MEMORANDUM & ORDER
Plaintiff Soheila Rahbari brings this shareholder derivative complaint on behalf of nominal defendant NexCen Brands, Inc. alleging breach of fiduciary duty, abuse of control, gross mismanagement, unjust enrichment, and insider selling against the named individual directors’ of NexCen from May 10, 2007 through the present based on their misrepresentations and failure to disclose known material adverse facts. Plaintiff further alleges that demand is excused futile because the directors face a substantial likelihood of liability or are not independent from those who face such a likelihood of liability.
BACKGROUND 1
A. Defendants
1. Nominal defendant NexCen is in the business of acquiring and managing global brands, which it licenses and franchises. Some of the franchised brands are retail footwear and accessory brands, including The Athlete’s Foot and Shoebox New York, while others are quick-service restaurants, including Marble Slab Creamery, MaggieMoo’s, Pretzel Time, Pretzelmaker, and Great American Cookies. NexCen is incorporated in the state of Delaware and has its principal executive offices in New York.
2. Defendant David Pros is the founder of NexCen. He serves as the Chairman of the board of directors and is the former Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”). Plaintiff further alleges that his principal source of income is the company in that he has continued to receive a $200,000 yearly salary in addition to his benefits, severance payments, and stock awards; which in 2006 resulted in total compensation of $356,214.
3. Defendant Robert W. D’Loren, a certified public accountant, served as the President and CEO of NexCen and as a member of its board of directors until his resignation in August 2008.
4. Defendant James Brady serves as the Chairperson of the Audit Committee, Chairperson of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, and a member of the board. The board determined Brady to be an audit committee financial expert as defined by Item 407 of Regulation S-K and as required by NASDAQ Rule 4350(d).
6. Defendant Jack Dunn IV served as a member of the board, as well as on the Compensation Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee until his resignation in September 2008. Dunn is the Chairman, CEO and President of FTI Consulting, Inc., a firm that provided due diligence services to NexCen in connection with an acquisition and has been engaged for “review [of] the Company’s cash flows and projections.” Am. Comp. ¶ 87. Dunn is also a limited partner of the Baltimore Orioles and is a “lifelong friend” of Defendant Stamas. Id. at ¶ 88.
7. Defendant Edward Mathias serves as a member of the board and sits on the Audit Committee, Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, and as Chairperson of the Compensation Committee.
8. Defendant Jack Rovner served as a member of the board and sat on the Compensation Committee until his resignation in August 2008.
9. Defendant George Stamas serves as a member of the board. Stamas is a senior partner at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP and a director of FTI Consulting, Inc., both of which do business with NexCen. Stamas is also a limited partner in the Baltimore Orioles with defendant Dunn.
10. Defendant Marvin Traub served as a member of the board until his resignation in December 2008.
B. Factual background
Plaintiff asserts that the relevant period for this suit begins on May 10, 2007.
In conjunction with her insider selling claim, plaintiff alleges sales made by defendants Oros and Dunn in May and June of 2007 were made while in possession of material undisclosed information. Dunn sold a total of 100,000 shares on May 16 and 17, 2007 with proceeds of $1,159,400. Oros allegedly sold a total of 164,783 shares in small batches on June 1, 4, and 5, 2007 with proceeds of $2,141,519.
In August 2007, NexCen issued a press release discussing a master loan agreement in place with BTMU Capital Corporation (“BTMU”), entered into on March 12, 2007, that allowed for borrowings up to $150 million. As of August 2007, the company had used $26.5 million to acquire The Athlete’s Foot and $27.3 million to acquire Bill Blass, and was now drawing down $22 million for the acquisition of the Waverly brand. The following day, the company announced the acquisition of Pretzel Time and Pretzelmaker franchise concepts for the combined price of $29.4 million ($22.1 million in cash and NexCen common stock valued at $7.3 million). A few days later, the company announced the reporting of its second quarter 2007 results, and on September 7, 2007 a press release reported a further drawdown of $16 million to finance the intellectual property assets of the Pretzel Time and Pretzelmaker acquisitions.
