to monitor may arise when the board has
reason to suspect wrongdoing, it does not
burden MSO's Board with a duty to monitor
Stewart's personal affairs.
First, plaintiff does not allege
facts that would give MSO's Board any reason
to monitor Stewart's activities before
mid-2002 when the allegations regarding her
divestment of ImClone stock became
public. Second, the
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quoted statement from Graham
refers to wrongdoing by the corporation.
Regardless of Stewart's importance to MSO,
she is not the corporation. And it is
unreasonable to impose a duty upon the Board
to monitor Stewart's personal affairs
because such a requirement is neither
legitimate nor feasible. Monitoring
Stewart by, for example, hiring a
private detective to monitor her behavior is
more likely to generate liability to
Stewart under some tort theory than
to protect the Company from a decline in its
stock price as a result of harm to Stewart's
public image.20
Even if I accept that the board
knew that Stewart's personal actions could
result in harm to MSO, it seems patently
unreasonable to expect the Board, as an
exercise of its supervision of the
Company, to preemptively thwart a
personal call from
Stewart to her stockbroker or to
fully control her handling of the media
attention that followed as a result of her
personal actions, especially where
her statements touched on matters that could
subject
Stewart to criminal charges.
Plaintiff has not cited any case to support
this new "duty" to monitor personal affairs.
Since the defendant
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directors had no duty to monitor
Stewart's personal actions, plaintiffs
allegation that the directors breached their
duty of loyalty by failing to monitor
Stewart because they were "beholden"
to her is irrelevant. Count II is dismissed
for failure to state a claim.
2. Count III-Stock Sales bv
Stewart and Doer-r
Count III of the amended
complaint alleges that
Stewart and Doer-r breached their
fiduciary duty of loyalty, usurping a
corporate opportunity by selling large
blocks of MS0 stock to ValueAct. Defendants
Stewart and Doerr are essentially in
the same position with respect to Count III.21
The basic requirements for establishing
usurpation of a corporate opportunity were
articulated by the Delaware Supreme Court in
Broz v. Cellular Information Systems,
Inc.:
[A] corporate officer or director
may not take a business opportunity for his
own if: (1) the corporation is financially
able to exploit the opportunity; (2) the
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opportunity is within the corporation's
line of business; (3) the corporation has an
interest or expectancy in the opportunity;
and (4) by taking the opportunity for his
own, the corporate fiduciary will thereby be
placed in a position [inimical] to his
duties to the corporation.22
In this analysis, no single
factor is dispositive. Instead the Court
must balance all factors as they apply to a
particular case.23
For purposes of the present motion, I assume
that the sales of stock to ValueAct could be
considered to be a "business opportunity." I
now address each of the four factors
articulated in Broz.
a. Financial Ability of MS0 to
Exploit the Opportunity
The amended complaint asserts
that MS0 was able to exploit this
opportunity because the Company's
certificate of incorporation had sufficient
authorized, yet unissued, shares of Class A
common stock to cover the sale to ValueAct.
Defendants do not deny that the Company
could have sold previously unissued shares
to ValueAct. I therefore conclude that the
first factor has been met.
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b. Within MSO's Line of Business
An opportunity is within a
corporation's line of business if it is "an
activity as to which [the corporation] has
fundamental knowledge, practical experience
and ability to pursue."24
Because I have already determined that MS0
had sufficient authorized but unissued
shares available and because no special
expertise is required to issue stock, I find
that the "ability to pursue" prong is met.
The question then becomes whether selling
its own stock is an activity as to which the
Company has fundamental knowledge and
practical experience.
Plaintiff states that the
Company's line of business is "creat[ing]
`how-to' content and domestic merchandise
for homemakers and other consumers."25
Nevertheless, the Court recognizes that
raising capital is a fundamental activity in
which businesses are often engaged. MS0 made
its initial public offering in October 1999.
Therefore, in a strictly literal sense, the
Company, like any stock corporation, "has
fundamental knowledge and practical
experience" in the activity of selling its
stock in exchange for capital contributions.
This conclusion, however, does not help
plaintiff in
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this instance. MS0 is a consumer products
company, not an investment company. Simply
stated, selling stock is not the same line
of business as selling advice to homemakers.
Further, I would presume that a company's
"line of business" is one that is intended
to be profitable. By definition, a company's
issuance of its stock does not generate
income.26 For the
foregoing reasons, I therefore conclude that
the sale of stock by
Stewart and Doerr was not within
MSO's line of business.
c. MSO's Interest or Expectancy
in the Stock Sales
A corporation has an interest or
expectancy in an opportunity if there is
"some tie between that property and the
nature of the corporate business."27
Requiring a tie to the "nature of the
corporate business" implicates many of the
issues discussed above regarding MSO's line
of business. The Broz Court found
that the company in that case, CIS (a
company in the business of providing
cellular phone service to the Midwest), had
no interest or expectancy in the Michigan-2
license in
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question because CIS was divesting its
cellular license holdings and its business
plan did not contemplate any new
acquisitions.28
Here, plaintiff does not allege any facts
that would imply that MS0 was in need of
additional capital, seeking additional
capital, or even remotely interested in
finding new investors. Had MS0 wished to do
so, it had a readily available, liquid
market in which to accomplish that aim, as
MSO's Class A stock is traded on the New
York Stock Exchange.
I fail to see any connection
between the potential sale of stock to
ValueAct and the nature of MSO's business.
