Recent Developments

Showing: 141 - 147 of 152 Articles

Two Search Tools For Finding Topics On Legal Blogs

I wanted to let you know about two resources that you may find helpful when trying to locate posts on legal blogs (called blawgs by some), including business bankruptcy topics. 

On the legal blog front, Justia, a company that helps legal and other bloggers design and maintain blogs, has a new service known as Justia Blawg Search. It’s both a search engine and a law blog directory, and you may find it useful if you are looking for articles and other posts by legal bloggers. 

Google also has a special search tool called Google’s Blog Search. Although still in beta, it’s focused on blogs of all kinds, including legal blogs. This tool can be particularly helpful if you want Google search results limited just to blogs. Of course, the main Google search engine includes blogs in its search results when relevant.

 

New Delaware Decision Limits Direct Creditor Claims Against Directors In The “Zone Of Insolvency”

The Delaware Court of Chancery has issued another decision involving creditor claims against directors of a financially troubled corporation. In North American Catholic Educational Programming, Inc. v. Gheewalla, et al., 2006 WL 2588971 (Del. Ch. Sept. 1, 2006), Vice Chancellor Noble made two important holdings:

  • First, although derivative claims can be brought, creditors may not assert direct claims against directors of a Delaware corporation for alleged breaches of fiduciary duty that occur while the corporation is in the "zone of insolvency." 
  • Second, assuming Delaware law would allow any creditor to bring a direct, non-derivative claim against directors of an actually insolvent corporation (still an unresolved question), the suing creditor’s right to payment would have to be "clearly and immediately due." Thus, creditors with disputed or contingent claims likely will not be able to assert a direct claim for breach of fiduciary duty, even if the corporation is in fact insolvent.

A copy of the decision is available here. Thanks to the Delaware Business Litigation Report blog for reporting on it first. 

No direct claim in the "zone of insolvency." The court’s refusal to permit a creditor to assert a direct claim — as opposed to a derivative claim — against corporate directors for breach of fiduciary duty in the zone or vicinity of insolvency was based on its careful analysis of the arguments for and against such claims. The court summed up its reasoning:

Indeed, it would appear that creditors’ existing protections—among which are the protections afforded by their negotiated agreements, their security instruments, the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, fraudulent conveyance law, and bankruptcy law—render the imposition of an additional, unique layer of protection through direct claims for breach of fiduciary duty unnecessary. Moreover, any benefit to be derived by the recognition of such additional direct claims appears minimal, at best, and significantly outweighed by the costs to economic efficiency. One might argue that an otherwise solvent corporation operating in the ‘zone of insolvency’ is one in most need of effective and proactive leadership—as well as the ability to negotiate in good faith with its creditors—goals which would likely be significantly undermined by the prospect of individual liability arising from the pursuit of direct claims by creditors.

Unclear if direct claims can be brought at all, even in a case of actual insolvency. The court engaged in a different analysis, focused more on the deficiency of the actual allegations in the complaint, in dismissing direct claims against the directors during the corporation’s alleged actual insolvency. However, the court commented that, to the extent Delaware law would permit a creditor to have a direct claim against directors of an insolvent corporation for breach of fiduciary duty, the claim would have to involve invidious conduct directed at that creditor. In so holding, the court relied heavily on two earlier decisions of the Court of Chancery, one by Vice Chancellor Strine in Production Resources Group v. NCT Group, Inc., 863 A.2d 772 (Del. Ch. 2004) (discussed in an earlier post) and the other by Vice Chancellor Lamb in Big Lot Stores, Inc. v. Bain Capital Fund VII LLC, et al., 2006 WL 846121 (Del. Ch. March 28, 2006) (available here). These decisions, taken together, suggest that most if not all creditor claims for breach of fiduciary duty against directors of insolvent Delaware corporations will be characterized as derivative and not direct claims.

Developing trend against expanding a director’s exposure to creditor claims. The Production Resources, Big Lot Stores, and now North American Catholic Educational Programming decisions, together with the recent Trenwick America Litigation Trust case refusing to recognize a cause of action for deepening insolvency (discussed in an earlier post), reflect the Delaware Court of Chancery’s resistance to attempts by creditors to expand the liability of directors when a corporation is insolvent or in the zone of insolvency. Although well-stated derivative claims by creditors for breach of fiduciary duty may be recognized by the courts in some cases, a direct claim by a creditor — if such a claim exists at all under Delaware law — seems to be limited to the rare circumstance in which that particular creditor was the only creditor harmed by an alleged breach of fiduciary duty. The Delaware Supreme Court has yet to weigh in, but these four decisions from three different Vice Chancellors indicate that the Court of Chancery is developing a consistent view on these issues.

