In Re infoUSA, Inc. Shareholders Litigation

953 A.2d 963, 2007 WL 5315015
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 20, 2007
DocketConsol. Civil Action 1956-CC
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 953 A.2d 963 (In Re infoUSA, Inc. Shareholders 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 infoUSA, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, 953 A.2d 963, 2007 WL 5315015 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

Before me is a complaint that tests the boundaries of the business judgment rule, the protection offered to defendant directors by Court of Chancery Rule 23.1, and the procedural rules by which a plaintiff brings a derivative complaint. After an activist shareholder petitioned this Court for access to books and records under 8 Del C. § 220, two plaintiffs brought separate lawsuits on behalf of in-foUSA against its directors. Both complaints alleged that the board either collaborated in or stood by idly in the face of a garish collection of self-interested transactions, principally engineered by the CEO, and largest shareholder, Vinod Gupta. Such extravagances included the lease of aircraft and office space for personal use, the provision of a yacht, and a collection of luxury and collectible cars that would leave James Bond green with envy.

Plaintiffs Dolphin Limited Partnership I, LP, Dolphin Financial Partners, LLC and Robert Bartow (hereafter, “Dolphin”) sought to recover derivatively the benefits expropriated from the company by the CEO and the defendant directors through claims for breach of fiduciary duty and waste. Plaintiff Cardinal Value Equity Partners LP (hereafter, “Cardinal Value”), on the other hand, pursued a more novel form of redress. In response to an offer from Vinod Gupta to take the company private, infoUSA formed a Special Committee that considered, and eventually rejected, his proposal. After the rejection, the board of directors dissolved the committee before it could canvas the market for other offers. Cardinal Value asked this Court to order the reinstatement of the Special Committee so that it could “complete” its mission. While Dolphin’s litany of related party transactions formed the basis of its complaint, Cardinal Value relied upon many of the same facts to suggest the impotency of the infoUSA board of directors in the face of the demand required of derivative plaintiffs under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1.

These early complaints, however, suffered from significant flaws, especially with regard to the requirement to demonstrate that any demand upon the board of directors would be futile. At times, plaintiffs’ strategy appeared to challenge the presumption of the business judgment rule by hurling allegation after allegation at the company as a whole, instead of focusing with precision upon a given director’s conflicts of interest. Although the standard test for demand futility under Aronson *972 does allow for the possibility that a given transaction is so egregious that it could not be an exercise of business judgment, 1 the Court must take great care that this exception does not turn the presumption of business judgment on its head. Like most derivative plaintiffs, Dolphin and Cardinal Value alleged that these transactions were not in fact an exercise of business judgment. For demand to be excused under Aronson, however, a plaintiff must plead specific facts to “overcome the powerful presumptions of the business judgment rule before they will be permitted to pursue the derivative claim.” 2 This presumption protects decisions unless they cannot be “attributed to any rational business purpose.” 3 A plaintiff who seeks to excuse demand through the second prong of Aronson thus faces a task closely akin to proving that the underlying transaction could not have been a good faith exercise of business judgment.

Plaintiffs’ individual allegations generally fail to meet this requirement. To take only one example: plaintiffs’ assert that payments being made to former President William Clinton, and provision of private jet travel for Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, represent waste of corporate assets. 4 Plaintiffs might be able to prove, at trial, that these expenditures were wholly unrelated to the business of the company or in some other way wasteful and in violation of the director’s fiduciary duties. It would be difficult to conclude, however, that a public company might never legitimately purchase the services of a former president. Nor do plaintiffs allege any facts suggesting that these transactions must be presumptively illegitimate. Indeed, the company has estimated that the relationship with former President Clinton might be responsible for up to $40 million in sales. 5

Plaintiffs attempt to compensate for the weakness of each particular allegation through an appeal to their collective unwholesomeness. The complaint and the accompanying briefs several times suggest that demand would be futile with respect to the defendant directors simply because no board, in the exercise of its business judgment, could ever have doled out so much largess to Vinod Gupta and his family and friends. The argument, while of a kind common to shareholder suits alleging excessive compensation, has been roundly rejected by this Court as circular reasoning that would eviscerate the business judgment rule of any purpose. 6

On October 17, 2006, this Court dismissed without prejudice Cardinal Value’s initial lawsuit, determining that Cardinal Value had failed to demonstrate *973 through allegations of particularized facts that a majority of the then-current board of directors lacked the disinterestedness or independence to consider demand. Shortly thereafter, Cardinal Value filed a new complaint, and defendants moved to consolidate the case with the still-pending lawsuit brought by Dolphin. Over plaintiffs’ objections, the Court consolidated the actions, finding that the interests of justice would be better served if the actions of the defendant directors — and their potential conflicts of interest — were considered as an integrated whole, rather than scattered semi-randomly as part of two separate lawsuits. Two more complaints followed. 7

At long last, all relevant allegations brought by all plaintiffs find themselves in the same complaint. Through this amalgamation of allegations, plaintiffs have finally demonstrated that a majority of in-foUSA’s board of directors are neither sufficiently disinterested nor independent to consider objectively a demand upon the board and, thus, that demand is excused. Similarly, I conclude that plaintiffs have alleged facts sufficient to state a claim on which relief may be granted. Defendants’ motion to dismiss is therefore denied.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs have followed this Court’s oft-issued advice and brought their action based upon documents received as part of a request for books and records under 8 Del. C. § 220. As a result, the amended consolidated complaint overflows with detail It is important to remember, however, that in considering a motion to dismiss, this Court is required to consider all well-pleaded facts in the complaint as true. 8

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
953 A.2d 963, 2007 WL 5315015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-infousa-inc-shareholders-litigation-delch-2007.