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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit No. 10-1953 CDX L IQUIDATING T RUST, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. V ENROCK A SSOCIATES, et al., Defendants-Appellees. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 04 C 7236âCharles R. Norgle, Sr., Judge. A RGUED F EBRUARY 16, 2011âD ECIDED M ARCH 29, 2011 Before P OSNER, FLAUM, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. P OSNER, Circuit Judge. This suit, brought by a trust that holds the common stock of a bankrupt company formerly known as Cadant, charges several former direc- tors with breaches of their duty of loyalty to the corpora- tion, and charges two venture-capital groups, which weâll abbreviate to âVenrockâ and âJ.P. Morgan,â with aiding and abetting the disloyal directors. Trial was bifurcated. Seven weeks into the trial on liability the 2 No. 10-1953 plaintiff rested and the defendants then moved for judg- ment as a matter of law. The district judge granted the motion with a brief oral statement of reasons, precipi- tating this appeal. Cadant had been created in 1998 to develop what are called âcable modem termination systems,â which enable high-speed Internet access to home computers. Though based in Illinois, Cadant initially was incorporated in Maryland and later was reincorporated in Delaware. The founders received common stock in the new corporation at the outset. Others purchased common stock later. Venrock and J.P. Morgan received preferred stock in exchange for an investment in the new company that they made at the beginning of 2000. Eric Copeland, a principal of Venrock, became a member of Cadantâs five- member board of directors. He is the director principally accused of disloyalty to Cadant. In April 2000 the board turned down a tentative offer by ADC Telecommunications to buy Cadantâs assets for $300 million. It was later that year that the board pro- posed and the shareholders approved the reincorporation of Cadant in Delaware, effective January 1, 2001. The suit involves decisions by Cadantâs board made both when Cadant was incorporated in Maryland and when it was reincorporated in Delaware. Illinois choice of law princi- ples, which govern this case because it was filed in Illinois, makes the law applicable to a suit against a director for breach of fiduciary duty that of the state of incorporation. Newell Co. v. Petersen, 758 N.E.2d 903, 923-24 (Ill. App. 2001). This is what is known as the âinternal No. 10-1953 3 affairsâ doctrineââa conflict of laws principle which recognizes that only one State should have the authority to regulate a corporationâs internal affairsâmatters peculiar to the relationships among or between the corpo- ration and its current officers, directors, and sharehold- ersâbecause otherwise a corporation could be faced with conflicting demands.â Edgar v. MITE Corp., 457 U.S. 624, 645 (1982); see also Nagy v. Riblet Products Corp., 79 F.3d 572, 576 (7th Cir. 1996); Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws § 309 (1971). The earliest challenged decision by Cadantâs boardâthe decision not to respond to ADCâs acquisition offer in April 2000âthus is easily dismissed. Maryland law applied at that time and under that law directors have no duty to âaccept, recommend, or respond on behalf of the corporation to any proposal by an acquiring person.â Md. Code, Corporations and Associations § 2-405.1(d)(1). In the fall of 2000, Cadant found itself in finan- cial trouble. The defendants attribute this to the de- flatingâbeginning in the spring of 2000 and continuing throughout the year and into the next yearâof the dot- com bubble of the late 1990s. Weâll return to the question of what caused Cadantâs financial distress, but whatever the cause the company needed fresh investment. The board considered a proposal from a group of Chicago investors and a joint proposal from Venrock and J.P. Morgan, and eventually decided on an $11 million loan from Venrock and J.P. Morgan. The terms of the loan were negotiated on Cadantâs behalf by Copeland. The board of directors had grown to seven members, of whom four, including Copeland, were employees of 4 No. 10-1953 Venrock or J.P. Morgan, though one of them, defendant C.H. Randolph Lyon, resigned from J.P. Morgan before the loan was made, while remaining a director of Cadant. The loan was a âbridge loan,â which is a short-term loan intended to tide the borrower over while he seeks longer-term financing. The $11 million bridge loan to Cadant was for only 90 days, at an annual interest rate of 10 percent; it also gave the lenders warrants (never exercised) to buy common stock of Cadant. Cadant ran through the entire loan, which had been made in January 2001, within a few months. Venrock and J.P. Morgan then made a second bridge loan, in May, this one for $9 million, again negotiated on Cadantâs behalf by Copeland. The loan agreement provided that in the event that Cadant was liquidated the lenders would be entitled to be paid twice the outstanding