In this appeal, we consider whether a complaint in a shareholder derivative action is sufficient under Delaware law to survive a motion to dismiss. Specifically, we must determine whether its particularized factual allegations create a reasonable doubt that the board of directors (board) of American Tower Corporation (ATC) was capable of exercising independent and disinterested judgment in responding to allegations that former and current officers and directors had colluded in the improper backdating of stock options. If the factual allegations are sufficient, the plaintiff stockholder, Eric Johnston, properly is entitled to proceed with the derivative action without having first made demand on the board to act on ATC’s behalf, that is, the action may proceed on a “demand excused” basis. If they are insufficient, as the motion judge found, the complaint is properly dismissed. We also consider whether the judge, on dismissing the complaint, should have done so without prejudice, and permitted the plaintiff to file an amended complaint.
Before reaching these issues, however, we must determine whether Johnston’s appeal from the judgment of dismissal has been rendered moot or is otherwise barred by the actions of unrelated plaintiffs in a parallel case filed in the Federal court, or by the ruling of the Federal judge dismissing that case.
1. Background
In support of the allegation that demand on the board would have been futile, the complaint alleged that four of the seven members of the then existing board, defendants James D. Taiclet, Jr.; Fred R. Lummis; Raymond P. Dolan; and Pamela D.A. Reeve, were not disinterested or independent,
In response to the lawsuit, ATC formed a special litigation committee (SLC) to investigate the backdating claims. On July 12, 2007, the SLC issued a report concluding that several members of the ATC board had granted and received improperly backdated stock options.
In the memorandum in support of its motion to dismiss, ATC argued that the complaint failed to allege facts sufficient to create a reasonable doubt that a majority of the seven member board was disinterested, and focused with particularity on the adequacy of the allegations regarding Dolan.
The plaintiff’s memorandum in opposition to the motion to dismiss, dated September 14, 2007, argued, with respect to Dolan, that, notwithstanding the November 19, 2003, SEC filings, the compensation committee did not actually execute a “unanimous written consent form” finally approving the November 17, 2003, grant of stock options until February 12, 2004, in violation of various accounting rules.
The plaintiff’s memorandum also included a footnote requesting that the court grant him “leave to replead in the event the Court grants any part of Defendants’ motion to dismiss.” The footnote stated that permission to replead would be “particularly appropriate here,” noting the report of the SLC “as having come to light following the filing of the Complaint.” The plaintiff did not further indicate what a repleaded complaint would include based on the information in the SLC report, nor did the plaintiff move to amend the complaint between the date the
In his memorandum of decision dismissing the complaint, the motion judge took note of the SEC Form 4 filings made on November 19, 2003, disclosing the November 17, 2003, grants. He also noted that the stock price dropped between those dates, and concluded that it would make little sense to “backdate a stock option to a time when the adjusted closing price was higher than on the date of the grant.” Therefore, there was no reason to believe that the stock option grant was improper. The judge further concluded that, without the backdating of the November 17 grant, the complaint failed to allege an impropriety for which Dolan might be liable. Insofar as the complaint made no allegations against three of the board members, the judge held that the plaintiff failed to meet his burden of pleading facts with particularity showing that a majority of the board was not disinterested or independent. Consequently, he granted ATC’s motion to dismiss for failure to make presuit demand. The dismissal was, as ATC had sought, with prejudice, and without further leave to amend.
Johnston then filed a motion requesting that the judge alter or amend the judgment “so as to be without prejudice and with leave to amend” his complaint pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 15 (a),
2. Preliminary questions. ATC has moved to dismiss Johnston’s appeal as moot because following the dismissal in this case other plaintiffs in a parallel Federal lawsuit (In re Am. Tower Corp. Sec. Litig., No. 06-10933 MLW [D. Mass.]) made demand on ATC to respond to the allegations of stock option backdating. ATC essentially contends that a demand made by any stockholder makes moot the demand excused or futility claim of any other stockholder. The proposition is not supported by Delaware law, under which the matter must be resolved. See Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc.,
“Where a demand has actually been made, the stockholder making the demand concedes the independence and disinterestedness of a majority of the board to respond.” Rales v. Blasband,
In support of its claim that this principle extends beyond co-plaintiffs in the same lawsuit and that a demand made by a
Courts that have addressed factual circumstances similar to this case have reached the conclusion “that a demand made by a nonparty does not bar ... [a] plaintiff from pleading demand futility.” See In re FirstEnergy Shareholder Litig.,
In Avacus Partners, L.P. vs. Brian, Civ. A. No. 11001 (Del. Ch. 1990),
ATC also contends that the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars Johnston from further litigating the issue of demand futility, because the Federal District Court judge in the parallel ATC lawsuit, in dismissing the Federal plaintiffs’ complaint, issued a final judgment, on the merits, that demand was not excused. We disagree.