On January 29, 2008, NexCen announced that it had acquired the Great American Cookie Company from Mrs. Fields Famous Brands, LLC for the purchase price of $93.7 million, consisting of approximately $89 million of cash as well as common stock valued at approximately $4.7 million. In the press release that announced the acquisition, the company stated that a portion of the purchase price was financed through the BTMU debt facility, which had been increased from $150 million to $181 million.
On March 14, 2008, the Company issued a press release entitled “NexCen Brands Reports 2007 Financial Results,” which
On March 21, 2008, NexCen filed its 2007 Annual Report with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on Form 10-K. This submission was signed by all of the individual defendants here. The 10-K provided, in relevant part:
In connection with the financing of our acquisition of Great American Cookies on January 29, 2008, we increased the maximum amount of borrowing that may be outstanding at any one time from $150 million to $181 million and modified certain defined terms used in the original loan documentation and related documents to take into account the Company’s acquisition of real estate assets in the Great American Cookies transaction. With the exception of these changes, the increase to the BTMU Credit Facility is substantially on the same terms as the original credit facility.
The 10-K then discussed the terms of the loan in some detail, but made no mention of any accelerated redemption clause. Further, the 10-K stated, “We anticipate that cash on hand and cash generated from operations will provide us with sufficient liquidity to meet the expenses of operations, including our debt service obligations, for at least the next twelve months.”
However, the amended loan facility did include an accelerated redemption clause. Specifically, though the amendment to the credit facility allowed NexCen to borrow an additional $70 million to finance a portion of the acquisition purchase price of Great American Cookies, it also included an accelerated-redemption feature that required $35 million of the total $70 million be reduced to $5 million by October 17, 2008.
In addition, under the terms of the original agreement, the revenues earned by the franchise and brand management business were collected in lockbox accounts and disbursed on a periodic basis to cover Nex-Ceris ordinary operating expenses. However, under the terms of the amendment, a portion of those disbursements were subordinated, limiting the amount of cash available to cover operating expenses. The amendment required that all remaining collected cash from the franchise businesses that was not necessary to cover operating expenses be used to reduce the principal of the $35 million accelerated redemption feature.
In May 2008, the omission of this information was disclosed by the company, resulting in the filing of a Current Report with the SEC on Form 8-K and the issuance of a press release outlining the omissions regarding the accelerated redemption feature, the fact of which would significantly change the amount cash available to the company.
2
The press release also announced that “the company believes that there is substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern, and pending completion of an independent review discussed below, that this substantial doubt also may have ex
When this information was released on May 19, 2008, shares fell 77.08% to $0.58 per share.
Over the next several months, a financial consultant hired by NexCen sought a solution to the cash flow problem and the internal investigation into the Company’s inadequate disclosures continued. In a Form 8-K filed on August 19, 2008, the company stated the “key conclusions” of the independent counsel hired to conduct the investigation:
Certain members of the Company’s senior management (i) failed to advise the board of directors of material changes in the terms of the financing of the Great American Cookies acquisition after the board had approved terms previously presented to it and (ii) made serious errors with respect to public disclosures regarding the terms of the financing and their impact on the Company’s financial condition that were contained in the [disclosures at issue]. Independent counsel did not find evidence that led it to conclude that there was an intentional effort to keep information concerning the terms of the financing from the board, the auditors or the public.”
In conjunction with this report, the board determined that changes in management and in the responsibilities of the financial staff had sufficiently addressed the issues identified by independent counsel.
Subsequently, NexCen sold its Waverly and Bill Blass brands at a loss and had its common stock de-listed by the NASDAQ Stock Market, resulting in the suspension of trading on January 13, 2009. On August 11, 2009, the company filed its amended Form 10-K (“10-K/A”) and restated financials for the period ending December 31, 2007, which confirmed the omission of the change in the credit facility’s terms and its effect on the company’s cash flow. The 10-K/A further stated that “[w]e have concluded that there was substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern as of December 31, 2007.” We note that this is even prior announcement of the Great American Cookies acquisition.