principal of the loan plus any accrued but unpaid interest on it; as a result, little if anything would be left for the share- holders. The disinterested directors of Cadant (the direc- tors who had no affiliation with Venrock or J.P. Morgan) who voted for the loan were engineers without fin- ancial acumen, and because they didnât think to retain their own financial advisor they were at the mercy of the financial advice they received from Copeland and the other conflicted directors. Cadant defaulted on the second bridge loan, and being in deep financial trouble agreed to sell all its assets to a firm called Arris Group in exchange for stock worth, when the sale closed in January 2002, some $55 million. That amount was just large enough to satisfy the claims of No. 10-1953 5 Cadantâs creditors and preferred shareholders (Venrock and J.P. Morgan were both). The sale was approved by Cadantâs board, but also, as required by Delaware law and the companyâs articles of incorporation, by a simple majority both of Cadantâs common and preferred share- holders voting together as a single class and of the pre- ferred shareholders voting separately. The stock in the Arris Group that Cadant received in exchange for Cadantâs assets became the property of the bankrupt estate. It was the estateâs only asset, and its value fell to a level at which Cadant was worth less than the claims of the bridge lenders and other creditors, with the result that the common shareholders were wiped out. They brought this case initially as a free- standing suit in federal district court. But in an earlier decision in this long-running litigation, Kennedy v. Venrock Associates, 348 F.3d 584 (7th Cir. 2003), we held that the suit was a derivative suitâa suit on behalf of the corporation against individuals and firms that had injured it by wrongful conduct. A derivative suit is an asset of the corporation, so if as in this case the corpora- tion is in bankruptcy the suit is an asset of the bankrupt estate. 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1); Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295, 306-07 (1939); Koch Refining v. Farmers Union Central Exchange, Inc., 831 F.2d 1339, 1343-44 (7th Cir. 1987); In re Ionosphere Clubs, Inc., 17 F.3d 600, 604 (2d Cir. 1994). Our previous decision therefore directed that the suit be treated as an adversary action in the bankruptcy proceeding. Initially the district court referred the case to the bankruptcy court, but the reference was with- drawn and the case returned to the district court, pursu- 6 No. 10-1953 ant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(e), when the plaintiff demanded a jury trial and the parties did not agree to allow the bankruptcy judge to conduct it. The district judge gave two independent grounds for granting judgment as a matter of law for the defen- dants. The first was that there was insufficient evidence of proximate cause to allow a reasonable jury to render a verdict for the plaintiff, and the second was that there was likewise insufficient evidence of a breach of fiduciary duty. These grounds turn out to be intertwined. (Ordinarily the issue of duty would precede that of cause, but no matter.) The term âproximate causeâ is pervasive in American tort law, but that doesnât mean itâs well understood. A common definition is that there must be proof of âsome direct relation between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct alleged.â Hemi Group, LLC v. City of New York, 130 S. Ct. 983, 989 (2010), quoting Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp., 503 U.S. 258, 268 (1992). But âdirectâ is no more illuminating than âproxi- mate.â Both are metaphors rather than definitions. What the courts are trying to do by intoning these words is to focus attention on whether the particular contribu- tion that the defendant made to the injury for which the plaintiff has sued him resulted from conduct that we want to deter or punish by imposing liability, as in the famous case of Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R., 162 N.E. 99 (N.Y. 1928) (Cardozo, C.J.). The plaintiff was injured when a heavy metal scale collapsed on the railroad plat- form on which she was standing. The scale had buckled No. 10-1953 7 from damage caused by fireworks dropped by a passenger trying, with the aid of a conductor, to board a moving train at some distance from the scale. She sued the railroad; it would have been unthinkable for her to sue the scaleâs manufacturer, even though if heavy metal scales did not exist she would not have been in- jured. No one would think the scaleâs manufacturer should be liable, because no one would think that tort law should try to encourage manufacturers of scales to take steps to prevent the kind of accident that befell Mrs. Palsgraf. The railroad was a more plausible defen- dant; its conductor had tugged the passenger aboard while the train was already moving. But how could he have foreseen that his act would have triggered an ex- plosion, as distinct from a possible injury to the