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MONICA A. BEAM,
derivatively on behalf of MARTHA
STEWART LIVING OMNIMEDIA, INC.,
Plaintiff Below, Appellant,
v.
MARTHA
STEWART, SHARON L. PATRICK, ARTHUR C.
MARTINEZ, NAOMI O. SELIGMAN, DARLA D. MOORE;
JEFFREY W. UBBEN, L. JOHN DOERR, and MARTHA
STEWART LIVING OMNIMEDIA, INC.,
Defendants Below, Appellees.
No. 501, 2003.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: February 3, 2004.
Decided: March 31, 2004.
Court of Chancery of the State of
Delaware, in and for New Castle County, C.A.
No. 19844.
Upon appeal from the Court of
Chancery. AFFIRMED.
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Pamela S. Tikellis, Esquire
(argued), Robert J. Kriner, Jr., Esquire,
and Brian D. Long, Esquire, of Chimicles &
Tikellis LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Of
Counsel: Nicholas E. Chimicles, Esquire and
James R. Malone, Jr., Esquire, of Chimicles
& Tikellis LLP, Haverford, Pennsylvania;
Lawrence A. Sucharow, Esquire and Joel
Bernstein, Esquire of Goodkind, Labaton,
Rudoff & Sucharow LLP, New York, New York;
Reginald A. Krasney, Esquire of Wayne,
Pennsylvania, for Appellant.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III,
Esquire, and S. Mark Hurd, Esquire, of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, Delaware; Of Counsel: Barry G.
Sher, (argued), and Brett D. Jaffe, Esquire,
of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
LLP, New York, New York, for Appellees
Patrick, Martinez, Seligman, Moore, and
Ubben and Nominal Appellee Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc.
Andre G. Bouchard, Esquire, of
Bouchard, Margules & Friedlander,
P.A.,Wilmington, Delaware; Of Counsel:
Barbara Moses, Esquire, of Morvillo,
Abramowitz, Grand, Iason & Silberberg, P.C.,
New York, New York, for Appellee
Stewart.
Before VEASEY, Chief Justice,
HOLLAND, BERGER, STEELE and JACOBS,
Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.
VEASEY, Chief Justice:
Page 3
In this appeal we review and
affirm the judgment of the Court of Chancery
in dismissing under Rule 23.1 a claim in a
derivative suit because the plaintiff failed
to make presuit demand on the corporation's
board of directors and failed to demonstrate
demand futility. In his opinion,1
the Chancellor dealt with several issues and
provided a detailed account of the facts of
the case. We summarize only those facts most
pertinent to this appeal. The single issue
before us is that of demand futility, no
appeal having been taken on the other
issues.
The Chancellor analyzed in detail
the plaintiff's demand futility allegations.
We agree with the Chancellor's well-reasoned
opinion. But, pursuant to our plenary
appellate review, we undertake a further
explication of certain points covered by the
Chancellor, including the matter of director
independence.
Facts
The plaintiff, Monica A.
Beam,
owns shares of Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. (MSO).
Beam
filed a derivative action in the Court of
Chancery against Martha
Stewart, the five other members of
MSO's board of directors, and former board
member L. John Doerr.2
In four counts, Beam's amended complaint
(the "complaint") challenged three types of
activity by
Stewart and the MSO board. The
Page 4
Court of Chancery dismissed three of the
four claims under Court of Chancery Rule
12(b)(6). Those dismissals were not appealed
and are not before us.
In the single claim at issue on
appeal (Count 1),
Beam
alleged that
Stewart breached her fiduciary duties
of loyalty and care by illegally selling
ImClone stock in December of 2001 and by
mishandling the media attention that
followed, thereby jeopardizing the financial
future of MSO . The Court of Chancery
dismissed Count 1 under Court of Chancery
Rule 23.1 because
Beam
failed to plead particularized facts
demonstrating presuit demand futility.
When
Beam
filed the complaint in the Court of
Chancery, the MSO board of directors
consisted of six members:
Stewart, Sharon L. Patrick, Arthur C.
Martinez, Darla D. Moore, Naomi O. Seligman,
and Jeffrey W. Ubben. The Chancellor
concluded that the complaint alleged
sufficient facts to support the conclusion
that two of the directors,
Stewart and Patrick, were not
disinterested or independent for purposes of
considering a presuit demand.
The Court of Chancery found that
Stewart's potential civil and criminal
liability for the acts underlying Beam's
claim rendered
Stewart an interested party and
therefore unable to consider demand.3
The Court also found that Patrick's position
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as an officer and inside director,4
together with the substantial compensation
she receives from the company, raised a
reasonable doubt as to her ability
objectively to consider demand.5
The defendants do not challenge the Court's
conclusions with respect to Patrick and
Stewart.
We now address the plaintiff's
allegations concerning the independence of
the other board members. We must determine
if the following allegations of the
complaint, and the reasonable inferences
that may flow from them, create a reasonable
doubt of the independence of either
Martinez, Moore or Seligman:6
4. Defendant Arthur C. Martinez
("Martinez") is a director of the Company, a
position that he has held since January
2001. Until December 2000, Martinez served
as Chairman of the board of directors of
Sears Roebuck and Co., and was its Chief
Executive Officer from August 1995 until
October 2000. Martinez joined Sears, Roebuck
and Co. in September 1992 as the Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of Sears
Merchandise Group, Sears's former retail
arm. From 1990 to 1992, he was Vice Chairman
of Saks Fifth Avenue and was a member of
Saks Fifth Avenue's board of directors.