Further, issuance of new shares without a
need or desire for new capital is perceived
to have negative effects on preexisting
shareholders, as the new capital may not be
effectively used to increase earnings at the
same time that the preexisting shareholders'
proportionate interests in the corporation
have decreased. Plaintiff presents no
indication that MS0 had any expectation,
interest, or necessity to raise capital
through new issuances of stock, nor can I
reasonably infer such from the amended
complaint. In the absence of specific
allegations indicative of
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corporate interest or expectancy, I must
conclude that this factor of the Broz
test has not been met.
d. Whether the Stock Sales Placed
Stewart and Doer-r in a Position
Inimical to Their Duties to MS0
"[T]he corporate opportunity
doctrine is implicated only in cases where
the fiduciary's seizure of an opportunity
results in a conflict between the
fiduciary's duties to the corporation and
the self-interest of the director as
actualized by the exploitation of the
opportunity."29
Given that I have concluded that MS0 had no
interest or expectancy in the issuance of
new stock to ValueAct, I fail to see, based
on the allegations before me, how
Stewart and Doer-r's sales placed
them in a position inimical to their duties
to the Company. Were I to decide otherwise,
directors of every Delaware corporation
would be faced with the ever-present specter
of suit for breach of their duty of loyalty
if they sold stock in the company on whose
Board they sit.
Additionally, Delaware courts
have recognized a policy that allows
officers and directors of corporations to
buy and sell shares of that
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corporation at will so long as they act
in good faith.30 A
corporation generally "has no interest in
its outstanding stock or in dealing in its
shares among its stockholders."31
Plaintiff cites only one case purported to
be to the contraryThorpe v. CERBCO, Inc.32
Thorpe involved a bidder who
approached the management of Insituform
East, Inc. desirous to purchase the company.33
In bad faith, management withheld this
information from the outside directors, lied
by saying that the bidder had not expressed
interest in purchasing the company,
threatened to block any sale of the entire
company, and simply informed the board a
bidder wished to buy the inside directors'
controlling interest.34
I would attempt to compare the well-pled
facts in this case to those in Thorpe,
but I am unable to do so because the amended
complaint fails to provide any
factual detail about the circumstances
surrounding the stock sales, alleging only
that the transactions occurred.
Page 24
Delaware jurisprudence favors
certainty and predictability.35
Directors must "make decisions based on the
situation as it exists at the time a given
opportunity is presented."36
In the absence of allegations based on L
well-pled facts that call into question the
propriety of
Stewart and Doerr's sales at the time
they made them, it is impossible to infer
that they acted in bad faith in selling
their shares or placed themselves in a
position inimical to their duties to MSO.
Given the allegations before me, the fourth
factor of the Broz test is not met.
On balancing the four factors, I
conclude that plaintiff has failed to plead
facts sufficient to state a claim that
Stewart and Doerr usurped a corporate
opportunity for themselves in violation of
their fiduciary duty of loyalty to MSO.
Count III is dismissed in its entirety under
Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim
upon which relief can be granted.37
Page 25
3. Count IV-Split-Dollar
Insurance
Count IV alleges, "[p]utting
aside whether the approval of such policies
. . . [was] proper, [the defendants] have
failed to act responsibly and address the
impropriety of the Company's payment of
split-dollar insurance policy premiums."38
Although it is possible that such policies
ultimately will be held to violate certain
provisions of Sarbanes-Oxley,39
the amended complaint fails to state a claim
under Delaware law. Plaintiff does not
allege that the premiums paid by MS0 were
unlawful, that MS0 failed to disclose the
existence of the policy, or that the Board
failed to take action once the governing law
changed. To the contrary, plaintiff alleges
merely that the split-dollar policies might
be held to be unlawful, then admits that the
Board properly disclosed the existence of
the policy in its April 1, 2002 Definitive
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Proxy Statement, and mrther concedes that
the Company's lawyers and accountants were
looking into whether the policy should be
unwound.
On the facts pled, this case is
analogous to Caremark.40
In Caremark, it was alleged that the
board of directors breached its fiduciary
duties by failing adequately to address
potential violations by Caremark's employees
of federal and state laws prohibiting the
payment of kickbacks relating to Medicare
and Medicaid patients. At one time, it was
unclear whether such kickbacks were
prohibited. In approving a settlement in the
case, then Chancellor Allen remarked that
"the record tends to show an active
consideration by Caremark management and its
Board of the . . . programs that ultimately
led to the company's indictment" and that
the failure to accurately predict the severe
consequences to the company as a result of
the violations did not give "rise to an
inference of breach of any duty imposed by
corporation law upon the directors of
Caremark."41
Although I do not have a
developed record before me at this stage of
the litigation, plaintiff here has conceded
that MSO's Board has considered and is
considering, with the assistance of expert
advisors, the potential
Page 27
ramifications of continuing the
split-dollar insurance policy. Two key
elements necessary to proving a breach of
fiduciary duty claim in this instance would
be that (1) the directors knew or should
have known that a violation of the law was
occurring and, (2) "the directors took no
steps in a good faith effort to prevent or
remedy `that situation."42
Giving full weight to the facts pled in the
amended complaint, I must conclude that
plaintiff is unable to meet this test, and
has thus failed to state a claim on which
relief can be granted.
Plaintiff also asserts in Count
IV that the policy was improper, noting that
"[a]dditionally, and under any circumstance,
the, conduct allege [sic] herein does not
deserve any such reward."43
The complaint is unclear as to whether this
is a separate, albeit oblique, allegation,
challenging the Board's business judgment
when taking out the policy in the first
place, or whether it calls into question the
continuation of premium payments.
Nevertheless, such a vague and conclusory
statement is inadequate to sustain Count IV,
and it is therefore dismissed.
Page 28
B. Motions to Dismiss the
Amended Complaint-Court of Chancery Rule 23.
