United Food and Commercial Workers Union v. Zuckerberg ( 2021 )


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  •             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    UNITED FOOD AND                       §     No. 404, 2020
    COMMERCIAL WORKERS UNION              §
    AND PARTICIPATING FOOD                §     Court Below – Court of Chancery
    INDUSTRY EMPLOYERS TRI-               §     of the State of Delaware
    STATE PENSION FUND,                   §
    §     No. 2018-0671-JTL
    Plaintiff-Below,                §
    Appellant,                      §
    §
    v.                              §
    §
    MARK ZUCKERBERG, MARC                 §
    ANDREESSEN, PETER THIEL,              §
    REED HASTINGS, ERSKINE B.             §
    BOWLES, and SUSAN D.                  §
    DESMOND-HELLMANN,                     §
    §
    Defendants-Below,               §
    Appellees                       §
    §
    and                             §
    §
    FACEBOOK, INC.,                       §
    §
    Nominal Defendant-Below,        §
    Appellee.                  §
    Submitted: June 30, 2021
    Decided:    September 23, 2021
    Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR,                       and
    MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices, constituting the Court en banc.
    Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED.
    P. Bradford deLeeuw, Esquire, DELEEUW LAW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware;
    Robert C. Schubert, Esquire, Willem F. Jonckheer, Esquire (argued), SCHUBERT
    JONCKHEER & KOLBE LLP, San Francisco, California; James E. Miller, Esquire,
    SHEPHERD FINKELMAN MILLER & SHAH, LLP, Chester, Connecticut; Attorneys for
    Appellant United Food and Commercial Workers Union and Participating Food Industry
    Employers Tri-State Pension Fund.
    Kevin R. Shannon, Esquire, Berton W. Ashman, Jr., Esquire, Tyler J. Leavengood, Esquire,
    POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; William Savitt,
    Esquire (argued), Ryan A. McLeod, Esquire, Anitha Reddy, Esquire, Kevin M. Jonke,
    Esquire, WACHTELL, LIPTON, ROSEN & KATZ, New York, New York; Attorneys for
    Appellees Marc L. Andreessen, Erskine B. Bowles, Susan D. Desmond-Hellman, Reed
    Hasting, and Peter Thiel.
    Raymond J. DiCamillo, Esquire, Kevin M. Gallagher, Esquire, RICHARDS, LAYTON &
    FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; George M. Garvey, Esquire, Laura Lin, Esquire,
    MUNGER, TOLLES & OLSON LLP, Los Angeles, California; Attorneys for Appellee
    Mark Zuckerberg.
    David E. Ross, Esquire, Garrett B. Moritz, Esquire, R. Garrett Rice, Esquire, ROSS
    ARONSTAM & MORITZ LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Appellee
    Facebook, Inc.
    2
    MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justice:
    In 2016, the board of directors of Facebook, Inc. (“Facebook”) voted in favor of a
    stock reclassification (the “Reclassification”) that would allow Mark Zuckerberg—
    Facebook’s controller, chairman, and chief executive officer—to sell most of his Facebook
    stock while maintaining voting control of the company.            Zuckerberg proposed the
    Reclassification to allow him and his wife to fulfill a pledge to donate most of their wealth
    to philanthropic causes.     With Zuckerberg casting the deciding votes, Facebook’s
    stockholders approved the Reclassification.
    Not long after, numerous stockholders filed lawsuits in the Court of Chancery,
    alleging that Facebook’s board of directors violated their fiduciary duties by negotiating and
    approving a purportedly one-sided deal that put Zuckerberg’s interests ahead of the
    company’s interests. The trial court consolidated more than a dozen of these lawsuits into a
    single class action. At Zuckerberg’s request and shortly before trial, Facebook withdrew the
    Reclassification and mooted the fiduciary-duty class action. Facebook spent more than
    $20 million defending against the class action and paid plaintiffs’ counsel more than
    $68 million in attorneys’ fees under the corporate benefit doctrine.
    Following the settlement, another Facebook stockholder—the United Food and
    Commercial Workers Union and Participating Food Industry Employers Tri-State Pension
    Fund (“Tri-State”)—filed a derivative complaint in the Court of Chancery. This new action
    3
    rehashed many of the allegations made in the prior class action but sought compensation for
    the money Facebook spent in connection with the prior class action.
    Tri-State did not make a litigation demand on Facebook’s board. Instead, Tri-State
    pleaded that demand was futile because the board’s negotiation and approval of the
    Reclassification was not a valid exercise of its business judgment and because a majority of
    the directors were beholden to Zuckerberg. Facebook and the other defendants moved to
    dismiss Tri-State’s complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1, arguing that Tri-State did
    not make demand or prove that demand was futile. Both sides agreed that the demand futility
    test established in Aronson v. Lewis1 applied to Tri-State’s complaint.
    In October 2020, the Court of Chancery dismissed Tri-State’s complaint under
    Rule 23.1. The court held that exculpated care claims do not excuse demand under
    Aronson’s second prong because they do not expose directors to a substantial likelihood of
    liability. The court also held that the complaint failed to raise a reasonable doubt that a
    majority of the demand board lacked independence from Zuckerberg. In reaching these
    conclusions, the Court of Chancery applied a three-part test for demand futility that blended
    the Aronson test with the test articulated in Rales v. Blasband.2
    Tri-State has appealed the Court of Chancery’s judgment. For the reasons provided
    below, this Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s judgment. The second prong of Aronson
    1
    
    473 A.2d 805
     (Del. 1984).
    2
    
    634 A.2d 927
     (Del. 1993).
    4
    focuses on whether the derivative claims would expose directors to a substantial likelihood
    of liability. Exculpated claims do not satisfy that standard because they do not expose
    directors to a substantial likelihood of liability. Further, the complaint does not plead with
    particularity that a majority of the demand board lacked independence. Thus, the Court of
    Chancery properly dismissed Tri-State’s complaint for failing to make a demand on the
    board.
    Additionally, this Opinion adopts the Court of Chancery’s three-part test for demand
    futility. When the Court decided Aronson, raising a reasonable doubt that the business
    judgment standard of review would apply exposed directors to a substantial likelihood of
    liability for care violations. The General Assembly’s enactment of Section 102(b)(7) and
    other developments in corporate law have weakened the connection between rebutting the
    business judgment standard and exposing directors to a risk that would sterilize their
    judgment with respect to a litigation demand. Further, the Aronson test has proved difficult
    to apply in many contexts, such as where there is turnover on a corporation’s board. The
    Court of Chancery’s refined articulation of the Aronson standard helps to address these
    issues. Nonetheless, this refined standard is consistent with Aronson, Rales, and their
    progeny. Thus, cases properly applying those holdings remain good law.
    5
    I.     RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.      The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties
    Appellee Facebook is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in
    California.3 Facebook is the world’s largest social media and networking service and one of
    the ten largest companies by market capitalization.4
    Appellant Tri-State has continuously owned stock in Facebook since
    September 2013.5
    Appellee Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook and has served as its chief executive
    officer since July 2014.6 Zuckerberg controls a majority of Facebook’s voting power and
    has been the chairman of Facebook’s board of directors since January 2012.7
    Appellee Marc Andreessen has served as a Facebook director since June 2008.8
    Andreessen was a member of the special committee that negotiated and recommended that
    the full board approve the Reclassification.9 In addition to his work as a Facebook director,
    Andreessen is a cofounder and general partner of the venture capital firm Andreessen
    Horowitz.10
    3
    App. to Opening Br. 19 (hereinafter, “A_”).
    4
    A19-20.
    5
    A19.
    6
    A20.
    7
    
    Id.
    8
    
    Id.
    9
    
    Id.
    10
    A51.
    6
    Appellee Peter Thiel has served as a Facebook director since April 2005.11 Thiel
    voted in favor of the Reclassification.12 In addition to his work as a Facebook director, Thiel
    is a partner at the venture capital firm Founders Firm.13
    Appellee Reed Hastings began serving as a Facebook director in June 2011 and was
    still a director when Tri-State filed its complaint.14 Hastings voted in favor of the
    Reclassification.15 In addition to his work as a Facebook director, Hastings founded and
    serves as the chief executive officer and chairman of Netflix, Inc. (“Netflix”).16
    Appellee Erskine B. Bowles began serving as a Facebook director in September 2011
    and was still a director when Tri-State filed its complaint.17 Bowles was a member of the
    special committee that negotiated and recommended that the full board approve the
    Reclassification.18
    Appellee Susan D. Desmond-Hellman began serving as a Facebook director in
    March 2013 and was still a director when Tri-State filed its complaint.19 Desmond-Hellman
    was the chair of the special committee that negotiated and recommended that the full board
    11
    A21.
    12
    
