Every company considering an IPO owes a hearty thanks to U.S.
District Judge Robert Sweet of Manhattan for his decision
Wednesday to dismiss four shareholder derivative suits against
Facebook board members. Sweet's painstaking 70-page opinion
includes holdings that are great for Facebook's defense of a
parallel securities class action over its disclosures to IPO
investors, but the judge also reached precedent-setting
conclusions on standing and ripeness that will help other
derivative defendants ward off IPO-based claims in state court.
Facebook's lead lawyers, Andrew Clubok of Kirkland & Ellis and
Richard Bernstein of Willkie Farr & Gallagher, certainly deserve
credit for coming up with innovative arguments to establish
valuable precedent in IPO cases.
I believe Sweet's ruling may have application beyond IPO
derivative suits, though. The decision could represent a way for
defendants to address the proliferation of derivative suits that
are inevitably filed in multiple state courts after M&A deals
are announced.
First, a refresher on the allegations and procedural
background of the Facebook derivative suits. The complaints
allege that under the direction of Facebook's board, the company
failed to make adequate disclosures to IPO investors about
Facebook's revenue projections and challenges in adapting to
smart device usage. (If those sound an awful lot like securities
class action claims, that's because the derivative suits
parallel a securities case against Facebook that is also before
Judge Sweet.) Three derivative suits were filed in state courts
in California. A fourth was filed in federal court in Manhattan.
Defendants removed the three California cases to federal court
in San Francisco. Then, before shareholders could litigate
motions to remand them to state court, the Judicial Panel on
Multidistrict Litigation transferred all of the derivative
litigation to Sweet in Manhattan federal court.
Facebook made a number of arguments about why the derivative
suits should be dismissed, most of which Sweet agreed with. In
findings that will probably turn out to be the most useful for
the company, the judge said that Facebook "repeatedly made
express and extensive warnings" about the challenge of increased
use of mobile devices and that the company was not obligated to
disclose internal revenue projections. Sweet's conclusion about
the adequacy of Facebook's warnings will help the company's
defense in the ongoing securities class action. And according to
Facebook defense lawyers Clubok and Bernstein, all IPO issuers
should be relieved by Sweet's strong language on the disclosure
of internal projections, in which the judge cited "courts
throughout the country" that have "uniformly agreed" such
internal calculations aren't material.
"An opposite ruling on disclosure would have changed at
least two decades of IPO practice," Bernstein told me. "It would
have been a revolutionary change."
The judge also implicitly endorsed the legitimacy of forum
selection clauses in certificates of incorporation, though he
denied Facebook's motion to dismiss the derivative suits on
forum selection grounds. Sweet ruled that Facebook had
adequately disclosed its clause, which mandates that
shareholders must sue in Delaware Chancery Court. He said the
clause didn't apply to the IPO derivative suits (none of which
was filed in Delaware) because the company did not file its
certificate of incorporation until three days after the IPO, so
its forum selection restrictions didn't bind IPO purchasers. But
according to Clubok and Bernstein, the judge's analysis of the
validity of the clause, even though it's dicta, is significant
in a relatively undeveloped area of the law.
Even more importantly for future IPO derivative defendants,
Sweet found that shareholders who buy in an IPO cannot meet
standing requirements for derivative claims. As the judge
explained, derivative plaintiffs, who bring suit on behalf of
the corporation itself, must be able to show that they owned
stock at the time of the board misconduct they're alleging.
Here, Sweet said, shareholders were complaining that Facebook
directors breached their duties when they withheld inside
information from investors in offering materials. But none of
the investors who filed a derivative suit was a shareholder
before the IPO, when those disclosure decisions were made. So,
according to Sweet, none has standing to assert a derivative
claim.
That's a broadly useful holding for defendants, according to
Clubok, who argued the dismissal motion for Facebook. "The
ruling holds that those who buy stock after an IPO can't use a
derivative suit to complain about pre-IPO conduct," he said.
But there's more: Sweet also said that federal courts have
discretion to consider threshold issues like standing and forum
selection even before they determine whether they have
jurisdiction over derivative suits, which, after all, typically
assert state-law causes of action. The Facebook derivative suits
presented unusual procedural circumstances, since they were
consolidated and transferred to federal court before remand was
litigated. Sweet's conclusion that he could rule on standing,
demand futility and ripeness without deciding jurisdiction,
Clubok said, is hugely significant - especially in tandem with
the judge's analysis of standing.
The combination, according to Clubok, is going to block
plaintiffs from undermining the Securities and Exchange
Commission's power to regulate IPOs through the back door of
state court derivative claims. "IPOs are less likely to be
second-guessed by state court juries if companies follow the
rules set forth by the SEC," he said.
Obviously, Sweet's ruling on shareholder standing in IPO
derivative cases won't help defendants in M&A derivative suits,
but I believe his reasoning on the power of federal courts to
decide threshold questions could. Typically, after a deal is
announced, shareholders file multiple suits in Delaware or other
state courts (and sometimes in federal court as well). Companies
usually don't mind litigating in Delaware, but what drives them
crazy is defending essentially the same claims by multiple sets
of plaintiffs in multiple state courts outside of Delaware.
Under the template of the Facebook derivative cases, though,
there's nothing to stop them from removing state-court suits to
federal court and then, before shareholders can litigate remand
motions, citing Sweet and moving to dismiss on demand futility.
(Sweet found demand futility to be among the threshold issues he
had discretion to decide without ruling on jurisdiction.) I've
heard arguments that one way to solve the problem of multiforum
derivative litigation would be to give the JPMDL the power to
consolidate cases raising issues of federal law, even when
they're not filed in federal court. Sweet's holding on the
discretion of federal courts in early-stage derivative
litigation would be all the more powerful if that were to
happen.
One final point about Sweet's ruling: The judge agreed with
Facebook's innovative argument that shareholders' derivative
claims weren't ripe because they were based only on the premise
that the company would be found liable for securities violations
in the parallel class action. That's another broad holding that,
according to Bernstein, should be useful to defendants in other
derivative suits that attempt to piggyback on securities class
actions.
Sweet gave the Facebook derivative plaintiffs leave to file
an amended complaint, but it's hard to see how they'll get past
the formidable obstacles his ruling raises. The plaintiffs
didn't respond Wednesday to a Reuters request for comment.
(This post has been updated to correct Judge Sweet's first
name and to remove an incorrect attribution to Clubock.)
(Reporting by Alison Frankel)
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