BA Wagner 2014
BA Wagner 2014
BA Wagner 2014
Gordon v. Doty (nice teacher lending her car) court says agency existed because
Doty gave her keys, gave conditions, and Gordon accepted.
Jensen Farms v. Cargill (Cargill is lender who showed some control) Cargill was
liable as principal because they were regularly supervising Jensen and eventually
controlled the grain elevator. So not buyer-supplier and not creditor-debtor.
*Note: Cargill violated #3 of the comment
Types of Authority
Actual (Express or Implied)
Apparent
Inherent
Estoppel
Ratification
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Section 7- (Actual) Authority
Power of agent to affect legal relations of principal done in accordance with
principal’s manifestation of consent to agent
Note: There are two types express (actually telling someone to work on your behalf)
and implied (see below)
Mill Street v. Hogan (men painting the church) Although the Elders did not say
“hire Sam” they did say that a helper might be needed and there were incidents
were Sam had helped in the past, so it could be inferred that agency existed.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Sections 8 and 27- Apparent Authority and Creation
of Apparent Authority
1. Objective manifestation from one party (apparent principal)
2. Which reaches a third party
3. Causing the third party to reasonably believe that another party (apparent agent)
is authorized to act for the apparent principal
What counts as a manifestation by the principal?
Direct communications from principal by letter/word of mouth
Authorized statements of the agent
Documents or other indicia of authority given by the principal to the
agent
Communications from third persons who have heard of the agent’s
authority from authorized or permitted channels of communication
Appointing a person to a position like manager or treasurer which
carries with it generally recognized duties
Communication to the public through signs or advertising
Continuously employing the agent
370 v. Ampex (370 manager asks for specific salesman, but he only has limited
authority) The contract that the salesman made with 370 is binding. A
reasonably prudent person needs to believe that the salesman had authority, and
because there was no notification to 370, documents saying that the salesman is
authorized to act, and it is reasonable to presume that the salesman was not limited.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Sections 8A, 161, 194, 195- Inherent Authority
Principal liable for acts done on his account that usually accompany or are
incidental to transactions agent authorized to conduct
Exists for the protection of persons harmed by or dealing with a servant or other
agent
R2d Agency §3(a): General Agent is an agent authorized to conduct a
series of transactions involving continuity of service.
R2d Agency §3(b): Special agent is an agent authorized to conduct a
single transaction or a series of transactions no involving continuity of
service.
Watteau v. Fenwick (England; Humble’s name was on the bar and the licenses, so it
appeared he owned it) Court said there was inherent authority because it could
easily be assumed that someone who is ordering things at a bar with their name had
the authority.
Hoddeson v. Koos Bros (ripoff furniture salesman) Here, the department store
allowed the fraud to create the appearance of authority. They should have put in
protocol like name IDs or uniforms.
Atlantic Salmon v. Curran (plaintiff made fraud companies) Court found the
“agent” liable because…The duty rests upon the agent, if he would avoid personal
liability, to disclose his agency and not upon the other to discover it. It is not enough
that the other party has the means of ascertaining the name of the principal. The
agent either needs to bring to him actual knowledge or else the agent will be bound.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Sections 2 & 219- Respondeat Superior Liability
Master is subject to liability for torts of his servants committed in the scope of
employment
Master = principal who employs an agent to perform service in his
affairs and who controls or has the right to control the physical conduct
of the other …
Servant = agent employed by a master to perform service in his affairs
whose physical conduct in the performance of the service is controlled
or is subject to the right to control by the master
Independent contractor = person who contracts with another to do
something for him but who is not controlled by the other nor subject to
the others right to control with respect to his physical conduct … may or
may not be an agent
Humble Oil v. Martin Court found that this case had a “master-servant”
relationsip. They look at the control and the factors. Humble retained title until
delivered to customers. Humble place strict system of financial control. Humble
had business discretion except for hiring, discharge, employee payment. Humble
furnished all equipment, advertising, medial, products. Humble controlled hours of
operation. Only Humble could terminate agreement.
Hoover v. Sun Oil Court found that this case had an “independent-contractor”
relationship. Sun did not control day-to-day operations. Sun’s represenatives made
weekly visits, but they only made suggestions, not mandates. Sun did not assume
any risk of profit/loss. Sun did not determine hours. Sun and the IC had a mutual
interest, not just Sun’s. Either party could terminate agreement.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Section 228- Agency & Acts Within the Scope of
Employment
Of the kind he is employed to perform
Within authorized time and space limits
Purpose to serve the master
If force intentionally used, use of force not unexpectable by the master
Ira Bushey v. U.S. (drunk seaman damages dry dock) Lane’s return to the ship
(though drunk) was clearly to serve the government, even though no one is sure
why he took the action that caused the damaged. But the level of foreseeability in
Respondeat superior only requires that an employer could perceive that harm could
flow from actions of their employees (whether or not they take all precautions). The
idea of a sailor who gets drunk and negligently does damage is foreseeable. The
government would not be liable if he was doing something related to his personal
life, but because they gave Lane access to the ship and the wheels, negligence was
foreseeable.