Inside The Fed’s Thinking About Economic Conditions And Trends

Earlier today the Federal Reserve Board released minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s ("FOMC") most recent meeting, held on August 8, 2006.  Having made some recent posts about the number of corporate defaults and bankruptcies predicted for 2007 (see earlier posts here and here), I thought you might be interested to see what the FOMC’s minutes had to say about current economic conditions and indicators about the economy’s future direction.

Here are a few key excerpts:

In their discussion of the economic situation and outlook, meeting participants noted that the slowing of GDP growth in the second quarter was generally in line with expectations, reflecting the continued cooling of the housing market, the restraining influence on demand of higher energy prices, and the lagged effects of past increases in interest rates. Going forward, output was expected to advance at a pace at or slightly below the economy’s potential rate of growth, but several participants noted that the annual revision to the national income and product accounts suggested this growth rate likely was lower than previously believed. Incoming information with regard to inflation had not been encouraging. Still, most participants thought that, with energy prices possibly leveling out, aggregate demand moderating, and long-term inflation expectations contained, core PCE inflation likely would decline gradually from its recent elevated level, though the upside risks to inflation were significant.

In their discussion of the major sectors of the economy, participants noted that residential construction activity had continued to recede over the past few months and cited the housing sector as a downside risk to the outlook for growth. The rate of new home sale cancellations, which was identified as an important leading indicator by some contacts in the construction industry, had spiked higher. Single-family housing starts and permits continued to fall, and inventories of unsold housing appeared to have risen significantly, pointing to continued slowing in this sector. Some participants observed that the slowing seemed to be orderly thus far, but it was also noted that in some areas of the country housing construction had experienced a relatively sharp fall. In general, participants expressed considerable uncertainty regarding prospects for the housing sector.

Meeting participants noted that the continued increases in energy prices and borrowing costs appeared to have restrained consumer spending growth in recent months. Contacts in the retail sector generally reported a continued slowing of growth in sales, although the situation differed somewhat by region and type of good or service. Reliable, comprehensive data were not yet available on recent house price movements, but the rate of appreciation appeared to be moderating and was likely to slow further in coming months. The slower pace of increase in housing wealth would restrain consumption growth, though by how much was uncertain. However, the financial condition of households, as judged by indicators such as bankruptcy filings and loan delinquencies, appeared to remain solid. Overall, consumption spending seemed likely to expand at a moderate pace in coming quarters.

Although business fixed investment in the second quarter was a little lower than had been expected, participants noted that this development appeared mainly to reflect the timing of purchases, particularly of transportation equipment, and not weakness in the underlying trend. Some participants noted that nonresidential construction had continued to strengthen, offsetting some of the contraction in residential construction. Looking forward, strong business balance sheets and high profitability were seen as supporting continued growth in expenditures on software and equipment. However, it was noted that if the reported slowing of increases in retail sales continued, businesses might trim capital spending plans.

In short, it’s unclear whether we’ll see the "soft landing" slowdown in growth that the FOMC expects, or a more significant housing-led downturn as some, such as Professor Nouriel Roubini of the NYU Stern School of Business, are predicting.  Either way, these minutes discuss some of the key factors that are likely to influence the economy — and the Fed — in the coming months. 

For those interested in reading the entire FOMC minutes (including the statement that many participants in the FOMC meeting viewed the August pause in raising interest rates as a "close call"), you can find them here.

 

Cooley Godward To Merge With Kronish Lieb, Creating Nationwide Bankruptcy Practice

I wanted to share with you some very exciting news about my firm and practice. Yesterday, Cooley Godward announced that the firm will merge with Kronish Lieb Weiner & Hellman LLP, a premier 110-lawyer New York firm with highly ranked bankruptcy, tax and complex commercial and white collar litigation practices. The merger will create a 550-lawyer firm with a coast-to-coast, high-caliber litigation practice, extensive corporate transactional capabilities and a significant presence in New York. The merger will be effective October 1, 2006, and the new firm name will be Cooley Godward Kronish LLP. Click here if you’d like to read the full press release.

The combination brings together Kronish’s leading bankruptcy and restructuring practice, ranked #1 in The Deal’s Bankruptcy Insider league tables in 2006 for Top Unsecured Creditor Law Firms, with Cooley’s deep expertise representing creditors committees, debtors, and other clients in bankruptcy matters involving technology companies and intellectual property assets. The combined firm will have more than 20 bankruptcy and restructuring attorneys nationwide.