In that case, the Federal judge granted ATC’s motion to dismiss because the plaintiffs effectively conceded that the Federal complaint did not sufficiently allege that demand would have been futile. At the hearing, the plaintiffs chose not to argue that the allegations in their amended complaint were “sufficient to raise the required reasonable doubt concerning the disinterest and independence of [ATC’s] board.” The judge therefore concluded that the plaintiffs “essentially acknowledged that they have not satisfied the high standards for being excused from making a demand.” The sole issue reached by the judge (and rejected) was whether ATC conceded the demand futility issue by creating a special litigation committee. That issue is different from the one we must address: whether the State complaint sufficiently alleges that the board in general, and Dolan in particular, were sufficiently disinterested to respond to a shareholder’s demand to act on claims of stock option backdating. Because the issue decided in the Federal adjudication is not “identical with the one presented in the action in question,” the doctrine of collateral estoppel does not apply. Alba v. Raytheon Co.,
ATC is incorporated in Delaware, and the substantive requirements of the demand rule are governed by the law of the state of incorporation. Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc.,
In this case, the relevant inquiry then is whether the complaint
“The purpose of the distinction between interested and disinterested directors is to ensure that the directors voting on a plaintiff’s demand can exercise their business judgment in the best interests of the corporation, free from significant contrary personal interests and apart from the domination and control of those who are alleged to have participated in wrongdoing.” Harhen v. Brown,
We agree with the judge that Johnston’s complaint failed to clear the bar required to demonstrate demand futility.
We begin, as did the Superior Court judge, with director Dolan. The judge noted that Johnston’s complaint implicated Dolan in only one transaction: the November 17, 2003, option grant for which Dolan was a member of the ATC compensation committee. The complaint alleges that the price of ATC stock rose substantially ten days after the purported date of the grant. This fact, Johnston alleges in his complaint, gives rise to the inference that the grant date was chosen with the benefit of hindsight to capture a greater value for the recipients of the option.
The judge properly rejected this contention. On November 19, 2003, each of the alleged recipients of the November 17 grant filed an SEC Form 4 announcing that the grant had occurred. At the very most, then, the option could have been backdated by only two days. Even that proposition is undercut by the record, however, because the price of ATC stock dropped from $10.50 on November 17 to $10.41 on November 19. As the judge concluded, “No one would backdate a stock option to a time when the adjusted closing price was higher than on the date of the grant.”
Johnston does not directly dispute the judge’s assessment; rather, he proposes that Dolan is not disinterested because the November 17 grant “was not ratified [by] the Compensation Committee, of which Dolan was then a member . . . until nearly three months thereafter.” That fact does not warrant Johnston’s conclusion that Dolan is not disinterested. First, contrary to Johnston’s implication, late ratification of an option grant is not the same as backdating. The purpose of backdating option grants (and the reason that they are improper) is to use hindsight for the purpose of selecting a low periodic stock price, thereby artificially increasing the option’s value. That clearly did not happen with the November 17 grant. See In re Openwave Sys. Inc. Shareholder Derivative Litig.,
On appeal, Johnston claims that the SLC report shows that Dolan was also involved in the backdating of option grants on November 12, 2003, and May 7, 2004, and that we should include option grants made on those dates in our analysis whether the complaint adequately alleged that Dolan was not a disinterested director. Those grants were not referenced in the initial complaint, in Johnston’s memorandum in opposition to ATC’s motion to dismiss, or, apparently, in his motion to amend or alter the judgment.
On a motion to dismiss a shareholder derivative suit, “given the clear requirements of rule 23.1,” courts will not ordinarily draw inferences from the record. Cote v. Levine, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 435, 442 n.11 (2001).
In the alternative, Johnston argues that the judge should have permitted an amendment of the initial complaint. We review the question under the abuse of discretion standard. R.W. Granger & Sons v. J & S Insulation, Inc.,
Johnston argues that Massachusetts employs liberal amendment rules, and that the motion judge abused his discretion in choosing not to follow those precedents. See, e.g., Jessie v. Boynton,
4. Motion to alter and amend judgment. Johnston also argues that the judge erred in denying Johnston’s motion to amend or alter the judgment of dismissal to be without prejudice and to permit him to file an amended complaint. For the above reasons, we disagree.
