Rude v. Cook Inlet Region, Inc.

294 P.3d 76, 2012 WL 6634005, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 176
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2012
DocketS-13823 S-13943
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 294 P.3d 76 (Rude v. Cook Inlet Region, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rude v. Cook Inlet Region, Inc., 294 P.3d 76, 2012 WL 6634005, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 176 (Ala. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 2008 Robert Rude, then a sitting Cook Inlet Region, Inc. (CIRI) director, and three other candidates ran as an independent "New Alliance" slate for positions on the CIRI board of directors. Shortly before the election, CIRI filed suit, claiming that the New Alliance proxy materials contained materially misleading statements. Rude and his co-defendants counterclaimed, alleging that CIRI's election procedures were unfairly tilted toward the interests of the current board and that the directors had improperly refused to disclose shareholder and corporate information to Rude and the other New Alliance candidates. The superior court granted summary judgment on all claims and counterclaims in favor of CIRI. As a result, the New Alliance proxies were voided, and Rude was not re-elected to the board. Rude appeals the rulings both on CIRI's claims and his counterclaims. Although Rude's claims are now technically moot, we address them insofar as they potentially affect prevailing party status. Because no issue of material fact exists as to the claims at issue and because CIRI is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we affirm the superior court.

In a separate appeal, Rude challenges four other rulings of the superior court. First, he challenges the award of attorney's fees to CIRI. Second, he challenges the superior court's denial of his Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment. Third, he challenges the superior court's exclusion of exhibits filed with that motion. Finally, he challenges the superior court's dismissal of New Alliance as a party to this suit. Because the superior court did not abuse its discretion in any of these rulings, we affirm the superior court in all respects.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS1

A. - Background

Cook Inlet Regional, Inc. (CIRI) is an Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANC-SA) corporation organized under Alaska law. It is governed by a 15-member board of directors, serving staggered three-year terms. Each year five director positions are up for election by the shareholders, and each year the board of directors recommends five candidates for the shareholders' vote and solicits proxies2 for those five candidates. In addition to the board's recommended slate, other candidates often run.

B. Board Endorsement And Formation Of New Alliance Slate

For the 2008 elections, Robert Rude, as well as Dorothy J. Anagick, Chris Kiana, and Mike Thomas, ran for seats on the board.3 Rude was at that time an incumbent director whose term was set to expire at the annual [80]*80meeting at which elections would be held. The other three candidates were not incumbent directors. All four applied for board endorsement. At a March 2008 board meeting, the board selected five candidates, including Rude and Thomas, to be the board-recommended slate4 One week later, the board voted to reconsider its selections and selected a new slate, this time without Rude or Thomas.5

Under CIRI's rules, individuals who wish to run for the board of directors, but who are not included in the board-endorsed slate, may still be included in CIRI's proxy materials. Such individuals are listed, along with their photographs and background information, in CIRI's proxy statements;6 their names are listed on the proxies; and their information and personal statements are included in the CIRI voter guide. In 2008 three "other candidates" opted to be included in CIRI's proxy materials. Rude, along with Thomas, Kiana, and Anagick, chose not to be included in CIRI's proxy materials, instead opting to run as a slate under the aegis of the New Alliance for the Future of CIRI, Inc. (New Alliance).

C. - Proxy Solicitation

On March 28, 2008, New Alliance began soliciting proxies on behalf of the four candidates and for a New Alliance proposal for a special dividend of $50 per share.7 Around the same time, Rude sent an email to CIRI President and Chief Executive Officer Margie Brown requesting that CIRI include in its proxies either New Alliance's proposal for a special dividend or a statement of how the CIRI board would vote its proxies on such a proposal. - Brown declined both requests. Brown also declined Rude's request for the email addresses of each CIRI shareholder.

Shortly after New Alliance sent its first proxy materials, CIRI filed a complaint with the Division of Banking, Securities and Corporations, alleging that New Alliance's proxy solicitations contained false and misleading statements concerning, most importantly, CIRI's alleged failure to pay adequate dividends in the past. While CIRI, New Alliance, and the Division communicated back and forth regarding CIRI's complaint to the Division,8 New Alliance continued to solicit proxies through three additional mailings and to maintain a website explaining its campaign for the four candidates and for a special dividend.

These additional New Alliance mailings, as well as the New Alliance website, contained a number of statements which CIRI believed to be false or misleading. These statements, described in more detail below, concerned, among other things, management compensation, allegations that CIRI had "liquidated" or sold significant landholdings, shareholders' rights under Alaska law and ANCSA, CIRI's election procedures, and CIRI's dividend policy. In CIRI's words, the statements as a whole gave the false impression that "(all-though CIRI as a corporation has done well in earning a profit over the years, the CIRI Board majority (and management) have refused to share the corporation's success with [81]*81the shareholders, instead keeping the vast majority of the net profits for themselves."

Meanwhile, starting in April 2008, CIRI began soliciting its own proxies. CIRI's first proxy solicitation included a proxy statement, including biographies of the board-endorsed candidates as well as three "other candidates." The proxy statement also included information about continuing directors (ie., those not up for re-election) and corporate information, including information about the current board of directors and election procedures. The enclosed proxy included the names of the five board-recommended candidates, as well as the three "other candidates" and a blank line labeled "Write-In Candidates." The proxy did not include a space for shareholders to vote on New Alliance's proposed special dividend.

CIRI's second proxy mailing, mailed approximately one week after the first, included a voter guide with more in-depth information about the eight candidates on the proxy, along with CIRI's annual financial report, a flyer in support of the board-endorsed candidates, and another proxy form with the same information as the first, CIRI subsequently sent two more mailings that included proxy forms and information supporting its endorsed candidates. Throughout its proxy mailings, CIRI touted its "Early Bird Prizes"-eash prize drawings for shareholders who returned proxies "for any proxy holder or candidate" before the May 30 deadline.

D. The Lawsuit And The Election

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 P.3d 76, 2012 WL 6634005, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rude-v-cook-inlet-region-inc-alaska-2012.