    Id.
    13
    A57.
    14
    See 
    id.
    15
    
    Id.
    16
    A60.
    17
    See 
    id.
    18
    
    Id.
    19
    See 
    id.
    7
    approve the Reclassification.20 In addition to her work as a Facebook director, Desmond-
    Hellman served as the chief executive officer of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (the
    “Gates Foundation”) during the events relevant to this appeal.21
    Sheryl Sandberg has been Facebook’s chief operating officer since March 2018 and
    has served as a Facebook director since January 2012.22
    Kenneth I. Chenault began serving as a Facebook director in February 2018 and was
    still a director when Tri-State filed its complaint.23 Chenault was not a director when
    Facebook’s board voted in favor of the Reclassification in 2016.24
    Jeffery Zients began serving as a Facebook director in May 2018 and was still a
    director when Tri-State filed its complaint.25 Zients was not a director when Facebook’s
    board voted in favor of the Reclassification in 2016.26
    B.     Zuckerberg Takes the Giving Pledge
    According to the allegations in the complaint, in December 2010, Zuckerberg took
    the Giving Pledge, a movement championed by Bill Gates and Warren Buffet that challenged
    wealthy business leaders to donate a majority of their wealth to philanthropic causes.27
    20
    
    Id.
    21
    A27.
    22
    A46.
    23
    See 
    id.
    24
    See A46; A41.
    25
    See A46.
    26
    See A46; A41.
    27
    A23.
    8
    Zuckerberg communicated widely that he had taken the pledge and intended to start his
    philanthropy at an early age.28
    In March 2015, Zuckerberg began working on an accelerated plan to complete the
    Giving Pledge by making annual donations of $2 to $3 billion worth of Facebook stock.29
    Zuckerberg asked Facebook’s general counsel to look into the plan.30 Facebook’s legal team
    cautioned Zuckerberg that he could only sell a small portion of his stock—$3 to $4 billion
    based on the market price—without dipping below majority voting control.31 To avoid this
    problem, the general counsel suggested that Facebook could follow the “Google playbook”
    and issue a new class of non-voting stock that Zuckerberg could sell without significantly
    diminishing his voting power.32 The legal team recommended that the board form a special
    committee of independent directors to review and approve the plan and noted that litigation
    involving Google’s reclassification resulted in a $522 million settlement.33 Zuckerberg
    instructed Facebook’s legal team to “start figuring out how to make this happen.”34
    28
    
    Id.
    29
    A24.
    30
    
    Id.
    31
    
    Id.
    32
    
    Id.
    33
    
    Id.
    34
    
    Id.
    9
    C.    The Special Committee Approves the Reclassification
    At an August 20, 2015 meeting of Facebook’s board, Zuckerberg formally proposed
    that Facebook issue a new class of non-voting shares, which would allow him to sell a
    substantial amount of stock without losing control of the company.35 Zuckerberg also
    disclosed that he had hired Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP (“Simpson Thacher”) to give
    him personal legal advice about “what creating a new class of stock might look like.”36
    A couple of days later, Facebook established a special committee, which was
    composed of three purportedly-independent directors: Andreessen, Bowles, and Desmond-
    Hellman (the “Special Committee”).37 The board charged the Special Committee with
    evaluating the Reclassification, considering alternatives, and making a recommendation to
    the full board.38 The board also authorized the Special Committee to retain legal counsel,
    financial advisors, and other experts.39
    Facebook management recommended and the Special Committee hired Wachtell,
    Lipton, Rosen & Katz (“Wachtell”) as the committee’s legal advisor.40 Before meeting with
    the Special Committee, Wachtell called Zuckerberg’s contacts at Simpson Thacher to discuss
    the potential terms of the Reclassification.41 Simpson Thacher rejected as non-starters
    35
    A26.
    36
    
    Id.
    37
    
    Id.
    38
    
    Id.
    39
    
    Id.
    40
    A27.
    41
    A29.
    10
    several features from the Google playbook, such as a stapling provision that would have
    required Zuckerberg to sell a share of his voting stock each time that he sold a share of the
    non-voting stock, and a true-up payment that would compensate Facebook’s other
    stockholders for the dilution of their voting power.42 By the time Wachtell first met with the
    Special Committee, the key contours of the Reclassification were already taking shape, and
    the Special Committee anticipated that the Reclassification would occur. Thus, the Special
    Committee focused on suggesting changes to the Reclassification rather than considering
    alternatives or threatening to reject the plan.43
    Following the recommendation of Bowles, the Special Committee hired Evercore
    Group L.L.C. (“Evercore”) as its financial advisor.44 Evercore was founded by Roger
    Altman, a personal friend of Bowles who had helped him with various political efforts.45
    Evercore’s team leader observed that it had been hired “in the second inning” and that
    negotiations were well underway before it began to advise the Special Committee on the
    Reclassification.46
    As the negotiations progressed, the Special Committee largely agreed to give
    Zuckerberg the terms that he wanted and did not consider alternatives or demand meaningful
    42
    Id.; see United Food & Commercial Workers Union v. Zuckerberg, 
    250 A.3d 862
    , 871 (Del. Ch.
    2020) (hereinafter, “Op. at__”).
    43
    
    Id.
    44
    A30.
    45
    
    Id.
    46
    
    Id.
    11
    concessions.47 For example, the Special Committee did not ask Zuckerberg to revisit any of
    the terms that Simpson Thacher identified as non-starters and did not try to place restrictions
    on Zuckerberg’s ability to sell as much stock as he wanted, for whatever purpose, on any
    timetable that he desired.48     Similarly, the Special Committee asked for only small
    concessions from Zuckerberg, such as a sunset provision that was designed to discourage
    Zuckerberg from leaving the company despite the absence of any demonstrable reason to
    believe that Zuckerberg would step away from his existing Facebook duties.49
    On November 9, 2015, Zuckerberg publicly reaffirmed the Giving Pledge.50 The
    next day, Zuckerberg circulated a draft announcement within Facebook that would disclose
    his intent to begin making large annual donations to complete the pledge.51 Zuckerberg
    asked for feedback on the announcement from various people, including Desmond-
    Hellman.52       Zuckerberg also informed Bowles and Andreessen of his planned
    announcement.53 Bowles and Andreessen told Zuckerberg that they were “proud” of him
    for taking the Giving Pledge and announcing his plan to begin donating his wealth to
    philanthropic causes.54 Zuckerberg also told Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, and Melinda Gates
    47
    See A30-40.
    48
    A31-32.
    49
    A41.
    50
    A33.
    51
    
    Id.
    52
    
    Id.
    53
    
    Id.
    54
    
    Id.
    12
    of his planned announcement.55 Melinda Gates forwarded an email that she received from
    Zuckerberg to Desmond-Hellman, adding a smiley-face emoji.56 At that time, Desmond-
    Hellman was the chief executive officer of the Gates Foundation.57
    A few weeks later, Zuckerberg published a post on his Facebook page announcing
    that he planned to begin making large donations of his Facebook stock.58 The post noted
    that Zuckerberg intended to “remain Facebook’s CEO for many, many years to come”59 and
    did not mention that his plan hinged on the Special Committee’s approval of the
    Reclassification.60 The Special Committee did not try to use the public announcement as
    leverage to extract more concessions from Zuckerberg.61
    Throughout the negotiations about the Reclassification, Andreessen engaged in
    facially dubious back-channel communications with Zuckerberg about the Special
    Committee’s deliberations.62 For example, during a March 2016 teleconference with the
    Special Committee, Zuckerberg pushed for an eight-year leave of absence.63 Andreessen
    sent Zuckerberg text messages during the meeting that provided live updates on which lines
    55
    
