Case Information
*1 FILED NOV 21 2011 NOT FOR PUBLICATION MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ROBERT P. BACA, No. 10-16718
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No. CV09-01283-PHX-SRB v.
MEMORANDUM [*] TIMOTHY A. CROWN; et al.,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
INSIGHT ENTERPRISES, INC.,
a Delaware Corporation,
Nominal Defendant-Appellee. Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona
Susan R. Bolton, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted October 24, 2011 San Francisco, California
Before: GRABER and IKUTA, Circuit Judges, and KAPLAN, [**] Senior District Judge.
*2
Robert P. Baca (“Baca”), a shareholder of Insight Enterprises, Inc. (“Insight”),
appeals the district court’s dismissal of his Second Amended Shareholder Derivative
Complaint (“SAC”) for failure to plead demand futility with sufficient particularity.
This court reviews for abuse of discretion a district court’s dismissal for failure to
plead demand futility adequately.
Janas v. McCracken
(
In re Silicon Graphics Inc.
Sec. Litig.
),
In a shareholder’s derivative action, the plaintiff purports to sue in the right and for the benefit of the corporation. Such an action implicates Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1, two aspects of which are pertinent here.
First, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1(b)(1) provides in relevant part that the complaint in a derivative action “must . . . allege that the plaintiff was a shareholder . . . at the time of the transaction complained of.” As plaintiff alleges that he first purchased shares of Insight on July 19, 2002, and held them continuously until the date of the second amended complaint, which was February 8, 2010 [ER 64] , this contemporaneous ownership rule limits the transactions of which he may complain to those that allegedly occurred during that period.
Second, Rule 23.1(b)(3) requires, in relevant part, that a derivative plaintiff
who, like this plaintiff, alleges no demand on the board of directors to pursue the
claim that the plaintiff seeks to bring on the corporation’s behalf “state with
*3
particularity . . . the reasons for not . . . making the effort.” This requirement protects
the directors’ right under state corporation law to exercise their business judgment as
to whether to pursue a corporate claim and “prevent[s] abuse of t[he derivative suit]
remedy. . . [by insisting] that the shareholder demonstrate ‘that the corporation itself
had refused to proceed after suitable demand, unless excused by extraordinary
conditions.’”
Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc.
,
In
Aronson v. Lewis
,
Baca alleges two types of claims here. First, he alleges that Tim Crown received backdated options and that Gunning, Jones, Fisher, and Dorrance – as members of Insight’s Compensation Committee – approved the issuance of backdated options (“Backdating Claims”). As the Backdating Claims do not challenge a board decision, they are analyzed under . Second, he alleges that the Insight board *5 committed waste by not attempting to recover the allegedly excessive compensation generated by the backdated options (“Refusal to Pursue Recovery Claim”). This challenges a board decision and thus is analyzed under .
To pursue either claim, Baca must allege that at least half of the Insight board
could not impartially and independently consider a demand.
See, e.g.
,
Beam ex rel.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v. Stewart
,
The Backdating Claims
As Baca concedes that five of the ten directors at the time he filed the second
amended complaint are disinterested with respect to the Backdating Claims, that
aspect of his complaint cannot stand unless it pled adequately that all five of the others
are “interested.” The complaint sought to do so first by alleging that Tim Crown is
interested under
Rales
because he was issued backdated options and thus “receive[d]
a personal financial benefit from a transaction that is not equally shared by the
stockholders.” ,
In support of his claim that Tim Crown received backdated options, Baca relies
on Insight’s 2006 Form 10-K, which stated that Insight’s top three executives,
including Crown, received some options with incorrect measurement dates between
1996 and 2005.
[ER 121]
The incorrect measurement dates were said to have resulted
from inadequate documentation or, in some cases, favorable retrospective date
selection – i.e., backdating.
[
Id.
]
In relying solely on the Form 10-K, however, Baca
fails to identify: (1) whether any options that Crown received were backdated as
opposed, for example, to having lacked adequate documentation, and (2) whether any
backdated options that he did receive were given between 2002 and 2005, which was
the relevant period during which Baca owned Insight stock. In other words, Baca
does not plead with particularity either that Crown actually received a backdated stock
option or, if he did, whether that occurred while Baca was a stockholder. Baca thus
does not allege that Crown “receive[d] a personal financial benefit from a [challenged]
transaction that is not equally shared by the stockholders,” ,
Baca again depends on the 2006 Form 10-K in alleging that Gunning, Jones,
*7
Fisher, and Dorrance face “a substantial likelihood” of liability for approving the
issuance of backdated options as members of the Compensation Committee.
Id.
Although Insight’s Form 10-K noted “instances of inadequate documentation, or
retrospective date selection” for certain options that required Compensation
Committee approval, Baca does not allege that any backdated option was approved
in 2004 or 2005, the only years during the relevant period when all four of these
directors served on the committee together.
[ER 121]
Accordingly, he fails to allege
with particularity that
all
of these four members of the Compensation Committee
actually approved the stock options in question.
See In re CNET Networks, Inc.
, 483
F. Supp. 2d 947, 965 (N.D. Cal. 2007). Baca therefore does not plead with
particularity that all of these four members of the Compensation Committee will face
“a substantial likelihood” of liability. ,
To prevail on his Backdating Claims, Baca had to allege that Crown and all four members of the Compensation Committee were disabled from passing on a demand, as the ability of any of the five of them to act with the five concededly disinterested directors would have left a qualified board majority. But his allegations fall short as to each of the five.
The Refusal to Pursue Recovery Claim
Baca’s Refusal to Pursue Recovery Claim is that the Insight board’s decision
not to seek recovery of excessive compensation generated by any backdated options
constituted waste and was not the “product of a valid exercise of business judgment.”
,
Although Baca alleges that the decision not to pursue claims against those who
received excessive compensation is not entitled to the presumptive validity afforded
by the business judgment rule, he does not question that there are numerous valid
business justifications why a corporation might choose to forego legal action in these
circumstances.
See Allison v. Gen. Motors Corp.
,
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of both of Baca’s claims for failure to allege demand futility.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as provided by 9th Cir. R. 36-3.
[**] The Honorable Lewis A. Kaplan, Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.
