Leslie J Murphy v. Samuel M Inman III

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 2022
Docket161454
StatusPublished

This text of Leslie J Murphy v. Samuel M Inman III (Leslie J Murphy v. Samuel M Inman III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leslie J Murphy v. Samuel M Inman III, (Mich. 2022).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

Syllabus Chief Justice: Justices: Bridget M. McCormack Brian K. Zahra David F. Viviano Richard H. Bernstein Elizabeth T. Clement Megan K. Cavanagh Elizabeth M. Welch

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions: prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kathryn L. Loomis

MURPHY v INMAN

Docket No. 161454. Argued on application for leave to appeal December 9, 2021. Decided April 5, 2022.

Leslie J. Murphy, a former shareholder of Covisint Corporation, brought an action in the business division of the Oakland Circuit Court against Samuel M. Inman III and other former Covisint directors, alleging that they had breached their statutory and common-law fiduciary duties owed to plaintiff when Covisint entered into a cash-out merger agreement with OpenText Corporation in 2017. Defendants moved for summary disposition, arguing that plaintiff lacked standing because his claim was derivative in nature and he did not satisfy the requirements for bringing a derivative shareholder action under MCL 450.1493a. Plaintiff responded that he was permitted to bring a direct shareholder action under MCL 450.1541a and that defendants owed common-law fiduciary duties to plaintiff as a shareholder. The trial court, Wendy L. Potts, J., granted defendants’ motion for summary disposition, ruling that plaintiff lacked standing to bring a direct shareholder action because he could not demonstrate an injury to himself without showing injury to the corporation, nor could he show harm separate and distinct from that of other Covisint shareholders. The court also rejected plaintiff’s common-law theory because it arose out of the same alleged injury as his statutory claim. The Court of Appeals, GLEICHER, P.J., and GADOLA and LETICA, JJ., affirmed in an unpublished per curiam opinion issued April 30, 2020. Plaintiff applied for leave to appeal, and the Supreme Court ordered and heard oral argument on whether to grant the application or take other action. 507 Mich 906 (2021).

In a unanimous opinion by Justice ZAHRA, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, held:

Corporate directors owe common-law fiduciary duties directly to the shareholders of the corporation, and these duties were not abrogated by the enactment of the Business Corporation Act (BCA), MCL 450.1101 et seq. In the context of a cash-out merger transaction in which the decision to sell the target corporation has been made, directors must disclose to the shareholders all material facts within their knowledge regarding the merger and must exercise their fiduciary duties to the shareholders with one goal in mind: to maximize shareholder value by securing the highest value share price reasonably available. In order to distinguish between direct and derivative actions brought by shareholders of a corporation in Michigan, courts must ask (1) who suffered the alleged harm, and (2) who would receive the benefit of any remedy recovered. If the answer to both questions is the corporation, the action is derivative. If the shareholder suffers the harm independently from the corporation and receives the remedy rather than the corporation, the action is direct. Under that framework, a shareholder who alleges that the directors of the target corporation breached their fiduciary duties owed to the shareholder in handling a cash-out merger may bring that claim as a direct shareholder action. The Court of Appeals erred by concluding that plaintiff’s claim was derivative.

1. Corporate directors owe their shareholders fiduciary duties under Michigan common law that exist independently of the duties prescribed in the BCA. A fiduciary relationship is one in which one person is under a duty to act for the benefit of the other on matters within the scope of the relationship. Directors of a corporation are understood to be fiduciaries because they are required to use their acumen for the corporation’s benefit rather than their own. The BCA provides in MCL 450.1541a that directors must discharge their duties in good faith, with the care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances, and in a manner they reasonably believe to be in the best interests of the corporation. While this provision does not address whether directors owe fiduciary duties directly to the shareholders, such duties have been held to exist under Michigan’s common law. The essence of these duties is to produce the best possible return for the shareholders’ investment, although courts’ expectations of directors acting as fiduciaries depend heavily upon context. The Michigan Supreme Court has not addressed directors’ fiduciary duties to their shareholders in sale-of-control transactions, but the courts in Delaware, which is commonly understood to be the leading state on matters of corporate law, have held that once the decision to sell the target corporation has been made, directors of the target corporation no longer perform purely managerial duties on behalf of the corporation; instead, they are charged with negotiating the share price that the target corporation’s shareholders will receive as cash. Thus, in the context of a cash-out merger transaction, directors of the target corporation must disclose all material facts regarding the merger and must discharge their fiduciary duties to maximize shareholder value by securing the highest value share price reasonably available. This is consistent with the understanding that directors’ fiduciary duties run primarily to the shareholders of a corporation and that the essence of those duties is to obtain the best possible return on the shareholders’ investments. Further, in the context of a cash-out merger or other sale- of-control transaction, the sale or dissolution of the target corporation is a foregone conclusion, and the long-term interests of the target corporation as an entity are therefore of no concern. In this case, plaintiff’s challenge to the validity and fairness of the merger assumes that the sale of Covisint was a foregone conclusion, and thus defendants’ business decision to sell Covisint in the first place was not at issue.

2. The Legislature did not abrogate the common-law fiduciary duties that corporate directors owe their shareholders when it enacted the BCA. The Michigan Supreme Court has continued to recognize that directors owe fiduciary duties to their shareholders since the enactment of the BCA, and the statutory history of the BCA and its predecessor, the General Corporation Act, 1931 PA 327, supports a conclusion that the Legislature did not abrogate these common-law duties. The Legislature has never created or codified a direct cause of action for shareholders, and it has never expressly or even impliedly rejected the common-law fiduciary duties running from corporate directors to their shareholders. Therefore, none of the changes to MCL 450.1541a(1) or its predecessor can reasonably be read to abrogate corporate directors’ common-law fiduciary duties to their shareholders. Contrary to defendants’ argument, the BCA does not set forth a comprehensive legislative scheme in which the Legislature intended the statutory duties codified in MCL 450.1541a(1) to supersede and replace all common-law fiduciary duties. That provision discusses the standard by which corporate directors are to discharge their managerial duties owed to the corporation, but it is silent as to the fiduciary duties that corporate directors owe their shareholders. The Legislature is presumed to know that duties to shareholders exist at common law, and absent a clear legislative intent, it cannot be presumed that the Legislature, in enacting the BCA, exercised its authority to abrogate those duties.

3.

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Leslie J Murphy v. Samuel M Inman III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-j-murphy-v-samuel-m-inman-iii-mich-2022.