boarder? If an accident is so freakish as to be unforeseeable, liability is unlikely to have a deterrent effect. Coming closer to our case, the defendants cite our decision in Movitz v. First National Bank of Chicago, 148 F.3d 760 (7th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff had bought a building in Houston in reliance on what he claimed was the defendantâs misrepresentation of its value. Had it not been for the misrepresentation he would not have bought it. Shortly after the purchase the Houston real estate market collapsed and his investment was wiped out. The misrepresentation had not caused that col- lapse but it had been a cause of the plaintiffâs buying the building and thus had contributed to his loss. Yet we ruled, without using the term âproximate cause,â that he could not recover from the defendant because (among other reasons) that would produce overdeterrence by 8 No. 10-1953 making the defendant an insurer of conditions that he could not control. Id. at 763. That would be as futile as making the manufacturer of the scale an insurer of Mrs. Palsgrafâs loss. The present case is superficially similar to Movitz because it is possible that what did in Cadant and hence its common shareholders (some at least of the preferred shareholdersâsuch as Venrock and J.P. Morganâseem to have come out all right) was not the defendantsâ alleged misconduct but the collapse of the dot-com bubble. And indeed the district court ruled that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the defendantsâ miscon- duct had been a âproximate causeâ of Cadantâs ruination, just as in Movitz. But we disagree with his ruling in two respects. First, the burden of proof on the issue of causa- tion (or if one prefers, of âproximate causationâ) was on the defendants rather than on the plaintiff and the judge cut off the trial before the defendants presented their defenses. Second, there was enough evidence that the bursting of the dot-com bubble did not account for the entire loss to Cadant to make causation an issue requiring factfinding and therefore for the jury to re- solve. The dot-com bubble was primarily in the stocks of firms that marketed their goods or services over the Internet. Cadant did not, and anyway it was in the hardware business, the fortunes of which depend on the volume of Internet traffic, which continued to increase even after the bubble burst. There may have been a crossover effect; the collapse of stock values, and the recession (mild though it was) that accompanied it, reduced the amount of venture capital available for No. 10-1953 9 technology companies generally, and so may have made it difficult for Cadant to obtain needed investment on reasonable terms. Our point is only that the effect of the bubbleâs bursting on Cadant was a jury issue, not an issue that the judge could resolve because the effect was incontestable. The first pointâthat the burden of proof on the issue of causation was on the defendantsâis counterintuitive. Ordinarily the burden of proving causation is on the plaintiff, since without an injury caused by the defendant there is no tort no matter how wrongful the defendantâs behavior was. Robinson v. McNeil Consumer Healthcare, 615 F.3d 861, 865-66 (7th Cir. 2010). Delaware law, however, creates an exception for suits against directors of a corporationâan exception not to the re- quirement that there be proof of causation but to the requirement that the plaintiff prove causation rather than the defendantâs having to prove absence of causation. To explain: When a director is sued for breach of his duty of loyalty or care to the shareholders, his first line of defense is the business-judgment rule, which creates a presumption that a business decision, including a recommendation or vote by a corporate director, was made in good faith and with due care. E.g., Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345, 360-61 (Del. 1993). But the presumption can be overcome by proof that the director breached his fiduciary duty to the corpora- tionâhis duty of loyalty and his duty to exercise due care in its performance. âIfââand here we come to the nub of the causation issue in this caseââthe [business- 10 No. 10-1953 judgment] rule is rebutted, the burden shifts to the de- fendant directors, the proponents of the challenged transaction, to prove to the trier of fact the âentire fair- nessâ of the transaction to the shareholder plaintiff.â Id. at 361; see also references in Teachersâ Retirement System of Louisiana v. Aidinoff, 900 A.2d 654, 674-76 nn. 30-32 (Del. Ch. 2006). Delaware law permits the shareholders to adopt (and Cadantâs shareholders did adopt) a charter provision exculpating directors from liability in damages for failure to exercise due care, but does not enforce a provi- sion exculpating them from liability for disloyalty, Emerald Partners v. Berlin, 787 A.2d 85, 95-97 (Del. 2001), and that is the charge in this case. But does Delaware law govern the issue? Cadantâs articles of incorporation in both Maryland and Delaware said that its directors would be exempted from liability for breaches of fiduciary duty to the fullest extent permitted by state lawâand the two statesâ laws are, or at least may be, different. Delaware provides that articles of incorporation âshall not eliminate or limit the liability of a director . . . for any breach of the directorâs duty of loyalty to the corporation or its stockholders,â Del. General Corporation Law § 102(b)(7), while Maryland law allows a corporation to shield its directors from all liability other than for âactive and deliberate dishon- esty.