Martinez is currently a member of the board
of directors of PepsiCo, Inc., Liz
Claiborne, Inc. and International Flavors &
Fragrances, Inc., and is the Chairman of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Martinez
is a longstanding personal friend of
defendants
Stewart and Patrick. While at Sears,
Martinez
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established a relationship with the
Company, which marketed a substantial volume
of products through Sears. Martinez was
recruited for the board by Stewart's
longtime personal friend, Charlotte Beers.
Defendant Patrick was quoted in an article
dated March 22, 2001 appearing in
Directors & Board as follows:
"Arthur is an old friend to both me and
Martha."
5. Defendant Darla D. Moore
("Moore") is a director of the Company, a
position she has held since September 2001.
Moore has been a partner of Rainwater, Inc.,
a private investment firm, since 1994.
Before that, Moore was a Managing Director
of Chase Bank. Moore is also a trustee of
Magellan Health Services, Inc. Moore is a
longstanding friend of defendant
Stewart. In November 1995, she
attended a wedding reception hosted by
Stewart's personal lawyer, Allen Grubman,
for his daughter. Also in attendance were
Stewart and Stewart's friend, Samuel
Waksal. In August 1996, Fortune carried an
article highlighting Moore's close personal
relationship with Charlotte Beers and
defendant
Stewart. When Beers, a longtime
friend and confidante to
Stewart, resigned from the Company's
board in September 2001, Moore was nominated
to replace her.
6. Defendant Naomi O. Seligman
("Seligman") is a director of the Company, a
position that she has held since September
1999. Seligman was a co-founder of Cassius
Advisers, an e-commerce consultancy, where
she has served as a senior partner since
1999, and is a co-founder of the Research
Board, Inc., an information technology
research group, where she served as a senior
partner from 1975 until 1999. Seligman
currently serves as a director of Akamai
Technologies, Inc., The Dun & Bradstreet
Corporation, John Wiley & Sons and Sun
Microsystems, Inc. According to a story
appearing on July 2, 2002 in The
Wall Street Journal, Seligman
contacted the Chief Executive Officer of
John Wiley & Sons (a publishing house) at
defendant Stewart's behest last year to
express concern over its planned publication
of a biography that was critical of
Stewart.
* * *
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8. Martinez, Moore, Seligson
[sic], and Ubben are hereinafter referred to
collectively as the Director Defendants. By
reason of Stewart's overwhelming voting
control over the Company, each of the
Director Defendants serves at her
sufferance. Each of the Director Defendants
receive [sic] valuable perquisites and
benefits by reason of their service on the
Company's Board. . . .
* * *
DEMAND ALLEGATIONS
73. . . . . No demand on the
Board of Directors was made prior to
institution of this action, as a majority of
the Board of Directors is not independent or
disinterested with respect to the claims
asserted herein.
* * *
77. Defendant Martinez is not
disinterested in view of his longstanding
personal friendship with both Patrick and
Stewart.
78. Defendant Moore is not
disinterested in view of her longstanding
personal relationship with defendant
Stewart.
79. Defendant Seligman is not
disinterested; she has already shown that
she will use her position as a director at
another corporation to act at the behest of
defendant
Stewart when she contacted the Chief
Executive Officer of John Wiley &Sons in an
effort to dissuade the publishing house from
publishing a biography that was critical of
Stewart.
80. The Director Defendants are
not disinterested as they are jointly and
severally liable with
Stewart in view of their failure to
monitor Stewart's actions. Moreover, pursuit
of these claims would imperil the
substantial benefits that accrue to them by
reason of their service on the Board, given
Stewart's voting control.7
Decision of the Court of
Chancery
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The Chancellor found that
Beam
had not alleged sufficient facts to support
the conclusion that demand was futile
because he determined that the complaint
failed to raise a reasonable doubt that
these outside directors are independent of
Stewart. Because Patrick and
Stewart herself are not independent
for demand purposes, all the plaintiff need
show is that one of the remaining directors
is not independent, there being only six
board members.8
The allegations relating to Moore, Seligman
and Martinez are set forth above.
It is appropriate here to quote
the Chancellor's analysis of the allegations
regarding these three directors:
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]."
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 careera matter in which
he would surely have a material interest.
Furthermore, the amended complaint
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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 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. 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
Seligman acted in a way that preferred the
protection of
Stewart over her fiduciary duties to
one 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
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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.9
Demand Futility and Director
Independence
This Court reviews de novo a
decision of the Court of Chancery to dismiss
a derivative suit under Rule 23.1.10
The scope of this Court's review is plenary.11
The Court should draw all reasonable
inferences in the plaintiff's favor. Such
reasonable inferences must logically flow
from particularized facts alleged by the
plaintiff.12
"[C]onclusory allegations are not considered
as expressly pleaded facts or factual
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inferences."13
Likewise, inferences that are not
objectively reasonable cannot be drawn in
the plaintiff's favor.