Majestic Realty v. Toti Contracting (negligent demolish work ruins Majestic’s roof)
This activity was inherently dangerous (not ultra-hazardous) and therefore this
is an exception to the run that employers are not liable for IC’s negligent actions.
Although Toti was innocent of direct negligence, the court said they should bear
damages over totally innocent Majestic (instill better hiring practices; only hire safe
workers)
Franchises
Franchise = licensing system used in business
Franchisor = party that grants franchise rights by contract
Franchisor obligations = license use of valuable name, logo and “system”
Murphy v. Holiday Inn (guest is injured at Holiday Inn, but they say they were just
licensor) Court holds that this franchisee contract did not establish a master-
servant relationship. The day-to-day operations were controlled by the hotel
owner, not Holiday Inn. The contract mostly protected Holiday’s trademark…it did
not grant control.
Note: This case had boiler-plate language that disclaimed Holiday Inn from
liability. But the court doesn’t follow this. They say agency can arise even if the
parties expressly deny it. It just happens that in this case, the control factor shows
that agency did not exist.
Miller v. McDonalds (diner is injured by eating a Big Mac) Court holds McDonalds
summary judgment was improper because a jury could have found two principles:
Agency and Apparent Agency? McDonalds clearly controlled the restaurant.
McDonald’s controlled the operating analysis, mandated what supplies were used,
mandated appearance, mandated employee uniforms, mandating packaging, and
listed strict standards for food/beverage. Even though the contract said McDonald’s
wasn’t liable, because McDonalds went beyond setting standards and instead
controlled…agency existed.
But there is also an issue of apparent agency (NOTE, this probably would have
applied to Holiday Inn if the issue had been raised) McDonalds held 3K out to be an
agent due to the control and Miller justifiability relied on McDonald’s standards of
quality.
Reading v. Regen (Plaintiff took job sitting on truck to help people smuggle in goods
by wearing his army uniform on the truck) Court held this was an improper use
of his uniform. Plaintiff was violating his duty owed to the employer to make money
for his own. Plaintiff owed loyalty, had a duty to act solely for the benefit of the
principal.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Section 388- Duty to Account for Profits Arising Out
of Employment
If Agent makes a profit in connection with transactions conducted by him on behalf
of the Principal, Agent must turn over profit to Principal
Example: Principal authorizes Agent to sell land for a fixed price. Agent makes a
contract to sell land to third party who makes a nonrefundable deposit. Third party
does not conclude the sale and forfeits the deposit. Agent sells the land to another
person. Agent is under a duty to Principal to turn the forfeited deposit over.
Restatement (2nd) Agency, Section 404- Liability for Use of Principal’s Assets
Agent must pay over profit if uses assets of principal in violation of a duty
Agent not liable for profits made by use of time to be devoted to principal unless he
violates duty not to act adversely or in competition with principal
Town & Country v. Newbery (Defendant worked for plaintiff’s company, when they
left to create their own company they used plaintiff’s list to solicit the customers)
Court says that plaintiff’s list was their trade secret, they had worked for 3 years to
build up that list. It was not like a phone book. The methods of cleaning the house
was not secret, but the customer list was.
Partnership
Fenwick v. UCC (Fenwick made Chesire “partner” to help set her salary) Court
says partnership was not established even though there was a document that called
the two “partners”
Right to share in profits (not conclusive, because not every agreement
that gives rights to share in profits is a partnership).
Obligation to share in losses (Chesire was not to share in losses)
Ownership and Control (Fenwick contributed capital, so he alone had
control)
Community Power in Administration (Fenwick had exclusive management
control)
Language in the agreement (they did label the agreement a “partnership”)
Rights of Dissolution (essentially the same as if Chesire quit; she had no rights
to assets)
Conduct toward third parties (only held themselves as partners for tax
purposes)
Kovacik v. Reed (Kovacik gives capital, Reed gives labor, Kovacik wants Reed to pay
50% of the losses (which is the default because they were to share 50% of the
profits). Court says this rule doesn’t apply when only one party contributes
capital BUT the RUPA 401(B) readopts the loss-sharing rule of UPA 18(a), and the
official comment specific rejects Kovacik.
Martin v. Peyton (really complex facts; main point is defendants helped Hall with his
business through weird financial dealings. Plaintiff claims defendants were
partners, and therefore were liable for its debts. Defendants claim they were
creditors, not partners) Court said the defendants were not partners.