    Id.
    56
    A34.
    57
    A27.
    58
    A34.
    59
    
    Id.
    60
    
    Id.
    61
    
    Id.
    62
    A36-40.
    63
    A38.
    13
    of argument were working64 and which were not.65 When confronted with these text
    messages later on, Desmond-Hellmann agreed that it appeared Andreessen had been
    “coaching” Zuckerberg through the negotiations.66
    On April 13, 2016, the Special Committee recommend that the full board approve the
    Reclassification.67 The next day, Facebook’s full board accepted the Special Committee’s
    recommendation and voted to approve the Reclassification.68 Zuckerberg and Sandberg
    abstained from voting on the Reclassification.69
    D.      Facebook Settles a Class Action Challenging the Reclassification
    On April 27, 2016, Facebook revealed the Reclassification to the public.70 The
    announcement was timed to coincide with the company’s best-ever quarterly earnings
    report.71 Evercore’s project leader, Altman, sent Desmond-Hellmann an email remarking,
    “Anytime [Facebook] announces earnings like that, no one will care about an equity
    recapitalization.”72
    On April 29, 2016, the first class action was filed in the Court of Chancery challenging
    the Reclassification.73 Several more similar complaints were filed, and in May 2016 the
    64
    See, e.g., 
    id.
     (“NOW WE’RE COOKING WITH GAS.”).
    65
    See, e.g., 
    id.
     (“This line of argument is not helping . . . .”).
    66
    
    Id.
    67
    A41.
    68
    
    Id.
    69
    A41 n.4.
    70
    A42.
    71
    
    Id.
    72
    A43.
    73
    
    Id.
    14
    Court of Chancery consolidated thirteen cases into a single class action (the “Reclassification
    Class Action”).74
    On June 20, 2016, Facebook held its annual stockholders meeting.75 Among other
    things, the stockholders were asked to vote on the Reclassification.76 Zuckerberg voted all
    of his stock in favor of the plan.77 Including Zuckerberg’s votes, a majority of Facebook’s
    stockholders approved the Reclassification.78 More than three-quarters of the minority
    stockholders voted against the Reclassification.79
    On June 24, 2016, Facebook agreed that it would not go forward with the
    Reclassification while the Reclassification Class Action was pending.80 The Court of
    Chancery certified the Reclassification Class Action in April 2017 and tentatively scheduled
    the trial for September 26, 2017.81 About a week before the trial was scheduled to begin,
    Zuckerberg asked the board to abandon the Reclassification.82 The board agreed, and the
    next day Facebook filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission
    disclosing that the company had abandoned the Reclassification and mooted the Class
    74
    
    Id.
    75
    
    Id.
    76
    
    Id.
    77
    
    Id.
    78
    
    Id.
    79
    
    Id.
    80
    
    Id.
    81
    
    Id.
    82
    
    Id.
    15
    Action.83 The Form-8K also disclosed that despite abandoning the Reclassification,
    Zuckerberg planned to sell a substantial number of shares over the coming 18 months.84
    In a companion Facebook post, Zuckerberg explained that he “knew [the
    Reclassification] was going to be complicated and [that] it wasn’t a perfect solution.” The
    post continued, “Today I think we have a better one” that would allow Zuckerberg and his
    wife to “fully fund [our] philanthropy and retain voting control of Facebook for 20 years or
    more.”85 The post also clarified that this new plan would not “change [our] plans to give
    away 99% of our Facebook shares during our lives. In fact, we now plan to accelerate our
    work and sell more of those shares sooner.”86 By January 3, 2019, Zuckerberg had sold
    about $5.6 billion worth of Facebook stock without the Reclassification.
    E.     Tri-State Files a Class Action Seeking to Recoup the Money that
    Facebook Spent Defending and Settling the Reclassification Class Action
    Facebook spent about $21.8 million defending the Reclassification Class Action,
    including more than $17 million on attorneys’ fees. Additionally, Facebook paid $68.7
    million to the plaintiff’s attorneys in the Reclassification Class Action to settle a claim under
    the corporate benefit doctrine.87
    83
    A43-44.
    84
    A44.
    85
    
    Id.
    86
    
    Id.
    87
    A45.
    16
    On September 12, 2018, Tri-State filed a derivative action in the Court of Chancery
    seeking to recoup the money that Facebook spent defending and settling the Reclassification
    Class Action.88 The complaint asserted a single count alleging that Zuckerberg, Andreessen,
    Thiel, Hastings, Bowles, and Desmond-Hellmann (collectively, the “Director Defendants”)
    breached their fiduciary duties of care and loyalty by improperly negotiating and approving
    the Reclassification.89 When Tri-State filed its complaint, Facebook’s board was composed
    of nine directors: Zuckerberg, Andreessen, Bowles, Desmond-Hellman, Hastings, Thiel,
    Sandberg, Chenault, and Zients (collectively, the “Demand Board”).90
    The complaint alleged that demand was excused as futile under Court of Chancery
    Rule 23.1 because “the Reclassification was not the product of a valid exercise of business
    judgment” and because “a majority of the Board face[d] a substantial likelihood of liability[]
    and/or lack[ed] independence.”91 Facebook and the Director Defendants moved to dismiss
    the complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 for failing to comply with the demand
    requirement.92
    On October 26, 2020, the Court of Chancery issued a memorandum opinion
    dismissing the complaint for failing to comply with Rule 23.1. The court held that demand
    was required because the complaint did not contain particularized allegations raising a
    88
    Op. at 875.
    89
    
    Id.
    90
    A46.
    91
    
    Id.
    92
    Op. at 869.
    17
    reasonable doubt that a majority of the Demand Board received a material personal benefit
    from the Reclassification, faced a substantial likelihood of liability for approving the
    Reclassification, or lacked independence from another interested party.93
    Tri-State appeals the Court of Chancery’s judgment dismissing the derivative
    complaint under Rule 23.1 for failing to make a demand on the board or plead with
    particularity facts establishing that demand would be futile.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “[O]ur review of decisions of the Court of Chancery applying Rule 23.1 is de novo
    and plenary.”94
    III.   ANALYSIS
    “A cardinal precept” of Delaware law is “that directors, rather than shareholders,
    manage the business and affairs of the corporation.”95 This precept is reflected in
    Section 141(a) of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”), which provides that
    “[t]he business and affairs of every corporation organized under this chapter shall be
    managed by or under the direction of a board of directors except as may be otherwise
    provided in this chapter or in [a corporation’s] certificate of incorporation.”96 The board’s
    authority to govern corporate affairs extends to decisions about what remedial actions a
    93
    
    Id. at 890-900
    .
    94
    Brehm v. Eisner, 
    746 A.2d 244
    , 253 (Del. 2000).
    95
    Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
    , 811 (Del. 1984), overruled on other grounds 
    746 A.2d 244
    (Del. 2000).
    96
    8 Del C. § 141(a) (emphasis added).
    18
    corporation should take after being harmed, including whether the corporation should file a
    lawsuit against its directors, its officers, its controller, or an outsider.97
    “In a derivative suit, a stockholder seeks to displace the board’s [decision-making]
    authority over a litigation asset and assert the corporation’s claim.”98 Thus, “[b]y its very
    nature[,] the derivative action” encroaches “on the managerial freedom of directors” by
    seeking to deprive the board of control over a corporation’s litigation asset.99 “In order for
    a stockholder to divest the directors of their authority to control the litigation asset and bring
    a derivative action on behalf of the corporation, the stockholder must” (1) make a demand
    on the company’s board of directors or (2) show that demand would be futile.100 The demand
    requirement is a substantive requirement that “‘[e]nsure[s] that a stockholder exhausts his
    intracorporate remedies,’ ‘provide[s] a safeguard against strike suits,’ and ‘assure[s] that the
    stockholder affords the corporation the opportunity to address an alleged wrong without
    litigation and to control any litigation which does occur.’”101
    97
    See, e.g., Lenois v. Lawal, 
    2017 WL 5289611
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Nov. 7, 2017) (The board’s
    “managerial decision making power . . . encompasses decisions whether to initiate, or refrain from
    entering, litigation.” (quoting Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 
    430 A.2d 779
    , 782 (Del. 1981)) (citing
    Levine v. Smith, 
    591 A.2d 194
    , 200 (Del. 1991); Spiegel v. Buntrock, 
    571 A.2d 767
    , 772-73
    (Del. 1990); Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 811
    )).
    98
    Op. at 16.
    99
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 811
    .
    100
    Lenois, 
    2017 WL 5289611
     at *9.
    101
    