Under the first prong of
Aronson,14 a
stockholder may not pursue a derivative suit
to assert a claim of the corporation unless:
(a) she has first demanded that the
directors pursue the corporate claim and
they have wrongfully refused to do so; or
(b) such demand is excused because the
directors are deemed incapable of making an
impartial decision regarding the pursuit of
the litigation.15
The issue in this case is the quantum of
doubt about a director's independence that
is "reasonable" in order to excuse a presuit
demand. The parties argue opposite sides of
that issue.
The key principle upon which this
area of our jurisprudence is based is that
the directors are entitled to a
presumption that they were faithful to
their fiduciary duties.16
In the context of presuit demand, the burden
is upon the plaintiff in a derivative action
to overcome that presumption.17
The Court must determine whether
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a plaintiff has alleged particularized
facts creating a reasonable doubt of a
director's independence to rebut the
presumption at the pleading stage.18
If the Court determines that the pleaded
facts create a reasonable doubt that a
majority of the board could have acted
independently in responding to the demand,
the presumption is rebutted for pleading
purposes and demand will be excused as
futile.19
A director will be considered
unable to act objectively with respect to a
presuit demand if he or she is interested in
the outcome of the litigation or is
otherwise not independent.20
A director's interest may be shown by
demonstrating a potential personal benefit
or detriment to the director as a result of
the decision.21
"In such circumstances, a director cannot be
expected to exercise his or her independent
business judgment without being influenced
by the . . . personal consequences
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resulting from the decision."22
The primary basis upon which a director's
independence must be measured is whether the
director's decision is based on the
corporate merits of the subject before the
board, rather than extraneous considerations
or influences.23
This broad statement of the law requires an
analysis of whether the director is
disinterested in the underlying transaction
and, even if disinterested, whether the
director is otherwise independent. More
precisely in the context of the present
case, the independence inquiry requires us
to determine whether there is a reasonable
doubt that any one of these three directors
is capable of objectively making a business
decision to assert or not assert a corporate
claim against
Stewart.
Independence Is a
Contextual
Inquiry
Independence is a fact-specific
determination made in the context of a
particular case. The court must make that
determination by answering the inquiries:
independent from whom and independent for
what purpose? To excuse presuit demand in
this case, the plaintiff has the burden to
plead particularized facts that create a
reasonable doubt sufficient to rebut the
presumption that either Moore, Seligman or
Martinez was independent of defendant
Stewart.
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In order to show lack of
independence, the complaint of a
stockholder-plaintiff must create a
reasonable doubt that a director is not so
"beholden" to an interested director (in
this case
Stewart) that his or her "discretion
would be sterilized."24
Our jurisprudence explicating the demand
requirement
is designed to create a balanced
environment which will: (1) on the one hand,
deter costly, baseless suits by creating a
screening mechanism to eliminate claims
where there is only a suspicion expressed
solely in conclusory terms; and (2) on the
other hand, permit suit by a stockholder who
is able to articulate particularized facts
showing that there is a reasonable doubt
either that (a) a majority of the board is
independent for purposes of responding to
the demand, or (b) the underlying
transaction is protected by the business
judgment rule.25
The "reasonable doubt" standard
"is sufficiently flexible and workable to
provide the stockholder with `the keys to
the courthouse' in an appropriate case where
the claim is not based on mere suspicions or
stated solely in conclusory terms."26
Personal Friendship
A variety of motivations,
including friendship, may influence the
demand futility inquiry. But, to render a
director unable to consider demand, a
relationship
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must be of a bias-producing nature.
Allegations of mere personal friendship or a
mere outside business relationship, standing
alone, are insufficient to raise a
reasonable doubt about a director's
independence.27 In
this connection, we adopt as our own the
Chancellor's analysis in this case:
[S]ome professional or personal
friendships, which may border on or even
exceed familial loyalty and closeness, may
raise a reasonable doubt whether a director
can appropriately consider demand. 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 level and the Court cannot make
a reasonable inference that a
particular friendship does so without
specific factual allegations to support such
a conclusion.28
The facts alleged by
Beam
regarding the relationships between
Stewart and these other members of
MSO's board of directors largely boil down
to a "structural bias" argument, which
presupposes that the professional and social
relationships that naturally develop among
members of a board impede independent
decisionmaking.29
This Court addressed the structural bias
argument in Aronson v. Lewis:
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Critics will charge that [by
requiring the independence of only a
majority of the board] we are ignoring the
structural bias common to corporate boards
throughout America, as well as the other
unseen socialization processes cutting
against independent discussion and
decisionmaking in the boardroom. The
difficulty with structural bias in a demand
futile case is simply one of establishing it
in the complaint for purposes of Rule 23.1.
We are satisfied that discretionary review
by the Court of Chancery of complaints
alleging specific facts pointing to bias on
a particular board will be sufficient for
determining demand futility.30
In the present case, the
plaintiff attempted to plead affinity beyond
mere friendship between
Stewart and the other directors, but
her attempt is not sufficient to demonstrate
demand futility. Even if the alleged
friendships may have preceded the directors'
membership on MSO's board and did not
necessarily arise out of that membership,
these relationships are of the same nature
as those giving rise to the structural bias
argument.
Allegations that
Stewart and the other directors moved
in the same social circles, attended the
same weddings, developed business
relationships before joining the board, and
described each other as "friends," even when
coupled with Stewart's 94% voting power, are
insufficient, without more, to rebut the
presumption of independence. They do not
provide a sufficient basis from which
reasonably to infer that Martinez, Moore and
Seligman may have been beholden to
Stewart. Whether
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they arise before board membership or
later as a result of collegial relationships
among the board of directors, such
affinitiesstanding alonewill not render
presuit demand futile.