Young v. Jones (PW-US and PW-Bahamas conflict) Court does NOT find
partnership by estoppel. The main issue here is (2). The plaintiffs did not read the
pamphlet before making their decision. Furthermore, their reliance led to a
transaction with a third party bank, NOT with the partnership.
Note: Possibly should have tried apparent agency.
Meinhard v. Salmon (Salmon and Meinhard enter into agreement where Meinhard
lended funds, then Salmon repays with profit, so the two were to bear losses
equally- even though Salmon had sole power to manage, lease, underlet, and
operate. Salmon came upon opportunity and took it, not telling Meinhard) Court
found that Salmon breached loyalty by appropriating the benefit of the partnership
without disclosing. He was taking the opportunity for himself, not for the business.
Salmon was secret and silent, which violating the duty of loyalty.
Note: Court seems to advocate splitting 50/50, but giving Salmon one
additional share so he could make management decisions.
Note: 404(b) and 404(c) were not in place at the time of this case. BUT
404(c) doesn’t matter, because no one was negligent.
UPA, Section 19 and 20- Partnership Information
Partners shall provide on demand true and full information of all things affecting the
partnership to any partner. Partners may inspect and copy partnership’s books.
Meehan v. Shaughnessy (Meehan, Boyle, later Cohen leave PC because they don’t feel
like they are being compensated for their work; they decided to take clients with
them through a letter on PC letterhead, and were deceptive when PC asked if they
were leaving the firm) Court says MBC did not breach duties for handling cases
for their own benefit (not partnership’s) because there was a provision in the
partnership agreement that they could take clients; nor did they secretly compete
with partnership. BUT court held they DID unfairly acquire consent from
clients/attorneys to withdraw cases because they didn’t give clients an option.
Furthermore, they lied on demand when PC asked if they were leaving.
Lawlis v. Knightlinger & Gray (Lawlis was alcoholic lawyer; partnership agreement
stated that a partner could be expelled at any time for any reason, so long as 2/3
senior partners agreed) Court holds for firm, as Lawlis was terminated in
accordance with the Partnership Agreement. There was also no evidence of
violation of duty of good faith- in fact Lawlis was treated very well with his
alcoholism and was given 8 months time before termination to find new
employment.
UPA, Section 18(a) and (b)- Partnership Financial Investment and Return
Partners contribute capital and/or labor
Partners have right to indemnity against expenses and liabilities incurred in
partnership business. (If you have paid out money on behalf of the partnership, then
partnership is expected to pay you back.)
Financial return: Partners have right to
Repayment of contribution
Right to share equally in profits and surplus after payment of liabilities,
and
An obligation to contribute to losses sustained by partnership according
to the share in profits.
Putnam v. Shoaf (Putnam pays to have Shoafs assume shares and all liability for
partnership debts; therefore Putnam would not be liable for future losses. Due to
embezzlement of bookkeeper while Putnam owned it, she and Shoaf both claim the
money owed to the partnership) Court rules for Shoafs. Under the agreement,
Putnam clearly conveyed her right, title, and interest to Shoafs (assignment under
UPA 27). Putnam wanted out, so she should be out.
UPA, Sections 18(e), (g), (h), 9(3)- Default Voting Rules
Disagreements among partners are decided by a partnership vote. One partner =
one vote, even if contributions are not equal.
Ordinary business decisions are decided by majority vote.
Other matters require unanimous consent:
Assign partnership property in trust to creditors/secure payment of debt
Dispose of good will of partnership
Do an act making it impossible to carry on partnership’s ordinary business
Confess a judgment against partnership
Submit a claim involving the partnership to arbitration
Admit a new partner
Contravene any agreement of the partners
Nabisco v. Stroud (Stroud and Freeman are general partners; Stroud says he won’t
take any more bread deliveries, Freeman okays bread deliveries) Court says
every partner is an agent and has the ability to bind the partnership when carrying
on in the usual way of business.(UPA 9, 15). And all partners have equal rights in
management. Ordering bread is in the ordinary business so Stroud cannot outvote
Freeman (UPA 18)
Changing Management Rights by Contract
Default rules are often changed in the following areas:
Delegating decision-making to a managing partner or executive committee
Weighing partnership voting to reflect pro rata contributions to capital
Changing the requirement of unanimous consent
Requiring supermajority voting for important decisions
Right to expel partners
Day v. Sidley & Austin (SA merges with other firm; Day votes in approval but
becomes upset after this determines he will lose his chairman position in the new
merged firm) SA adopted structure where each partner did not have equal rights
in management, but instead had executive committee manage. When Day signed the
partnership agreement giving control to the executive committee to create, control,
eliminate, restructure firm committees, he waived his management rights. If
management was important to him, he should have contracted around it.