I
Defendants have moved to dismiss
the amended complaint under Court of
Chancery Rule 23.1 for failure to make
demand upon MSO's board of directors or
adequately to plead why demand would be
futile. On a motion to dismiss pursuant to
Rule 23.1, the Court considers the same
documents, similarly accepts well-pled
allegations as true, and makes reasonable
inferences in favor of the plaintiff-all as
it does in considering a motion to dismiss
under Rule 12(b)(6).44
Rule 23.1, however, confers substantive
rights that result in derivative complaints
being subjected to more stringent pleading
requirements.45
The plaintiff must state with particularity
the efforts made to cause the company's
board of directors to take action on the
matters of concern to the plaintiff-to state
how demand was made.46
If, as in this action, the plaintiff has
failed to make a demand
Page 29
on the board, the plaintiff must state
with particularity the reasons that demand
should be excused.47
Plaintiff concedes that demand
was not made but asserts that demand L would
be futile because the board of directors is
incapable of acting independently and
disinterestedly in evaluating demand with
respect to plaintiffs claims. As a practical
matter, because Counts II through IV are
dismissed for failure to state a claim, I
need only determine whether demand would be
futile with respect to Count I.48
Count I alleges that
Stewart breached her fiduciary duties
to MS0 and its shareholders by selling
(perhaps illegally) shares of ImClone in
December of 2001 and by public statements
she made regarding that sale. Because this
claim does not challenge an action of the
board of directors of MSO, the appropriate
test for demand futility is that articulated
in Razes v. Blasband.49
Particularly, the Court's task is to
evaluate whether the particularized
allegations "create a reasonable doubt that,
as of the time the complaint [was] filed,
the board of
Page 30
directors could have properly exercised
its independent and disinterested business
judgment in responding to a demand."50
Rales requires that a majority of the
board be able to consider and appropriately
to respond to a L demand "free of personal
financial interest and improper extraneous
influences."51
Demand is excused as futile if the Court
finds there is "a reasonable doubt that a
majority of the Board would be disinterested
or independent in making a decision on
demand."52
The original complaint was filed
on August 15,2002. At that time the board
members were defendants
Stewart, Patrick, Martinez, Seligman,
Moore, and Ubben. Thus, these six
individuals constitute the board for
purposes of evaluating demand futility.53
Demand is required if, in view of all the
particularized allegations in the complaint
and drawing all reasonable inferences in
favor of the plaintiff, there is no
reasonable doubt of the ability of a
majority, here four of the six directors, to
respond to demand appropriately.
Page 31
1. Inside Directors:
Stewart and Patrick
Defendants do not suggest that
either
Stewart or Patrick should be
considered disinterested, independent, and
able to consider demand on Count I without
interference of improper extraneous
influences. Still, Rule 23.1 places the
burden on the plaintiff to specify in the
complaint the reasons why demand would be
futile.
The amended complaint alleges
that in her sales of ImClone stock and
subsequent statements on the subject,
Stewart not only breached her
fiduciary duties to MSO and its shareholders
but may have committed criminal acts. It
seems that these allegations indicate a
significant likelihood that
Stewart may be both civilly and
criminally liable with respect to these
actions. This is sufficient to raise a
reasonable doubt of Stewart's disinterest in
the challenged acts. I find that
Stewart must be considered incapable
of appropriately considering demand with
respect to Count I.
Patrick is the president, chief
operating officer, and a director of MSO.
Her 2001 compensation included $980,000 in
salary and bonuses along with a grant of
options to purchase 130,000 Class A shares
of MSO. Based on the magnitude of
compensation described flowing to Patrick
from her work at MSO, I find that Patrick
has a material interest in her own
Page 32
continued employment. Because
Stewart is the company's chairman and
chief executive, controls over 94% of the
shareholder vote, and is the
"personification of [MSO's] brands as well
as [its] senior executive and primary
creative force,"54
Stewart certainly has the ability to
affect Patrick's employment and compensation
at MSO. As described above,
Stewart is personally interested in
the subject matter of Count I. This raises a
reasonable doubt whether Patrick can
evaluate and respond to demand on Count I
without being influenced by improper
consideration of the extraneous matter of
how pursuit of that claim would affect
Stewart's interests.55
Although I find these allegations
sufficient alone to excuse demand with
respect to Patrick, the amended complaint
makes two additional allegations worth
mentioning. Patrick is also the secretary of
M.
Stewart, Inc., which the amended
complaint describes as "one of Stewart's
personal companies."56
It seems a reasonable inference, even
without more specific
Page 33
allegations, that
Stewart can control whether Patrick
remains in that position. What the amended
complaint fails to do is provide any facts
to show why remaining in that position would
be material to Patrick-additional facts from
which the Court could reasonably infer that
Patrick's interest in keeping her position
as secretary of M.
Stewart, Inc. may raise questions of
Patrick's independence of
Stewart. Finally, the amended
complaint asserts in a wholly conclusory
fashion that Patrick and
Stewart are longstanding friends. No
other details about the duration, nature, or
evidences of the very existence of the
friendship are given. As such, there is no
basis for the Court to infer that the
friendship may constitute a further basis
for questioning Patrick's independence.
2. Outside Directors:
Martinez, Moore, Seligman, and Ubben
Stewart
has overwhelming voting control of MSO,
controlling over 94% of the shareholder
vote. It is reasonable to infer that she can
remove or replace any or all of the
directors. This ability does not by itself
demonstrate that
Stewart has the capacity to control
the outside directors,57
but is not
Page 34
without relevance to whether there is a
reasonable doubt of the outside directors'
independence of
Stewart. What is required in addition
are allegations demonstrating that remaining
on MSO's board is material to the outside
directors such that they would be incapable
of considering demand without this
extraneous consideration having an
inappropriate effect on their decisionmaking
process. No such allegations are made in the
amended complaint. The amended complaint
does specify the various retainers, meeting
fees, and other perquisites afforded the
directors, but it is not obvious from the
allegations that such compensation would be
sufficient to entice any of the outside
directors to ignore fiduciary duties to MSO
and its shareholders. Nor does plaintiff
suggest that the outside directors have a
history of blindly following Stewart's will
or even accepting her recommendations
without adequate independent study and
investigation.`58
Page 35
The amended complaint also
describes two of the outside directors,
Martinez and Moore, as having longstanding
friendships with
Stewart. Notwithstanding defendants'
arguments to the contrary, some professional
or personal friendships, which may border on
or even exceed familial loyalty and
closeness,59 may
raise a reasonable doubt whether a director
can appropriately consider demand.60
This is particularly true when the
allegations raise serious questions of
either civil or criminal liability of such a
close friend. Not all friendships, or even
most of them, rise to this level61
and the Court cannot make a
reasonable inference that a particular
Page 36
friendship does so without specific
factual allegations to support such a
conclusion.