The Court of Chancery in the
first instance, and this Court on appeal,
must review the complaint on a case-by-case
basis to determine whether it states with
particularity facts indicating that a
relationshipwhether it preceded or followed
board membershipis so close that the
director's independence may reasonably
be doubted. This doubt might arise either
because of financial ties, familial
affinity, a particularly close or intimate
personal or business affinity or because of
evidence that in the past the relationship
caused the director to act non-independently
vis vis an interested director. No such
allegations are made here. Mere allegations
that they move in the same business and
social circles, or a characterization that
they are close friends, is not enough to
negate independence for demand excusal
purposes.
That is not to say that personal
friendship is always irrelevant to the
independence calculus. But, for presuit
demand purposes, friendship must be
accompanied by substantially more in the
nature of serious allegations that would
lead to a reasonable doubt as to a
director's independence. That a much
stronger relationship is necessary to
overcome the presumption of independence at
the demand futility stage becomes especially
compelling when one considers the risks that
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directors would take by protecting their
social acquaintances in the face of
allegations that those friends engaged in
misconduct.31 To
create a reasonable doubt about an outside
director's independence, a plaintiff must
plead facts that would support the inference
that because of the nature of a relationship
or additional circumstances
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other than the interested director's
stock ownership or voting power, the
non-interested director would be more
willing to risk his or her reputation than
risk the relationship with the interested
director.32
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Specific Allegations
Concerning Seligman and Moore33
1. Seligman
Beam's allegations concerning
Seligman's lack of independence raise an
additional issue not present in the Moore
and Martinez relationships. Those
allegations are not necessarily based on a
purported friendship between Seligman and
Stewart. Rather, they are based on a
specific past act by Seligman that,
Beam
claims, indicates Seligman's lack of
independence from
Stewart.
Beam
alleges that Seligman called John Wiley &
Sons (Wiley) at Stewart's request in order
to prevent an unfavorable publication
reference to
Stewart. The Chancellor concluded,
properly in our view, that this allegation
does not provide particularized facts from
which one may reasonably infer improper
influence.
The bare fact that Seligman
contacted Wiley, on whose board Seligman
also served, to dissuade Wiley from
publishing unfavorable references to
Stewart, even if done at Stewart's
request, is insufficient to create a
reasonable doubt that Seligman
Page 21
is capable of considering presuit demand
free of Stewart's influence. Although the
court should draw all reasonable
inferences in Beam's favor, neither improper
influence by
Stewart over Seligman nor that
Seligman was beholden to
Stewart is a reasonable inference
from these allegations.
Indeed, the reasonable inference
is that Seligman's purported intervention on
Stewart's behalf was of benefit to MSO and
its reputation, which is allegedly
tied to Stewart's reputation, as the
Chancellor noted.34
A motivation by Seligman to benefit the
company every bit as much as
Stewart herself is the only
reasonable inference supported by the
complaint, when all of its allegations are
read in context.35
Page 22
2. Moore
The Court of Chancery concluded
that the plaintiff's allegations with
respect to Moore's social relationship with
Stewart presented "quite a close
call" and suggested ways that the "balance
could have been tipped."36
Although we agree that there are ways that
the balance could be tipped so that mere
allegations of social relationships would
become allegations casting reasonable doubt
on independence, we do not agree that the
facts as alleged present a "close call" with
respect to Moore's independence. These
allegations center on: (a) Moore's
attendance at a wedding reception for the
daughter of Stewart's lawyer where
Stewart and Waksal were also present;
(b) a Fortune magazine article
focusing on the close personal relationships
among Moore,
Stewart and Beers; and (c) the fact
that Moore replaced Beers on the MSO board.
In our view, these bare social relationships
clearly do not create a reasonable doubt of
independence.
Page 23
3. Stewart's 94% Stock Ownership
Beam
attempts to bolster her allegations
regarding the relationships between
Stewart and Seligman and Moore by
emphasizing Stewart's overwhelming voting
control of MSO. That attempt also fails to
create a reasonable doubt of independence. A
stockholder's control of a corporation does
not excuse presuit demand on the board
without particularized allegations of
relationships between the directors and the
controlling stockholder demonstrating that
the directors are beholden to the
stockholder.37 As
noted earlier, the relationships alleged by
Beam
do not lead to the inference that the
directors were beholden to
Stewart and, thus, unable
independently to consider demand. Coupling
those relationships with Stewart's
overwhelming voting control of MSO does not
close that gap.38
Page 24
A Word About the
Oracle Case
In his opinion, the Chancellor
referred several times39
to the Delaware Court of Chancery decision
in In re Oracle Corp. Derivative
Litigation.40
Indeed, the plaintiff relies on the
Oracle case in this appeal. Oracle
involved the issue of the independence of
the Special Litigation Committee (SLC)
appointed by the Oracle board to determine
whether or not the corporation should cause
the dismissal of a corporate claim by
stockholder-plaintiffs against directors.