Duration of Partnership
(1) At will- no limitation on duration default rule
(2) Express term- for x number of years
(3) Implied Term- until sum of money is earned, until one or more partners recoup,
until certain debts are paid, until certain property is disposed of, etc.
Page v. Page (brother have partnership; brother #1 wants to pull out when it
becomes unprofitable because his other company is creditor; brother #2 says
partnership for implied term) Court says NO partnership for implied term. Every
partnership seeks to make money, but this does not automatically imply a term to
remain in business until profitable. But the court does find that the plaintiff is
breaching his fiduciary duty of good faith, because his actions are for himself, not
the partnership.
UPA, Section 38(1)- Right to Require Liquidation
If dissolution (caused in any way except in breach of agreement), partner may
request liquidation
Note: the default rule is that upon dissolution (caused in any way except in
breach of partnership agreement) any partner may request liquidation. But
in practice, partners often agree to continue the business because liquidation
will not produce maximum value to partners.
Pav-Saver v. Vasso (Wagner hates this place; says it got it wrong. Pav-Saver
contributed IP. Pav-Saver terminated, and according to the agreement had to pay
equal payments over a 10 year period. Vasso continued business and wanted IP.
Also wanted damages more quickly.) Court held that Meersman should get IP
according to UPA; but that liquidated damages should go to Meersman according to
the contract. So what governs, contract or UPA?
Jewel v. Boxer (oral agreement to form partnership, oral agreement to not share
profits equally, but no written partnership agreement) Court says it does not
matter how much time a partner spent on a case after dissolution, they cannot be
awarded extra profit (partners are prevented from scrambling to keep their files or
competing to get more lucrative cases).
Corporations
Corporations Partnership
Formalities required No formalities
Limited liability Unlimited liability
Free transferability Not freely transferable
Continuity At will
Centralized management Equal management rights
Double taxation Single taxation
Structure
Shareholders/stockholders are owners of business. They do not manage but
delegate their rights of management and control to the Board of Directors.
Directors make corporate management decisions and all policy decisions. But they
are not employees
Inside Directors: are directors AND officers
Outside directors: NOT officers (there should be a majority of these because
board is supposed to be unbiased/objective, and that happens less when you
are employee of company).
Officers are employees. They run the day-to-day management. Their power is
delegated to them by the Board of Directors.
Promoter’s Liability
Liability for Pre-Incorporation Contracts:
-If promoter forms corporation later…
Can corporation become party to contract?
Can promoter avoid liability?
-If corporation is never formed or if promoter forms different corporation…
Who is liable?
Corporation By Estoppel
-Would earn a windfall if allowed to evade liability based on absence of
incorporation
-Person acted as though he was dealing with a corporation
-Test (articulated in Southern Gulf) were substantial rights affected
Southern Gulf Marine v. Camcraft (Barrett, promoter of Southern Gulf, signs contract
with Camcraft. He thinks that he will incorporate in Texas, but instead incorporate
under foreign country. Camcraft says they can breach)
Court says that because formed in Caymen Island, doesn’t allow for default. They
allow “corporation by estoppel” because Camcraft would earn windfall if allowed to
evade liability.
Test for Corporation by Estoppel (as expressed here): whether a SUBSTANTIAL
right changed/affected. This fails here because Southern Gulf was ready to pay, so
where they were paying from didn’t matter.
Note: Barrett signs both as an individual and as president of Southern Gulf,
not yet formed. If corporation is later formed, corporation can adopt the contract
and assume responsibility and can take over payments. But if Southern Gulf was
never formed, then promoter would be liable, as Barrett signed for himself and
corporation.
De Facto Corporation
-If promoter tried in good faith to incorporate, had a legal right to do so, and acted
as a corporation
-If a client believes that lawyer took document, filed with Secretary of State, but
forgets to file and client acts like they are a corporation and carries on business like
it, then courts sometimes give the benefit of limited liability
-Good faith!
Enterprise Liability
-This is going after affiliated corporations (Walkovsky). But this was rejected in
Walkovsky.
-Much more available assets by going after companies with same owner
-Idea is that you should ignore corporate separateness, argue that even though they
are legally set up as separate entitles, owner does not treat them as separate (co-
mingle assets)
**Compare this to Piercing the Corporate Veil where Shareholder’s (not other
corporations) personal assets may be available to creditor; note; this also fails in
Walkovsky
Walkovsky (person hit by cab sues Carlton who is stockholder of 10 cab
corporations with 2 cabs each; he has minimal insurance in all of them) majority
says we can’t go after Carlton because we can’t pierce the corporate veil…no
evidence he was using the company for his own benefit. Also no dice on enterprise
liability because you can’t just go after because same person owns…they have to be
co-mingling and we don’t have good evidence of that. Dissent says we should go
after Walkovsky because he was committing fraud by underfunding insurance.