The factual allegations regarding
Stewart's friendship with Martinez are
inadequate to raise a reasonable doubt of
his independence. While employed by Sears,
Martinez developed business ties to MSO due
to Sears' marketing of a substantial
quantity of MSO products. Martinez was
recruited to serve on MSO's board of
directors by Beers, who is described as
Stewart's longtime personal friend and
confidante and who was at that time an MSO
director. Shortly after Martinez joined
MSO's board, Patrick was quoted in a
magazine article saying, "Arthur [Martinez]
is an old friend to both me and Martha [Stewart]."62
Weighing against these factors, the amended
complaint discloses that Martinez has been
an executive and director for major
corporations since at least 1990. At present
he serves as a director for four prominent
corporations, including MSO, and is the
chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago. One might say that Martinez's
reputation for acting as a careful fiduciary
is essential to his career-a matter in which
he would surely have a material interest.
Page 37
Furthermore, the amended complaint does
not give a single example of any action by
Martinez that might be construed as evidence
of even a slight inclination to disregard
his duties as a fiduciary for any
reason. In this context, I cannot reasonably
infer, on the basis of several years of
business interactions and a single
affirmation of friendship by a third party,
that the friendship between
Stewart and Martinez raises a
reasonable doubt of Martinez's ability to
evaluate demand independently of Stewart's
personal interests.
The allegations regarding the
friendship between Moore and
Stewart are somewhat more detailed,
yet still fall short of raising a reasonable
doubt about Moore's ability properly to
consider demand on Count I. In 1995,
Stewart's lawyer, Allen Grubman, hosted a
wedding reception for his daughter. Among
those in attendance at the reception were
Moore,
Stewart, and Waksal. In addition,
Fortune magazine published an article in
1996 that focused on the close personal
friendships among Moore,
Stewart, and Beers. In September
2001, when Beers resigned from MSO's board
of directors, Moore was selected to replace
her. Although the amended complaint lists
fewer positions of fiduciary responsibility
for Moore than were listed for Martinez, it
is clear that Moore's professional
reputation similarly would be
Page 38
harmed if she failed to fulfill her
fiduciary obligations. To my mind, this is
quite a close call. Perhaps the balance
could have been tipped by additional, more
detailed allegations about the closeness or
nature of the friendship, details of the
business and social interactions between the
two, or allegations raising additional
considerations that might inappropriately
affect Moore's ability to impartially
consider pursuit of a lawsuit against
Stewart.63
On the facts pled, however, I cannot say
that I have a reasonable doubt of Moore's
ability to properly consider demand.
No particular felicity is alleged
to exist between
Stewart and Seligman. The amended
complaint reports in ominous tones, however,
that Seligman, who is a director both for
MSO and for JWS, contacted JWS' chief
executive officer about an unflattering
biography of
Stewart slated for publication. From
this, the Court is asked to infer that
Seligrnan acted in a way that preferred the
protection of
Stewart over her fiduciary duties to
one
Page 39
or both of these companies. Without
details about the nature of the contact,
other than Seligman's wish to "express
concern," it is impossible reasonably to
make this inference. Stewart's public image,
as plaintiff persistently asserts, is
critical to the fortunes of MSO and its
shareholders. As a fiduciary of MSO,
Seligman may have felt obligated to express
concern and seek additional information
about the publication before its release. As
a fiduciary of JWS, she could well have
anticipated some risk of liability if any of
the unflattering characterizations of
Stewart proved to be insufficiently
researched or made carelessly. There is no
allegation that Seligman made any
inappropriate attempt to prevent the
publication of the biography. Nor does the
amended complaint indicate whether the
biography was ultimately published and, if
so, whether Seligman's inquiry is believed
to have resulted in any changes to the
content of the book. As alleged, this matter
does not serve to raise a reasonable doubt
of Seligman's independence or ability to
consider demand on Count I.
In sum, plaintiff offers various
theories to suggest reasons that the outside
directors might be inappropriately swayed by
Stewart's wishes or interests, but fails to
plead sufficient facts that could permit.
the Court reasonably to infer that one or
more of the theories could be accurate.
Page 40
Evidence to support (or refute) any of
the theories might have been uncovered by an
examination of the corporate books and
records, to which the plaintiff would have
been entitled for this purpose.64
Board minutes or voting records, for
example, could reveal if the outside
directors have in the past challenged
Stewart's proposals, or not, voted in line
with
Stewart, or in opposition to her, and
shown on which issues the outside directors
have been more or less likely to go along
with Stewart's wishes. Armed with such
information, plaintiff (and this Court)
would be in a much better position to
evaluate whether there exists a reasonable
doubt of the outside directors' resolve to
act independently of
Stewart. It appears, however, that
plaintiff made no such investigation,
instead relying largely, if not solely, on
information from media reports to support
the assertion that demand would be futile.
It is troubling to this Court
that, notwithstanding repeated suggestions,
encouragement, and downright admonitions
over the years both by this
Page 41
Court65 and by
the Delaware Supreme Court,66
litigants continue to bring derivative
complaints pleading demand futility on the
basis of precious little
Page 42
investigation beyond perusal of the
morning newspapers.67
This failure properly to investigate whether
a majority of directors fairly can evaluate
demand may lead to either (or both) of two
equally appalling results. If there is no
reasonable doubt that the board could
respond to demand in the proper fashion,
failure to make demand and filing the
derivative action
Page 43
results in a waste of the resources of
the litigants, including the corporation in
question, as well as those of this Court. If
the facts to support reasonable doubt could
have been ascertained through more careful
pre-litigation investigation, the failure to
discover and plead those facts still results
in a waste of resources of the litigants and
the Court and, in addition, ties the hands
of this Court to protect the interests of
shareholders where the board is unable or
unwilling to do so. This results in the
dismissal of what otherwise may have been
meritorious claims, fails to provide relief
to the company's shareholders, and further
erodes public confidence in the legal
protections afforded to investors.
