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Shareholder Litigation relating to Code 162(m)
2013.Jul.02 Code 162(m) Litigation Again Avoids Dismissal. A Delaware court has again rejected Qualcomm's effort to dismiss shareholder derivative litigation alleging the company's proxy statement was either false or misleading in representing that shareholder approval would allow plan awards to qualify for an exemption from Code §162(m). Qualcomm relied on a new development to argue for dismissal, perhaps encouraged because the prior court order described the motion as presenting "a close call." Qualcomm's new evidence took the form of an "Issue Resolution Agreement" in which the IRS agreed that Qualcomm's 2011 LTIP satisfied Code§162(m)'s requirements for the making of exempt awards. The court nevertheless declined to dismiss the case because the IRS agreement was not final and binding, and therefore became an evidentiary item as opposed to being dispositive.
2013.Jan.14 Code §162(m) Claims Resoundingly Dismissed - DE Supreme Court. "The decision to sacrifice some tax savings in order to retain flexibility in compensation decisions is a classic exercise of business judgment." So holds Delaware's Supreme Court in Freedman v. Adams. Despite this dismissal of another §162(m)-based action, employers should be mindful of three points.
2012.Aug.21 Code §162(m) Claims -- One Dismissed (vs. AK Steel); Others Rise (vs. Caterpillar and Viacom)
2012.Mar.30 DE Chancery Dismisses Broad Range of 162(m) Claims; Denies Fee Award. In Freedman v. Adams, a shareholder brought derivative claims alleging breaches of fiduciary duty and waste due to the failure of XTO Energy's board to structure over $40 million of executive bonuses in a manner that would be deductible under Code Se §162(m). The Court's decision resoundingly rejects several fiduciary breach and waste claims relating to Code Section 162(m), with two of many notable quotations being:
2012.Feb.9 Allergan's ex-CEO dismissed from litigation alleging material mis-statements in proxy statement re Code 162(m) compliance invalidates shareholder approval of stock plan. See New Jersey Building Laborers Pension Fund v. Ball et al., case number 1:11-cv-01153, U.S. District Court, Delaware.
2011.Aug.4 Copy-cat Shareholder Litigation ... Stock Plan Approval Challenged due to Code §162(m) Description. ConocoPhillips has become the latest target of vexatious shareholder derivative litigation that seeks to invalidate shareholder approval of a new (or amended) stock award plan. Each of these actions argues, unpersuasively, that the underlying proxy statement mis-stated how Code §162(m)'s tax deduction rules would apply to plan awards. See Harvard Blog (2011.Sept.7).
2011.July.1 Qualcomm faced the first of these actions, with its motion to dismiss being denied in Hoch v. Alexander (D.De, 7/1/2011), holding that "The parties dispute, among other things, whether certain treasury regulations apply as well as the meaning of the Proxy Statement. But at this stage, Hoch has properly pled that a material misstatement interfered with the voting rights of shareholders and that the false proxy statement breached Defendants' duties of loyalty and good faith and constituted waste. See Resnik, 2011 WL 1184739, at *12-13."
2011.Mar.30 In Seinfeld v. O'Connor, Delaware's District Court dismissed a shareholder derivative action claiming that the 2009 proxy statement for Republic Services contained false or misleading statements in connection with an annual incentive plan's conformity with Code §162(m). The court's decision states that --
(i) "it is plain that the proxy statement does not say what Seinfeld alleges. It does not assert that the EIP will be tax-deductible, only that it is intended to be deductible under IRC § 162(m)" (page 7 of PDF), and
(ii) "The regulation contemplates the kind of 'menu-plan' of possible performance measures and goals that Republic used here."
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