â Md. Code, Courts and Judicial Proceedings § 5- 418(a)(2). The plaintiff presented evidence of disloyalty, as weâll see later, but we are uncertain whether it proves âactive and deliberate dishonesty.â The briefs virtually ignore the issue, and we cannot find a case No. 10-1953 11 decided by a Maryland court that construes the term. An unpublished decision by the Fourth Circuit inter- prets the term in the Maryland statute as including fraud, Hayes v. Crown Central Petroleum Corp., 78 Fed. Appâx 857, 865 (4th Cir. 2003), which is a possible charac- terization of the defendantsâ alleged conduct in the present case. And Mississippi v. Richardson, 817 F.2d 1203, 1210 (5th Cir. 1987), construes the identical term ap- pearing in a liability insurance policy to cover âwilful neglect of duties,â embezzlement, and fraudâand willful neglect of duties seems a pretty good description of the defendantsâ alleged wrongdoing. And if there was disloyalty in this case it was deliberate, and maybe thatâs enough to prove âactive and deliberate dishonesty.â We neednât decide, because we think the Delaware statute controls, so far as the bridge loans are concerned, and they are the focus of the suit. The negotiations leading up to the first bridge loan took place in the fall of 2000 and the loan was approved by Cadantâs board on January 10, 2001ânine days after Cadantâs reincorpo- ration in Delaware took effect. Some of the plaintiffâs strongest evidence of the disloyalty of the conflicted directors concerns Copelandâs actions during the nego- tiation of the first loan, and the plaintiff argues that that loan initiated the events which led to the despera- tion sale of the company to Arris. We cannot apply both statesâ law to the first bridge loan, and so we fall back (as did the court in the only factually similar case weâve found, Demoulas v. Demoulas Super Markets, Inc., 677 N.E.2d 159, 169 (Mass. 1997)) to 12 No. 10-1953 general choice of law principles, see Restatement, supra, §§ 309, 6, and ask which stateâs law governing the duties of directors the parties would have expected to govern Cadantâs internal affairs in the critical period, and which state had the greater regulatory interest in the corpora- tionâs internal affairs then. See id., §§ 6(2)(c), (d); Resolu- tion Trust Corp. v. Everhart, 37 F.3d 151, 153-54 (4th Cir. 1994). The answer to both questions is Delaware. It was on November 8, 2000, that Cadantâs board formally ap- proved the decision to reincorporate, in a resolution which stated that âthe Board believes that the State of Delaware has an established body of case law that better enables the Board effectively to meet its fiduciary ob- ligations to the stockholders of the Company.â Copelandâs failure to disclose disloyal acts that he committed during the negotiation was a disloyal act that caused the loan to be approved, and it was approved in January, after the company had reincorporated under Delaware law. The board would have assumed that, certainly from that day forward, the duties of the directors relating to both that loan and the second bridge loan would be governed by Delaware law. Apart from the boardâs refusal to sell the company to ADC Telecommunications, moreoverâan act squarely governed by Maryland law and exempted from liabil- ity by that law because it was concluded before rein- corporation was resolved upon, let alone accom- plishedâmost of the disloyal acts of which the plain- tiff complains occurred while Cadant was a Delaware corporation, and most that occurred earlier occurred after the board had decided that Delaware law made a No. 10-1953 13 better fit with Cadant than Maryland law did. So Delaware had a greater regulatory interest than Maryland in the governance of Cadantâs internal affairs in the critical period in which the events giving rise to this lawsuit occurred. We conclude that the articles of incorporation were not effective in waiving Copelandâs and the other con- flicted directorsâ duty of loyalty, and so proof of their disloyal acts (had the jury been permitted to find that theyâd indeed committed those acts) would have placed on them the burden of proving the âentire fair- nessâ of the bridge loans. But, say our defendants, the plaintiff still had to prove proximate cause and what has âentire fairnessâ to do with that? In a case like this, everything. For âin the review of a transaction involving a sale of a company, the directors [once the application of the business-judgment rule is