FIDUCIARY DUTIES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

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FIDUCIARY DUTIES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Jenifer R. Smith, Partner September 21, 2017 www.dlapiper.com September 2017 0

Introduction Every director owes fiduciary duties to the corporation and its shareholders. Since directors can be subject to personal liability for breaches of these duties, it is important that they understand their obligations under law. This presentation discusses: The core fiduciary duties of care and loyalty. Specific director obligations that flow from the core fiduciary duties. The standards of review that courts apply when judging directors' conduct. How directors can limit their exposure to liability. Fiduciary duty issues in the limited liability company context. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 1

Role of Directors in Management of the Corporation Ultimate responsibility for the business and affairs of the corporation belongs to the board of directors. Shareholders have two fundamental rights: To elect directors to the board. To exit the corporation by selling their shares. The shareholders do not manage the corporation. No less true when there is a majority shareholder. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 2

Role of Directors in Management of the Corporation (cont'd) The board makes decisions on behalf of the corporation by: Appointing officers who run the day-to-day operations of the corporation, propose strategies and objectives, and implement corporate plans. Supervising those officers. Making major decisions for the corporation (for example, selling the company or entering into a significant joint venture). Delegating powers to committees. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 3

Sources of Director Duties The "corporate contract" consists of three components: The state corporate statute (the Delaware General Corporation Law). The corporation's certificate of incorporation. The corporation's bylaws. The fiduciary duties of the board are codified in some state statutes. In Delaware, they remain a product of common law. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 4

The Fiduciary Duties of the Board of Directors The core fiduciary duties of the board of directors are: The duty of care. The duty of loyalty. Other duties like the duty of good faith and duty of oversight stem from the core fiduciary duties. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 5

To Whom Are Fiduciary Duties Owed? Directors owe their fiduciary duties to the corporation and its shareholders. Common stock, not preferred stock. The rights of the preferred are governed by contract. The corporation itself does not owe fiduciary duties to the shareholders. If the board commits a breach of fiduciary duty, the complaint is with the board, not the corporation. The corporation cannot be held to have aided or abetted the board's breach. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 6

Financially Troubled Companies If the corporation is insolvent, directors continue to owe fiduciary duties to the corporation, but the corporation's creditors replace the shareholders as the primary beneficiaries of those duties. Creditors of solvent corporations are generally protected by the contract and debtor-creditor law, not by corporate law binding the directors. Duties to creditors do not arise until actual insolvency. However, it can be difficult or impossible to pinpoint the moment when a corporation actually becomes insolvent. Best practice is to start considering the interests of creditors and maximizing value for the corporate enterprise rather than just the stockholders once the corporation is in financial distress or in the zone of insolvency. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 7

Duty of Care The duty of care requires that directors be informed of all material information reasonably available to them when making decisions for the corporation. A director must act with the care that a person in a like position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances. Directors have no per se duty to maximize the profits of the corporation. Directors can take actions (for example, charitable donations) that do not directly increase profits, as long as there is a connection to a rational business purpose. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 8

Duty of Loyalty The duty of loyalty requires directors to act in good faith for the benefit of the corporation and its shareholders, not for their own personal interest. Corporate opportunity doctrine: an officer or director may not divert to himself or his affiliates any business opportunity presented to, or otherwise rightfully belonging to, the corporation. The corporation can renounce its interest in specified business opportunities in its certificate of incorporation or by board action. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 9

The Board's Conduct

Business Judgment Rule In making business decisions, directors are generally protected by the business judgment rule. The rule presumes that disinterested and independent directors acted: On an informed basis. In good faith. In the honest belief that the action was taken in the best interest of the corporation. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 11

Business Judgment Rule (cont'd) Informed. Directors must inform themselves of all material information reasonably available to them. Directors can rely on information and opinions from consultants and management, if those persons can competently produce those reports. Good faith. The decision-making process must be substantive and cannot just rubber stamp management's actions. Best interest of the corporation. The directors must reasonably believe the action was taken in the best interests of the corporation. The standard for a finding of breach is gross negligence. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 12

Corporate Waste If the plaintiff fails to rebut the presumption of the business judgment rule (no conflict of interest, no bad faith, no gross negligence), no remedy unless the challenged transaction constitutes waste. Stringent standard that is only met in the "rare, unconscionable case where directors irrationally squander or give away corporate assets." Spending on items such as employee vehicles, outings, social club dues and holiday gifts has been found to not constitute waste. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 13

Exculpation from Liability What if a board of disinterested and independent directors has been found to have acted with gross negligence? Breach of the duty of care is grounds for liability, unless (as is common) the corporation exculpates directors for breaches of that duty. The certificate of incorporation can contain a provision eliminating or limiting the personal liability of directors to the corporation for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty. This applies only to a breach of the duty of care, not a breach of the duty of loyalty, including the duty of good faith. It is not retroactive. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 14

Breach of Duty of Loyalty: Bad Faith There is no single definition of good faith or bad faith. To act in good faith, a director must act with honesty of purpose and in the best interest of the corporation. Situations that usually involve bad faith: An intentional failure to act in the face of a known duty to act, demonstrating a conscious disregard for one's duties. A knowing violation of the law. Acting for any purpose other than advancing the best interests of the corporation or its shareholders. Beyond gross negligence. Actual or constructive knowledge required. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 15