Incorporated in these disclosures was the report of KPMG, which had been hired as an independent registered public accounting firm. KPMG cited material weaknesses in the company’s system for financial controls including (1) the company’s failure to maintain a sufficient number of accounting and financial reporting personnel; (2) the fact that the personnel retained did not have the appropriate level of expertise in generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”); (3) the lack of effectiveness in the design and implementation of the company’s controls over the completeness and accuracy of accrued liabilities; and (4) the lack of sufficient clarity as to the roles and responsibility of senior management.
C. The action here
Plaintiff brought her original complaint on June 27, 2008 and filed her amended complaint on August 25, 2009 after the filing of the 10-K/A. Plaintiff asserts claims derivatively on behalf of the company for breach of fiduciary duty, abuse of control, gross mismanagement, unjust enrichment, and insider selling. Plaintiff did not seek to bring this suit to the board for their approval in advance of filing, allegedly because making such a demand would have been futile, as discussed in greater detail below. Defendants now seek to have the suit dismissed for failure to make such a demand, arguing that the board would have been able to make a disinter
DISCUSSION
Delaware courts have long held that “stockholder plaintiffs [in derivative suits] must overcome the powerful presumptions of the business judgment rule before they will be permitted to pursue [a] derivative claim.”
Rales v. Blasband,
In analyzing whether the failure to make such a demand will be excused, the Court must look to the law of the state where the nominal defendant is incorporated.
Halpert Enterprises, Inc. v. Harrison,
Plaintiff alleges there that no demand was made to the NexCen board because any attempt to make such a demand would have been futile. In such circumstances, two tests are used to determine whether the failure to make demand is excused. The first, known as the
Aronson
test, is applied to claims where plaintiff alleges “a conscious business decision in breach of [the directors’] fiduciary duties.”
Wood,
Rales
requires that, in order to show that the demand requirement is excused, the plaintiff must set out particularized facts that “create a reasonable doubt that, as of the time the complaint is filed, the board of directors could have properly exercised its independent and disinterest
A. Relevant Board
While not explicit in the plaintiffs papers, there appears to be a dispute as to which present or former board members should be deemed to constitute the board for purposes of the demand excused analysis. Plaintiffs amended complaint names as defendants all of the directors that were on the board as of the filing of the original complaint, but only discusses the five defendants that were serving on the board at the time of the filing of the amended complaint when arguing that demand should be excused. Plaintiff does not discuss the justification for applying the arguments to this limited number of directors in her papers, offering no citation or argument as to the proper constitution of the board for purposes of this analysis. At oral argument, plaintiff offered only that “[tjhere is a split of authority” on which board to look to, without offering cases or further argument. Oral Arg. at 25:22. In contrast, the defendant argued both at oral argument and in their papers that “[t]he filing of an amended complaint only ... [changes the relevant board for analysis] to the extent that the amended complaint raises claims not already Validly in litigation.’ ”
In re Fuqua Industries, Inc. S’holder Litig.,
No. CIV.A. 11974,
Plaintiffs amended complaint was brought following the filing of NexCen’s 10-K/A and financial restatement, but it does not include any new causes of action.
4
At the filing of the original complaint, the board consisted of the nine board members named here as defendants. Upon the filing of the amended complaint, four of those members had resigned from the board. Though a majority of the original board was still in place, we believe the relevant board for analysis here should be the board as constituted at the time of the original complaint’s filing, given that all of plaintiffs derivative claims were validly in litigation at that time.
See also In re Affiliated Computer Services, Inc. S’holders Litig.,
C.A. No. 2821-VCL,
Accordingly, we will analyze whether the plaintiff has created a reasonable doubt that a majority of NexCen’s board members, as the board was constituted at the filing of the original complaint, could have properly executed their independent and disinterested business judgment in response to a demand. These board members include all the individual defendants named in this action: defendants Oros, Brady, Caine, Mathias, Stamas, Rovner, Dunn, Traub, and D’Loren.