    Id.
     (alterations in original) (first quoting Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 811-12
    ; and then quoting Kaplan
    v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 
    540 A.2d 726
    , 730 (Del. 1988)).
    19
    Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 implements the substantive demand requirement at the
    pleading stage by mandating that derivative complaints “allege with particularity the efforts,
    if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action the plaintiff desires from the directors or
    comparable authority and the reasons for the plaintiff’s failure to obtain the action or for not
    making the effort.”       To comply with Rule 23.1, the plaintiff must meet “stringent
    requirements of factual particularity that differ substantially from . . . permissive notice
    pleadings.”102 When considering a motion to dismiss a complaint for failing to comply with
    Rule 23.1, the Court does not weigh the evidence, must accept as true all of the complaint’s
    particularized and well-pleaded allegations, and must draw all reasonable inferences in the
    plaintiff’s favor.103
    The plaintiff in this action did not make a pre-suit demand. Thus, the question before
    the Court is whether demand is excused as futile. This Court has articulated two tests to
    determine whether the demand requirement should be excused as futile: the Aronson test
    and the Rales test.104 The Aronson test applies where the complaint challenges a decision
    made by the same board that would consider a litigation demand.105 Under Aronson,
    demand is excused as futile if the complaint alleges particularized facts that raise a reasonable
    doubt that “(1) the directors are disinterested and independent[,] [or] (2) the challenged
    102
    Brehm, 
    746 A.2d at 254
    .
    103
    See, e.g., White v. Panic, 
    783 A.2d 543
    , 549 (Del. 2001).
    104
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 805
    ; Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 927
    .
    105
    See, e.g., Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 933
    .
    20
    transaction was otherwise the product of a valid business judgment.”106 This reflects the
    “rule . . . that where officers and directors are under an influence which sterilizes their
    discretion, they cannot be considered proper persons to conduct litigation on behalf of the
    corporation. Thus, demand would be futile.”107
    The Rales test applies in all other circumstances. Under Rales, demand is excused as
    futile if the complaint alleges particularized facts creating a “reasonable doubt that, as of the
    time the complaint is filed,” a majority of the demand board “could have properly exercised
    its independent and disinterested business judgment in responding to a demand.”108
    “Fundamentally, Aronson and Rales both ‘address the same question of whether the board
    can exercise its business judgment on the corporat[ion]’s behalf’ in considering demand.”109
    For this reason, the Court of Chancery has recognized that the broader reasoning of Rales
    encompasses Aronson, and therefore the Aronson test is best understood as a special
    application of the Rales test.110
    While Delaware law recognizes that there are circumstances where making a demand
    would be futile because a majority of the directors “are under an influence which sterilizes
    their discretion” and “cannot be considered proper persons to conduct litigation on behalf of
    106
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    107
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    108
    Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 934
    .
    109
    Lenois, 
    2017 WL 5289611
    , at *9 (quoting Kaplan, 
    540 A.2d at 730
    ).
    110
    See, e.g., Hughes v. Hu, 
    2020 WL 1987029
    , at *12 (Del. Ch. Apr. 27, 2020); In re Wal-Mart
    Stores, Inc. Del. Deriv. Litig., 
    2016 WL 2908344
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. May 13, 2016); David B. Shaev
    Profit Sharing Account v. Armstrong, 
    2006 WL 391931
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Feb. 13, 2006).
    21
    the corporation,”111 the demand requirement is not excused lightly because derivative
    litigation upsets the balance of power that the DGCL establishes between a corporation’s
    directors and its stockholders. Thus, the demand-futility analysis provides an important
    doctrinal check that ensures the board is not improperly deprived of its decision-making
    authority, while at the same time leaving a path for stockholders to file a derivative action
    where there is reason to doubt that the board could bring its impartial business judgment to
    bear on a litigation demand.
    In this case, Tri-State alleged that demand was excused as futile for several reasons,
    including that the board’s negotiation and approval of the Reclassification would not be
    “protected by the business judgment rule” because “[t]heir approval was not fully informed”
    or “duly considered,”112 and that a majority of the directors on the Demand Board lacked
    independence from Zuckerberg.113 The Court of Chancery held that Tri-State failed to plead
    with particularity facts establishing that demand was futile and dismissed the complaint
    because it did not comply with Court of Chancery Rule 23.1.114
    111
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    112
    A47. The complaint also contains conclusory allegations that the Director Defendants acted in
    bad faith. 
    Id.
     (The Director Defendants’ “approval was not fully informed, not duly considered, and
    was not made in good faith for the best interests of Facebook.”). On appeal, Tri-State concedes that
    the complaint did not plead with particularity that a majority of the Demand Board was subject to
    liability for acting in bad faith. Compare Op. at 895-900 (holding that the complaint did not allege
    with particularity bad faith claims against Hastings, Thiel, or Bowles) with Opening Br. (not
    contesting this holding). Accordingly, the Court does not address whether demand is excused as
    futile under the second prong of the Aronson test because a majority of the Demand Board
    committed non-exculpated breaches of their fiduciary duties.
    113
    See A45-63.
    114
    Op. at 900-01.
    22
    On appeal, Tri-State raises two issues with the Court of Chancery’s demand-futility
    analysis. First, Tri-State argues that the Court of Chancery erred by holding that exculpated
    care violations do not satisfy the second prong of the Aronson test.115 Second, Tri-State
    argues that its complaint contained particularized allegations establishing that a majority of
    the directors on the Demand Board were beholden to Zuckerberg.116
    For the reasons provided below, this Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s judgment.
    A.      Exculpated Care Violations Do Not Satisfy Aronson’s Second Prong
    The directors and officers of a Delaware corporation owe two overarching fiduciary
    duties—the duty of care and the duty of loyalty.117 “[P]redicated upon concepts of gross
    negligence,” the duty of care requires that fiduciaries inform themselves of material
    information before making a business decision and act prudently in carrying out their
    duties.118 The duty of loyalty “‘requires an undivided and unselfish loyalty to the
    corporation’ and ‘demands that there shall be no conflict between duty and self-interest.’”119
    Tri-State alleges that the Director Defendants breached their duty of care in
    negotiating and approving the Reclassification. Section 102(b)(7) of the DGCL authorizes
    115
    Opening Br. 23-36.
    116
    Id. at 37-47.
    117
    See, e.g., Dohmen v. Goodman, 
    234 A.3d 1161
     (Del. 2020) (“Directors of Delaware corporations
    owe duties of care and loyalty to the corporation and its stockholders.” (citing Stone ex
    rel. AmSouth Bancorporation v. Ritter, 
    911 A.2d 362
    , 370 (Del. 2006))); Gantler v. Stephens, 
    965 A.2d 695
    , 708-709 (Del. 2009) (holding “that corporate officers owe fiduciary duties that are
    identical to those owed by corporate directors”).
    118
    See, e.g., Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 812
    .
    119
    City of Fort Myers Gen. Emps.’ Pension Fund v. Haley, 
    235 A.3d 702
    , 721 (Del. 2020) (citations
    omitted) (quoting Guth v. Loft, 
    5 A.2d 503
    , 510 (Del. 1939)).
    23
    corporations to adopt a charter provision insulating directors from liability for breaching their
    duty of care:
    “[T]he certificate of incorporation may . . . contain any or all of
    the following matters:
    (7) 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; . . . or (iv) for any
    transaction from which the director derived an improper
    personal benefit.
    Facebook’s charter contains a Section 102(b)(7) clause;120 as such, the Director
    Defendants face no risk of personal liability from the allegations asserted in this action. Thus,
    Tri-State’s demand-futility allegations raise the question whether a derivative plaintiff can
    rely on exculpated care violations to establish that demand is futile under the second prong
    of the Aronson test. The Court of Chancery held that exculpated care claims do not excuse
    demand because the second prong of the Aronson test focuses on whether a director faces a
    substantial likelihood of liability.121 Tri-State argues that this analysis was wrong because
    120
    App. to Answering Br. 77 (“Limitation of Liability. To the fullest extent permitted by law, no
    director of the corporation shall be personally liable to the corporation or its stockholders for
    monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director. Without limiting the effect of the
    preceding sentence, if the General Corporation Law is hereafter amended to authorize the further
    elimination or limitation of the liability of a director, then the liability of a director of the corporation
    shall be eliminated or limited to the fullest extent permitted by the General Corporation Law, as so
    amended.” (emphasis removed)).
    121
    Op. at 878-86.
    24
    Aronson’s second prong focuses on whether the challenged transaction “satisfies the
    applicable standard of review,” not on whether directors face a substantial likelihood of
    liability.122
    The following discussion is divided into three parts. The first part affirms the Court
    of Chancery’s holding that, in light of subsequent developments, exculpated care claims do
    not excuse demand under Aronson’s second prong. The second part explains why Tri-State’s
    counterarguments do not change our analysis. The third part adopts the Court of Chancery’s
    three-part test as the universal test for demand futility.
    1.      The second prong of Aronson focuses on whether the directors face
    a substantial likelihood of liability
    The main question on appeal is whether allegations of exculpated care violations can
    establish that demand is excused under Aronson’s second prong. According to Tri-State, the
    second prong excuses demand whenever the complaint raises a reasonable doubt that the
    challenged transaction was a valid exercise of business judgment, regardless of whether the
    directors face a substantial likelihood of liability for approving the challenged transaction.
    Thus, exculpated care violations can establish that demand is futile.123
    Tri-State’s argument hinges on the plain language of Aronson’s second prong, which
    focuses on whether “the challenged transaction was . . . the product of a valid business
    judgment”:
    122
    Opening Br. 26.
    123
    See id. at 23-36.
    25
    [I]n determining demand futility, the Court of Chancery
    . . . must decide whether, under the particularized facts alleged,
    a reasonable doubt is created that: (1) the directors are
    disinterested and independent and (2) the challenged
    transaction was otherwise the product of a valid business
    judgment. Hence, the Court of Chancery must make two
    inquiries, one into the independence and disinterestedness of the
    directors and the other into the substantive nature of the
    challenged transaction and the board’s approval thereof.124
    Later opinions issued by this Court contain similar language that can be read to
    suggest that Aronson’s second prong focuses on the propriety of the challenged
    transaction.125 These passages do not address, however, why Aronson used the standard of
    review as a proxy for whether the board could impartially consider a litigation demand. The
    likely answer is that, before the General Assembly adopted Section 102(b)(7) in 1995,126
    rebutting the business judgment rule through allegations of care violations exposed directors
    to a substantial likelihood of liability. Thus, even if the demand board was independent and
    124
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
     (emphasis added).
    125
    See, e.g., Levine v. Smith, 
    591 A.2d 194
    , 205-06 (Del. 1991) (“Assuming a plaintiff cannot prove
    that directors are interested or otherwise not capable of exercising independent business judgment, a
    plaintiff in a demand futility case must plead particularized facts creating a reasonable doubt as to
    the ‘soundness’ of the challenged transaction sufficient to rebut the presumption that the business
    judgment rule attaches to the transaction.”), overruled on other grounds by Brehm v. Eisner,
    