Sealand v. Pepper Source (Sealand ships peppers for PS, PS stuffs Sealand on the bill,
Sealand filed action for money. PS had dissolved a few months earlier, so Sealand
couldn’t recover, so Sealand wants to go against shareholder) Court establishes
test. Alter-ego is satisfied- the corporate defendants where shareholder’s
playthings, he co-mingling bank accounts, he co-mingled the corporations. Court
finds fraud is NOT met, but let’s Sealand amend. They need to show fraud/injustice
beyond right to receive payment (creditors can’t win just because they’re creditors).
Note: third prong not applied here.
Parent/Subsidiary Relationship and Substantial Domination Test
This allows plaintiffs to collect from parents for their subsidiaries. There is a
piercing test in parent subsidiary:
1) Alter ego/control/domination
2) Fraud/injustice
Direct Liability
This theory is separate from piercing and is mostly based on negligence
Restatement (2nd) of Torts says that one who undertakes to render services is
subject to liability to third-party for physical harm due to a failure to exercise
reasonable care if:
*Failure to exercise reasonable care increased risk of harm
*Undertaken to perform duty owed by the other to third party
*Harm by third party suffered because of reliance
Silicone- both Parent/Subsidiary and Direct Liability case (Bristol purchased shares
of MEC and exerted control over MEC, used their departments, approved their
budget, set salaries, etc. Females are injured by breast implants manufactured by
MEC, but MEC is dissolved so they go after Bristol)
Parent/Subsidiary: Court isn’t sure about prong #2, but there’s enough evidence
to survive summary judgment. Prong #1 is met because MEC is in no way
independent (look to factors)
Direct liability (essentially negligence theory); court finds that Bristol who
undertook to render services is subject to liability to third party for physical harm
(women) due to failure to exercise reasonable care (again, check test)
Shareholder Derivative Litigation
Derivative lawsuit= shareholder brings a lawsuit to remedy a wrong on behalf of the
corporation against directors, managers, or other shareholders. Directors/officers
won’t sue their friends, so we rely on shareholders to protect the corporation.
*Shareholder can only sue in equity
*No standing otherwise because they haven’t been directly harmed
Strike suit= a lawsuit that is brought in the hope of a settlement.
*Lawyers are the main people who benefit from these
*So although we like derivative lawsuits we don’t like strike suits
Cohen v. Beneficial (In NJ, statute says that in a derivative shareholder action, if a
person has less than 5% ownership or $50,000, they have to give security for
corporation for expenses to defendant the lawsuit in case corporation wins…this is
to prevent strike suit. Plaintiff wants statute thrown out) Court upholds statute.
Fees are reasonable, state has legitimate purpose. Court finds this to be a
substantive rule, not procedural matter that would preempt federal rules.
Eisenberg v. Flying Tiger (Eisenberg was owner of original Flying Tiger, but the
operating assets were switched to their subsidiary, FTL, so Eisenberg’s shares,
which were supposed to be operating a business, is now just a holding company.
Question is whether this is a direct or derivative claim) Court finds direct lawsuit.
Look at who was harmed, corporation or individuals! Eisenberg feels his shares
have been diluted, or were just of a different type (holding instead of aircraft
company/shares). Although corporation is arguing it’s corporation harmed
(derivative) the court finds for Eisenberg because he personally wanted a type of
shares.
Demand Requirement & Demand Futility
Purpose of Demand:
*Allow dispute to be resolved by corporation outside of court
*Allow corporation to take over lawsuit if it is beneficial to corporation
*If demand is excused or wrongfully refused, shareholder can control
*Protect corporate boards from harassment and discourage strike suits
Demand Excusal, if Demand is Futile:
1) Majority of Board has material or familial interest
2) Majority of Board is incapable of acting independently
3) Underlying Transactions are not product of valid “Business Judgment Rule”
**Note: don’t focus on #3
Wrongful Refusal:
-If the board says no to demand, this claims that Board’s judgment is wrong
-This is difficult because Business Judgment Rule (presumed to run business in best
interest of the corporation)
-To overcome, the plaintiff must allege facts with particularity, creating reasonably
doubt that the board acted independently or with due care (note Grimes does NOT
do this)
Grimes v. Donald (Grimes, a shareholder, sues CEO Donald and the Board of
Directors because he believes too much power was given to Donald. He thinks the
Board should be running the business, not Donald, and that too much money is
given to Donald)
Claim #1= Abdication. Court says this is fine. It is okay to delegate to people and
the Board does retain ultimate decision because they can fire Donald, even though
he gets paid a lot if they do. So Board is within authority.
Claim #2 Derivate Claim/Demand claim For derivative lawsuits, there is a
requirement that in order to proceed, you must first go to Board and make a
demand that the Board takes over the lawsuit and brings wrongdoers to justice.