B. Interest
Delaware courts have found that a director is “interested” in the context of the demand excused analysis when a director derives any personal financial benefit that does not accrue to the corporation or stockholders generally, or when a corporate decision will have a materially detrimental impact on a director, but not on the corporation and the stockholders.
See Rales,
Reasonable doubt as to the board’s ability to exercise its business judgment can be established by alleging that the members of the board faced a substantial risk of personal liability as a result of the suit. However, “the mere threat of personal liability ... is insufficient to challenge either the independence or disinterestedness of directors.”
Aronson,
Further, “[wjhere directors are contractually or otherwise exculpated from liability for certain conduct, ‘then a serious threat of liability may only be found to exist if the plaintiff pleads a
non-exculpated
claim against the directors based on particularized facts.’ ”
Wood,
The director defendants here are covered by such an exculpatory provision.
6
Thus, in order to face a substantial likeli
A failure to act in good faith may be shown, for instance, where the fiduciary intentionally acts with a purpose other than that of advancing the best interests of the corporation, where the fiduciary acts with the intent to violate applicable positive law, or where the fiduciary intentionally fails to act in the face of a known duty to act, demonstrating a conscious disregard for his duties. There may be other examples of bad faith yet to be proven or alleged, but these three are the most salient.
In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative Litigation,
Plaintiff argues three different grounds for finding that certain or all of the directors are interested. First, plaintiff argues that defendants Oros and Dunn traded while in the possession of material nonpublic information, thus accruing a personal financial benefit not common to the corporation generally. Further, plaintiff argues that all of the defendants are interested because they face a substantial likelihood of liability stemming from the later-retracted disclosures in NexCen’s 2007 10-K Report. Plaintiff frames this likelihood of liability in the context of (1) the directors’ signatures on the 10-K and (2) their alleged failure of oversight leading up to the disclosures. In making her argument regarding failure of oversight, plaintiff also alleges that defendants Brady, Caine, and Mathias face an even greater likelihood of liability based on their positions on NexCen’s Audit Committee. We will address the insider trading allegations first, and then turn to the likelihood of liability in each of these contexts.
1. Insider Trading
To show interest as a result of insider selling, plaintiff must plead “particularized facts regarding the directors ... [that] they engaged in material trading
2. Signatures on the 2007 10-K Form
Plaintiff argues that each of the defendants face a substantial likelihood of liability because each signed the 2007 10-K. Without more, however, the signing of financial reports is insufficient to create an inference that the directors had actual or constructive notice of any illegality for purposes of the demand excused analysis.
Wood,
The cases cited by plaintiff to justify such a likelihood of liability are not persuasive. Most of these cases are in the context of a Section 10(b) securities claim, which is not the context at issue before this Court.
11
Given that the controlling
The one case cited by plaintiff that did arise in the context of the demand excused analysis is an unpublished Connecticut Superior Court case that is directly in conflict with
Seminaris,
a Delaware Chancery Court case cited above.
See Fina v. Calarco,
Here there is no allegation in the complaint that the board members knew of the improper disclosures when they signed the 2007 10-K. Plaintiff acknowledges that the internal investigation found that defendants did not have knowledge of the misstatement at issue, and does not offer any allegation that would indicate the contrary. 12 Accordingly, the signatures of the director defendants will not result in a finding of interestedness for purposes of the demand excused analysis.
3. Failure of oversight
By far the bulk of plaintiffs arguments, and the entirety of her presentation at oral argument, focused on an alleged failure of oversight stemming from the board’s failure to sufficiently monitor the company’s internal mechanisms for financial reporting. Plaintiff alleges that the defendants face a substantial likelihood of liability because they: (1) failed to adhere to the NexCen Corporate Guidelines regarding them oversight role; (2) failed to diligently evaluate information provided; (3) failed to ensure that reasonable reporting systems were in place; and (4) failed to ensure that reliable financial controls were in place and functioning to prevent improper reporting. In making this last allegation, plaintiff argues that NexCen’s admissions in its Form 10-K/A, 13 filed August 11, 2009, constitute an admission that the board failed to ensure the functioning of reliable financial controls. 14
As plaintiffs allegations based on the Corporate Guidelines
15
and the failure
a) The standard first announced by the Delaware Supreme Court in In re Caremark provides the governing law on this claim.
