Beam Ex Rel. M. Stewart Living v. Stewart

845 A.2d 1040, 2004 Del. LEXIS 162, 2004 WL 739152
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 31, 2004
Docket501,2003
StatusPublished
Cited by357 cases

This text of 845 A.2d 1040 (Beam Ex Rel. M. Stewart Living v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beam Ex Rel. M. Stewart Living v. Stewart, 845 A.2d 1040, 2004 Del. LEXIS 162, 2004 WL 739152 (Del. 2004).

Opinion

VEASEY, Chief Justice.

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 plaintiffs 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 Omnime-dia, 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 Court of Chancery dismissed three of the four claims under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6). Those dismissals were not appéaled 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 posi *1045 tion 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 plaintiffs 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 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 ariicle 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 Steivari and Stewart’s friend, Samuel Waksal. In August 1996, Fortune carried an ariicle 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 *1046 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, Selig-man 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.
* * -i=
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. ■

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Bluebook (online)
845 A.2d 1040, 2004 Del. LEXIS 162, 2004 WL 739152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beam-ex-rel-m-stewart-living-v-stewart-del-2004.