Dov Charney v. American Apparel, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 11, 2015
DocketCA 11098-CB
StatusPublished

This text of Dov Charney v. American Apparel, Inc. (Dov Charney v. American Apparel, Inc.) 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
Dov Charney v. American Apparel, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DOV CHARNEY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 11098-CB ) AMERICAN APPAREL, INC., ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: July 8, 2015 Date Decided: September 11, 2015

Stephen B. Brauerman, Vanessa R. Tiradentes and Sara E. Bussiere of BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Stephen C. Norman of POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendant.

BOUCHARD, C. Plaintiff Dov Charney is the founder and former Chairman and Chief Executive

Officer of American Apparel, Inc. (the “Company”). In June 2014, he was suspended

from his CEO position. In July 2014, he entered a Nomination, Standstill and Support

Agreement (the “Standstill Agreement”) and resigned as a director of the Company. In

December 2014, Charney was formally terminated as CEO for cause. In May 2015, the

Company sued Charney in this Court (C.A. No. 11033-CB) for allegedly breaching the

Standstill Agreement (the “Standstill Proceeding”).

In this action, Charney seeks to have the Company advance his legal expenses

incurred in mounting his defense in the Standstill Proceeding. The parties cross moved

for summary judgment over whether Charney is entitled to advancement for the Standstill

Proceeding under the Company’s charter and his Indemnification Agreement. In this

opinion, I conclude that he is not.

The most significant legal issue raised by the cross motions is the meaning of the

advancement provision in the Indemnification Agreement, which mandates advancement

for events or occurrences “related to the fact” that Charney is or was a director or officer

of the Company. For the reasons explained below, I construe this phrase as used in the

Indemnification Agreement to be equivalent to the phrase “by reason of the fact” found in

Section 145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, which requires a nexus or causal

connection between the claims in the underlying proceeding and one’s official corporate

capacity to obtain advancement. Construed as such, Charney is not entitled to

advancement for the claims asserted in the Standstill Proceeding because none of them

implicate his use or abuse of corporate power as a fiduciary of American Apparel.

1 I also find that, because the Company’s charter mandates advancement only for

current directors and current officers, Charney is not entitled to advancement under the

charter for the additional reason that he was neither a current director nor a current officer

when he was sued in the Standstill Proceeding in May 2015.

I. BACKGROUND 1

A. The Parties

Plaintiff Dov Charney, a California resident, is the founder and former Chairman

and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of American Apparel, Inc. He is the beneficial owner

of approximately 42.3% of the Company. Charney and the Company are parties to an

Indemnification Agreement dated as of March 6, 2008 (the “Indemnification

Agreement”), and an Employment Agreement effective as of April 1, 2012 (the

“Employment Agreement”).

Defendant American Apparel, Inc., a Delaware corporation based in Los Angeles,

California, is a vertically integrated clothing designer, manufacturer, and retailer.

Non-party Standard General L.P. (“Standard General”) is a New York-based

investment firm.

B. The Company Suspends Charney as CEO

Charney contends that, by June 2014, the Company’s Chief Financial Officer,

John J. Luttrell, and several of the Company’s directors had implemented a plan to oust

1 The facts are drawn from the pleadings and exhibits submitted in support of the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. In re Orchard Enters., Inc. Stockholder Litig., 88 A.3d 1, 8 (Del. Ch. 2014).

2 him from American Apparel. The Company vigorously denies these allegations, the truth

of which is not necessary to resolve the present cross-motions.

On June 18, 2014, at a regular meeting of the Company’s board of directors, Allan

Mayer, an American Apparel director, hand delivered a letter to Charney notifying him of

the board’s intention to terminate him for cause under his Employment Agreement. The

letter immediately suspended Charney as American Apparel’s President and CEO:

Effective immediately, you [Charney] will be relieved of all of your job duties and obligations, including as President and Chief Executive Officer; your power to act on the Company’s behalf is hereby suspended. During your suspension, you shall not, on behalf of the Company, negotiate or enter into contracts, disburse funds, make any statements on the Company’s behalf to the press, public or vendors . . . , attempt to communicate with current employees or former employees with continuing contractual obligations to the Company . . . , or disrupt or interfere in any way with the Company’s operations. . . . You also remain subject to continuing obligations under federal securities laws . . . and continuing fiduciary duties under state law. 2

According to the meeting minutes, the board suggested a willingness to accept Charney’s

resignation under proposed separation documents, but Charney refused to resign. 3

After excusing Charney from the meeting, the remaining directors unanimously

resolved to suspend him as CEO, to revoke his authority to act for or on behalf of the

Company, and to remove him from his position as Chairman of the board. Specifically,

the board’s resolution provided:

[E]ffective immediately and until such suspension has been lifted or Mr. Charney has been terminated, Mr. Charney shall have no further authority

2 Def.’s Ex. 4 at 3-4. 3 Def.’s Ex. 3 at 1.

3 or responsibility as an officer or agent of the Company, whether as Chief Executive Officer, President or otherwise.

...

[E]ffective immediately, any and all power, authority or direction previously granted to Mr. Charney to act for or on behalf of the Company . . . is hereby revoked.

[E]ffective immediately, Mr. Charney is hereby removed as the Chairman of the Board and shall have no further authority or responsibility as the Chairman of the Board, but such removal shall have no effect on Mr. Charney’s position as a member of the Board. 4

The board subsequently appointed Luttrell to be the Company’s Interim CEO.

On June 19, 2014, the Company filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and

Exchange Commission (“SEC”) disclosing these developments. On June 23, 2014,

Charney filed a Schedule 13D with the SEC acknowledging his suspension. Around this

time, Charney entered into an agreement with Standard General (acting on behalf of its

funds) providing for a financing transaction to acquire additional American Apparel stock

and an arrangement governing the voting control of the additional stock and Charney’s

original stock. 5

On June 27, 2014, Charney purported to call a special meeting of the Company’s

stockholders to, among other proposed actions, expand the size of the board and elect

individuals to those newly created directorships. That same day, a committee of the

American Apparel board adopted a one-year stockholder rights plan with a 15% trigger.

4 Def.’s Ex. 3 at A-1 to A-2. 5 Def.’s Ex. 7 at Item 3, Ex. A.

4 C. The Standstill Agreement

On July 9, 2014, three weeks after his suspension as American Apparel’s CEO,

Charney, the Company, and Standard General (and several of its affiliates) entered into

the Standstill Agreement.

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