The Court of Chancery undertook a searching
inquiry of the relationships between the
members of the SLC and Stanford University
in the context of the financial support of
Stanford by the corporation and its
management. The Vice Chancellor concluded,
after considering the SLC Report and the
discovery record, that those relationships
were too close for purposes of the SLC
analysis of independence.41
An SLC is a unique creature that
was introduced into Delaware law by
Zapata v. Maldonado in 1981.42
The SLC procedure is a method sometimes
employed where presuit demand has already
been excused and the SLC is vested with the
full power
Page 25
of the board to conduct an extensive
investigation into the merits of the
corporate claim with a view toward
determining whetherin the SLC's business
judgmentthe corporate claim should be
pursued. Unlike the demand-excusal context,
where the board is presumed to be
independent, the SLC has the burden of
establishing its own independence by a
yardstick that must be "like Caesar's
wife""above reproach."43
Moreover, unlike the presuit demand context,
the SLC analysis contemplates not only a
shift in the burden of persuasion but also
the availability of discovery into various
issues, including independence.
We need not decide whether the
substantive standard of independence in an
SLC case differs from that in a presuit
demand case. As a practical matter, the
procedural distinction relating to the
diametrically-opposed burdens and the
availability of discovery into independence
may be outcome-determinative on the issue of
independence.44
Moreover, because the members of an SLC are
vested with enormous power to seek dismissal
of a derivative suit brought against their
director-colleagues in a setting where
presuit demand is already excused, the Court
of Chancery must exercise careful oversight
of the bona fides of the SLC and its
process.
Page 26
Aside from the procedural distinctions,
the Stanford connections in Oracle
are factually distinct from the
relationships present here.45
Section 220
Beam's failure to plead
sufficient facts to support her claim of
demand futility may be due in part to her
failure to exhaust all reasonably available
means of gathering facts. As the Chancellor
noted,46 had
Beam
first brought a Section 220 action seeking
inspection of MSO's books and records,47
she might have uncovered facts that would
have created a reasonable doubt. For
example, irregularities or "cronyism" in
MSO's process of nominating board members
might possibly strengthen her claim
concerning Stewart's control over MSO's
directors. A books and records inspection
might have revealed whether the board used a
nominating committee to select directors and
maintained a separation between the
directorselection
Page 27
process and management. A books and
records inspection might also have revealed
whether
Stewart unduly controlled the
nominating process or whether the process
incorporated procedural safeguards to ensure
directors' independence.48
Beam
might also have reviewed the minutes of the
board's meetings to determine how the
directors handled Stewart's proposals or
conduct in various contexts. Whether or not
the result of this exploration might create
a reasonable doubt would be sheer
speculation at this stage. But the point is
that it was within the plaintiff's power to
explore these matters and she elected not to
make the effort.
In general, derivative plaintiffs
are not entitled to discovery in order to
demonstrate demand futility.49
The general unavailability50
of discovery to assist plaintiffs with
pleading demand futility does not leave
plaintiffs without means of gathering
information to support their allegations of
demand futility, however. Both this Court
and the Court of Chancery have continually
advised plaintiffs who seek to
Page 28
plead facts establishing demand futility
that the plaintiffs might successfully have
used a Section 220 books and records
inspection to uncover such facts.51
Because
Beam
did not even attempt to use the
fact-gathering tools available to her by
seeking to review MSO's books and records in
support of her demand futility claim, we
cannot know if such an effort would have
been fruitless, as
Beam
claimed on appeal. Beam's failure to seek a
books and records inspection that may have
uncovered the facts necessary to support a
reasonable doubt of independence has
resulted in substantial cost to the parties
and the judiciary.52
Page 29
Conclusion
Because
Beam
did not plead facts sufficient to support a
reasonable inference that at least one MSO
director in addition to
Stewart and Patrick was incapable of
considering demand,
Beam
was required to make demand on the board
before pursuing a derivative suit. Hence,
presuit demand was not excused. The Court of
Chancery did not err by dismissing Count 1
under Rule 23.1. The judgment of the Court
of Chancery is AFFIRMED.
It is ordered that the time
within which a motion for reargument may be
timely filed under Supreme Court Rule 18 is
shortened to five days from the date of this
opinion. This is due to the impending change
in the composition of the Supreme Court,
arising from the retirement of the Chief
Justice in April 2004.
Notes:
1.
Beam
ex rel. Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v.
Stewart, 833 A.2d 961 (Del. Ch.
2003).
2. The action against Doerr was dismissed
with prejudice and no appeal was taken.
Therefore, nothing involving Mr. Doerr is
before this Court.
3.
Stewart was, at all relevant times,
MSO's chairman and chief executive. She
controls over 94% of the shareholder vote.
Beam, 833 A.2d at 966. She also
personifies MSO's brands and was its primary
creative force. Id. at 968.
4. Patrick is the president and chief
operating officer of MSO. Id. at 966.
5. Id. at 977-78.
6. The Court of Chancery did not address
Ubben's ability to consider demand in its
Rule 23.1 analysis of Count 1. The parties
also do not press the issue here, perhaps
because Beam's demand futility allegations
with respect to Ubben related more to a
claim that was dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6)
than to the Rule 23.1 dismissal of Count 1.
Because the parties do not argue and the
court below did not address the issue of
Ubben's independence, we do not address it.
Thus, we assume for purposes of this appeal
that the presumption of Ubben's independence
is unrebutted. The plaintiff also appears to
have waived her claim that Martinez is not
independent. See infra note 33.
