Leal v. Meeks

115 A.3d 1173
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 14, 2015
DocketNo. 564, 2014; No. 706, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by160 cases

This text of 115 A.3d 1173 (Leal v. Meeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leal v. Meeks, 115 A.3d 1173 (Del. 2015).

Opinion

STRINE, Chief Justice:

I. INTRODUCTION

These appeals were scheduled for argument on the same day because they turn on a single legal question: in an action for damages against corporate fiduciaries, where the plaintiff challenges an interested transaction that is presumptively subject to entire fairness review, must the plaintiff plead a non-exculpated claim against the disinterested, independent directors to survive a motion to dismiss by those directors? 1 We answer that question in the affirmative. A plaintiff seeking only monetary damages must plead non-exculpated claims against a director who is protected by an exculpatory charter provision to survive a motion to dismiss, regardless of the underlying standard of review for the board’s conduct — be it Revlon,2 [1176]*1176Unocal,3 the entire fairness standard, or the business judgment rule.

The Court of Chancery in both of these cases denied the defendants’ motions to dismiss because it read the precedent of this Court to require doing so, regardless of the exculpatory provision in each company’s certifícate of incorporation. Under the Court of Chancery’s analysis, even if the plaintiffs could not plead a non-exculpated claim against any particular director, as long as the underlying transaction was subject to the entire fairness standard of review, and the plaintiffs were therefore able to state non-exculpated claims against the interested parties and their affiliates, all of the directors were required to remain defendants until the end of litigation. The Court of Chancery was reluctant to embrace that result but felt that it was the reading most faithful to our precedent.

In this decision, we hold that even if a plaintiff has pled facts that, if true, would require the transaction to be subject to the entire fairness standard of review, and the interested parties to face a claim for breach of their duty of loyalty, the independent directors do not automatically have to remain defendants. When the independent directors are protected by an exculpatory charter provision and the plaintiffs are unable to plead a non-exculpated claim against them, those directors are entitled to have the claims against them dismissed, in keeping with this Court’s opinion in Malpiede v. Townson4 and cases following that decision.5 Accordingly, we remand both of these cases to allow the Court of Chancery to determine if the plaintiffs have sufficiently pled non-exculpated claims against the independent directors.

II. BACKGROUND

These appeals both involve damages actions by stockholder plaintiffs arising out of mergers in which the controlling stockholder, who had representatives on the board of directors, acquired the remainder of the shares that it did not own in a Delaware public corporation.6 . Both merg[1177]*1177ers were negotiated by special committees of independent directors, were ultimately approved by a majority of the minority stockholders, and were at substantial premiums to the pre-announcement market price.7 Nonetheless, the plaintiffs filed suit in the Court of Chancery in each case, contending that the directors had breached their fiduciary duty by approving transactions that were unfair to the minority stockholders.

In both appeals, it is undisputed that the companies did not follow the process established in Kahn v. M & F Worldwide Corporation as a safe harbor to invoke the business judgment rule in the context of a self-interested transaction.8 Thus, the entire fairness standard presumptively applied, although the burden of persuasion on that issue might ultimately rest with the plaintiffs.9 In both cases, the defendant directors were insulated from liability for monetary damages for breaches of the fiduciary duty of care by an exculpatory charter provision adopted in accordance with 8 Del. C. § 102(b)(7). Despite that provision, the plaintiffs in each case not only sued the controlling stockholders and their affiliated directors, but also sued the independent directors who had negotiated and approved the mergers.

In the first of these cases to be decided, In re Cornerstone Therapeutics Inc. Stockholder Litigation, the independent director defendants moved to dismiss on the grounds that the plaintiffs had failed to plead any non-exculpated claim against them.10 The independent directors argued that although the entire fairness standard applied to the Court of Chancery’s review of the underlying transaction, and thus the controlling stockholder and its affiliated directors were at risk of being found liable for breaches of the duty of loyalty, the plaintiffs still bore the burden to plead non-exculpated claims against the indépen-dent directors.11 The independent directors noted that this Court held in Malpiede v. Townson that, in the analogous context of review under the Revlon standard, plaintiffs seeking damages must plead non-exculpated claims against each individual director or risk dismissal.12 The [1178]*1178independent directors also pointed out that in a number of cases, including several affirmed by this Court, the Court of Chancery dismissed claims against independent directors when the plaintiffs failed to plead non-exculpated claims for breaches of fiduciary duty, notwithstanding the applicability of entire fairness review to the transaction.13

In response, the plaintiffs argued that the Court of Chancery could not grant the independent directors’ motion to dismiss, regardless of whether they had sufficiently pled non-exculpated claims.14 Under their reading of language in two of the four decisions issued by this Court in the extensive Emerald Partners litigation,15 the plaintiffs contended that they could defeat the independent directors’ motions to dismiss solely by establishing that the underlying transaction was subject to the entire fairness standard.16 In the first of the two relevant Emerald Partners decisions (“Emerald I ”), this Court determined that the plaintiffs had sufficiently pled duty of loyalty claims against the disinterested directors that were “intertwined” with their duty of care claims.17 In the second of the two decisions (“Emerald II”), this Court stated that “when entire fairness is the applicable standard of judicial review, a determination that the director defendants are exculpated from paying monetary damages can be made only after the basis for their liability has been decided,” on a fully-developed factual record.18 The Cornerstone plaintiffs argued that this language in Emerald II should be read broadly to require the court to deny independent directors’ motions to dismiss whenever the applicable standard of re[1179]*1179view is entire fairness.19 Although the Court of Chancery suggested that it believed that the defendants’ view of the law was the preferable one,20 it nonetheless concluded that it was bound to deny the motion because its reading of the Emerald II

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Bluebook (online)
115 A.3d 1173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leal-v-meeks-del-2015.