    746 A.2d 244
     (Del. 2000); C.L. Grimes v. Donald, 
    673 A.2d 1207
    , 1216 (Del. 1996) (One ground
    for alleging with particularity that demand would be futile is that a ‘reasonable doubt’ exists that the
    board is capable of making an independent decision to assert the claim if demand were made. The
    basis for claiming demand excusal would normally be that . . . the underlying transaction is not the
    product of a valid exercise of business judgment.” (citations omitted)), overruled on other grounds
    by Brehm, 
    746 A.2d at 244
    . But see Kaplan, 
    540 A.2d at 732
     (“The demand futility test established
    in Aronson provides a standard for determining whether the directors who approved the challenged
    transaction are under an influence which precludes them from being ‘considered the proper persons
    to conduct the litigation on behalf of the corporation.” (quoting Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    )).
    126
    1995 Delaware Laws Ch. 79 (S.B. 175).
    26
    disinterested with respect to the challenged transaction, the litigation presented a threat that
    would “sterilize [the board’s] discretion” with respect to a demand.127
    Aronson supports this conclusion. For example, in Aronson the Court noted that,
    although naming directors as defendants is not enough to establish that demand would be
    futile, “in rare cases a transaction may be so egregious on its face that board approval cannot
    meet the test of business judgment, and a substantial likelihood of liability therefore
    exists. . . . [I]n that context demand is excused.”128 This passage helps to illuminate the
    connection that the Court drew between rebutting the business judgment rule and the board’s
    ability to consider a litigation demand. At that time, if the business judgment rule did not
    apply, allowing the derivative litigation to go forward would expose the directors to a
    substantial likelihood of liability for breach-of-care claims supported by well-pleaded factual
    allegations. It is reasonable to doubt that a director would be willing to take that personal
    risk. Thus, demand is excused.
    On the other hand, if the business judgment rule would apply, allowing the derivative
    litigation to go forward would expose the directors to a minimal threat of liability. A remote
    threat of liability is not a good enough reason to deprive the board of control over the
    corporation’s litigation assets. Thus, demand is required.
    127
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    128
    
    Id. at 815
     (emphasis added) (citing Gimbel v. Signal Cos., Inc., 
    316 A.2d 599
     (Del. Ch. 1974),
    aff’d 
    316 A.2d 619
    ; Cottrell v. Pawcatuck, Co., 
    128 A.2d 225
     (Del. 1956)).
    27
    Although not unanimous,129 the weight of Delaware authority since the enactment of
    Section 102(b)(7) supports holding that exculpated care violations do not excuse demand
    under Aronson’s second prong.130 For example, in Lenois, the Court of Chancery held that
    the second prong focuses on whether director-defendants face a substantial likelihood of
    liability:
    [W]here an exculpatory charter provision exists, demand is
    excused as futile under the second prong of Aronson with a
    showing that a majority of the board faces a substantial
    likelihood of liability for non-exculpated claims. That a non-
    exculpated claim may be brought against less than a majority of
    the board or some other individual at the company, or that the
    board committed exculpated duty of care violations alone, will
    not affect the board’s right to control a company’s litigation.131
    In reaching that conclusion, Lenois examined several other Court of Chancery
    decisions holding that Section 102(b)(7) provisions are relevant when assessing whether
    demand should be excused under Aronson’s second prong:
    •     In Higher Education Management Group, Inc v. Matthews, the Court of
    Chancery noted that because the corporation’s charter contained a
    Section 102(b)(7) provision, and the complaint did “not support an inference of
    bad faith conduct by a majority of the Director Defendants,” demand was required
    because “there would be no recourse for Plaintiffs and no substantial likelihood of
    liability if the Director Defendants’ only failing was that they had not become fully
    informed.”132
    129
    See McPadden v. Sidhu, 
    964 A.2d 1262
    , 1271-73 (Del. Ch. 2008) (holding that exculpated
    breach-of-care claims can excuse demand under the second prong of the Aronson test).
    130
    See, e.g., Lenois, 
    2017 WL 5289611
    , at *12-14 (collecting cases).
    131
    Id. at *14.
    132
    
    2014 WL 5573325
    , at *11, *11 n.63 (Del. Ch. Nov. 3, 2014).
    28
    • In Pfeiffer v. Leedle, the Court of Chancery held that demand was “excused under
    the second prong of Aronson” because the board committed “breaches of the duty
    of loyalty” that “cannot be exculpated” under the charter.133
    • In In re Goldman Sachs, the Court of Chancery noted that where a corporation’s
    charter contains a Section 102(b)(7) provision, the second prong of Aronson
    requires that the plaintiff “plead particularized facts that demonstrate that the
    directors acted with scienter; i.e., there was an ‘intentional dereliction of duty’ or
    a ‘conscious disregard’ for their responsibilities, amount to bad faith.”134 In other
    words, to establish that making a demand would be futile under the second prong
    of Aronson a derivative complaint would have to raise a reasonable doubt that the
    directors faced a substantial likelihood of liability for committing non-exculpated
    breaches of their fiduciary duties.135
    • In In re Lear, the Court of Chancery reached the same conclusion that where a
    corporation’s charter has a Section 102(b)(7) provision, “the plaintiffs [must]
    plead particularized facts supporting an inference that the directors committed a
    breach of their fiduciary duty of loyalty” by “act[ing] in bad faith.”136
    • In Disney I, the Court of Chancery held that making a demand would be futile
    because the complaint raised a reasonable “doubt whether the board’s actions
    were taken honestly and in good faith,” exposing the directors to liability for non-
    exculpated breaches of their fiduciary duties.137
    Several opinions issued after Lenois support the same analysis:138
    • In Ellis v. Gonzalez, the Court of Chancery held that because the corporation’s
    charter contained a Section 102(b)(7) provision, “under either Aronson or Rales,
    the question . . . is the same: Does the Complaint adequately allege that a majority
    of . . . [the] board faces a substantial likelihood of liability for breaching the duty
    of loyalty?”139
    133
    