7. Amended Complaint at 2-4, 19-20,
Beam,
833 A.2d 961 (emphasis added).
8. If three directors of a six person
board are not independent and three
directors are independent, there is not a
majority of independent directors and demand
would be futile.
See Benneville v. York, 769 A.2d 80,
85-86 (Del. Ch. 2000) (holding that
demand is excused where a board is evenly
divided between interested and disinterested
directors).
9.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 979-81 (footnotes omitted)
(emphasis added).
10.
White v. Panic,
783 A.2d 543, 549
(Del. 2001);
Brehm v. Eisner,
746 A.2d 244, 253
(Del. 2000).
11. Brehm, 746 A.2d at 253.
12. White, 783 A.2d at 549.
13. Id.
14.
See Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805,
814 (Del. 1984) (setting forth two steps
of a demand futility analysis: whether (1)
"the directors are disinterested and
independent and (2) the challenged
transaction was otherwise the product of a
valid exercise of business judgment").
15.
Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927, 932
(Del. 1993); see also DEL. CH. R.
23.1 (providing the demand requirements for
initiation of derivative suits by
stockholders).
16. See Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812
("It is a presumption that in making a
business decision the directors of a
corporation acted on an informed basis, in
good faith and in the honest belief that the
action taken was in the best interests of
the company.").
17.
Levine v. Smith, 591 A.2d 199, 205-06
(Del. 1991);
Grobow v. Perot, 539 A.2d 180, 187-89
(Del. 1988).
18. Rales, 634 A.2d at 934.
19. Id.
20.
See Grimes v. Donald, 673 A.2d 1207,
1216 (Del. 1996) ("The basis for
claiming excusal would normally be that: (1)
a majority of the board has a material
financial or familial interest; (2) a
majority of the board is incapable of acting
independently for some other reason such as
domination or control; or (3) the underlying
transaction is not the product of a valid
exercise of business judgment." (footnotes
omitted)); see also In re EBAY, Inc.
Shareholders Litig., C. A. No. 19988-NC,
2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 4 (Del. Ch. Feb. 11,
2004) (demand was excused where futility
analysis turned not on personal relationship
but on allegations that compensation to
non-interested directors in the form of
not-yet-vested stock options created a
reasonable doubt of their independence for
presuit pleading purposes; although
allegations were made of "personal ties,"
the analysis addressed only the financial
ties and whether that raised the pleading
inference that the non-interested directors
were beholden to the interested directors).
21. Cf. Rales, 634 A.2d at 936 ("A
director is considered interested where he
or she will receive a personal financial
benefit from a transaction that is not
equally shared by the stockholders.
Directorial interest also exists where a
corporate decision will have a materially
detrimental impact on a director, but not on
the corporation and the stockholders."
(citation omitted)).
22. Id.
23. Id. (quoting
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 816
(Del. 1984)).
24. Id.
25. Grimes, 673 A.2d at 1217
(footnote omitted).
26. Id. In her reply brief the
plaintiff seemingly argues that our use of
the phrases "reason to doubt" and
"reasonable belief" in Grimes has
somehow watered down the pleading threshold
set forth in our jurisprudence. Reply Brief
at 3-4. Nothing in Grimes was
intended to weaken the traditional,
objective reasonable doubt standard to be
applied to the pleading threshold. See
Grimes, 673 A.2d at 1217 n.17 ("The
concept of reasonable belief is an objective
test and is found in various corporate
contexts.");
Grobow v. Perot, 539 A.2d 180, 186
(Del. 1988) (noting that determination
of demand futility "[n]ecessarily . . .
involves an objective analysis of the
facts").
27. Litt v. Wycoff, C.A. 19083-NC,
2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 23, at *16 (Del. Ch.
Mar. 28, 2003).
28.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 979 (footnotes omitted).
29. See DENNIS J. BLOCK ET AL.,
THE BUSINESS JUDGMENT RULE 1765 (5th ed.
1998) (describing the "`structural bias'
viewpoint. . . . [as holding] that the
judgment of seemingly disinterested
directorswho are not defendants in a
litigation or participants in wrongdoing
alleged in a litigationis inherently
corrupted by the `common cultural bond' and
`natural empathy and collegiality' shared by
most directors"); Michael P. Dooley & E.
Norman Veasey, The Role of the Board in
Derivative Litigation: Delaware Law and the
Current ALI Proposals Compared, 44 BUS.
LAW. 503, 534 (1989) ("As we understand the
argument, it is that no professional
colleague can be expected to be as neutral
on questions of management misbehavior as a
court to whom the alleged malefactor is a
stranger.").
30. 473 A.2d 805, 815 n.8 (Del. 1984).
Although the Aronson Court spoke of
"discretionary" review by the Court of
Chancery, a concept that was changed by this
Court
Brehm v. Eisner,
746 A.2d 244, 253
(Del. 2000), when we stated that our
review of the Court of Chancery decision on
presuit demand is de novo, the same
principles apply as stated in Aronson.
31. See Dooley & Veasey, supra
note 29, at 535 ("[O]utside directors tend
to be men and women who have considerable
investments in reputation but who have
invested most of their human capital
elsewhere.").