The course of the litigation in
In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative
Litigation68
is instructive on this point. In that case
the shareholder-plaintiffs alleged that the
director-defendants breached their fiduciary
duty when they approved an employment
contract with a very large severance package
for president, Michael Ovitz, and when the
directors granted Ovitz a non-fault
termination under that contract upon his
departure from Disney's employ just over a
year later.69 In
October 1998, this Court granted the
Page 44
defendants motion to dismiss under Rule
23.1.70 The Court
determined that the amended complaint had
failed to raise a reasonable doubt of
whether Michael Eisner, Disney's CEO and
Ovitz's longtime friend, was disinterested
in the challenged transactions71
or of whether a majority of the directors
approving either the contract or the
non-fault termination was independent of
Eisner.72 In
addition, the Court determined that
"Plaintiffs [had] failed to plead facts
giving rise to a reasonable doubt that the
Board, as a matter of law, was reasonably
inforrned" when approving Ovitz's contract.73
The complaint also failed to plead
adequately that the approval of the contract
amounted to waste,74
and "[t]here [was] no allegation that the
Board did not consider the pertinent issues
surrounding Ovitz's termination."75
Page 45
On appeal, the Supreme Court
largely affirmed the Court of Chancery
decision to grant the motion to dismiss.76
Although troubled by the lavish compensation
awarded to Ovitz in exchange for meager
benefits deriving to Disney and by the
"casual, if not sloppy and perfunctory"
manner in which the directors addressed
Ovitz's hiring and termination, the Court
agreed that the amended complaint was "so
inartfully drafted that it was properly
dismissed under our pleading standards for
derivative suits."77
The Supreme Court, however, determined that
the plaintiffs should be given an
opportunity to replead (1) whether reliance
on the advice of compensation expert Graef
Crystal should afford the board protection
against claims of breach of the duty of care78
and (2) whether granting Ovitz a non-fault
termination constituted waste.79
The plaintiffs then used a books
and records request to investigate possible
wrongdoing in relation to Ovitz's hiring and
termination.80 The
second amended complaint adequately pled
demand futility because the
Page 46
facts, which were uncovered through
examination of the corporate records and
documents, showed a lack of oversight so
egregious that it called into question the
directors' good faith exercise of their
fiduciary duties.81
It would be inappropriate to
speculate on the merits of the underlying
claims in any case, including this one, on a
motion to dismiss under Rule 23.1. Therefore
I have and express no opinion regarding the
merits of Count I as may have been
determined had it survived for trial. I
would be remiss, though, if I failed to
point out that with a bit more detail about
the "relationships," "friendships," and
"inter-connections" among
Stewart and the other defendants or
with some additional arguments as to why
there may be a reasonable doubt of the
directors' incentives when evaluating demand
with respect to Count I, there may have been
a reasonable doubt as to one or all of the
outside directors disinterest, independence,
or ability to consider and respond to demand
free from improper extraneous influences.
Nevertheless, on this pleading, no such
doubt is raised. The defendants' motions to
dismiss the amended complaint
Page 47
for failure adequately to plead demand
futility are granted with respect to Count
I.
C. Motion to Stay This Action
Application of the McWayne Standard
All claims made in the amended
complaint have been dismissed either for
failure to state a claim or for failure
properly to plead demand futility. Since no
claims survive the motions to dismiss, the
motion to stay this action is moot.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, (1)
the defendants' motions to dismiss Counts
II, III, and IV for failure to state a claim
are GRANTED; (2) the defendants' motions to
dismiss the amended complaint for failure to
make demand or adequately to plead that
demand is excused are therefore moot as to
Counts II, III, and IV; (3) the defendants'
motions to dismiss the amended complaint for
failure to make demand or adequately to
plead that demand is excused are GRANTED as
to Count I; and (4) the defendants' motion
to stay further proceedings in this action
pending the resolution of the Federal Action
is mooted by the dismissal of all counts in
the amended complaint.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes:
1. Defendants MSO, Sharon L. Patrick,
Arthur C. Martinez, Naomi O. Seligman, Darla
D. Moore, and Jeffrey W. Ubben (collectively
the "MSO defendants") move to dismiss the
amended complaint under Court of Chancery
Rule 23.1 for failure to make demand on
MSO's board of directors and for failure to
plead adequately why demand should be
excused and to dismiss Counts II and IV
under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) or
alternatively to stay the action in favor of
first-filed federal litigation. Defendant
Martha
Stewart moves to dismiss on the same
bases as the MSO defendants, adopting their
arguments and, in addition, to dismiss Count
III pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Defendant L.
John Doer-r moves to dismiss the amended
complaint for failure to make demand or
properly to allege demand futility, adopting
and supplementing the arguments of the MSO
defendants and, in addition, to dismiss
Count III pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
In her original motion,
Stewart also sought to stay this
action on the same grounds as the MSO
defendants. In a letter to the Court, dated
July 11, 2003,
Stewart withdrew her motion to stay.
2. The facts in this Opinion are derived
from the well-pled allegations of the
amended complaint unless otherwise
indicated. Counsel have apprised the Court
of recent developments including the June 4,
2003 indictment and SEC action filed against
Stewart and resultant management
changes at MSO. The Court must, however,
evaluate the facts as pled in the amended
complaint in ruling on these motions to
dismiss. For this reason, the facts as
stated and discussed in this opinion are
those pled in the amended complaint and do
not take into account later developments.
3. Am. Compl. 3.
4. Id.
5. Id. 5.
6. The amended complaint specifically
refers to a number of reports in the New
York Times, an incident on the CBS
broadcast of The Early Show, and at
least one report in the Wall Street
Journal.
7. Am. Compl. 18.
8. Id. 16 (quoting MSO's public
offering prospectus).
9. The amended complaint uses the
shorthand "ValueAct" as a designation for a
combination of four interrelated business
entities-two Delaware limited partnerships
(ValueAct Partners and ValueAct Partners
II), a British -Virgin Islands company
(ValueAct International), and a Delaware
limited liability company (VA Partners).
This Opinion adopts similar usage of the
name ValueAct. ValueAct is in the business
of investing in securities.