In In re Caremark Int’l Deriv. Litig., the Delaware Court of Chancery ruled that:
Generally where a claim of directorial liability for corporate loss is predicated upon ignorance of liability creating aetivities within the corporation ... only a sustained and systematic failure of the board to exercise oversight — such as an utter failure to attempt to assure a reasonable information and reporting system exists — will establish the lack of good faith that is a necessary condition to liability.
The Stone Court held that, based on Caremark:
“[N]ecessary conditions predicate for director oversight liability” are that “(a) the directors utterly failed to implement any reporting or information system or controls; or (b) having implemented such a system or controls, consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations thus disabling themselves from being informed of risks or problems requiring their attention.”
Id.
at 370 (emphasis in original). “Where directors fail to act in the face of a known duty to act, thereby demonstrating a conscious disregard for their responsibilities, they breach their duty of loyalty by failing to discharge that fiduciary obligation in good faith.”
Id.
Such a finding of bad faith requires a showing of scienter, or that defendants had actual or constructive knowledge of failure to act as the law requires.
Wood,
As the court in Stone highlighted,
[T]he directors’ good faith exercise of oversight responsibility may not invariably prevent employees from violating criminal laws, or from causing the corporation to incur significant financial liability, or both.... In the absence of red flags, good faith in the context of oversight must be measured by the directors’ actions ‘to assure a reasonable information and reporting system exists’ and not by second-guessing after the occurrence of employee conduct that results in an unintended adverse outcome.
Id.
at 373 (citing
In re Caremark,
In sum, it is only if plaintiff can plead particularized facts that show a non-exculpated breach of loyalty for failure to act in good faith that she can demonstrate a likelihood of liability such that the failure to make a demand is excused. Thus, the essential question is whether the director defendants utterly failed to implement a system for reporting or financial control; or, having implemented such a system of controls, whether they consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operation.
b) The actions or inaction of the Nex-Cen board did not constitute a conscious disregard of their duty of oversight.
While, not surprisingly, plaintiff does not set out the systems in place at NexCen prior to the filing of the 10-K/A; it appears from the citations to the 10-K and 10-K/A in the amended complaint that such a system existed, albeit to poor effect. In her submissions plaintiff argues both that defendants utterly failed to implement such a system and that they failed to monitor the system in place. However, at oral argument, plaintiffs counsel rightly focused on the failure to monitor argument. We also focus on the second prong of the Caremark analysis, given that Nex-Cen did have some system in place for financial reporting.
There is no dispute that NexCen’s systems for financial control and reporting were deficient at the time of the faulty disclosure. After the company brought the omission to public light, the internal investigation reported the deficiencies, and NexCen included this information in its subsequent Form 10-K/A.
18
While plaintiff
1) Plaintiff makes no allegation of knowledge or any mechanism by which the defendants would have been aware of the deficiencies at NexCen prior to the disclosure.
In place of particularized allegations of consciousness, plaintiff offers general statements or relies on inferences that are not supported by specific allegations. For example, plaintiff states that the directors acted with bad faith in signing the 2007 10-K in that they “either knew of, or recklessly disregarded, the false statements and misrepresentations made in the Company’s 2007 10-K, thereby becoming an accessory to the false statements and misrepresentations.” Am. Comp. ¶ 71. In making this statement, however, there is no allegation about the mechanism by which the knowledge required under the bad faith inquiry would be obtained by the board. Further, allegations that “[t]he Director Defendants either evaluated [ (“information regarding the Company’s business opportunities and credit facilities”) ], and intentionally or recklessly, rubber-stamped NexCen’s misrepresentations or recklessly failed to ensure information necessary to prevent the misrepresentations was provided to them,” id. at ¶ 68, does little to indicate that the board was presented with any information that would suggest that the disclosure system was malfunctioning or that the loan agreement’s terms were amended, resulting in inaccurate disclosures. Absent more particularized pleadings as to the conscious disregard, these allegations cannot meet plaintiffs burden of particularized pleading with respect to the demand excused standard.