Here, Grimes did make demand and Board said no. Because this happened we
follow the “Wrongful Refusal Doctrine” which is difficult to overcome because of
Business Judgment Rule, so Grimes it out of luck.
DGCL 141(C)(2)- Special Litigation Committees & Demand Requirement
Board may designate 1 or more committees, each consisting of 1 or more directors.
The Board committee may exercise all the powers and authority of the full board.
Note, also, 141(a)- Business Judgment Rule. The business and affairs of the
corporation shall be managed by or under the direction of the Board of Directors.
There is a rebuttable presumption that directors and officers carry out their
functions in good faith, after sufficient investigation, and for valid business reasons.
Oracle (more recent than Zapata; shareholder sues directors for insider trading, so
Oracle sets up special litigation committee. The directors put 2 Stanford professors
on the committee because they weren’t on the Board at the time of the alleged
wrongdoing. Their decision would be binding. They recommend not taking action)
Court finds that they did intensive investigation, were not compensated, weren’t
there at the time of the incident, did not benefit, were financially independent BUT
there was a SOCIAL tie. There was professor/student relationship as well as
friendships within Stanford, enough to jeopardize independence.
Corporate Philanthropy
Delaware General Corporation Code 102(A)(3)
-Certificate of Incorporation shall set forth nature of the business. It may say
“any lawful act or activity.” It may also contain restrictions.
Dodge v. Ford Motor (Ford is controlling shareholder/on Board, Dodge are minority
shareholders…Ford wants to change dividends such that the regular one gets paid
but the special dividends funds long-term expansion plain. Dodge says the goal
should be to advance shareholder interests, not charity) Court holds for Dodge.
They think Ford’s discretion went too far (focus on short term).
*This case seems wrong because they didn’t note how long-term expansion
would create more profit in the long-term for shareholders
Wrigley (Shareholder wants lights on the field (more games, more profit), but
Wrigley doesn’t want baseball at night & doesn’t want to disturb community)
Court holds that Business Judgment Rule lets Wrigley decide. Plaintiff couldn’t
establish abuse of discretion, illegality, conflict of interest. There is also no evidence
that plaintiff showed lack of lights damaged profits).
*So modern viewpoint (Berle-Dodd debate) is that corporations should
primarily serve shareholders but they can have non-main purpose to serve
outside constituencies and charities.
DGCL 141(b)- Board Composition and Action: Composed of one or more members
(fixed in bylaws or certificate). The majority of the total number is called a Quorum
(it can be reduced to 1/3 in the bylaws). A valid board action is a vote of majority of
directors present at a meeting with quorum present (note this can require a
supermajority).
DGCL 251(b)- Board Approval: Board of each merging corporation shall adopt a
resolution approving an agreement of merger and declaring its advisability
Note Exception…
DGCL 141(e)- Good Faith Reliance on Records and Reports
In performing their duties, board members may rely in good faith on records of
corporation and on information, opinions, reports, statements presented to the
corporation by corporation’s officers or employees
Smith v. Van Gorkom (Here, Board approved merger at only price bid on, after 2
hours of consideration, no documentation, no valuation study…nothing except the
word of CEO. They gave shareholders insufficient/incorrect information and they
ratified it too) Court held they violated duty of care because it wasn’t sufficient to
take on faith what CEO said and spend such little time debating it. Shareholder
ratification doesn’t occur because of bad information. Exception of 141(e) is not
met because Van Gorkom did tell them things but there was no information, opinion,
report, or statement that classifies (it has to be more concrete than speculation!) So
duty of care is violated.
Duty to Monitor
Bad company:
Francis v. United Jersey Bank (Woman inherits 48% shareholder + director from
husband. Two sons, also directors, are misappropriating funds, which would have
been obvious if she had paid attention) Court says she needed to acquire a
rudimentary understanding of the business, keep informed, stay current with
corporate activities, not shut eyes to corporate misconduct (general monitoring, not
detailed inspection), and must maintain familiarity with financial status of
corporation. Instead, she just stayed boarded up in her house…completely passive.
Business Judgment Rule doesn’t cover her when she didn’t do anything.
Good company:
In Re Caremark (Law prohibits kickbacks for Medicaid referral. Caremark starts to
get in trouble, so when they became aware they discontinued management fees,
created internal and external audits, created ethics handbook, created ethics hotline,
created a compliance officer, etc.) Court holds to approve settlement because the
directors were the opposite of passive. When the Board became aware they put in
reasonable compliance measures.
Duty of Loyalty
Flieger v. Lawrence (Lawrence wants to sell property to Agau. The board rejects it,
but then officers/directrs as individuals form company, USAC, to acquire the
property and develop it. They then have option contract where they sell all of their
shares in USAC for 800,000 shares of Agau. Majority of shareholders ratified this
option contract. Plaintiff derivative action to recover the shares) Directors say
they are protected by ratification under DGCL 144(a) when shareholders ratified.