The amended complaint does not
allege that the entities designated
"ValueAct" are in any way related to
ValueAct Captial Partners, L.P., of which
Ubben is the founder and managing partner.
Nor does it allege that Ubben is involved
with ValueAct either as an investor or a
manager. During oral argument on these
motions, plaintiffs counsel suggested that
Ubben is the manager and founding director
of ValueAct and that he obtained his seat on
MSO's board as a result of ValueAct's
purchase of Stewart's and Doerr's MSO
shares. This would imply that Ubben is
somehow implicated in misdirecting these
transactions away from MSO and to
Stewart and Doerr, and that Ubben was
rewarded for doing so with a seat on MSO's
board of directors. NO allegations of this
type are made in the amended complaint and
they are not considered by the Court in
ruling on these motions to dismiss.
10. See Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, Pub.
L. No. 107-204 § 402(a), 116 Stat. 745,
787-88 (codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78m(k)
(2003)).
11. Vanderbilt Income & Growth Assocs.
v. Arvida./JMB Managers, Inc., 69 1 A.2d
609, 612-13 (Del. 1996); Orman v.
Cullman, 794 A.2d 5, 15-16 (Del. Ch.
2002).
12. Orman, 794 A.2d at 15.
13.
Grobow v. Perot, 539 A.2d 180, 187
(Del. 1988) (stating that "conchrsionary
allegations of fact or law not supported by
allegations of specific fact may not be
taken as true"), overruled in part on
other grounds by Brehm v. Eisner, -742
A.2d 244 (Del. 2000).
14. Id. (stating that the Court
"need not. . .draw all inferences from [the
allegations] in plaintiffs' favor unless
they are reasonable inferences").
15. Rabkin v. Philip A. Hunt Chem.
Corp., 498 A.2d 1099, 1104 (Del. 1985).
16. The "duty to monitor" is not a
separate fiduciary duty, but rather stems
from the core fiduciary duties of care and
loyalty. The parties argue at length about
whether this duty stems from the duty of
care, the duty of loyalty, or both as it
relates to MSO's § 102(b)(7) charter
provision. I need not, nor do I, decide from
which duty the "duty to monitor" flows in
order to reach my conclusion as to Count II.
17. See In re Abbot Laboratories
S'holders Litig., 325 F.2d 795 (7th Cir.
2003); In re Caremark Int'l Inc.
Derivative Litig.,
698 A.2d 959
(Del. Ch. 1996); In re Baxter Int'l, Inc.
S'holders Litig.,
654 A.2d 1268 (Del.
Ch. 1995).
18. Plaintiff concedes that the Board
recognized the importance of
Stewart to MSO and has already
exercised some level of care ex ante
(through terms included in her employment
agreement) in protecting the Company from
possible harms caused by Stewart's personal
activities. For example, the amended
complaint states that:
Because of the importance of
defendant Stewart's, public image to the
Company and to the value of the trademarks
and intellectual property that she has
licensed to it, her employment agreement
expressly provides that she may be
terminated for cause if she is convicted' of
a felony or engages in gross misconduct that
"results in material and demonstrable damage
to the business or reputation of the
Company."
Am. Compl. 19.
19. 188 A.2d 125, 130 (Del. 1963).
20. One could even imagine that if the
board hired a private detective to monitor
Stewart's personal activities and that
action were to become public knowledge, the-
lack. of trust implied in such an action
could itself tarnish Stewart's public
reputation, harming MSO'S business prospects
and its shareholders.
21. Doerr contends in the briefing on
this motion that he resigned from MSO's
board before the sale of Kleiner, Perkins'
MS0 stock to ValueAct on March 14, 2002.
Doerr also disputes that plaintiff has
alleged that Kleiner, Perkins, the entity
that owned the shares sold to ValueAct, and
of which Doerr is a general partner, is an
alter ego of Doerr and is under his control.
Even if Doer-r's contentions fail (and I
express no opinion as to whether they would
upon a fully developed record), my decision
on this count would not be affected. For
purposes of this motion, Doer-r is treated
as if he were a director of the Company on
March 14, 2002 and that he sold the MS0
shares to ValueAct personally.
Stewart does not dispute her
fiduciary status as an officer and director
of the Company at the time she sold shares
to ValueAct.
22. 673 A.2d 148, 155 (Del. 1996).
23. Id.
24.
Guth v. Loft, 5 A.2d 503, 514 (Del.
1939).
25. Am. Compl. 13.
26. See 26 U.S.C. § 1032 (2003) (no gain
or loss recognized for tax purposes on
issuance of stock); PAUL MLINTER & THOMAS A.
RATCLIFFE, APPLYING GAAP & GAAS §§ 15.0 1-
15.02 (Release No. 35,2002) (same rule for
accounting purposes).
27. Broz, 673 A.2d at 156 (quoting
Johnston v. Greene,
121 A.2d 919,924
(Del. 1956)).
28. Id.
29. Id. at 157.
30. See Brophy v. Cities Serv.
Co., 70 A.2d 5, 8 (Del. Ch. 1949) (noting
that "in the absence of special
circumstances, corporate offricers and
directors may purchase and sell its capital
stock at will, and without any liability to
the corporation"); Frantz Mfg. Co. v.
EAC Hindus., 501 A.2d 401, 408 (Del.
1985) (stating that "directors have the
right to deal freely with their shares of
stock and to dispose of them at the best
price they are able to obtain, so long as
they are acting in good faith").
31. Tuckman v. Aerosonic Corp.,
1982 Del. Ch. LEXIS 452, at *25 (Del. Ch.)
(quoting 3 FLETCHER CYCLOPEDIA OF THE LAW OF
PRIVATE CORPORATIONS (Per-m. ed.) § 900).
32.