At oral argument, plaintiff argued that these general statements are sufficient to demonstrate a substantial likelihood of liability because the board members had a duty to make themselves aware of the deficiencies of the disclosure system and the information regarding the changes to the loan agreement. When pressed, however, plaintiff could not define the line that needed to be drawn between what information the directors had to request and review, and what information or documents they could rely on others to report the relevant details of.
The cases cited by plaintiff do not address this line-drawing concern or otherwise persuade us that the improper disclo
Cited especially strenuously by plaintiffs counsel at oral argument, the Sixth Circuit’s opinions in
McCall v. Scott
20
are similarly unpersuasive here.
These allegations are in stark contrast to the pleadings at issue here, which do not allege (1) any specific mechanism by which the Audit Committee or the board were made aware of the change in the loan facility or that the financial controls were otherwise deficient; (2) that the board members were involved in negotiating the change in the facility; and (3) that there were any lawsuits in play. Further, while the loan provision certainly had meaningful ramifications for the company, there is no particularized allegation of a longstanding or widespread fraud at NexCen. In short, there are simply no red flags alleged in plaintiffs complaint here, and as a result, McCall v. Scott is not persuasive support for plaintiffs arguments.
Absent any indication that the board was aware that the terms of the loan agreement had changed, that the disclosures were inaccurate, or that the systems were deficient, we do not see how the board members can be charged with a conscious disregard of their duties.
Plaintiff makes the additional argument that the members of the Audit Committee face a more substantial likelihood of liability given their roles on that committee, and that such a role is a sufficient basis upon which to infer knowledge of the alleged illegality. However, Delaware case law does not support that position.
Wood,
3) Though plaintiff does not make interestedness arguments with respect to individual directors, D’Loren could possibly be interested.
No argument is made with respect to the disinterestedness of individual directors aside from that discussed above. Though plaintiff does not include any arguments regarding defendant D’ Loren’s interestedness, as the President and CEO at the time of the acquisition and financing, we note that arguments could be made. For the purposes of this analysis we will assume without deciding that a finding of
C. Independence
To the extent that some or all of the directors are found to be interested,
23
the Court must determine “whether any of the other members of the board are compromised in their ability to act independently of the directors found to be interested.”
Guttman,
Given our findings above, defendant D’Loren is the only even potentially interested director. Though plaintiff makes certain allegations regarding the lack of independence of defendants Oros, Stamas, and Dunn, even if we were to find that all of these defendants were lacking independence, the majority of the board would still be disinterested and independent.
For the sake of completeness and the benefit of any reviewing court, we will address plaintiffs assertions, but what follows is in no way meant to lend credence to plaintiffs arguments in this regard.
1. Defendant Oros
Plaintiff argues that defendant Oros lacks independence because his principal source of income is derived from the company. However, “[m]ere allegations of substantial compensation are insufficient to establish futility” without an allegation of unreasonableness.
In re Evergreen Mut. Funds Fee Litig.,
2. Defendant Stamas
Plaintiff next argues that Defendant Stamas lacks independence based on his outside business connections with Nex-Cen. According to the amended complaint, Stamas’ business connections include his position as a partner at Kirkland & Ellis, a law firm that does work for NexCen and has outstanding bills owed by NexCen; as well as his position on the board of FTI Consulting, which has done due diligence work for NexCen in the past and was more recently hired to do cash flow analysis for the company. Without more, however, Stamas’ positions with Kirkland & Ellis and FTI Consulting are not sufficient to establish a lack of independence.
See, e.g. Halpert Enterprises,
3. Defendant Dunn
Plaintiff further argues that Defendant Dunn is not independent of Defendant Stamas because of their longstanding personal and business relationships involving their board membership at FTI Consulting and the fact that they both hold ownership interests in the Baltimore Orioles. This argument is similarly unpersuasive. 24
While, as stated above, there are multiple problems on the merits with plaintiffs arguments regarding the independence of Stamas and Dunn, it is also significant issue that none of plaintiffs arguments relate to a lack of independence from defendant D’Loren, the only director that we have found interested here.
