Ernesto Espinoza v. Mark Zuckerberg

124 A.3d 47, 2015 WL 6501521, 2015 Del. Ch. LEXIS 273
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 28, 2015
DocketCA 9745-CB
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 124 A.3d 47 (Ernesto Espinoza v. Mark Zuckerberg) 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
Ernesto Espinoza v. Mark Zuckerberg, 124 A.3d 47, 2015 WL 6501521, 2015 Del. Ch. LEXIS 273 (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

BOUCHARD, C.

This case presents a question of first impression: Can a disinterested controlling stockholder ratify a transaction approved by an interested board of directors, so as to shift the standard of review from entire fairness to the business judgment presumption, by expressing assent to the transaction informally without using one of the methods the Delaware General Corporation Law prescribes to take stockholder action? In my opinion, the answer to this question is no. • Stated in the affirmative, I conclude for the reasons explained below that stockholder ratification of a self-dealing transaction must be accomplished formally by a vote at a meeting of stockholders or by written consent in order to shift the standard of review that otherwise would apply to such a transaction.

In this derivative action, a stockholder of Facebook, Inc. challenges the decision of Facebook’s board of directors in 2013 to approve compensation for its outside, non-management directors, who comprised six of the eight directors on Facebook’s board at the time. The stockholder asserts claims against the defendant directors for breach of their fiduciary duties, unjust enrichment, and waste of corporate assets.

The parties agree that the board’s decision to approve the 2013 compensation would be governed by the entire fairness standard of review in the first instance as a self-dealing transaction. After the filing of this lawsuit, however, Mark Zuckerberg, who did not receive the disputed 2013 compensation and who controlled over 61% of the voting power of Facebook’s common stock, expressed his approval of the 2013 eompensátion for the non-management directors in a deposition and an affidavit. Based on these sworn statements, the defendants seek summary judgment against the fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment claims on the theory that Zuckerberg, in his capacity as a disinterested stockholder, ratified the 2013 compensation, thereby shifting the standard of review governing that transaction from entire fairness to the business judgment presumption. Defendants also seek to dismiss the waste claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

*50 ' The fundamental issue here is whether Zuckerberg’s approvals were in a form sufficient to constitute stockholder ratification. Zuckerberg did not make use of a formal method of expressing stockholder assent, namely by voting at a stockholder meeting or acting by written consent in compliance with Section 228 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. According to plaintiff, stockholder ratification may be invoked only by one of these two methods. Defendants counter that it is sufficient that Zuckerberg, acting as a disinterested controlling stockholder, expressed his will to approve the transaction even if he did not adhere to corporate formalities.

The controlling stockholder of a Delaware corporation wields significant power, including the power in some circumstances to ratify interested directors’ decisions and thereby limit judicial scrutiny of such actions. But a controlling stockholder should not, in my view, be immune from the required formalities that come with such power. Although traditional agency law allows a principal to ratify an agent’s conduct through informal assent, this tradition is ill-suited to the context of corporate law ratification, where formal structures govern the collective decision-making of stockholders who coexist as principals. These formalities serve to protect the corporation and all of its stockholders by ensuring precision, both in defining what, action has been taken and establishing that the requisite number of stockholders approved. such action, and by promoting transparency, particularly for non-assenting stockholders. I therefore conclude that stockholders of a Delaware corporation — even a single controlling stockholder — cannot ratify an interested board’s decisions without adhering to the corporate formalities specified in the Delaware General Corporation Law for taking stockholder action.

Given this conclusion, the entire fairness standard applies to the board’s approval of the 2013 compensation. As such, and given that defendants have not thus far demonstrated that the directors’ compensation decisions were entirely fair, their motion for summary judgment is denied. Plaintiff has failed to state a reasonably conceivable claim for waste, however, and thus that claim is dismissed.

1. BACKGROUND 1

A. The Parties

Nominal Defendant Facebook, Inc. (“Fa-cebook” or the “Company”) is a Delaware corporation with headquarters in California. Hundreds of millions of people use Facebook’s social networking website and mobile applications. Facebook has a dual-class capital structure. Its' Class B common stock has ten votes per share and its Class A common stock has one vote' per share.

Defendant Mark Zuckerberg is the founder of Facebook. Zuckerberg has served as Facebook’s Chief Executive Officer since July 2004 and as the Chairman of Facebook’s board of directors since January 2012. Zuckerberg, principally due to his ownership of the super-voting Class B shares, controlled approximately 61.6% of the total voting power of Facebook’s common stock as of February 28, 2014. 2 Defendant Sheryl K. Sandberg has served as Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer since *51 March 2008 and as a Facebook director since June 2012.

Defendants Donald E. Graham, Peter A. Thiel, Marc. L. Andreessen, Reed Hastings, Erskine B. Bowles, and Susan D. Desmond-Hellmann were members of Fa-cebook’s board of directors when the Verified Complaint was filed on June 6, 2014, and at all times relevant to this opinion. All of the defendant directors other than Zuckerberg and Sandberg were non-employee directors.

Plaintiff Ernesto Espinoza alleges he has been a Facebook stockholder at all relevant times.

B. Facebook Adopts the 2012 Equity Incentive Plan

Since 2008, Facebook has granted restricted stock units (“RSUs”) to new members of its board of directors who were not Facebook investors or employees. 3 Beginning in 2011, new non-employee directors typically received 20,000 RSUs upon joining the board, and an annual retainer of $50,000. From 2011 until mid-2013, the Audit Committee Chair received an extra $20,000.

In a prospectus filed before Facebook’s initial public offering, Facebook announced that its board of directors and stockholders had adopted the 2012 Equity Incentive Plan,, which became effective upon filing thé prospectus in May 2012, and which replaced the 2005 Stock Plan. 4 The 2012 Equity Incentive Plan authorizes Face-book’s board of directors to provide stock-based eompensátion to Facebook’s employees, officers, directors, and consultants. 5 The Compensation Committee, of Face-book’s board admiriistérs the 20.12 Equity Incentive Plan, except for grants to non-employee directors, which are determined by the full board. 6 The .

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Bluebook (online)
124 A.3d 47, 2015 WL 6501521, 2015 Del. Ch. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernesto-espinoza-v-mark-zuckerberg-delch-2015.