Kronish has represented scores of unsecured creditors committees in some of the nation’s largest and best-known bankruptcies and out-of-court workouts, including Montgomery Ward, Federated Department Stores, and Footstar. Kronish has also represented numerous employee and retiree committees including, most notably, the United Airlines ESOP Committee, the Enron Employee Related Issues Committee, the Bonwit Teller Retiree Committee and the LTV Retiree Committee. 

In addition, Kronish has served as reorganization counsel in significant debtor cases, including the $5 billion Metromedia Fiber Network Chapter 11 case and, together with Cooley, the $1.2 billion Old UGC Chapter 11 case. 

Having worked with Kronish’s bankruptcy attorneys on a number of matters over the past several years, I couldn’t be more delighted with the news and look forward to working with my new colleagues to serve our combined firm’s clients.  

 

Trademark Licensees In Bankruptcy: A Leg Up For Trademark Owners?

Apparently, until last November, no court had been called upon to resolve whether a trademark licensee in bankruptcy can assume, or assume and assign, a non-exclusive trademark license without the trademark owner’s consent.  

The decision. We got the first answer to that question in a case called In re: N.C.P. Marketing Group, Inc., 337 B.R. 230 (D.Nev. 2005), when the U.S. District Court in Nevada held that trademark licenses are personal and nonassignable, absent a provision in the trademark license to the contrary. Click here for a copy of the N.C.P Marketing Group decision. In reaching its conclusion, the court held that under the Lanham Act, the federal trademark statute, a trademark owner has a right and duty to control the quality of goods sold under the mark:

Because the owner of the trademark has an interest in the party to whom the trademark is assigned so that it can maintain the good will, quality, and value of its products and thereby its trademark, trademark rights are personal to the assignee and not freely assignable to a third party.  

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (which includes Nevada, California, and other western states) had previously interpreted the key Bankruptcy Code provision involved, Section 365(c)(1), to prevent a debtor from assuming an agreement when it does not have the right to assign it. (For a discussion about how bankruptcy can affect intellectual property licenses, including the impact of this earlier Ninth Circuit case, you may want to read my earlier post on the topic.) 

Building on this Ninth Circuit law, the trademark owner in the N.C.P. Marketing Group case argued that under trademark law the debtor could neither assume nor assign the non-exclusive trademark license at issue. The district court agreed, holding that the bankruptcy court correctly granted the trademark owner’s motion to compel the debtor to reject the trademark license, forcing the debtor to give up its license rights. 

Good news for trademark owners.  The decision is good news for trademark owners. Many have have long worried that if a licensee files bankruptcy it might be able to use the Bankruptcy Code’s general power to assume and assign executory contracts to assign trademark licenses to third parties over the trademark owner’s objection. The N.C.P. Marketing Group decision extends to trademark owners protections already recognized by many courts for patent and copyright holders. The case does not address whether the same rule would apply to exclusive trademark licenses, but given the trademark owner’s similar rights and duties to control the quality of goods sold under a licensed mark, the result could be the same. 

Bad news for debtor licensees. The decision, of course, is bad news for trademark licensees that file bankruptcy.  If the decision is followed by other courts, trademark licensees in bankruptcy will be unable to assign their rights to third parties or even to keep those rights for themselves without the trademark owner’s consent.  The value of these debtors, and their ability to repay creditors, could suffer as well.

On appeal. The district court’s decision may not be the last word. The debtor has appealed to the Ninth Circuit, although a ruling could be a number of months away.  I will report on the Ninth Circuit’s decision when it comes down.  In the meantime, this is only one district court decision, applying Ninth Circuit law, so its full impact has yet to be determined.

Just for kicks. Finally, for those interested, the trademarks involve the Billy Blanks® Tae Bo® fitness program.  At least until the Ninth Circuit rules on appeal, the district court’s decision will give trademark owners like Billy Blanks a "leg up" in their efforts to control their marks. 

Deepening Insolvency: New Delaware Decision Holds That No Such Cause Of Action Exists

Over the past few years, a number of bankruptcy and other federal courts have held that plaintiffs, often bankruptcy trustees or other bankruptcy estate representatives, could pursue a cause of action against a corporation’s directors and others for "deepening insolvency."  What has made a deepening insolvency claim so attractive to plaintiffs and troubling to defendants is the lack of clarity about what conduct might give rise to such a claim, how damages for it might be calculated, and whether it would allow for expanded recoveries under other causes of action. 