None of these arguments warrant a finding that any of the defendants lacked the ability to make an independent judgment on the corporate merits of the decision regarding bringing suit here. We thus find that the majority of the NexCen board would have been able to exercise its disinterest and independent business judgment in responding to the demand.
See Rales,
CONCLUSION
Because plaintiff has not established a reason to doubt a majority of the board’s disinterest or independence at the time the initial complaint was filed, we dismiss this action for failure to make a demand on the board of directors prior to suit. Plaintiffs request that we excuse demand would necessitate the finding of a substantial likelihood of liability based on the failure to ask a question: whether the loan facility, already in place for some
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The following facts are taken from the First Amended Shareholder Derivative Complaint ("Am. Comp.”), except where otherwise noted, and are taken as true for the purposes of a motion to dismiss.
See In re Citigroup Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig.,
. The press release staled: "In the course of preparing its first quarter 2008 10-Q and following the appointment of its new Chief Financial Officer, the company conducted a review of its prior public filings, including the terms of the January 2008 amendments to its bank credit facility.... The company concluded that disclosures regarding the accelerated-redemption feature of its bank credit facility, as well as other changes that reduced the amount of cash available to the company for general use, were not contained in the company's 2007 Annual Report on Form 10-K or the January 29, 2008 Current Report on Form 8-K filed in connection with the acquisition of Great American Cookies.”
. While plaintiff initially argued in her papers that Aronson should be applied, at oral argument plaintiff's counsel did not contest that Rales was the proper standard. Oral Argument ("Oral Arg.”) at 14:16-17, June 25, 2010.
. The amended complaint dropped a cause of action for waste and removed defendant Dunn’s name from the cause of action for insider trading.
. By statute, a company may include in their certificate of incorporation: "[a] provision eliminating or limiting the personal liability of a director to the corporation or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director, provided that such provision shall not eliminate or limit the liability of a director: (i) for any breach of the director’s duty of loyalty to the corporation or its stockholders; (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith or which involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law; (iii) under § 174 of this title [unlawful dividend or stock purchase]; or (iv) for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit.” Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 102(b)(7).
. NexCen's Charter provides: "A director of the Corporation shall under no circumstances have any personal liability to the Corporation or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director; provided, however, that this provision shall not eliminate or limit the liability of a director (i) for any breach of the director’s duty of loyalty to the Corporation or its stockholders, (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith or which involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law, (iii) under Section 174 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, or (iv) for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit.” Martin Decl. Ex. B at 3.
. Plaintiff argues that under Delaware law, a motion to dismiss may not be granted when a complaint includes duty of loyalty claims that aren’t within the terms of the exculpation clause. In arguing this, however, the plaintiff misses the point. The issue currently before us does not require the Court to determine that all claims are exculpated to allow for dismissal. Instead, in the demand excused context, we must determine whether the non-exculpated, remaining duty of loyalty allegations amount to a "substantial likelihood of liability” such that the directors could not have made an impartial decision regarding plaintiff’s demand. In the case cited principally by plaintiff,
Alidina v. Internet.com Corp.,
the claims there were discussed in the context of a 12(b)(6) motion and the court did not address whether demand was excused.
. Plaintiff includes allegations regarding Dunn's trading in the body of the complaint, but has removed Dunn’s name from the Cause of Action for Insider Selling. Am. Comp. ¶¶ 58, 110-113. Regardless of this omission, we address and dismiss any such claim as to both directors
. In making this argument, plaintiff points to personal stock sales allegedly made while in possession of material undisclosed information. Here, the allegedly insider trading by Oros occurred in May 2007 and that of Dunn in June 2007. The acquisition of Great American Cookies and the amendment to the loan facility that was used to finance it were not made until January 2008, and the 10-K that failed to disclose the accelerated redemption provision was not filed until March 21, 2008.