32. See id. ("The structural bias
argument asks us to believe that outside
directors generally are more willing to risk
reputation and future income than they are
to risk the social embarrassment of calling
a colleague to account."); Bryan Ford, In
Whose Interest: An Examination of the Duties
of Directors and Officers in Control
Contests, 26 ARIZ. ST. L.J. 91, 127
(1994) (recognizing that many
factorsincluding personal integrity,
honesty, concern about their business
reputations, and the threat of liability to
shareholdersmay motivate directors to
exercise their judgment independently of
corporate executives); cf. Cal. Pub.
Employees' Ret. Sys. v. Coulter, C.A.
No. 19191, 2002 Del. Ch. LEXIS 144, at
*28-29 (Del. Ch. Dec. 18, 2002) (observing
that an allegation of a lifelong friendship
with an interested party is not alone
sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt of a
director's disinterest or independence);
Kohls v. Dunthie, 765 A.2d 1274, 1284
(Del. Ch. 2000) (holding that a personal
friendship between a member of a special
committee of the board and an interested
party to the challenged transaction, as well
as the fact that the interested party had
once given the director a summer job, were
insufficient to challenge the director's
ability to exercise his independent judgment
with respect to the transaction);
Benefore v. Jung Woong Cha, C.A. No.
14614, 1998 Del. Ch. LEXIS 28, at *9 (Del.
Ch. Feb. 20, 1998) (stating that an
allegation of a longtime friendship was not
sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt about
a director's ability to exercise his
judgment independently of his friend); E.
Norman Veasey, The Defining Tension in
Corporate Governance in America, 52 BUS.
LAW. 393, 406 (1997) ("Friendship, golf
companionship, and social relationships are
not factors that necessarily negate
independence. . . . [T]here is nothing to
suggest that, on an issue of questioning the
loyalty of the CEO, the bridge partner of
the CEO cannot act independently as a
director. To make a blanket argument
otherwise would create a dubious presumption
that the director would sell his or her soul
for friendship."); cf. also Lynn A.
Stout, On the Proper Motives of Corporate
Directors (Or, Why You Don't Want to Invite
Homo Economicus to Join Your Board), 28
DEL. J. CORP. L. 1, 8-9 (2003) (proposing an
"other-regarding" theory of directorial
behavior in which directors are motivated to
"do a good job" not only by external
pressures, but also by internal pressures
such as "a director's sense of honor; her
feelings of responsibility; her sense of
obligation to the firm and its shareholders;
and, her desire to `do the right thing'").
33. In her reply brief in this Court the
plaintiff appears to have abandoned any
serious contention that she has properly
alleged a reasonable doubt that Martinez is
independent, focusing instead on her
contention that the Chancellor erred in
dismissing her complaint as to Moore and
Seligman. In her reply brief the plaintiff
states:
What Plaintiff has asked is that
the Court apply the law of Delaware to the
allegations in the Amended Complaint. Had
the Court of Chancery done so and heeded its
expressed doubts, it would not have
dismissed the Amended Complaint, because
Moore and Seligman (as well as
Stewart and Patrick) are not capable
of impartially considering demand.
Reply Brief at 3 (footnotes
omitted). Accordingly, we do not analyze
separately the allegations concerning
Martinez. Moreover, since it is clear that
the plaintiff has not pleaded facts raising
a reasonable doubt as to Seligman and Moore,
a fortiori, the plaintiff's weaker
allegations concerning Martinez must fail.
34.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 980-81.
35. The complaint alleges:
16. The Company is highly
dependent upon
Stewart; as the Company's prospectus
for the public offering indicated:
* * *
We are highly dependent upon our
founder, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Martha
Stewart . . . . The diminution or
loss of the services of Martha
Stewart, and any negative market or
industry perception arising from that
diminution or loss, would have a material
adverse effect on our business . . . .
Martha
Stewart remains the personification
of our brands as well as our senior
executive and primary creative force.
17. The prospectus for the public
offering also warned that the Company's
business would be affected adversely if
"Martha Stewart's public image or reputation
were to be tarnished. Martha
Stewart, as well as her name, her
image and the trademarks and other
intellectual property rights relating to
these, are integral to our marketing efforts
and form the core of our brand name. Our
continued success and the value of our brand
name therefore depends, to a large degree,
on the reputation of Martha
Stewart."
Amended Complaint at paras.
16-17,
Beam,
833 A.2d 961.
36. The Chancellor concluded as follows:
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. On the facts pled, however,
I cannot say that I have a reasonable doubt
of Moore's ability to properly consider
demand.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 980.
37.
See Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805,
815 (Del. 1984) ("[I]n the demand
context even proof of majority ownership of
a company does not strip the directors of
the presumptions of independence, and that
their acts have been taken in good faith and
in the best interests of the corporation.
There must be coupled with the allegation of
control such facts as would demonstrate that
through personal or other relationships the
directors are beholden to the controlling
person.");
Stroud v. Milliken Enters., Inc., 585
A.2d 1306, 1307 (Del. Ch. 1988) (stating
that control of a corporation by a majority
stockholder who nominates or elects the
directors is not sufficient to raise a
reasonable doubt about a director's
independence; rather, the nature of the
relationships between them must demonstrate
that the director is beholden to the
stockholder).
38. The plaintiff's counsel was asked at
oral argument in this Court if she had any
authority for the proposition that social
friendship plus such strong voting power of
the interested director was sufficient to
create a reasonable doubt of independence
alone. Counsel admitted that she could point
to no such authority.
39. E.g.,
Beam,
833 A.2d at 979 n.60; id. at 980
n.63.