    2013 WL 5988416
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Nov. 8, 2013).
    134
    
    2011 WL 4826104
    , at *12 (Del. Ch. Oct. 12, 2011).
    135
    See 
    id.
    136
    
    967 A.2d 640
    , 657 (Del. Ch. 2008).
    137
    
    825 A.2d 275
    , 286 (Del. Ch. 2003).
    138
    The Court acknowledges that some of the opinions applied the Rales test for demand futility.
    139
    
    2018 WL 3360816
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. July 10, 2018) (citations omitted).
    29
    • In Steinberg v. Bearden, the Court of Chancery’s demand-futility analysis focused
    on whether “a majority of the Board face[d] a substantial threat of personal
    liability . . . such that the Board could not consider a demand impartially.”140
    This Court’s opinion in In re Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc. Stockholder Litigation,
    changed the landscape even more.141 Before Cornerstone, there was some uncertainty about
    how to apply a Section 102(b)(7) provision when deciding a motion to dismiss under Court
    of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6). Some courts held that an exculpation clause could warrant
    dismissing a complaint alleging care claims.142 Others, particularly where the entire fairness
    standard of review might apply, ruled that more factual development was needed to
    determine whether the director’s breach would be exculpated.143 Thus, a complaint alleging
    exculpated care violations might compromise a director’s ability to impartially consider a
    litigation demand by exposing them to the distraction of protracted litigation, public scrutiny,
    and potential reputational harm, even if the risk was low that the director would be found
    liable for breaching their fiduciary duties.
    140
    
    2018 WL 2434558
    , at *8-9 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2018).
    141
    
    115 A.3d 1173
    , 1186-87 (Del. 2015) (“[W]hen the plaintiffs have pled no facts to support an
    inference that any of the independent directors breached their duty of loyalty, fidelity to the purpose
    of Section 102(b)(7) requires dismissal of the complaint against those directors.”).
    142
    See, e.g., Pfeiffer, 
    2013 WL 5988416
    , at *9 (considering a 102(b)(7) provision when deciding to
    dismiss a complaint for failing to comply with Rule 23.1); Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    ,
    1094-96 (holding that the Court could apply a 102(b)(7) provision clause when considering a motion
    to dismiss a suit challenging an arm’s length merger approved by disinterested stockholders).
    143
    See, e.g., Emerald P’rs v. Berlin, 
    726 A.2d 1215
    , 1223 (Del. 1999) (holding that a
    Section 102(b)(7) provision did not justify granting summary judgment because there were disputed
    facts about whether the directors committed non-exculpated breaches of their fiduciary duties).
    30
    Cornerstone eliminated any uncertainty and held that where a corporation’s charter
    contains a Section 102(b)(7) provision, “[a] plaintiff seeking only monetary damages must
    plead non-exculpated claims against a director who is protected by an exculpatory charter
    provision to survive a motion to dismiss, regardless of the underlying standard of review for
    the board’s conduct.”144 Thus, under current law a Section 102(b)(7) provision removes the
    threat of liability and protracted litigation for breach of care claims. As such, Cornerstone
    eliminated “any continuing vitality from Aronson’s use of the standard of review for the
    challenged transaction as a proxy for whether directors face a substantial likelihood of
    liability sufficient to render demand futile.”145
    Accordingly, this Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s holding that exculpated care
    claims do not satisfy Aronson’s second prong. This Court’s decisions construing Aronson
    have consistently focused on whether the demand board has a connection to the challenged
    transaction that would render it incapable of impartially considering a litigation demand.146
    144
    See Cornerstone, 
    115 A.3d at 1186-87
    .
    145
    Op. at 885.
    146
    See, e.g., Levine, 
    591 A.2d at 205
     (“The premise of a shareholder claim of futility of demand is
    that a majority of the board of directors either has a financial interest in the challenged transaction or
    lacks independence or otherwise failed to exercise due care. On either showing, it may be inferred
    that the Board is incapable of exercising its power and authority to pursue the derivative claims
    directly.”); C.L. Grimes, 
    673 A.2d at 1216
     (“One ground for alleging with particularity that demand
    would be futile is that a ‘reasonable doubt’ exists that the board is capable of making an independent
    decision to assert the claim if demand were made.” (quoting Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    )); see also
    Wood v. Baum, 
    953 A.2d 136
    , 140 (Del. 2008) (“A stockholder may not pursue a derivative suit to
    assert a claim of the corporation unless the stockholder (a) [makes a demand] . . .; or (b) establishes
    that pre-suit demand is excused because the directors are deemed incapable of making an impartial
    decision regarding the pursuit of the litigation.” (citation omitted)).
    31
    When Aronson was decided, raising a reasonable doubt that directors breached their duty of
    care exposed them to a substantial likelihood of liability and protracted litigation, raising
    doubt as to their ability to impartially consider demand. The ground has since shifted, and
    exculpated breach of care claims no longer pose a threat that neutralizes director discretion.
    These developments must be factored into demand-futility analysis, and Tri-State has failed
    to provide a reasoned explanation of why rebutting the business judgment rule should
    automatically render directors incapable of impartially considering a litigation demand given
    the current landscape. For these reasons, the Court of Chancery’s judgment is affirmed.
    2.     Tri-State’s other arguments do not change the analysis
    Tri-State raises a few more counterarguments that do not change the Court’s analysis.
    First, Tri-State argues that construing the second prong of Aronson to focus on
    whether directors face a substantial likelihood of liability erases any distinction between the
    two prongs of the Aronson test.147 The argument goes like this. If directors face a substantial
    likelihood of liability for approving the challenged transaction, then they are interested with
    respect to the challenged transaction. The first prong of Aronson already addresses whether
    directors are interested in the challenged transaction. Thus, construing the second prong to
    require a substantial risk of liability makes it redundant.148 This argument misconstrues
    Aronson. The first prong of Aronson focuses on whether the directors had a personal interest
    147
    See Opening Br. 27-28.
    148
    See 
    id.
    32
    in the challenged transaction (i.e., a personal financial benefit from the challenged transaction
    that is not equally shared by the stockholders).149 This is a different consideration than
    whether the directors face a substantial likelihood of liability for approving the challenged
    transaction, even if they received nothing personal from the challenged transaction. The
    second prong excuses demand in that circumstance. Thus, the first and second prongs of
    Aronson perform separate functions, even if those functions are complementary.
    Second, Tri-State argues that this holding places an unfair burden on plaintiffs and
    will fail to deter controllers from pressuring boards to approve unfair transactions.150
    Although not entirely clear, Tri-State appears to argue that because the entire fairness
    standard of review applies ab initio to a conflicted-controller transaction,151 demand is
    automatically excused under Aronson’s second prong. As the Court of Chancery noted
    below, some cases have suggested that demand is automatically excused under Aronson’s
    second prong if the complaint raises a reasonable doubt that the business judgment standard
    of review will apply, even if the business judgment rule is rebutted for a reason unrelated to
    the conduct or interests of a majority of the directors on the demand board.152 The Court of
    Chancery’s case law developed in a different direction, however, concluding that demand is
    not futile under the second prong of Aronson simply because entire fairness applies ab initio
    149
    
