Brandin v. Deason

941 A.2d 1020, 2007 WL 2088877, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 20, 2007
DocketC.A. 2123-VCL
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 941 A.2d 1020 (Brandin v. Deason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandin v. Deason, 941 A.2d 1020, 2007 WL 2088877, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

Over a year after the filing of this derivative action and several months after the sixteen individual defendants answered the amended complaint, three of them now ask the court to stay this case, which challenges purported stock option backdating practices allegedly perpetrated by various directors and officers of a Delaware corporation, pending resolution of a later-filed parallel proceeding in a Texas federal court. Largely because substantial unsettled issues of Delaware law are involved in this litigation, and since the defendants’ claims that they would be inconvenienced by proceeding in this forum are both dilatory and pretextual, the court will deny their request to stay this case.

I.

A. The Parties

The plaintiff, Jan Brandin, is a Massachusetts resident who alleges that he has owned stock in the nominal defendant, Affiliated Computer Services, Inc., since July 19, 2001. Affiliated is a Delaware corporation with a principal place of business in Dallas, Texas. The company provides information technology and business process outsourcing services.

Defendant Jeffrey A. Rich is a former chief executive officer and director of Affiliated, having resigned from those positions in September 2005. Defendant Mark A. King is a former president, chief executive officer, and director of the company. King stepped down from his posts in November *1022 2006. Joining him that month was defendant Warren Edwards, who, until that time, served as Affiliated’s chief financial officer. 1 Thirteen other persons, all of whom either served or continue to serve as Affiliated’s officers and directors, are individual defendants in this case, but do not join in the present motion. 2

B. The Facts

Brandin filed this derivative action on May 2, 2006, and subsequently amended his complaint on August 15, 2006. He alleges that between 1994 and 2002, the individual defendants breached their fiduciary duties to Affiliated by engaging in a scheme to backdate stock options in violation of the company’s stock option plans. In the weeks following Brandin’s initial fifing, other derivative plaintiffs brought lawsuits in courts around the country alleging similar claims based on virtually identical facts. Of particular importance here is a consolidated derivative action originally filed on June 22, 2006 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas (the “Texas Action”). 3 In addition to the same state law causes of action Brandin sets forth here, the complaint in the Texas Action includes a number of additional derivative claims based on purported violations of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the rules promulgated thereunder. 4 The Texas Action has remained virtually dormant since its commencement over a year ago, although the defendants there filed motions to dismiss in early June 2007, arguing, inter alia, that the Texas plaintiffs failed to adequately allege demand futility. 5 No defendant has filed an answer in the Texas Action, and discovery is at a standstill due to the automatic stay provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. 6

By comparison, the Delaware action has proceeded at a relatively steady pace. All of the individual defendants have answered the amended complaint, and, although they raise vaguely phrased affirmative defenses premised on Court of Chancery Rule 23.1, none of the defendants moved for dismissal on demand-related grounds. Brandin has served several sets of interrogatories and document requests on the defendants, and has obtained over a million pages of document discovery from Affiliated. On April 5, 2007, Brandin moved for partial summary judgment against Deason, Rich, *1023 and King on the grounds that those defendants received backdated stock option grants and, accordingly, the company is entitled to rescind the grants and receive any monetary benefits wrongfully obtained therefrom. 7 On May 11, 2007, Rich, King, and Edwards moved to stay this action in favor of the Texas Action.

II.

In support of their motion, the defendants argue that allowing this case to proceed would result in duplicative and wasteful litigation. Brandin’s complaint, the defendants contend, is merely a subset of the claims asserted in the Texas Action because a number of federal securities laws issues, over which this court has no jurisdiction, are alleged there. The defendants also posit that Brandin has no standing to contest the validity of stock options granted on eleven of the twelve dates in question since he did not own Affiliated stock at those times. Thus, the defendants say, this lawsuit, unlike the Texas Action, will not resolve the substantive merits of state law claims implicating a majority of the alleged misconduct perpetrated by Affiliated’s management. Finally, the defendants, as Texas residents, argue they will be saddled with great hardship by having to litigate this case in Delaware, and are presented with “a real threat” that certain key witnesses would be unable to present five testimony at trial.

Brandin views the present motion as a belated and frivolous attempt by a handful of defendants to further delay substantive judicial scrutiny of their past conduct. In opposition to the motion, he argues that Delaware, as Affiliated’s state of incorporation, has an overriding interest in hearing this case because it involves a type of fiduciary malfeasance — stock options backdating — which has the potential to raise unsettled, yet important, issues of Delaware corporate law. Moreover, Brandin says this case was filed before the Texas Action, and, in stark contrast to that lawsuit, has progressed substantially. The defendants’ litany of hardships, according to Brandin, is pretextual: had they truly faced insurmountable difficulty by proceeding in Delaware, such issues would have surfaced many months ago, before answers to the complaint were filed and before Brandin ever moved for partial summary judgment. In essence, Brandin asks the court not to countenance the kind of litigation gamesmanship that, he believes, is all too clear if one looks beneath the surface of this motion.

III.

Pursuant to the teachings of McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Engineering Co., principles of comity allow a Delaware court great discretion to stay a case “when there is a prior action pending elsewhere, in a court capable of doing prompt and complete justice, involving the same parties and the same issues.” 8 The McWane doctrine, however, has limited application to the present motion because this case was filed well before the Texas Action and because, as this court has consistently recognized, the doctrine’s application “presents great difficulty in shareholder derivative actions.”

Related

Sperling & Slater v. SilkRoad, Inc.
Superior Court of Delaware, 2022
In re Lordstown Motors Corp. Stockholders Litigation
Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2022
Martinez v. E.i. Dupont De Nemours & Co.
86 A.3d 1102 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2014)
Hamilton Partners, L.P. v. Englard
11 A.3d 1180 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2010)
In Re Citigroup Inc. Shareholder Derivative Litigation
964 A.2d 106 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2009)
In Re Nyfix, Inc. Derivative Litigation
567 F. Supp. 2d 306 (D. Connecticut, 2008)
Aveta, Inc. v. Colon
942 A.2d 603 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
941 A.2d 1020, 2007 WL 2088877, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandin-v-deason-delch-2007.