We have what I think is our first decision interpreting the new DGCL 144: Ayers v. Foley, from VC Will.
This is a derivative action challenging a board’s award of compensation to itself, and an award of compensation to the company’s founder and Chair. What is particularly amusing is that the company, Fidelity National Financial, is now organized in Nevada; its reincorporation became effective one day after the lawsuit was filed. What is also amusing is that FNF’s first attempt to reincorporate to Nevada failed a shareholder vote; the company was only able to win shareholder approval by committing in its charter to adopting greater shareholder protections than Nevada provides.
So, the case. With respect to the award to the board, the defendants conceded that this was an interested transaction, with no cleansing mechanisms, and demand was excused; the only argument they made was that plaintiffs’ complaint did not make it “reasonably conceivable” that the compensation was not entirely fair. That argument was a heavy lift, and VC Will rejected it; those claims will proceed.
The real action concerned the grant to the company founder and chair. He held only 3.6% of the stock; there was no argument he was a controlling shareholder.
So the issue for the court was whether demand was excused under Rule 23.1. Which meant, VC Will had to decide whether a majority of the board was disinterested and independent under the standard set forth in United Food & Commercial Workers Union & Participating Food Industry Employers Tri-State Pension Fund v. Zuckerberg.
But, nine out of eleven board members had been identified as independent under NYSE listing rules. And under new DGCL 144(d)(2):
Any director of a corporation that has a class of stock listed on a national securities exchange shall be presumed to be a disinterested director with respect to an act or transaction to which such director is not a party if the board of directors shall have determined that such director satisfies the applicable criteria for determining director independence from the corporation … which presumption shall be heightened and may only be rebutted by substantial and particularized facts that such director has a material interest in such act or transaction or has a material relationship with a person with a material interest in such act or transaction.
So the question for VC Will was, does this provision extend to demand excusal, or is it solely limited to cleansing interested transactions, which is the subject of DGCL 144?
She concluded that it does extend to demand excusal:
Where the General Assembly intended a provision to apply only within Section 144, it said so expressly. In Section 144(d) itself, the legislature took care to confine a provision to specific paragraphs—and did so within paragraph (d)(7), where it named three other paragraphs to which the rule applies. Similarly, the preface to Section 144(e) states that its definitions are “[f]or purposes of this section.” Section 144(d)(2) contains no such limiting language.
If “provisions are expressly included in one part of a statute, but omitted from another, it is reasonable to conclude that the legislature was aware of the omission and intended it.” The purposeful omission of limiting language in paragraph (d)(2) illustrates the legislature’s intent that the heightened presumption apply broadly, including when assessing director disinterestedness for purposes of Rule 23.1. Reading paragraph (d)(2) to apply solely within Section 144 would also deprive the limiting language in paragraph (d)(7) and subsection (e) of independent meaning, contrary to settled principles of statutory construction.
Although Rule 23.1 already requires particularized facts to rebut the presumption of independence and disinterestedness, Section 144(d)(2) goes further by requiring both “substantial and particularized facts.” The inclusion of the additional modifier suggests a legislative intent to strengthen the presumption beyond the Rule 23.1 standard.
In other words, VC Will read the legislature’s intent for DGCL 144(d)(2) to be incorporated into demand excusal, because nothing in DGCL 144(d)(2) says its definition of disinterestedness is to be confined solely to that particular section of the Code. Other provisions of DGCL 144, such as DGCL 144(e), are so confined. From there, VC Will went on to find demand was not excused with respect to the founder compensation.
Fine.
But later in the opinion….
The statute requires “substantial and particularized facts” demonstrating either “a material interest” in a transaction or “a material relationship” with an interested person…. See also id. § 144(e)(7), (8) (defining “[m]aterial interest” and “[m]aterial relationship”).
Um. Didn’t we just agree that DGCL 144(e) is limited to DGCL 144? That’s what distinguishes it from DGCL 144(d)? But DGCL 144(e) ended up getting imported into Rule 23.1 via DGCL 144(d) nonetheless, which suggests the inquiry can’t be as simple as trying to divide the pieces of DGCL 144 into those that apply to “this section” and those that apply more broadly.
Look, this is a difficult problem. On the one hand, DGCL 144 does not in any way incorporate or reference Rule 23.1 It even uses different terminology than the caselaw developed under Rule 23.1: Rule 23.1 caselaw distinguishes between “independence” and “disinterestedness,” and while DGCL 144 clearly includes both concepts substantively, it combines them under a single rubric, “disinterest” (which makes it difficult to teach, by the way). That might be a reason to treat the two as wholly separate.
On the other hand, from a judicial perspective, it is uncomfortable to have a definition of independence for cleansing purposes that is distinct from the definition of independence for the purposes of demand excusal, each of which is subject to a distinct particularity standard.
It is even more uncomfortable when you consider that demand excusal is, as a practical matter, an inquiry into whether a particular type of decision was cleansed – the decision whether to bring a lawsuit. That is, most potentially “interested” board decisions involve actual contracts – to buy something, to sell something, to grant compensation. In the demand context, it’s a different type of potentially interested board decision – the decision whether to sue. Either way, though, we’re talking about what is sufficient to cleanse that decision such that the court will defer to it. Viewed that way, there is no reason the cleansing procedures for the two – actual transactions/contracts, versus decisions whether to bring a lawsuit – should differ at all.
But if that’s the logic, then we have to ask whether the full suite of new DGCL 144 cleansing procedures applies to demand excusal. And that would create real upheaval. For example, DGCL 144 permits cleansing of transactions where the board is majority-conflicted via the use of a committee. But in the context of demand excusal, if the board is majority-conflicted, the use of a special litigation committee is subject to special scrutiny by the court. Not to mention, of course, DGCL 144 has a whole new set of rules for the construction of such a committee.
I don’t know the right answer for any of this. But I think with respect to the narrow question before VC Will – how to evaluate independence – the path of least resistance might have been to say that DGCL 144(d)(2) simply incorporates the particularity standards already employed by Delaware courts under Rule 23.1. Granted, the “substantial” modifier of DGCL 144(d)(2) is new, but I don’t think the 23.1 caselaw finds a lack of independence based on insubstantial facts. And interpreting DGCL 144(d)(2) through Rule 23.1’s lens causes the least disruption, because there’s no need to invent a whole new standard. Rule 23.1 demand excusal does not change; what changes is how allegations of lack of independence are evaluated in cases not governed by Rule 23.1, and that will be done by reference to existing caselaw. I take no position, though, on whether that would have made a difference in this particular case.
And another thing. New Shareholder Primacy podcast is up! Me and Mike Levin talk about the Supreme Court’s decision in FS Credit Opportunities v. Saba Capital Master Fund. Here at Spotify; here at Apple; and here at YouTube.