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    150
    See Opening Br. 35-36.
    151
    See, e.g., Kahn v. Tremont Corp., 
    694 A.2d 422
    , 428-29 (Del. 1997).
    152
    Op. 880-882.
    33
    to a controlling stockholder transaction. As the Court of Chancery has explained, the theory
    that demand should be excused simply because an alleged controlling stockholder stood on
    both sides of the transaction is “inconsistent with Delaware Supreme Court authority that
    focuses the test for demand futility exclusively on the ability of a corporation’s board of
    directors to impartially consider a demand to institute litigation on behalf of the
    corporation—including litigation implicating the interests of a controlling stockholder.”153
    Further, Tri-State’s argument presumes that a stockholder has a general right to
    control corporate claims. Not so. The directors are tasked with managing the affairs of the
    corporation, including whether to file action on behalf of the corporation. A stockholder can
    only displace the directors if the stockholder alleges with particularity that “the directors are
    under an influence which sterilizes their discretion” such that “they cannot be considered
    proper persons to conduct litigation on behalf of the corporation.”154 As such, enforcing the
    demand requirement where a stockholder has only alleged exculpated conduct does not
    “undermine shareholder rights;” instead, it recognizes the delegation of powers outlined in
    the DGCL.
    Finally, Tri-State’s argument collapses the distinction between the board’s capacity to
    consider a litigation demand and the propriety of the challenged transaction. It is entirely
    153
    Teamsters Union 25 Health Servs. & Ins. Plan v. Baiera, 
    2015 WL 4192107
    , at *1 (Del.
    Ch. July 13, 2015); see, e.g., In re BGC P’rs, Inc., 
    2019 WL 4745121
    , at *7-9 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30,
    2019) (rejecting the plaintiff’s argument that demand was automatically excused under Aronson’s
    second prong because the derivative complaint challenged a conflicted-controller transaction).
    154
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    34
    possible that an independent and disinterested board, exercising its impartial business
    judgment, could decide that it is not in the corporation’s best interest to spend the time and
    money to pursue a claim that is likely to succeed. Yet, Tri-State asks the Court to deprive
    directors and officers of the power to make such a decision, at least where the derivative
    action would challenge a conflicted-controller transaction. This rule may have its benefits,
    but it runs counter to the “cardinal precept” of Delaware law that independent and
    disinterested directors are generally in the best position to manage a corporation’s affairs,
    including whether the corporation should exercise its legal rights.155
    For these reasons, Tri-State cannot satisfy the demand requirement by pleading—for
    reasons unrelated to the conduct or interests of a majority of the directors on the demand
    board—that the entire fairness standard of review would apply to the Reclassification.
    Rather, to satisfy Rule 23.1, Tri-State must plead with particularity facts establishing that a
    majority of the directors on the demand board are subject to an influence that would sterilize
    their discretion with respect to the litigation demand.
    Third, Tri-State argues that this holding is contrary to Brehm v. Eisner,156 H&N
    Management Group v. Couch,157 and McPadden.158 This Court’s opinion in Brehm contains
    language that can be read to suggest that the second prong of the Aronson test focuses on the
    155
    See Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 811
    .
    156
    
    746 A.2d 244
     (Del. 2000).
    157
    
    2017 WL 3500245
     (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 2017).
    158
    
    964 A.2d at 1262
    .
    35
    propriety of the challenged transaction rather than on whether the directors face a substantial
    likelihood of liability for approving the transaction. For example, the Court’s demand-futility
    analysis focused on duty of care violations even though the opinion was issued after the
    legislature adopted Section 102(b)(7) and it appears that Disney’s corporate charter had an
    exculpation clause.159 Nonetheless, the Court did not hold that exculpated claims can
    establish demand futility,160 and on remand the plaintiff relied on non-exculpated claims to
    establish that demand was futile.161 Thus, Brehm did not hold that exculpated care violations
    can excuse demand under Aronson’s second prong.
    H&N Management is inapposite because the corporation’s charter did not exculpate
    directors for breaches of the duty of care.162 Thus, the Court of Chancery did not address
    whether exculpated claims could excuse demand under the second prong of the Aronson test.
    This leaves McPadden, which appears to be the only Delaware decision squarely
    holding that exculpated care violations can excuse demand under the second prong of
    Aronson.163 It is understandable that the Court of Chancery reached this holding given the
    159
    See Brehm, 
    746 A.2d at 259
     (“Pre-suit demand will be excused in a derivative suit only if the
    Court of Chancery in the first instance, and this Court in its de novo review, conclude that the
    particularized facts in the complaint create a reasonable doubt that the informational component of
    the directors’ decision[-]making process, measured by concepts of gross negligence, included
    consideration of all material information reasonably available.”); In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative
    Litig., 
    825 A.2d 275
    , 290 (Del. Ch. 2003) (stating that Disney had an exculpation clause).
    160
    Brehm, 
    746 A.2d at 262-63
    .
    161
    In re Walt Disney, 
    825 A.2d at 289-90
    .
    162
    
    2017 WL 3500245
    , at *7 (“Defendants do not benefit from a provision that exculpates them for
    grossly negligent conduct . . . .”).
    163
    
