Melzer v. CNET Networks, Inc.

934 A.2d 912, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 163, 2007 WL 4146237
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 21, 2007
DocketCivil Action 3023-CC
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 934 A.2d 912 (Melzer v. CNET Networks, Inc.) 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
Melzer v. CNET Networks, Inc., 934 A.2d 912, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 163, 2007 WL 4146237 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

This should have been a very easy case. Plaintiffs, who are shareholders of CNET, initiated this action under 8 Del. C. § 220 to seek books and records relating to stock options backdating — a practice in which the company has already admitted it engaged — after being ordered to do so by a federal judge in California. This seeming simplicity notwithstanding, CNET opposed the demand for inspection, the parties battled over discovery via a contentious motion to compel, and only on the brink of trial did CNET agree to share certain documents with plaintiffs. This agreement was not, however, all encompassing, and now the parties dispute the scope of books and records to which plaintiffs are entitled. Summarized as succinctly as possible, the issue is whether plaintiffs are entitled to documents relating to options granted before plaintiffs owned stock in CNET. Because plaintiffs’ purpose in this action is to obtain the particularized facts they need to adequately allege demand futility (rather than to investigate potential claims that plaintiffs have no standing to assert), plaintiffs may have access to certain documents pertaining to options granted before they owned shares.

*914 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case, like so many others concerning backdated stock options, found its genesis in a March 18, 2006 article in the Wall Street Journal that suggested many large corporations were engaging in an options-granting practice that contravened corporate charters far and wide. 1 That article and its findings have led to the filing of numerous federal and state law actions and to well over one hundred SEC investigations. 2 This case is somewhat unique, however, because here the defendant corporation has admitted that it engaged in backdating stock options granted from the time of its IPO in 1996 through at least 2003.

CNET’s options issues first came to light in May 2006, when the Center for Financial Research and Accountability (“CFRA”) published an analysis of option-granting practices of one hundred publicly traded companies. The CFRA report specifically identified CNET as a company whose pattern of granting options indicated backdating. On June 27, 2006, CNET disclosed that its option granting practices were under investigation by the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California and by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The next month, CNET announced that an internal investigation conducted by a special committee confirmed the CFRA report and announced that the company would need to restate its financial statements from 2003-05. In mid-October 2006, CNET released further, more specific findings from the special committee, which concluded backdating had been a problem for the company from the time of its IPO in 1996.

On June 19, 2006, plaintiffs filed their initial complaint in the District Court for the Northern District of California alleging federal securities and state law claims against CNET and its directors relating to backdated stock options. 3 After CNET’s disclosures in the fall, plaintiffs amended their derivative complaint, and the defendants moved to dismiss for failure to make a demand on the CNET board. Applying the Aronson 4 test for demand futility, the district court granted the motion to dismiss. 5

Plaintiffs had alleged several theories to support their contention that demand on the CNET board would have been futile. First, to the extent a director materially benefited from a backdated option, he or she would not be disinterested under the first prong of the Aronson test. 6 Thus, to the extent that plaintiffs could plead with particularity facts demonstrating that a majority of the directors received backdated options, demand would be excused. Second, to the extent a director knowingly backdated a stock option in violation of the company’s charter, that director’s action is ultra vires and is not the product of valid business judgment. 7 If a majority of the *915 current board engaged in backdating, demand would be excused. 8

Thus, key to establishing demand futility was particularized facts demonstrating that backdating occurred and either that (1) a majority of the current board received backdated options or (2) a majority of the current board engaged in backdating itself. The district court analyzed individually the eight option grants that plaintiffs alleged were backdated and concluded that plaintiffs successfully pleaded particularized facts with respect to only the grants on June 3, 1998, April 17, 2000, and October 8, 2001. 9 Consequently, plaintiffs had demonstrated that only one member of the then-current board received backdated options. 10 Judge Alsup also found unpersuasive plaintiffs’ attempts to show demand futility under the second prong of Aronson, concluding that plaintiffs failed to allege the particularized facts necessary to demonstrate that board members actually engaged in the process of backdating. 11

After dismissing plaintiffs’ amended complaint, however, Judge Alsup granted further leave to amend, 12 and issued a stay pending a books and records demand in Delaware. 13 The stay specifically requested that CNET cooperate and expedite the inspection because “CNET itself raised the availability of such an inspection in its recent memoranda.” 14 Judge Alsup listed four categories of books and records that would be helpful in the California action:

1. All books and records showing the extent to which the CNET compensation committee delegated (or did not delegate) to management, either expressly or by custom and practice, the authority to select the exercise price or grant date of stock options under the 1997 plan and, if such delegation occurred, the extent to which the compensation committee was made aware of the exercise prices and dates selected.
2. All books and records establishing the specific chronology and events leading to the stock-option grants alleged in the complaint and exercise prices and grant dates associated therewith.
3. All books and records needed to determine whether Messrs. Colligan and Robison received stock options that were backdated.
4. All books and records necessary to show the extent to which any min *916

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Bluebook (online)
934 A.2d 912, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 163, 2007 WL 4146237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melzer-v-cnet-networks-inc-delch-2007.