What is deepening insolvency? Courts have described deepening insolvency as the "fraudulent prolongation of a corporation’s life beyond insolvency," resulting in "damage to the corporation caused by increased debt" and similarly as the “fraudulent expansion of corporate debt and prolongation of corporate life.”  A more colorful way of putting it might be, under some circumstances, "better dead than (deeper in the) red." 

A question of state law. Since federal courts apply state law to many substantive issues, those federal courts that have recognized a deepening insolvency cause of action have done so by predicting how state courts would rule on the question.  With so many companies incorporated there, Delaware’s view on deepening insolvency may be the most important.  For that reason, many attorneys took note when in the past few years bankruptcy courts in Delaware allowed deepening insolvency claims to go forward, based on their prediction that Delaware state courts would also recognize the cause of action.

The new Delaware decision.  Although federal courts had issued rulings, no Delaware state court had decided whether a cause of action for deepening insolvency exists under Delaware law.  Well, that changed on August 10, 2006, when Delaware’s corporate law court, the Court of Chancery, issued a decision in a case called Trenwick America Litigation Trust v. Ernst & Young LLP, et al.  Click here to read the court’s decision.

In Trenwick America, Vice Chancellor Strine squarely held, in unusually strong language, that no cause of action for deepening insolvency exists under Delaware law. The court also elaborated on how the business judgment rule can protect directors when a corporation is insolvent or in the zone of insolvency. Since the decision is almost 90 pages long, I’ve quoted below from the key deepening insolvency discussion (although I left out the extensive footnotes). It makes for interesting reading — even if you’re not a lawyer. 

Delaware law does not recognize this catchy term as a cause of action, because catchy though the term may be, it does not express a coherent concept. Even when a firm is insolvent, its directors may, in the appropriate exercise of their business judgment, take action that might, if it does not pan out, result in the firm being painted in a deeper hue of red. The fact that the residual claimants of the firm at that time are creditors does not mean that the directors cannot choose to continue the firm’s operations in the hope that they can expand the inadequate pie such that the firm’s creditors get a greater recovery. By doing so, the directors do not become a guarantor of success.  Put simply, under Delaware law, ‘deepening insolvency’ is no more of a cause of action when a firm is insolvent than a cause of action for ‘shallowing profitability’ would be when a firm is solvent. Existing equitable causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, and existing legal causes of action for fraud, fraudulent conveyance, and breach of contract are the appropriate means by which to challenge the actions of boards of insolvent corporations.

Refusal to embrace deepening insolvency as a cause of action is required by settled principles of Delaware law. So, too, is a refusal to extend to creditors a solicitude not given to equityholders. Creditors are better placed than equityholders and other corporate constituencies (think employees) to protect themselves against the risk of firm failure.

The incantation of the word insolvency, or even more amorphously, the words zone of insolvency should not declare open season on corporate fiduciaries. Directors are expected to seek profit for stockholders, even at risk of failure.  With the prospect of profit often comes the potential for defeat.

The general rule embraced by Delaware is the sound one.  So long as directors are respectful of the corporation’s obligation to honor the legal rights of its creditors, they should be free to pursue in good faith profit for the corporation’s equityholders.  Even when the firm is insolvent, directors are free to pursue value maximizing strategies, while recognizing that the firm’s creditors have become its residual claimants and the advancement of their best interests has become the firm’s principal objective.

Delaware law imposes no absolute obligation on the board of a company that is unable to pay its bills to cease operations and to liquidate. Even when the company is insolvent, the board may pursue, in good faith, strategies to maximize the value of the firm. As a thoughtful federal decision recognizes, Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code expresses a societal recognition that an insolvent corporation’s creditors (and society as a whole) may benefit if the corporation continues to conduct operations in the hope of turning things around.

If the board of an insolvent corporation, acting with due diligence and good faith, pursues a business strategy that it believes will increase the corporation’s value, but that also involves the incurrence of additional debt, it does not become a guarantor of that strategy’s success. That the strategy results in continued insolvency and an even more insolvent entity does not in itself give rise to a cause of action. Rather, in such a scenario the directors are protected by the business judgment rule. To conclude otherwise would fundamentally transform Delaware law.

The rejection of an independent cause of action for deepening insolvency does not absolve directors of insolvent corporations of responsibility.  Rather, it remits plaintiffs to the contents of their traditional toolkit, which contains, among other things, causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty and for fraud.  The contours of these causes of action have been carefully shaped by generations of experience, in order to balance the societal interests in protecting investors and creditors against exploitation by directors and in providing directors with sufficient insulation so that they can seek to create wealth through the good faith pursuit of business strategies that involve a risk of failure.  If a plaintiff cannot state a claim that the directors of an insolvent corporation acted disloyally or without due care in implementing a business strategy, it may not cure that deficiency simply by alleging that the corporation became more insolvent as a result of the failed strategy.

