In Re Fuqua Industries, Inc. Shareholder Litigation

752 A.2d 126
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 2, 1999
DocketCivil Action 11974
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 752 A.2d 126 (In Re Fuqua Industries, Inc. Shareholder Litigation) 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
In Re Fuqua Industries, Inc. Shareholder Litigation, 752 A.2d 126 (Del. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

In the eighth year of this protracted derivative litigation, defendants deposed the two derivative plaintiffs in whose names this litigation is prosecuted, Virginia Abrams and Alan Freberg. In the course of the depositions, defendants determined that Abrams and Freberg were unfamiliar with many of the facts and allegations involved in this lawsuit. Defern dants now point to plaintiffs’ alleged unfamiliarity and ask this Court to disqualify Abrams and Freberg because they cannot adequately and fairly protect the interests of Fuqua Industries, Inc. and its shareholders as mandated by Rule 23.1. The question I must answer is whether I should disqualify a derivative plaintiff who is unfamiliar with the basic facts of his or her lawsuit and who exercises little, if any, control over the conduct of such suit?

In order to meet the adequacy requirements of Rules 23 or 23.1, a representative plaintiff must not hold interests antagonistic to the class, retain competent and experienced counsel to act on behalf of the class and, finally, possess a basic familiarity with the facts and issues involved in the lawsuit. Defendants do not allege that either Abrams or Freberg is burdened by a disabling conflict of interest; nor do they allege that class counsel is incompetent or inexperienced. Rather, defendants predicate their entire claim on plaintiffs’ alleged ignorance of the lawsuit’s facts. Because I find that plaintiffs are sufficiently familiar with the facts of the lawsuit prosecuted in their names, I deny defendants’ motions.

I. BACKGROUND

These cases are musty with age and neglect. Mrs. Abrams filed her first complaint in February 1991. Consolidated soon thereafter with two other complaints, plaintiffs filed a consolidated amended derivative and class action complaint naming directors of Fuqua and its principal shareholder, Triton Group, Inc., as defendants. 1 *128 Approximately four years and nearly thirty continuances later, plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint in December 1995.

The second amended complaint alleged what was described by defense counsel in oral argument as a “dog’s breakfast” of fiduciary breaches and various other wrongful or illegal conduct. The foundation of this multitude of alleged wrongs was a claim that Triton and Fuqua’s directors engaged in a series of transactions designed to entrench Fuqua’s board. In May 1997, this Court dismissed all of plaintiffs’ class claims and all their derivative claims save one. The surviving derivative claim concerns the decision of Fuqua directors to exempt Triton from 8 Del. C. § 208 and to repurchase 4.9 million Fuqua shares, both for the alleged purpose of increasing Triton’s control over Fuqua, entrenching Fuqua’s board and, consequently, denying Fuqua shareholders a change of control premium.

II. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES

Shortly after plaintiffs filed their third amended complaint in 1998 against Fuqua and six former directors of Fuqua, defendants moved to disqualify Abrams and Freberg as inadequate plaintiffs to prosecute this derivative action. Narrowly stated, defendants contend that because plaintiffs are demonstrably unfamiliar with many of the facts and allegations of the suit prosecuted in their names and because they exercise little, if any, control over the suit, they should be disqualified as derivative plaintiffs on adequacy grounds.

Defendants point to the deposition testimony of Abrams and Freberg. This testimony, defendants allege, demonstrates that plaintiffs are fatally ignorant of the issues and allegations in the pleadings. Moreover, defendants contend that plaintiffs are not the “driving force” behind this litigation and have ceded control of the lawsuit to their attorneys. These two alleged defects, argue defendants, make Abrams and Freberg inadequate derivative plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs insist that they have a perfectly good lay understanding of the issues in this case. Furthermore, they complain that defendants seek to set the adequacy bar much too high. In the plaintiffs’ view, the defendants’ motion is nothing more than a last ditch effort to avoid the merits of the sole surviving issue in this lawsuit.

III. PLAINTIFFS ABRAMS AND FREBERG AND THE PROSECUTION OF THE LITIGATION

The defendants’ motion requires an examination of the roles played by Abrams and Freberg throughout this litigation. I will briefly set forth a factual history.

Mrs. Abrams has held Fuqua shares (since converted to Metromedia) for over thirty years. The quantity of her holdings has ranged from as much as 12,008 Fuqua shares to the current level of 8000 Me-tromedia shares. The decision to purchase Fuqua shares, as most all of Abrams’ investment decisions, was made jointly with her husband, Burton Abrams, a retired trial attorney.

In an affidavit, Mr. Abrams states that before the institution of this action, he directed a number of oral and written communications to Fuqua officers and directors complaining of managerial misconduct. After receiving no responses or dismissive responses, Mr. and Mrs. Abrams decided to pursue legal redress. In light of Mr. Abrams’ experience as an attorney, he apparently took primary responsibility for finding and communicating with counsel to represent Mrs. Abrams.

*129 During the long pendency of this litigation Mrs. Abrams fell ill. As she concedes, her memory and faculties have suffered as a result. In a 1998 deposition, it was evident that Mrs. Abrams lacked a meaningful grasp of the facts and allegations of the case prosecuted in her name. While at times she appeared able to provide a general understanding of her claim, she was unable to articulate the understanding with any particularity and she was obviously confused about basic facts regarding her lawsuit.

Mrs. Abrams deposition testimony suggests an attention span deficit and fatigue. More troubling then her confusion about certain facts and allegations in the pleadings, however, was the conduct of Abrams’ attorney in defending the deposition. Through the use of frequent interruptions, objections, hints, handwritten notes, gestures to documents, leading questions, unauthorized counseling, and even direct testimony asserted on behalf of Abrams, her attorney improperly hampered opposing counsel’s efforts to gather evidence. In so doing, her attorney did neither himself, nor his client, any service. I will address Abrams’ attorney’s abuses and indiscretions during the Abrams deposition later in this Opinion.

Alan Freberg, the second derivative plaintiff in this action, purchased twenty-five Fuqua shares in 1989. In 1991, presumably upon concluding that Fuqua directors and Triton had engaged in self-dealing transactions (for the complementary purposes of enriching Triton and Fuqua directors at the expense of public shareholders and entrenching Fuqua’s directors) and that they had no intention of auctioning Fuqua, Freberg retained counsel and filed his first complaint. Freberg’s complaint was amended and consolidated with the Abrams complaint.

Freberg’s deposition testimony evidences that his knowledge of the case is at best elliptical.

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752 A.2d 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fuqua-industries-inc-shareholder-litigation-delch-1999.