Even were we to conclude that the judge should have dismissed the complaint without prejudice to the filing of an amended one, the filing of an amended complaint at that juncture would likely have been futile as a matter of law. Courts are not required to grant motions to amend prior complaints where “the proposed amendment ... is futile.” All Seasons Servs., Inc. v. Commissioner of Health & Hosps. of Boston,
So ordered.
Notes
The information set out in this section is drawn from the pleadings as well as the memorandum and order of the motion judge dismissing the complaint.
The other three members of the board of directors (board) were not named as defendants, nor were any allegations made in the complaint with regard to their disinterest or independence. The motion judge therefore presumed them to be disinterested, and the plaintiff has not argued otherwise on appeal.
A recounting of the complaint’s allegations with respect to why the three other defendant board members were not disinterested or independent is unnecessary to the resolution of this case.
The special litigation committee (SLC) report did not conclude that the November 17, 2003, grant date w.as chosen “with the benefit of hindsight.” Rather, the report implied that the November 17 stock option grants demonstrated an improved grant process within the American Tower Company (ATC). First, management proposed a general compensation plan; the compensation committee considered and approved that plan; management implemented it; and the compensation committee subsequently ratified grants issued in accordance with the plan. The SLC also concluded that each of the November 17 grants was within the range detailed in the compensation plan, and that the officers who received them filed forms with the SEC on November 19, 2003, disclosing the grants.
The memorandum also challenged the adequacy of factual allegations regarding board members James D. Taiclet, Jr., and Pamela D.A. Reeve and maintained that the “Plaintiff [had] failed to allege any particularized facts from which the Court could infer that any of the six grants were backdated” (emphasis in original).
“Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires that all
Prior to July 1, 2004, G. L. c. 156B, § 59, repealed by St. 2004, c. 178, § 47, allowed a board of directors to take action without a formal meeting if there was unanimous written consent. General Laws c. 156D, § 8.21 (a), inserted by St. 2003, c. 127, § 17, which superseded that section, now contains the relevant provision.
The plaintiff’s memorandum in opposition to the motion to dismiss made extensive use of the findings in the SLC report to support the plaintiff’s claim that various ATC officers and directors received backdated option grants. However, the memorandum made no reference to any option grant other than the November 17, 2003, grant alleged in the complaint, in which Dolan participated as a member of the compensation committee. There are no allegations that Dolan ever received any backdated option grants.
Rule 15 (a) of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure,
In White v. Panic,
Once a demand has been made, absent a wrongful refusal, the stockholder’s ability to initiate a derivative suit is terminated. Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado,
“Delaware permits the citation of unpublished decisions as precedent.” First Marblehead Corp. v. House,
We also note that the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies only if “the party against whom estoppel is asserted [is] a party (or in privity with a party) to the prior adjudication.” Alba v. Raytheon Co.,
In contrast, Massachusetts substantive law, as recently amended, requires that demand be made in all derivative suits filed on behalf of Massachusetts corporations. G. L. c. 156D, § 7.42, inserted by St. 2003, c. 127, § 17 (“No shareholder may commence a derivative proceeding” until written demand is made and certain time periods have elapsed). The change to Massachusetts law traces back to 1989, when the American Bar Association section of business law proposed that States adopt a “universal demand requirement,” eliminating the “futility” exception. See Werbowsky v. Collomb,
There is no claim that Dolan received any backdated option grants. See note 9, supra.
“The tax and accounting fraud that flows from acts of concealed options backdating involve clear violations of positive law. But even in such cases, there are important nuances about who bears responsibility when the corporation. violates the law, nuances that turn importantly on the state of mind of those accused of involvement” (emphasis in original). Desimone v. Barrows,
The November 12, 2003, and May 7, 2004, dates come from Johnston’s main brief. In his reply brief, Johnston expands the backdated option grants in which he claims the SLC report implicates Dolan to include grants “dated” July 29, 2003; February 4, 2004; and February 23, 2004.
The “court may consider documents referenced in [the] plaintiff’s complaint
The Braddock rule is a matter of substantive Delaware law, which we must apply, and not a procedural rule. See In re CNET Networks, Inc. Shareholder Derivative Litig., No. C 06-03817WHA (N.D. Cal June 16, 2008) (Braddock v. Zimmerman,