Moreover, the fact of insolvency does not render the concept of “deepening insolvency” a more logical one than the concept of “shallowing profitability.”  That is, the mere fact that a business in the red gets redder when a business decision goes wrong and a business in the black gets paler does not explain why the law should recognize an independent cause of action based on the decline in enterprise value in the crimson setting and not in the darker one.  If in either setting the directors remain responsible to exercise their business judgment considering the company’s business context, then the appropriate tool to examine the conduct of the directors is the traditional fiduciary duty ruler.  No doubt the fact of insolvency might weigh heavily in a court’s analysis of, for example, whether the board acted with fidelity and care in deciding to undertake more debt to continue the company’s operations, but that is the proper role of insolvency, to act as an important contextual fact in the fiduciary duty metric. In that context, our law already requires the directors of an insolvent corporation to consider, as fiduciaries, the interests of the corporation’s creditors who, by definition, are owed more than the corporation has the wallet to repay.

In so ruling, I reach a result consistent with a growing body of federal jurisprudence, which has recognized that those federal courts that became infatuated with the concept, did not look closely enough at the object of their ardor.  Among the earlier federal decisions embracing the notion – by way of a hopeful prediction of state law – that deepening insolvency should be recognized as a cause of action admittedly were three decisions from within the federal Circuit of which Delaware is a part.  None of those decisions explains the rationale for concluding that deepening insolvency should be recognized as a cause of action or how such recognition would be consistent with traditional concepts of fiduciary responsibility.

You might find Professor Larry Ribstein’s discussion of the new decision interesting, as well as the comments made by Francis Pileggi, who publishes the Delaware Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog.  They also discuss another aspect of the decision, the holding that directors of a wholly owned subsidiary corporation did not breach their fiduciary duties by taking on debt for the benefit of the parent corporation, even though both the parent and subsidiary ended up in bankruptcy.

Echoes of Production Resources. Some of you may recall that Vice Chancellor Strine was also the author of the November 2004 Production Resources decision, which interpreted Delaware law more favorably for directors of corporations that are insolvent or in the "zone of insolvency." The Production Resources decision was the subject of an earlier post

This new decision builds on Production Resources and, in so doing, follows an approach similar to one recently taken by a bankruptcy court in New York in In re Verestar, Inc.  The June 2006 Verestar decision cited to Production Resources and predicted that Delaware courts would reject deepening insolvency as a cause of action. Click here for a copy of the Verestar decision; its deepening insolvency discussion starts at page 41. 

Conclusion. With a clear voice from the Delaware Court of Chancery, the Trenwick America decision reinforces a recent trend among some federal courts to step away from recognizing deepening insolvency as a separate cause of action.  As with any new decision, however, the real test of its influence will be the extent to which other courts, including Delaware’s highest court, the Delaware Supreme Court, follow its holding and reasoning. 

 

Directors Of Insolvent Corporations: Duties And Protections

The fiduciary duties that directors owe a Delaware corporation and its shareholders are generally held to expand to include the interests of creditors when the company is insolvent or in the "zone of insolvency."  A hot topic among directors, particularly those serving on boards of troubled companies, is how best to meet their fiduciary duties and avoid the potential for personal liability in these situations. 

One of the most important decisions in recent years on this issue came from the Delaware Court of Chancery, the corporate law court, in November 2004 in a case called Production Resources. Why is the case important?  In short, the Production Resources court interpreted the law in a way that gives directors more protection when they make business judgments for a troubled company. 

First, the Production Resources court rejected a trend among some courts and commentators that had sought to impose on directors of insolvent or potentially insolvent corporations a new set of fiduciary duties, beyond those owed to the corporation, in favor of creditors. That trend started back in 1991 with the Court of Chancery decision in the Credit Lyonnais case — the decision that helped coin the phrase “vicinity” or “zone” of insolvency.  

Second, it held that the common exculpatory provision found in the corporate charter of most Delaware corporations, protecting directors from liability for monetary damages for a breach of the fiduciary duty of care, applies to claims made by creditors as well as by shareholders or the corporation itself.

This analysis discusses the Production Resources decision in more detail. (A pdf of the analysis is available as well.)  A "zone of insolvency" conference last November also produced an interesting discussion reported by Professor Larry Ribstein.  If you want to read the 54-page Production Resources decision itself, click here.

The decision’s ultimate impact will depend on whether other courts (including bankruptcy courts where these issues are often litigated) decide to follow its approach — so stay tuned.