rebutted] have the burden of establishing that the price offered was the highest value reasonably available under the circum- stances,â Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., supra, 634 A.2d at 361âin other words, the burden of proving that the shareholders did as well as they would have done had the defendant directors been loyal and careful. Thatâs another way of saying that the disloyal acts had no effect on the shareholdersâno causal relation to their loss. An alternative mode of rebuttal would be to prove that despite evidence of disloyalty, the directors had been loyal; and then the business-judgment rule would spring back in and insulate the directors from liability. The term âentire fairnessâ makes a better semantic 14 No. 10-1953 match with this form of rebuttal than does showing that the company was sold for the highest price realistically attainable even if the directors who engineered the sale were disloyal. But what would be the need for a concept of âentire fairnessâ if all that was involved was that if the plaintiffâs evidence of disloyalty is compelling enough to place a burden of proving loyalty on the de- fendant, the latter still can prevail, by proving that he was loyal after all? The alternative version of âentire fairness,â which defines a distinct doctrine, is the version applicable to this case. The disloyalty of the defendant directors must be assumed because the judge aborted the trial, and so the defendants have to prove that their misconduct had no causal efficacy because Cadant made as good a deal as it would have done had the defen- dants been loyal. Thatâs a simple causal question; thereâs no need to worry about what âproximate causeâ means. The defendants think it heresy to excuse a plaintiff from having to prove causation and to make them prove its absence. But not only is this unambiguously the Dela- ware rule in a case like this; shifting to the defendant the burden of proof on causation is common in other areas of law, such as employment discrimination. E.g., St. Maryâs Honor Center v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502, 506-07 (1993); Gacek v. American Airlines, Inc., 614 F.3d 298, 301 (7th Cir. 2010). The shift makes sense in cases governed by the business-judgment rule, which creates such a com- modious safe harbor for directors that overcoming it requires the plaintiff to make a very strong showing of misconduct. Misconduct however great can be rendered harmless by a supervening event such as the No. 10-1953 15 bursting of a commodity bubble, as in Movitz. But as that is exceptional, it makes sense to place the burden of proving supervening cause on the defendant; indeed that is where the burden of proving supervening cause (a cause that wipes out the defendantâs responsibility for the plaintiffâs injury) usually rests. E.g., BCS Services, Inc. v. Heartwood 88, LLC, No. 10-3062, 2011 WL _____, at *__ (7th Cir. March 24, 2011); Roberts v. Printup, 595 F.3d 1181, 1189-90 (10th Cir. 2010). Actually thereâs enough proof that the alleged miscon- duct caused loss to Cadantâs shareholders to make the issue of causation one for the jury no matter which side has the burden of proof. It was after the dot-com bubble burst, and only a few months before Cadant was sold to the Arris Group for $55 million, that a similar company, River Delta, was sold for $300 million. Cadant couldnât hold out for a comparable deal because of the terms of the bridge loans. If the plaintiffâs evidence is credited, Copeland, in cahoots with an employee of J.P. Morgan named Charles Walker (a defendant), used information gleaned from meetings of Cadantâs board to reveal to J.P. Morgan and through it to Venrock that Cadant would accept a smaller bridge loan, and for a shorter term, than Venrock and J.P. Morgan would have expected the board to insist on. Walker himself joined Cadantâs board soon after the first bridge loan was made, as did another J.P. Morgan employee (Stephan Oppenheimer), who is also a defendant. There is evidence that Copeland, Walker, and Oppenheimer conspired to ensure that Cadant would accept the second bridge loan, which added to the disadvantages to 16 No. 10-1953 Cadant of the first loan by creating a generous liquida- tion preference; as mentioned earlier, in the event of a sale or liquidation of Cadant, Venrock and J.P. Morgan would be entitled to be paid twice the amount of their investment in the company, to the prejudice of the common shareholders. The smaller the loan, the shorter the term, and the bigger the liquidation preference, the worse for those shareholders. The smaller the loan, the less it strengthens the borrower (Cadant) and thus the harder it is for the borrower to hold out for generous offers from prospec- tive buyers. The shorter the term, the shorter the period for which the borrower can hold out for an attractive sale price. The bigger the liquidation preference, the less the stockholders will realize from the sale in the eventâwhich was looming when the bridge loans were made, and which eventually