Court says no. Can’t get disinterred director approval because they’re all interested.
Shareholder ratification doesn’t count because you need majority of disinterested
and apparently that didn’t happen here either. But court does uphold as the contrat
being fair because the shares were of value and could generate profit for the
corporation.
Broz v. Cellular Information Systems (Broz is president of FRBC and director of CIS.
He takes opportunity that someone who was considering acquiring CIS wanted)
This case fails the Guth test. The same line of business test was met. But three
aren’t. CIS didn’t have the financial ability to buy the license. They did not have
interest/expectancy because they were divesting themselves of licenses. And there
was no conflict because Broz approached CIS about it first. So test isn’t met.
In Re eBay (In return for business, Goldman Sachs gave certain directors stock
options at a lower price that they could turn around and sell for higher. They’re
accused of a kickback…Goldman Sachs giving directors these instead of the
corporation.) Court says Guth test is met. eBay definitely had financial ability. It
was in the same line of business, as stocks were part of their cash-management
strategy. The corporation definitely would have expected this after spending
money…rather than it going to individual directors. And taking this did conflict
because the corporation was never given the opportunity that the directors took. So
directors lose.
Sinclair Oil v. Levien (Sinclair owns 97% of Sinven and Levien is minority
shareholder. There are three main conflicts)
*Claim that Sinclair was hurting Sinven by giving dividends Business Judgment
Rule. Minority shareholders get what majority shareholder gets, so standard
rule.
*Claim that Sinclair was Denying Business Opportunities Business Judgment Rule.
No self-dealing. Levien couldn’t point to any opportunity that belonged to
Sinven and was given to someone else.
*Other Subsidiary of Sinclair keeps breaking contract with Sinven, but no
punishment This is Intrinsic Fairness (harder than Business Judgment).
Because Sincliar was getting the benefit of the breach of contract, they benefitted
to the disadvantage of the minority shareholders.
LLCs
ULLCA 201-
LLC is a legal entity distinct from its members
*Hybrid. Limited liability (corporations) + flow through tax (partnership)
Corporate Characteristics
Limited Liability
Free Transferability
Continuity of Life
Centralized Management, vs member management
Westec v Lanham (Westec contracted with Clark, who said he was agent of Lanham.
Business card had Clark’s name, Lanham’s address, and PII- but didn’t say what PII
is) Court pretty much decides this based on agency. Clark is dismissed as a
disclosed agent. Lanham could have avoided liability by disclosing he worked for
PII, a LLC. (Court rejects idea that companies are put on constructive notice by filing
of a LLC.)
ULLCA 103(a)- Operating Agreement (Like By-Laws)
-Members of LLC may enter into Operating Agreement to regulate conduct of
business and relations among members, managers, and company.
-Members may not change provisions of the ULLCA specified in 103(b), such as the
duty of loyalty, duty of care.
-Unless changed by the Operating Agreement, the default rules of the ULLCA apply.
Elf v. Jaffari (Elf files derivative lawsuit against Jaffari, claiming mismanagement.
But there is an arbitration agreement) So court dismisses the lawsuit. Operating
agreements have a lot of freedom of contract.
ULLCA Dissolution
801- Events of Dissolution
802- Winding up after Dissolution
805- Filing of Articles of Termination
806- Creditors must be paid!
*Includes members entitled to return of contributions
807- Disposing of known claims by giving notice to Creditors
808- Disposing of other claims by publishing notice to Creditors in newspaper
*Other claims are barred
808(d)(2)- Member liability to creditors is up to the amount received in distribution
New Horizons v. Haack (Haack’s LLC entered into debts. She claims limited liability.
There was a problem with the way Haack conducted herself in resolving the
business. No evidence of how she distributed the accounts. Not sure if she pocketed
it or gave it to creditors) Court holds that there are statutory steps she needed to
do to dissolve. Haack doesn’t get protection of FRE 808(d)(2) because the court
assumes she pocketed the remaining funds so she has to pay a claim for that amount
(the amount she could have pocketed).
Suppose she proved she put $2000 into business, she had paid Kickappoo’s
debts and then pocketed $500. Then New Horizons shows up with $1000. Her
liability would be for $500, because she would be limited to the amount she
received. This set of facts assumes she follows correct procedures.
Securities Regulations
Scope:
-Disclosure provisions
-Anti-fraud provisions
-Regulating markets and market professionals
What is a Security?
