International Painters & Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund v. Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P.

41 Misc. 3d 770
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 Misc. 3d 770 (International Painters & Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund v. Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Painters & Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund v. Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P., 41 Misc. 3d 770 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Eileen Bransten, J.

In this shareholder derivative action, plaintiff International Painters and Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund brings suit on behalf of nominal defendant BGC Partners, Inc. (BGCP), asserting claims for breach of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment that stem from three transactions entered into by BGCP’s Board of Directors (Board). Defendants Cantor Fitzgerald, L.E, CF Group Management, Inc., and Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. (collectively, Cantor), as well as defendants Howard W. Lutnick, Stephen T. Curwood, John H. Dalton, Barry R. Sloane, and Albert M. Weis (the individual defendants), now seek dismissal of plaintiffs complaint pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7) for failure to plead demand futility and failure to state a cause of action against defendants Curwood, Dalton, Sloane, and Weis (collectively, the outside directors). Plaintiff opposes. For the reasons that follow, defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted.

I. Background

Plaintiff is a shareholder of BGCP, a global brokerage company incorporated in Delaware. (Complaint 1111 5, 6.) BGCP was founded in April 2008 — the product of a merger between one of Cantor’s brokerage units and a preexisting public company, eSpeed, Inc. (Id. H 17.) During the period at issue in this litigation, Cantor was BGCP’s controlling shareholder. (Id. U 7.) Defendant Lutnick was BGCP’s chairman and CEO, as well as Cantor’s chairman and CEO. (Id. 1i 9.) In addition, Lutnick allegedly controlled Cantor through its managing general partner, defendant CF Group Management, Inc. (Id.)

BGCP had a five-person Board of Directors. Defendant Lutnick was the chairman (id.), and was the only member of the BGCP Board affiliated with Cantor. (See defendants’ brief in support of motion to dismiss at 3.) The other four members of [772]*772the Board — defendants Curwood, Dalton, Sloane, and Weis— were outside directors. {Id. 1f 10.)

The instant litigation involves three transactions entered into by the BGCP Board on behalf of BGCB labeled by plaintiff as: (1) the debt transaction; (2) the equity transaction; and (3) the change-in-control transaction. Plaintiff claims that the individual defendants — the members of the BGCP Board — breached their fiduciary duties to the corporation by approving these purportedly related-party transactions. Specifically, plaintiff alleges that these three transactions unduly benefitted Cantor and defendant Lutnick, to the detriment of BGCP

A. The Debt Transaction

The debt transaction involved the sale of certain Cantor-issued notes that had been assumed by BGCP in connection with the April 2008 merger. (Complaint 1Í 20.) As the notes were set to mature in April 2010 at an interest rate of 5.19% BGCP purportedly considered options to satisfy its obligations to the third parties to whom payment on the notes was due. After the Board’s Audit Committee sought the guidance of independent legal and financial advisors, the Audit Committee approved the issuance of notes to Cantor that were due in 2015 at an 8.75% interest rate. {Id. UU 22, 24.) The proceeds from the sale of these newly-issued notes to Cantor were used to repay the 5.19% notes due to third parties. {Id.) In its complaint, plaintiff contends that this transaction was “on its face . . . unfair to [BGCP],” as the “8.75% notes reflect a 1.25% rate increase in the cost of the debt and provide Cantor with valuable conversion privileges, which if exercised, could cause substantial dilution of BGCP’s Class A common stock.” {Id. Hit 26-28.)

B. The Equity Transaction

The next transaction to which plaintiff objects is the so-called equity transaction, through which BGCP sold 3.23 million shares of its class A common stock, using defendant Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. (CF & Co.) as its sales agent. {Id. 1Í 38.) Under BGCP’s controlled equity offering sales agreement with CF & Co., the sales agent was entitled to compensation equal to 2% of the gross proceeds of any equity offerings. {Id.)

While the sale of the class A shares generated approximately $17,792,000 in net proceeds for BGCI) plaintiff asserts that the corporation received no benefits from the transaction, since BGCP then used approximately $17,371,000 of these proceeds [773]*773to repurchase class A common stock from Cantor. (Id. If 42.) In addition, BGCP paid CF & Co. approximately $362,000 in sales commissions. (Id.)

C. The Change-in-Control Transaction

Finally, plaintiff maintains that the amended change-in-control agreement entered into by Lutnick and BGCP was unfair to the company, given Lutnick’s “sole and exclusive ability to determine whether to effect a change in control and thus trigger his own receipt of payments and benefits from the Company.” (Complaint 1T 54.)

Lutnick and the company first entered into a change-in-control agreement in March 2008. (Id. 1Í 48.) As its name implies, this agreement provided for payment of a lump sum to Lutnick upon a change in control of BGCP (Id. 1Í 50.) On August 3, 2011, Lutnick and BGCP amended the change-in-control agreement to provide that Lutnick would continue to receive all of the benefits of the prior agreement plus immediate vesting and exchangeability of “all partnership units in BGC Holdings, L.P, including REUs, PSUs, PSIs and any other units [Lutnick] may hold.” (Id. 11 51.) Plaintiff contends that this final provision in the change-in-control agreement amendment “will unduly benefit Lutnick at the expense of [BGCP] and its minority shareholders.” (Id. 1Í 55.)

D. Instant Action

Plaintiff filed this derivative action on March 9, 2012, asserting the following claims: (1) breach of fiduciary duty against defendants Cantor, Lutnick, Curwood, Dalton, Sloane, and Weis; and (2) unjust enrichment against defendants Cantor and Lutnick. In its complaint, plaintiff acknowledges that it failed to first make a demand on the BGCP Board before commencing this litigation but asserts that it chose not to do so because demand would have been futile.

II. Analysis

Defendants now bring the instant pre-answer motion to dismiss, arguing that plaintiff has not carried its burden of pleading demand futility. Further, defendants contend that all claims against the outside directors merit dismissal because plaintiff has not alleged that defendants Curwood, Dalton, Sloane, and Weis violated their duties of loyalty or good faith. These arguments will be examined in turn.

[774]*774A. Demand Futility

A “cardinal precept” of Delaware law1 is that “directors, rather than shareholders, manage the business and affairs of the corporation.” (Aronson v Lewis, 473 A2d 805, 811 [Del 1984], overruled on other grounds by Brehm v Eisner, 746 A2d 244 [Del 2000].) Since a shareholder’s ability to commence an action on behalf of a corporation “inherently impinges upon the directors’ power to manage the affairs of the corporation,” Delaware law “imposes certain prerequisites on a stockholder’s right to sue derivatively.” (Kaplan v Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540 A2d 726, 730 [Del 1988].)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Misc. 3d 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-painters-allied-trades-industry-pension-fund-v-cantor-nysupct-2013.