came to passâthat the firm is forced to liquidate. Uncontaminated by disloyal direc- tors, so far as appears, River Delta, in adverse economic conditions similar to those alleged to have beset Cadant, nevertheless was sold for more than five times what Cadant was sold for a few months later. This is some evidenceâand not the only evidence (but weâre trying to keep this opinion as short as possible)âthat Cadantâs common shareholders were hurt by the defendantsâ misconduct, over and above the hurt inflicted by events over which the defendants had no control. Remember that the trial was bifurcated, so that all the jury had to find was that Cadant had been harmed by the directorsâ actions; measurement of the harmâspecifically, allocating the harm between the misconduct of the defendants No. 10-1953 17 and the bursting of the dot-com bubbleâwas reserved for the trial on damages, if liability was found. Even so, the defendants argue, retreating to their second line of defense, there was no breach of loyalty because their conflict of interest was fully disclosed. The conflict was fully disclosed. But that misses the point. Section 144(a)(1) of Delawareâs General Corporation Law provides, so far as relates to this case, that if âthe material facts as to the directorâs . . . relationship or interest and as to the contract or transactions are disclosed or are known to the board of directors . . ., and the board . . . in good faith authorizes the contract or transac- tion by the affirmative votes of a majority of the disin- terested directors,â then âno contractâ between the corpo- ration (call it A) and another corporation (B) in which a director of A is also a director or an officer, or has some other financial interest, âshall be void or voidable solely for this reason,â that is, solely because a director of A has an interest in B, with which A transacted. Cope- land was a director of Venrock as well as of Cadant, and Venrock was a lender to Cadant, both as a preferred shareholder (which is a type of lender, not an equity owner) and as a bridge lender. The other defendant directors had a similar conflict of interest. But Copeland (and we may assume the others) fully disclosed to Cadant his (their) relationship with Venrock or J.P. Mor- gan, the other preferred shareholder-bridge lender, which was acting in partnership with Venrock. This meant that the transactions between it and Venrock and J.P. Morgan, disadvantageous to Cadant though they turned 18 No. 10-1953 out to be, could not be voided solely because of the con- flicts of interest. And if the conflicts thus were sterilized, the directors could not be found to have committed a breach of fiduciary duty just by virtue of the fact that they negotiated those deals. But that is not the accusation. The accusation is that the directors were disloyal. They persuaded the district judge that disclosure of a conflict of interest excuses a breach of fiduciary duty. It does not. It just excuses the conflict. (Notice the parallel between the statutory pro- vision and how Delaware law treats the exculpatory clause in Cadantâs articles of incorporation.) Mills Acquisi- tion Co. v. Macmillan, Inc., 559 A.2d 1261, 1279-80 (Del. 1989); Off v. Ross, 2008 WL 5053448, at *11 n. 43 (Del. Ch. Nov. 26, 2008); Kosseff v. Ciocia, 2006 WL 2337593, at *6- 8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 3, 2006); cf. Kahn v. Lynch Communications Systems, Inc., 638 A.2d 1110, 1117-21 (Del. 1994); Weinberger v. UOP, Inc. 457 A.2d 701, 703 (Del. 1983). To have a conflict and to be motivated by it to breach a duty of loyalty are two different thingsâthe first a factor increasing the likelihood of a wrong, the second the wrong itself. Thus a disloyal act is actionable even when a conflict of interest is notâone difference being that the conflict is disclosed, the disloyal act is not. A director may tell his fellow directors that he has a conflict of interest but that he will not allow it to influence his actions as director; he will not tell them he plans to screw them. If having been informed of the conflict the disinterested directors decide to continue to trust and rely on the interested ones, it is because they No. 10-1953 19 think that despite the conflict of interest those directors will continue to serve the corporation loyally. Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v. Benihana, Inc., 906 A.2d 114 (Del. 2006), a derivative suit much like this one, provides an illuminating contrast to this case. A director was inter- ested but his interest was known to the board. Having settled that point, the court went on to con- sider whether he had breached his fiduciary duty to the corporation, and concluded that he had not. He âdid not set the terms of the [challenged] deal; he did not deceive the board; and he did not dominate or control the other directorsâ approval of the Transaction. In short, the record does not support the claim that [he] breached his duty of loyalty.