. There is no allegation as to what material information these defendants possessed that compelled them to trade their shares at that time. Instead, plaintiff relies on a recitation of the sales and the conclusoiy statement that the sales "were suspicious as to both the timing and amount in comparison to Defendants’ historical NexCen trading activity.” Am. Comp. ¶ 58. However, plaintiff provides no information as to NexCen's historical trading activity. Such allegations do not even approach what is necessary to plead that a defendant faces a substantial likelihood of liability for insider trading.
.See Howard v. Everex Systems, Inc.,
.As cited in the amended complaint, the report stated: “Certain members of the Company's senior management (i) failed to advise the board of directors of material changes in the terms of the financing of the Great American Cookies acquisition after the board had approved terms previously presented to it and (ii) made serious errors with respect to public disclosures regarding the terms of the financing and their impact on the Company’s financial condition that were contained in the Company's Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on January 29, 2008 and in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K.... Independent counsel did not find evidence that led it to conclude that there was an intentional effort to keep information concerning the terms of the financing from the board, the auditors, or the public.” Am. Comp. ¶ 45.
. Specifically, plaintiff cites the admission that material weaknesses in internal controls became apparent as a result of the internal investigation, a finding which will be discussed in greater detail below.
. Plaintiff cites to
Kohls v. Duthie
for this proposition.
. Plaintiff's reliance on NexCen's Corporate Guidelines as demonstrative of appropriate standards for action fails because, "[although the members of the ... Committee were
. Though plaintiff argues that the board failed to sufficiently analyze the information underlying NexCen’s disclosures, the amended complaint makes no allegation of any specific information that was provided to the board that was not sufficiently analyzed or was consciously disregarded. Rather, plaintiff stakes her claim on the allegation that the board should have done more to seek out and investigate the documentation underlying whatever it was that they might have been given. This is a very broad allegation, and noticeably lacks any suggestion that the members of the board were provided with any information regarding the changes to the loan provisions prior to the filing of the 10-K.
. In the same paragraph cited here, the amended complaint also states that the directors "participated in, approved and/or permitted the wrongs alleged herein to have occurred and participated in efforts to conceal or disguise same.” To the extent this statement was intended to make an allegation beyond a failure of oversight claim, it is conclusory and will not satisfy any variant of the pleading requirements. As discussed above, plaintiff makes no specific allegations of knowledge of unlawful action on the part of the NexCen officers or directors or of any specific actions taken in an attempt to conceal any illegality. To the contrary, plaintiff acknowledges that the board initiated independent investigations when the misstatements came to light in May 2008.
. Material weaknesses identified in the 10-K/A included: (1) dispersed oversight of legal issues given the lack of a general counsel; (2)
. We also note that the mere fact that an investigatory committee found that there were deficiencies in reporting does not necessarily result in a finding of a failure of oversight. In
Stone v. Ritter,
the Delaware Supreme Court refused to excuse demand despite the fact that (1) the Federal Reserve and the Alabama Banking Department had issued a Cease and Desist Order requiring the company at issue to improve its compliance program and to engage an independent consultant to conduct a review of the program; and (2) FinCEN had issued a written Assessment of Civil Money Penalty including detailed "determinations” regarding the compliance procedures.
Stone,
. The
McCall
Court issued two opinions on this issue. The first, issued on Feb. 13, 2001, included the bulk of the factual and legal findings.
. Further, plaintiff alleges that the Court is entitled to infer that the “knowledge of the Audit Committee members can be imputed to the entire Board.” PI. Mem. at 14. However, the sole case cited for this proposition is inapposite.
See Saito v. McCall,
No. Civ. A. 17132-NC,
. Plaintiff cites several cases placing importance on membership in the Audit Committee; however these cases are not directly on point.
See In re TASER,
. A court must consider whether directors were independent only upon a finding that one or more of the directors is not disinterested.
See Brehm,
. Mere personal or business relationships will not raise a reasonable inference that a director cannot consider demand, absent specific factual allegations to support such a conclusion.
Beam v. Stewart,
