Burgess Ex Rel. BancorpSouth, Inc. v. Patterson

188 So. 3d 537, 2016 WL 1459116, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 154
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 2016
Docket2015-CA-00260-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 188 So. 3d 537 (Burgess Ex Rel. BancorpSouth, Inc. v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess Ex Rel. BancorpSouth, Inc. v. Patterson, 188 So. 3d 537, 2016 WL 1459116, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 154 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

KITCHENS, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. William Burgess, a common stock shareholder of BancorpSouth, Inc., filed a shareholder derivative action in the Circuit Court of Lee County after a Special Committee comprised of BancorpSouth directors and officers rejected his presuit demand. Burgess, in his presuit demand and in his Shareholder Derivative Complaint, made various 'claims relating to alleged- misrepresentations in company publications directed to shareholders following the 2008 economic downturn. Ultimately, the Circuit Court of Lee County dismissed the action. For the reasons stated below, we now affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Burgess sent a shareholder demand pursuant to Mississippi Code' Section 79-4-7.42 1 on June 2, 2010, requesting that “BancorpSouth’s Board of Directors ... take actions to remedy breaches of fiduciary duties from July 2009 to the present ... by certain current and/or former directors and executive officers of the. Company— ” 2 . Burgess -claimed that corpo *540 rate management, in the wake of the 2008 economic downturn, had “caused Bancorp-South to issue a series of materially false and misleading statements regarding-the Company’s business and financial results.” More specifically, Burgess claimed that management had “failed to disclose the extent of seriously delinquent commercial real estate loans and construction and land loans” and had “also failed to ensure that the Company adequately and timely recorded losses for its impaired loans, which in turn caused BancorpSouth’s financial statements to be materially false and misleading.”

¶ 3. Burgess’s demand cited various press releases from 2009 and early 2010 in which BancorpSouth had touted its vigorous financial health. But then, on February 25, 2010, management announced a delay in the filing of BancorpSouth’s Annual Report on Form 10-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

¶ 4. Burgess claimed that management’s “material misrepresentations and gross mismanagement of the Company” caused BancorpSouth to sustain damages. Burgess stated that management had “authorized, caused, or permitted BancorpSouth to issue false and misleading financial results for fiscal year 2009” and that management had:

[Authorized, caused or permitted Ban-corpSouth to conduct its business in an unsafe, imprudent and dangerous manner by pursuing unsound practices, including financial disclosure, allowance for credit losses and financial oversight, and the serious and adverse impact of these practices on BancorpSouth’s finances and financial condition and prospects. In addition, they permitted Ban-corpSouth to falsify its statements to the public to try to conceal the true nature of its problems.

Based on his allegations of corporate management malfeasance, Burgess demanded that the BancorpSouth Board of Directors (the Board) conduct an internal investigation into “BancorpSouth’s violations of Mississippi and/or federal law” and “commence a civil action against each member of management to recover for the benefit of the Company the amount of damages sustained'by the Company as a result of their breaches of fiduciary duties....”

¶ 5. On June 30, 2010, the Board delegated to a Special Committee “the full authority and responsibility for determining whether it is in the Company’s best interest to pursue any of the claims asserted” by Burgess in his demand. The Board appointed and, unanimously approved Has-sell H. Franklin, Wilbert G. Holliman, and Guy W. Mitchell, III, as qualified directors to serve on the Special Committee. By letter dated July 2, 2010, Burgess was notified that the Special Committee had been formed for the purpose of evaluating his claims. On July 15, 2010, Stephen L. Thomas of the law firm of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, LLP, informed Burgess that his firm had been “retained as independent counsel to aid a recently created Special Committee ... composed of qualified, disinterested Directors of Bancorp-South, Inc. to conduct an inquiry into the allegations” of the demand.

¶ 6. The Special Committee, “having conducted a good faith, adequate, and reasonable inquiry into the allegations and claims” raised in Burgess’s demand, determined “for and on behalf of the Board that, based upon its inquiry, the maintenance of the derivative proceeding ... is not in the best interests of the Company.” Thomas notified Burgess and his counsel, *541 in a letter dated August 27, 2010, that this determination had been made.

¶ 7. Aggrieved by the Special Committee’s refusal to initiate derivative proceedings, Burgess, on August 16, 2011,-filed a Shareholder Derivative Complaint in the Circuit Court of Lee County. In addition to naming BancorpSouth, Inc., as a defendant, Burgess also named “certain current and/or' former members of its Board of Directors ... and executive officers,” including Aubrey B. Patterson, Hassell H. Franklin, James Virgil Kelley, Turner 0. Lashlee, Alan W. Perry, James E.' Campbell, III, Wilbert G. Holliman, Jr., Larry G. Kirk, Guy W. Mitchell, III, William Cal Partee, Jr., Warren A. Hood, Jr., William L. Prater, and Gregg Cowsert.

¶8. Burgess claimed that the Special Committee improperly had rejected his demand. He stated that the investigation was “perfunctory and inadequate,” because the Special Committee had “performed their entire purported ‘investigation’ in little more than a month (in the middle of summer), start to finish.” He claimed that the Special Committee members lacked independence because they “are individuals that have developed longstanding professional relationships with each other and with whom they have entangling financial alliances, interests, and dependencies....” .Burgess continued that “the members of the Special Committee have benefited [sic], and will continue to benefit, from the wrongdoing alleged herein and have engaged in such conduct to preserve their positions of control and' the perquisites derived thereof, and are incapable of exercising independent judgment in deciding whether to bring, this action.” Burgess described the Special Committee investigation as having been a “sham, mere window dressing as no true independent investigation of the Company’s myriad financial reporting, accounting, and internal control issues could have possibly been completed in a month’s time.”

¶ 9. In terms of substantive claims, Burgess first alleged that the defendants had “violated their fiduciary duties of care, loyalty, and good faith by causing or allowing the Company to disseminate to Bancorp-South shareholders materially misleading and inaccurate information through, inter alia, BancorpSouth filings and other public statements and disclosures_” ' Second, he claimed that Defendants- had “willfully ignored the obvious and pervasive problems with BancorpSouth’s internal controls practices and ■ procedures and failed to make a good faith effort to correct the problems or prevent their recurrence.” Third, Burgess claimed that Defendants had “violated and breached their fiduciary duties of care, loyalty, reasonable inquiry, oversight, good faith and supervision,” and such breach caused “significant damages, not only monetarily, but also to corporate image and goodwill.”

¶ 10.

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188 So. 3d 537, 2016 WL 1459116, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-ex-rel-bancorpsouth-inc-v-patterson-miss-2016.