â Id. at 121. There is enough evidence that Copeland and the other defendant directors did these things to create an issue for a jury to resolve. Only one further issue need be discussedâthe potential liability of Venrock and J.P. Morgan. They of course owed no duty of loyalty or care to Cadant. But to aid and abet a breach of fiduciary duty committed by corporate directors is actionable under Delaware law, Gatz v. Ponsoldt, 925 A.2d 1265, 1275-76 (Del. 2007); Malpiede v. Townson, 780 A.2d 1075, 1096-98 (Del. 2001); Gilbert v. El Paso Co., 490 A.2d 1050, 1057-58 (Del. 1984), and the evidence of such aiding and abetting, notably by Charles Walker on behalf of both Venrock and his employer J.P. Morgan, is sufficient to create another jury issue. Gatz explains that âto state a claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, a plaintiff must allege (1) a 20 No. 10-1953 fiduciary relationship; (2) a breach of that relationship; (3) that the alleged aider and abettor knowingly partici- pated in the fiduciaryâs breach of duty; and (4) damages proximately caused by the breach,â 925 A.2d at 1275, and Malpiede that âa third party may be liable for aiding and abetting a breach of a corporate fiduciaryâs duty to the stockholders if the third party âknowingly partici- patesâ in the breach . . . . Knowing participation in a boardâs fiduciary breach requires that the third party act with the knowledge that the conduct advocated or assisted constitutes such a breach. Under this standard, a bidderâs attempts to reduce the sale price through armâs- length negotiations cannot give rise to liability for aiding and abetting, whereas a bidder may be liable to the targetâs stockholders if the bidder attempts to create or exploit conflicts of interest in the board,â 780 A.2d at 1096-97, and Gilbert that âalthough an offeror may attempt to obtain the lowest possible price for stock through armâs-length negotiations with the targetâs board, it may not knowingly participate in the target boardâs breach of fiduciary duty by extracting terms which require the opposite party to prefer its interests at the expense of its shareholders.â 490 A.2d at 1058. These formulas, with âlenderâ replacing âbidderâ in Malpiede and âofferorâ in Gilbert, fit this case to a T (always assuming that the plaintiff can prove his allegations). These defendants will of course avoid liability for aiding and abetting if there was no misconduct by Cope- land or any of the other defendant directors for Venrock and J.P. Morgan to aid or abet, but we have just ruled that there was sufficient evidence of such misconduct to create a jury issue. No. 10-1953 21 The defendants make some other arguments in support of the judgment, but they are too insubstantial to warrant discussion. The plaintiffsâ objections to certain evidentiary rulings by the district court during the trial can abide the retrial. We note the questionable wisdom of granting a motion for judgment of law seven weeks into a trial that was about to end because the defendants declared that they were not going to put in a defense case. Reserving decision on the motion might have avoided a great waste of time, money, and judicial resources, as the case must now be retried from the beginning. And because it will be retried Circuit Rule 36 directs that a new judge be assigned unless the parties stipulate otherwise. Either way the parties and the district court may want to rethink how the case should be submitted to the jury. The original trial was bifurcated along tradi- tional lines, separating liability from damages, and with regard to liability for breach of fiduciary duty the proposed jury instructions required the plaintiff to prove duty, breach, causation, and injury. But the burden-shifting structure of the relevant Delaware lawânormally applied by Chancery judgesâcan be difficult for lay jurors to grasp. Although rebutting the application of the business-judgment rule is similar to proving duty and breach, and proving âentire fairnessâ is similar to disproving causation and injury, the concepts are not identical. When compensatory damages are sought, proving or disproving that the challenged transaction was made at a âfair priceâ (evidencing âentire 22 No. 10-1953 fairnessâ) might require the same evidence as proving or disproving damages. It may therefore make sense to reconsider on remand whether bifurcating liability and damages is the best approach to take in this case. Bifurca- tion tailored to the requirements of Delaware law might make the juryâs job easier. One possibility would be for phase one of a bifurcated trial to focus on the plain- tiffâs evidence in support of rebutting application of the business-judgment rule and phase two to take up the question of âentire fairnessâ and, if necessary, damages. But this is a case-management issue, which was not addressed by the parties and is best left to the judgment of the district judge who will retry the case. R EVERSED AND R EMANDED, WITH D IRECTIONS 3-29-11
Case Information
- Court
- U.S. Court of Appeals
- Decision Date
- March 29, 2011
- Citation
- 640 F.3d 209
- Status
- Precedential