40. 824 A.2d 917 (Del. Ch. 2003).
41. Oracle, 824 A.2d at 921. It is
noteworthy that the Vice Chancellor was
concerned and expressed "some shock" that
the extent of the Stanford ties was not
revealed in the Report of the SLC and was
unearthed only in discovery. He noted that
"the plain facts are a striking departure
from the picture presented in the Report."
Id. at 929-30.
42.
430 A.2d 779 (Del. Ch. 1981).
43.
Lewis v. Fuqua, 502 A.2d 962, 967
(Del. Ch. 1985).
44. In Oracle we declined to
accept an interlocutory appeal last year.
Oracle Corp. v. Barone, No. 341, 2003,
2003 Del. LEXIS 392 (Del. July 28, 2003).
That matter may come before us at some time
in the future.
45. The analysis applied to determine the
independence of a special committee in a
merger case also has its own special
procedural characteristics. In such cases,
courts evaluate not only whether the
relationships among members of the committee
and interested parties placed them in a
position objectively to consider a proposed
transaction, but also whether the committee
members in fact functioned
independently. See, e.g.,
Kahn v. Tremont Corp.,
694 A.2d 422, 429-30 (Del. 1997) ("[T]he
Special Committee . . . did not function
independently. . . . From its inception, the
Special Committee failed to operate in a
manner which would create the appearance of
objectivity in Tremont's decision to
purchase the NL stock. As this Court has
previously stated in defining director
independence: `it is the care, attention and
sense of individual responsibility to the
performance of one's duties . . . that
generally touches on independence.' The
record amply demonstrates that neither
Stafford nor Boushka possessed the `care,
attention and sense of responsibility'
necessary to afford them the status of
independent directors. The result was that
Stein, arguably the least detached member of
the Special Committee, became, de facto,
a single member committeea tenuous role.'"
(fourth alteration in original) (citation
omitted)).
46.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 981-83 & nn.65-66.
47. See DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 8, §
220 (Supp. 2003) (providing that
stockholders have the right to inspect a
corporation's books and records for "any
proper purpose").
48. Although not mandated by Delaware
law, it is relevant to note that the New
York Stock Exchange listing requirements,
for example, require that listed companies
have an independent and effective nominating
committee. See New York Stock
Exchange Corporate Governance Rule 303A.04
(2003), available at
http://www.nyse.com/pdfs/finalcorpgovrules.pdf;
Nat'l Ass'n Sec. Dealers Rule 4350(c)(4),
NASD Manual Online (2003),
http://cchwallstreet.com/NASD/NASD_Rules.
Although these requirements may not have
been in effect at times relevant to this
complaint, it is relevant to note that MSO
is an NYSE listed company.
49.
See Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927,
934 n.10 (Del. 1993) ("[D]erivative
plaintiffs . . . are not entitled to
discovery to assist their compliance with
Rule 23.1 . . . .");
Levine v. Smith, 591 A.2d 194, 209
(Del. 1991) (refusing to extend the
availability of limited discovery to either
demand refused cases or demand excused
cases, absent the Zapata context
relating to an SLC).
50. We need not decide if some precise
and limited discovery would ever be
appropriate in the discretion of the Court
of Chancery in the eventuality that a books
and records inspection under Section 220
uncovered a significant ambiguity, the
resolution of which could be essential to
determining the issue of independence.
51. The Chancellor cited an extensive
string of cases in which our courts have
emphasized the availability of the Section
220 action as a possible method of securing
facts to support a demand futility claim.
Beam,
833 A.2d at 981 nn.65-66. Note in particular
the discussion of the Disney case
where the plaintiffs were permitted to
replead, then used the Section 220
procedure, and the new complaint survived a
motion to dismiss on the ground that presuit
demand was excused. Id. at 983-84.
In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative Litig.,
825 A.2d 275, 279 (Del. Ch. 2003).
52. We agree with the Chancellor's point
about cost and drain on resources in weak
cases where the plaintiff does not seek
books and records.
White v. Panic, 783 A.2d 549-50 (Del.
2001) (discussed by the Chancellor in
Beam,
833 A.2d at 982 n.66), we approved the Vice
Chancellor's admonition in that case that a
plaintiff should pursue a books and records
inspection in order to secure the facts
necessary to support an allegation of demand
futility if the factual allegations would
otherwise fall short. At the same time, we
said that a failure to use Section 220
should not alter the standard to be applied
to consideration of an allegation of demand
futility. White, 783 A.2d at 549-50.
A plaintiff's use of, or failure to use, a
books and records inspection does not change
the standard to be applied to review of the
complaint. Regardless of whether the
plaintiff secured any facts alleged in her
complaint through a Section 220 inspection,
the court must draw all reasonable
inferences in the plaintiff's favor and
determine whether those facts create a
reasonable doubt of the directors'
independence. The allegations of demand
futility made in the complaint, and the
reasonable inferences drawn therefrom,
continue to be the sole basis on which the
court should make its demand futility
determination. If the particularized facts
alleged in the complaint, even if pleaded
without benefit of a Section 220 inspection,
together with the reasonable inferences from
those facts create a reasonable doubt of the
independence of a majority of the board,
then the complaint is indeed "well-pleaded,"
despite the fact that a books and records
inspection might have gleaned additional
facts to support the demand futility claim.
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