Securities Act of 1933, Section 2(a)(1)
Security means (unless the context otherwise requires) any note, stock, treasury
stock, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, investment contract, or in general
any interest or instrument commonly known as security. (Note LLC membership
interest is not listed)
-Implications of calling an investment opportunity a “security” Disclosure
and anti-fraud provisions apply.
Economic Realities Test: aren’t bound to someone’s label, but as to how something
was used in practice. (Just because you call something stock doesn’t mean it’s stock)
Defenses:
-Loss causation: reason you lost money was not because of
misstatement/omissions, but because there was some other reason (example: stock
market crash)
-Due diligence
What is Due Diligence:
Expert Non-Expert
Expertised Portion Reasonably believes, after No reason to believe information
reasonable investigation, is false
that info is true
Non-expertised No liability Reasonably believes, after
Portion reasonable investigation, that
info is true
Escott v. BarChris (bowling alley securities) Essentially no one meets the above
chart
Anti-Fraud #2-
In Re Cady Roberts (SEC Case 1961, we didn’t read it) SEC recognized common
law duty of corporate insiders to disclose inside information when dealing in
securities.
SEC v. Texas Gulf (there was drilling going on with good findings. The company 1)
bought securities on the good oil news before it was released to the public and 2)
lied in publicly denying the find) 3 issues:
Prohibition of Insider Trading: When insiders, those with access to non-public
information, have information…they have it for a purpose to do their work and
make business decisions. It was confidential when they bought the stock, so they
misused the information for personal gain.
Standard of Materiality: test= would a reasonable investor want to know the
information in making investment decisions. Here, the information was speculative.
So when information is speculative courts START with Reasonable Man Standard
and then NEXT move to the Probability Magnitude Test:
*Weigh the probability of something happening with the magnitude of that
event. Here, the probability of a ore strike was high and the magnitude of the
impact of the company would be large. So it was material.
In Connection Requirement Company says they aren’t liable because the ore
strike wasn’t in connection with purchase/sale of securities. Court disagrees, says it
is enough when there is false information if the investors can show you knew what
you were putting out was not correct and investors would rely on it.
Chiarella v. United States (Supreme Court 1980 case, we didn’t read, person in
printing business read a document he was printing and was able to figure out a
corporate transaction) Court says no liability. The fact the person got inside
information doesn’t mean automatic liability; mere possession is not enough. Only
liability when there is a breach of a fiduciary duty. The duty to abstain arises from a
relationship of trust between a corporation’s shareholders and employees.
Misappropriation
-Outsider violates 10b/10b-5 when he trades on material non-public information in
breach of a duty owed to the source of such information.
-Disclosure to source of information absolves the breach.
U.S. v. O’Hagan (O’Hagan is partner a law firm who is representing Grand Met who is
making a tender offer for Pillsbury, which is confidential. But O’Hagan began
purchasing stock options in Pillsbury and sold after public announcement) No
classic rule (you must be an insider to Pillsbury). No tippee (no tipper affiliated
with Pillsbury giving information for personal benefit. So third theory. An outsider
violates when he trades on material, non-public information by breaching a
fiduciary duty owed to the source of that information. Here, O’Hagan owed a duty to
his law firm and his client. He should have disclosed!
O’Hagan also challenged 14-e-3 and says it should be struck down because it
doesn’t require that someone breach a duty. Says it’s in excess of SEC’s authority.
But court upholds, deferring to SEC.
Proxy
Purpose: Must have certain number of people holding stock to be present (person or
proxy). But only those present can vote. Because majority won’t show, proxy must
happen.
Uses: Solicit shareholder votes needed to hold meeting and take valid shareholder
action
Fights: For corporate control. Incumbents want to keep control. Insurgents want to
take control.
Levin v. MGM (O’Brien is incumbent; Levin is insurgent. Levin loses and sues that
O’Brien’s group used excessive expenditure of corporate money…proxies cost a lot)
Court says expenditure is fine. Insurgents don’t have to step aside and let
insurgents take over. They have the right to expend corporate money. But court
notes that proxy fight needs to be over policy…not just wanting to stay in power.
*When incumbents when they reimburse themselves.
NYBCL 1315
*Shareholder must have at least 5% of outstanding shares
*Must give 5 days demand in writing to business
*Types of records you can get are limited
*Must provide affidavit saying you’ll only use list for certain, legitimate purposes
Crane v. Anaconda (Crane is trying to take over Anaconda, but they don’t want it.
They are shareholder that wants stockholder list to reach out to shareholders
directly to buy their stocks) Court agrees with Crane, that there is proper
purpose to inform shareholders of valuable exchange offers. Anaconda doesn’t have
any reason besides trying to keep themselves in office.
DGCL 220 (broader than NY)
*Any stockholder
*Written demand
*Request to inspect during normal business hours
*Can request shareholder list, also books and other records (but there is a higher
burden of proof for books/records than there is for shareholder lists)