676 A.2d 436 (Del. 1996).
33. Id. at 438.
34. Id. at 439.
35. See Broz, 673 A.2d at 159.
36. Id.
37. There is some controversy in the
parties' briefs as to whether the
opportunity for the ValueAct sales was
presented to the board by
Stewart or Doerr. In Broz, the
Supreme Court clearly stated, "It is not the
law of Delaware that presentation to the
board is a necessary prerequisite to a
finding that a corporate opportunity has not
been usurped." Id. at 157. Presenting
an opportunity to the board simply provides,
"a kind of `safe harbor' for the director,
which removes the specter of a post hoc
judicial determination that the director or
officer has improperly usurped a corporate
opportunity." Id. I have concluded
that the amended complaint fails to plead
properly that
Stewart and Doerr usurped a corporate
opportunity, regardless of whether it was
ever presented to the board. Since they were
under no separate obligation to present it,
the count cannot be sustained whether a
presentation was made or not. Plaintiff in
her brief in opposition to defendants'
motions suggests that discovery under Court
of Chancery Rule 56(f) is necessary before
this claim can be resolved. As has been
demonstrated by my analysis of Count III, I
do not agree. Plaintiffs belated request for
discovery under Rule 56(f) is denied.
38. Am. Compl. 71.
39. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, Pub. L.
No. 107-204 § 402(a), 116 Stat. 745, 787-88
(codified at 15 U.S.C. 5 78m(k) (2003)). My
decision on the motions to dismiss Count IV
does not bear in any way on the merits of
whether such policies may be inconsistent
with the provisions of Sarbanes-Oxley.
40.
698 A.2d 959.
41. Id. at 961.
42. Id. at 971.
43. Am. Compl. 71.
44. See white v. Panic,
783 A.2d
543,549 (Del. 2001).
45. See Rales v. Blasband, 634
A.2d 927, 932 & n.7 (Del. 1993);
Emerald Partners v. Berlin, 1993 Del.
Ch. LEXIS 273, at *7 (Del. Ch.);
Pogostin v. Rice, 1983 Del. Ch. LEXIS
437, at *7 (Del. Ch.), aff'd,
480 A.2d 619 (Del. 1984).
46. CT. CH. R. 23.1.
47. Id.
48. Demand futility analysis is conducted
on a claim-by-claim basis. See Yaw v.
Talley, 1994 Del. Ch. LEXIS 35,
at *27 (Del. Ch.); Needham, 1993 Del.
Ch. LEXIS 76, at *9-10. Because I have
dismissed all other claims for failure to
state a claim, there is no need to determine
whether demand would have been required as
to Counts II, III, and IV.
49.
634 A.2d 927 (Del. 1993).
50. Id. at 934.
51. Id. at 935.
52. Id. at 930.
53. See, e.g., Haseotes v. Bentas,
2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 106, at *14 (Del.
Ch.); Needham, 1993 Del. Ch. LEXIS
76, at *8-9; Harris v. Carter, 582
A.2d 222, 229-32 (Del. Ch. 1990).
54. Am. Compl. 16 (quoting MSO's public
offering prospectus).
55. This does not call into question
Patrick's disinterest with
respect to demand on Count I as alleged in
the amended complaint. Rather it raises a
reasonable doubt of Patrick's
independence of
Stewart, who is considered an
interested party with respect to Count I.
56. Am. Compl. 3.
57. See Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d
805, 816 (Del. 1984) (noting that "proof of
majority ownership of a company does not
strip the directors of the presumption[] of
independence").
58. At oral argument, plaintiffs counsel
suggested that the MSO board should have
fired
Stewart before the announcement of
the federal indictment and of the SEC civil
action. The failure to do so is purported to
be a strong indication that the board as a
whole is dominated and controlled by
Stewart. This argument is
unpersuasive for two reasons. First, the
sole factual allegation upon which this
inference is to be made is merely that
Stewart was not removed from her
positions as board chairman and chief
executive officer before the indictment but
has since been replaced. Even at oral
argument plaintiff could not make factual
allegations that would support an inference
(1) that the board failed to consider what
if any action might be taken in response to
the negative media attention; (2) that the
board failed to evaluate the risks and
benefits of possible responses including
those likely to result from taking no
action; or (3) that the board's decision to
wait before taking action was made on any
basis other than the business judgment that
to take action prematurely could
unnecessarily worsen any harm to MSO and its
shareholders that was already resulting from
the negative publicity. The identification
of which matters were or were not officially
considered by the directors is precisely the
sort of information that should be readily
ascertainable by a shareholder through a
books and records action authorized under 8 Del. C. § 220. Second, the allegation
is simply not made in the amended complaint
and therefore cannot be considered by this
Court for the purpose of demand futility
analysis.
59. See Grace Bros. v. UniHolding
Corp., 2000 Del. Ch. LEXIS 101, at *32
(Del. Ch.) (finding reasonable doubt whether
a director impartially could consider demand
adverse to the interests of his
brother-in-law);
Mizel v. Connelly, 1999 Del. Ch.
LEXIS 157, at *11-14 (Del. Ch.)
(observing that close familial ties should
"go a long (if not the whole) way toward
creating a reasonable doubt").
60.
In re Oracle Corp. Derivative Litig.,
824 A.2d 917, 937-39 (Del. Ch. 2003)
(discussing candidly the tension in Delaware
law with respect to whether and how
nonmonetary factors may enter into the
independence analysis).
61. See Abrams v. Koether, 766 F.
Supp. 237, 256 (D.N.J. 1991) (noting that
"allegations that making demand would call
on the Defendants to sue their friends,
family and business associates are
insufficient" to demonstrate demand
futility).
62. Am. Compl. 4.
63. For example, in the context of
evaluating the independence of a special
litigation committee, Vice Chancellor Strine
found a reasonable doubt of the independence
of the SLC members based on a complex web of
personal and professional relationships and
interactions among the SLC members and those
whose alleged wrongdoing the SLC was charged
with investigating. In re Oracle Corp.
Derivative Litig., 824 A.2d 917. It is
worth noting that this web of relationships
was uncovered in part during discovery. Id.
at 920. Perhaps the plaintiff here could
have mustered the necessary facts had she
used 8 Del. C. § 220.
64. 8 Del. C. § 220; Rales, 634
A.2d at 934 n.10.