Bad Faith via Failure of Oversight A component of the duty of care is to have a functioning oversight and compliance system. The board must implement an adequate system for reporting issues to the board. "Caremark" claim: the plaintiff alleges the board failed to oversee the company to a degree tantamount to bad faith. Director liability under Caremark arises where either: The directors utterly failed to implement any reporting or information system or controls. Having implemented such a system or controls, the directors consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations. "Possibly the most difficult theory on which a plaintiff might hope to win a judgment." www.dlapiper.com September 2017 16

Breach of Duty of Loyalty: Conflict of Interest Conflict transactions: If a majority of the directors hold a personal interest in a transaction, or if a majority of the directors are not independent, they lose the presumption that they acted in the best interest of the corporation. Directors are not deemed to have breached their fiduciary duties just because they were not disinterested and independent. However: Their decisions will be judged for their fairness. If found liable, their liability cannot be exculpated away. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 17

Conflict of Interest: Disinterest and Independence Disinterest: Material financial interest not shared equally by the shareholders vs. any self-dealing (even immaterial). The materiality of a financial benefit is determined in the context of the director's personal financial circumstances. Independence: The director is so beholden to the controller or so under his influence that the director's discretion would be sterilized. Personal and business ties together. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 18

Conflict of Interest: Potential Liability Directors are not automatically liable in conflict transactions, even if the transaction is ruled unfair to the shareholders. If the charter contains an exculpatory provision for breaches of the duty of care: Any directors who themselves are disinterested and independent are only liable if they approved the transaction in subjective bad faith. Any director lacking in disinterest or independence is subject to damages regardless of subjective intent. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 19

Heightened Standards of Review

Situations Requiring Stricter Review Certain contexts remove the presumptions of the business judgment rule because of the possibility of a conflict of interest. Courts use greater scrutiny in determining whether a board carried out its fiduciary duties in these situations: Transactions with a controlling shareholder on both sides. Interference with shareholder vote. Sale of the company. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 21

Conflict and Controller Transactions The "entire fairness" standard of review (Delaware law's most onerous standard) applies in two general circumstances: When a controlling shareholder stands on both sides of the transaction. If at least half of the directors who approved the transaction were not disinterested and independent. The defendants must establish both: Fair dealing. How the transaction was timed, initiated, structured, negotiated, disclosed by management to the directors, approved by the board and shareholders. Fair price. All relevant factors: assets, market value, earnings, future prospects, any other elements that affect the intrinsic value of the stock. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 22

Sale of the Company Once the board agrees to a sale, two legal changes: The focus of the board's duties shifts to obtaining the highest value reasonably attainable for the shareholders. The board's conduct is reviewed for its reasonableness. The board's conduct must be reasonable, not perfect. No single blueprint for fulfilling the board's duties. If the corporation has an exculpatory clause, breach is established only if the board utterly failed to attempt to obtain the best price. A fully informed shareholder vote approving the sale restores the business judgment rule. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 23

Duty of Disclosure To ratify conflict transactions or restore the business judgment rule, the shareholder vote must be fully informed. Directors have a duty to communicate honestly with shareholders and to make full and fair disclosures. The board is not required to provide all of the corporation's financial or business information to the shareholders. The information must meet a standard of a "substantial likelihood that the disclosure of the omitted fact would have been viewed by the reasonable shareholder as having significantly altered the total mix of information made available." www.dlapiper.com September 2017 24

Indemnification and Insurance

Director Indemnification and Insurance There are three main ways for the corporation to limit its directors' exposure to personal liability for breach of fiduciary duty: A written provision in the corporation's certificate of incorporation eliminating or limiting a director's personal liability for breach of the duty of care (a 102(b)(7) provision, already discussed). Indemnification and advancement. Directors and officers insurance ("D&O Insurance"). www.dlapiper.com September 2017 26

Indemnification and Advancement Directors have a right to indemnification when they are made a party to a proceeding, and succeed on the merits, because of their service to the corporation. A director may also seek an advancement of expenses from the corporation. Delaware law permits, but does not require, the corporation to advance the director's expenses as they are incurred. The expenses must be incurred for the purpose of "defending" oneself, not for initiating "offensive litigation" to vindicate one's reputation. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 27

D&O Insurance Delaware law permits corporations to insure directors to cover losses (such as settlement costs, fines, and legal fees) resulting from liability arising from actions taken while acting in an official capacity. Insurance to protect directors from fraud, dishonesty, or for violations of criminal law cannot be purchased. The three most common types of D&O coverage serve to: Protect directors and officers from personal loss resulting from conduct arising out of their duties to the company ("Side A" coverage). Reimburse the company for indemnifying directors and officers for claims made against them ("Side B" coverage). Reimburse the company for certain claims made directly against it ("Side C" coverage). www.dlapiper.com September 2017 28

Limited Liability Companies

Fiduciary Duties of Members of LLCs in Delaware Unless the limited liability company agreement says otherwise, the managers and controlling members of a Delaware limited liability company owe fiduciary duties of care and loyalty to the limited liability company and its members. Parties are free to expand, restrict or eliminate fiduciary duties (subject to the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing). Members and managers can rely in good faith on information, opinions, reports, or statements from other members or managers, officers, employees, committees, or any other person regarding matters the member or manager reasonably believes are within that person's professional or expert competence. www.dlapiper.com September 2017 30

Questions

For Further Information or Questions Please Contact: Jenifer R. Smith DLA Piper LLP (US) Partner e: Jenifer.Smith@dlapiper.com o: 512.457.7037 www.dlapiper.com September 2017 32