65. See, e.g., In re Citigroup Inc. S'holders Litig., 2003
Del. Ch. LEXIS 61, at *1-2 (Del.
Ch.); In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative
Litig.,
825 A.2d 275, 279 n.5
(Del. Ch. 2003) [hereinafter Disney II];
Guttman v. Jen-Hsun Huang,
823 A.2d
492,493 (Del. Ch. 2003);
Litt v. Wycoff, 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS
23, at *26 & n.40 (Del. Ch.);
Biondi v. Scrushy, 820 A.2d 1148, 1162 (Del. Ch.
2003); Fruend v. Lucent Techs., Inc., 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 3, at
*13-14 (Del. Ch.); In re New Valley Corp. Derivative
Litig., 200 1 Del. Ch. LEXIS 13, at *20
n.17 (Del. Ch.); TCW Tech. L.P. v.
Intermedia Communications, Inc., 2000
Del. Ch. LEXIS 147, at *9-1 1 &
nn.2-3 (Del. Ch.); Ash v.
McCall, 2000 Del. Ch. LEXIS
144, at *56 n.56 (Del. Ch.); White
v. Panic, 793 A.2d 356, 365 (Del.
Ch. 2000), aff'd,
783 A.2d 543 (Del. 2001);
Mizel v. Connelly, 1999 Del. Ch.
LEXIS 157, at *16 & n.5.
66. See White, 783 A.2d at
549-50 & n.15; Brehm v.
Eisner,
746 A.2d 244, 266 (Del. 2000); Scattered Corp. v. Chi. Stock Exch., 701 A.2d 70,
78 (Del. 1997); Security First Corp.
v. U.S. Die Casting & Dev. Co., 687
A.2d 563, 567 n.3 (Del. 1997); Rales, 634 A.2d at
934 n. 10. In Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d
927, 935 n. 10 (Del. 1993), the Supreme
Court stated that "little use has been made
of § 220 as an information-gathering tool in
the derivative context" and that this
situation was "generated by the `first to
tile' custom seemingly permitting the winner
of the race to be named lead counsel." The
Supreme Court encouraged the Court of
Chancery to ignore the custom of allowing
the "first the file" to serve as lead
counsel where a later filing plaintiffs
counsel was diligent and employed § 220.
Id. Vice Chancellor Lamb continued the
Supreme Court's thought in White v.
Panic, 793 A.2d 356 (Del. Ch.
2000) (White I), and stated that
because a plaintiff did not use § 220 he
would "not give a broad reading to the facts
alleged in the complaint, nor [would he]
infer from them the existence of other facts
that would have been proved or disproven by
a further pre-suit investigation." Id.
at 364. On appeal, the Supreme Court noted
that Vice Chancellor Lamb was correct in
"chastising the plaintiff for his lackluster
pre-suit efforts," but that "a perceived
deficiency in the plaintiffs pre-suit
investigation would not permit the Court of
Chancery . . . to limit its reading of the
complaint or to deny the plaintiff the
benefit of reasonable inferences from
well-pleaded factual allegations." White
v. Panic,
783 A.2d 543, 549-50
(Del. 2001) (citing Brehm v. Eisner, 746
A.2d 244,255 (Del. 2000)) (White II).
The Supreme Court's statement
does not seem to address the true thrust of
Vice Chancellor Lamb's comment. The Supreme
Court stated that the Court of Chancery
should not "limit its reading of the
complaint," White II at 550, but this
is wholly consistent with not giving "a
broad reading to the facts alleged in the
complaint," White I at 364. In other
words, declining to expand factual
inferences is not the same as actively
limiting those same factual inferences.
Moreover, the Supreme Court's admonition to
allow "the benefit of reasonable inferences
from well-pleaded factual allegations," White II at 550, is not
inconsistent with declining to infer "the
existence of other facts that would have
been proved or disproven by a further
pre-suit investigation." White I
at 364. The reason for this consistency is
straighfonvard: if a complaint is devoid of
facts that could have been proved (if they
existed) by use of § 220, it is not
"well-pleaded," and to infer the existence
of those facts, when they could easily have
been proved by the use of § 220, is not
"reasonable." This consistency is reinforced
by the Supreme Court's statement in
White II that it could not conclude
that Vice Chancellor Lamb "limited [his]
interpretation of the complaint in a manner
inconsistent with the accepted standards,"
White II at 550. Ultimately, one
might argue that following Vice Chancellor
Lamb's interpretive suggestion would be a
reasonable method to further the Supreme
Court's desire to encourage the use of § 220
as it stated in Rales.
67. The assertion of plaintiffs counsel
at oral argument that this case was filed
before such investigation became a standard
practice appears unfortunately to be correct
but, nonetheless, does nothing to ease the
mind of the Court on this point. Although I
hope that adequate pre-suit investigation
does become the norm, the fact that a
half-dozen of the opinions just cited,
supra note 62, were issued in the last
seven months would seem to indicate that it
has not yet become a matter of course.
Nonetheless, fully half of the Court of
Chancery opinions, supra note 62, and
all of the Delaware Supreme
Court opinions, supra note 63, cited
(a group of eleven opinions that is in no
way purported to be exhaustive of Delaware
jurisprudence on this point) had been issued
well before either the original or amended
complaint was filed in this action.
68.
825 A.2d 275.
69. The facts as pled at various stages
are given in each of the three opinions that
chronicle the saga of this litigation.
In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative Litig.,
731 A.2d 342,355 (Del. Ch. 1998)
[hereinafter Disney I], aff'd in
part, rev'd in part sub nom. Brehm v.
Eisner, 746 A.2d 244 (Del. 2000),
motion to dismiss denied, Disney II,
825 A.2d 275.
70. Disney I, 731 A.2d at 355.
71. Id. at 356.
72. Id. at 361.
73. Id. at 362.
74. Id. at 363.
75. Id. at 364.
76. Brehm, 746 A.2d at 248.
77. Id. at 249.
78. Id. at 262.
79. Id. at 266.
80. Disney II, 825 A.2d at 279.
81. Id. at 278-79.
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