    964 A.2d at 1270-75
     (holding that demand was excused under the second prong of Aronson
    “because plaintiff has pleaded a duty of care violation with particularity sufficient to create a
    36
    plain language of Aronson. Nonetheless, given the subsequent developments in Delaware
    law, it is our view that exculpated care violations no longer pose a sufficient threat to excuse
    demand under the second prong of the Aronson test. Rather, the second prong requires
    particularized allegations raising a reasonable doubt that a majority of the demand board is
    subject to a sterilizing influence because directors face a substantial likelihood of liability for
    engaging in the conduct that the derivative claim challenges.
    3.      This Court adopts the Court of Chancery’s three-part test for
    demand futility
    This issue raises one more question—whether the three-part test for demand futility
    the Court of Chancery applied below is consistent with Aronson, Rales, and their progeny.
    The Court of Chancery noted that turnover on Facebook’s board, along with a director’s
    decision to abstain from voting on the Reclassification, made it difficult to apply the Aronson
    test to the facts of this case:
    The composition of the Board in this case exemplifies the
    difficulties that the Aronson test struggles to overcome. The
    Board has nine members, six of whom served on the Board
    when it approved the Reclassification. Under a strict reading of
    Rales, because the Board does not have a new majority of
    directors, Aronson provides the governing test. But one of those
    six directors abstained from the vote on the Reclassification,
    meaning that the Aronson analysis only has traction for five of
    the nine. Aronson does not provide guidance about what to do
    with either the director who abstained or the two directors who
    joined the Board later. The director who abstained from voting
    on the Reclassification suffers from other conflicts that renders
    reasonable doubt that the transaction at issue was the product of a valid exercise of business
    judgment,” but dismissing the complaint as to certain directors due to a Section 102(b)(7) provision).
    37
    her incapable of considering a demand, yet a strict reading of
    Aronson only focuses on the challenged decision and therefore
    would not account for those conflicts. Similarly, the plaintiff
    alleges that one of the directors who subsequently joined the
    Board has conflicts that render him incapable of considering a
    demand, but a strict reading of Aronson would not account for
    that either. Precedent thus calls for applying Aronson, but its
    analytical framework is not up to the task. The Rales test, by
    contrast, can accommodate all of these considerations.164
    The court also suggested that in light of the developments discussed above, “Aronson
    is broken in its own right because subsequent jurisprudential developments have rendered
    non-viable the core premise on which Aronson depends—the notion that an elevated
    standard of review standing alone results in a substantial likelihood of liability sufficient to
    excuse demand. Perhaps the time has come to move on from Aronson entirely.”165
    To address these concerns, the Court of Chancery applied the following three-part test
    on a director-by-director basis to determine whether demand should be excused as futile:
    (i) whether the director received a material personal
    benefit from the alleged misconduct that is the subject of the
    litigation demand;
    (ii) whether the director would face a substantial
    likelihood of liability on any of the claims that are the subject of
    the litigation demand; and
    (iii) whether the director lacks independence from
    someone who received a material personal benefit from the
    alleged misconduct that is the subject of the litigation demand
    164
    Op. at 890.
    165
    Id. at 889-90.
    38
    or who would face a substantial likelihood of liability on any of
    the claims that are the subject of the litigation demand.166
    This approach treated “Rales as the general demand futility test,” while “draw[ing] upon
    Aronson-like principles when evaluating whether particular directors face a substantial
    likelihood of liability as a result of having participated in the decision to approve the
    Reclassification.”167
    This Court adopts the Court of Chancery’s three-part test as the universal test for
    assessing whether demand should be excused as futile. When the Court decided Aronson, it
    made sense to use the standard of review to assess whether directors were subject to an
    influence that would sterilize their discretion with respect to a litigation demand. Subsequent
    changes in the law have eroded the ground upon which that framework rested. Those
    changes cannot be ignored, and it is both appropriate and necessary that the common law
    evolve in an orderly fashion to incorporate those developments. The Court of Chancery’s
    three-part test achieves that important goal. Blending the Aronson test with the Rales test is
    appropriate because “both ‘address the same question of whether the board can exercise its
    business judgment on the corporat[ion]’s behalf’ in considering demand”; 168 and the refined
    test does not change the result of demand-futility analysis.169
    166
    Id. at 890.
    167
    Id.
    168
    Lenois, 
    2017 WL 5289611
    , at *9 (quoting Kaplan, 
    540 A.2d at 730
    ).
    169
    If a director is interested in the challenged transaction—or lacks independence from someone
    else who is interested in the transaction—then the first prong of Aronson excuses demand with
    respect to that director. Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    . The first and third prongs of the refined three-
    39
    Further, the refined test “refocuses the inquiry on the decision regarding the litigation
    demand, rather than the decision being challenged.”170 Notwithstanding text focusing on the
    propriety of the challenged transaction, this approach is consistent with the overarching
    concern that Aronson identified: whether the directors on the demand board “cannot be
    considered proper persons to conduct litigation on behalf of the corporation” because they
    “are under an influence which sterilizes their discretion.”171 The purpose of the demand-
    futility analysis is to assess whether the board should be deprived of its decision-making
    authority because there is reason to doubt that the directors would be able to bring their
    impartial business judgment to bear on a litigation demand. That is a different consideration
    than whether the derivative claim is strong or weak because the challenged transaction is
    likely to pass or fail the applicable standard of review. It is helpful to keep those inquiries
    separate. And the Court of Chancery’s three-part test is particularly helpful where, like here,
    board turnover and director abstention make it difficult to apply the Aronson test as written.
    Finally, because the three-part test is consistent with and enhances Aronson, Rales,
    and their progeny, the Court need not overrule Aronson to adopt this refined test, and cases
    properly construing Aronson, Rales, and their progeny remain good law.
    part test yield the same result. Op. at 890. Similarly, if the derivative litigation would expose a
    director to a substantial likelihood of liability, then the demand requirement is excused as futile with
    respect to that director under the second prong of the Aronson test and the second prong of the refined
    test. See Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    ; Op. at 890. Thus, the refined three-part test excuses demand
    whenever the Aronson test would excuse demand.
    170
    Op. at 887.
    171
    Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 814
    .
    40
    Accordingly, from this point forward, courts should ask the following three questions
    on a director-by-director basis when evaluating allegations of demand futility:
    (i) whether the director received a material personal
    benefit from the alleged misconduct that is the subject of the
    litigation demand;
    (ii) whether the director faces a substantial likelihood of
    liability on any of the claims that would be the subject of the
    litigation demand; and
    (iii) whether the director lacks independence from
    someone who received a material personal benefit from the
    alleged misconduct that would be the subject of the litigation
    demand or who would face a substantial likelihood of liability
    on any of the claims that are the subject of the litigation demand.
    If the answer to any of the questions is “yes” for at least half of the members of the demand
    board, then demand is excused as futile. It is no longer necessary to determine whether the
    Aronson test or the Rales test governs a complaint’s demand-futility allegations.
    B.         The Complaint Does Not Plead with Particularity Facts Establishing that
    Demand Would Be Futile
    The second issue on appeal is whether Tri-State’s complaint pleaded with
    particularity facts establishing that a litigation demand on Facebook’s board would be futile.
    The Court resolves this issue by applying the three-part test adopted above on a director-by-
    director basis.
    The Demand Board was composed of nine directors. Tri-State concedes on appeal
    that two of those directors, Chenault and Zients, could have impartially considered a
    41
    litigation demand.172 And Facebook does not argue on appeal that Zuckerberg, Sandberg,
    or Andreessen could have impartially considered a litigation demand.173 Thus, in order to
    show that demand is futile, Tri-State must sufficiently allege that two of the following
    directors could not impartially consider demand: Thiel, Hastings, Bowles, and Desmond-
    Hellmann.
    Tri-State concedes on appeal that neither Thiel, Hastings, Bowles, nor Desmond-
    Hellmann had a personal interest in the Reclassification.174 This eliminates the possibility
    that demand could be excused under the first prong of the demand-futility test, as none of the
    remaining four directors obtained a material personal benefit from the alleged misconduct
    that is the subject of the litigation demand.
    Similarly, there is no dispute that Facebook has a broad Section 102(b)(7)
    provision;175 and Tri-State concedes on appeal that the complaint does not plead with
    particularity that Thiel, Hastings, Bowles, or Desmond-Hellmann committed a non-
    exculpated breach of their fiduciary duties with respect to the Reclassification.176 This
    172
    Compare Op. at 895-900 (holding that the complaint did not establish that Chenault or Zients
    lacked independence) with Opening Br. (not challenging that holding).
    173
    Compare Op. at 893 (assuming that Zuckerberg, Sandberg, and Andreessen were incapable of
    impartially considering a litigation demand) with Answering Br. (neither conceding nor challenging
    that assumption for the purpose of considering the motion to dismiss).
    174
    Compare Op. 892-901 (holding that the complaint did not allege that these directors had a
    personal interest); with Opening Br. (not contesting that holding).
    175
    See, e.g., App. to Answering Br. 77.
    176
    Compare Op. 892-901(holding that the complaint did not allege with particularity that these
    directors committed non-exculpated breaches of their fiduciary duties); with Opening Br. (not
    contesting that holding).
    42
    eliminates the possibility that demand could be excused under the second prong of the
    demand-futility test, as none of the remaining four directors would face a substantial
    likelihood of liability on any of the claims that would be the subject of the litigation demand.
    This leaves one unanswered question: whether the complaint pleaded with
    particularity facts establishing that two of the four remaining directors lacked independence
    from Zuckerberg.
    “The primary basis upon which a director’s independence must be measured is
    whether the director’s decision is based on the corporate merits of the subject before the
    board, rather than extraneous considerations or influences.”177 Whether a director is
    independent “is a fact-specific determination” that depends upon “the context of a particular
    case.”178 To show a lack of independence, a derivative complaint must plead with
    particularity facts creating “a reasonable doubt that a director is . . . so ‘beholden’ to an
    interested director . . . that his or her ‘discretion would be sterilized.’”179
    177
    Beam ex rel. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v. Stewart, 
    845 A.2d 1040
    , 1049
    (Del. 2004) (citing Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 936
    ); see also Sandys v. Pincus, 
    152 A.3d 124
    , 128
    (Del. 2016) (“At the pleading stage, a lack of independence turns on ‘whether the plaintiffs have pled
    facts from which the director’s ability to act impartially on a matter important to the interested party
    can be doubted because that director may feel either subject to the interested party’s dominion or
    beholden to that interested party.’” (quoting Del. C’ty Empls. Ret. Fund v. Sanchez, 
    124 A.3d 1017
    ,
    1024 n.25 (Del. 2015))).
    178
    Beam, 
    845 A.2d at 1049
    .
    179
    
    Id. at 1050
     (quoting Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 936
    ).
    43
    “A plaintiff seeking to show that a director was not independent must satisfy a
    materiality standard.” 180 The plaintiff must allege that “the director in question had ties to
    the person whose proposal or actions he or she is evaluating that are sufficiently substantial
    that he or she could not objectively discharge his or her fiduciary duties.”181 In other words,
    the question is “whether, applying a subjective standard, those ties were material, in the sense
    that the alleged ties could have affected the impartiality of the individual director.”182 “Our
    law requires that all the pled facts regarding a director’s relationship to the interested party
    be considered in full context in making the, admittedly imprecise, pleading stage
    determination of independence.”183 And while “the plaintiff is bound to plead particularized
    facts in . . . a derivative complaint, so too is the court bound to draw all inferences from those
    particularized facts in favor of the plaintiff, not the defendant, when dismissal of a derivative
    complaint is sought.”184
    “A variety of motivations, including friendship, may influence the demand futility
    inquiry. But, to render a director unable to consider demand, a relationship must be of a bias-
    180
    Kahn v. M&F Worldwide Corp., 
    88 A.3d 635
    , 649 (Del. 2014) (citing Cinerama, Inc. v.
    Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
    , 1167 (Del. 1995)); Brehm, 
    746 A.2d at
    259 n.49), overruled on
    other grounds by Flood v. Synutra Int’l, Inc., 
    88 A.3d 635
     (Del. 2018).
    181
    
    Id.
    182
    
    Id.
     (citing Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
     (Del.1995); Cede & Co. v.
    Technicolor, Inc., 
    634 A.2d 345
    , 363 (Del.1993); Grimes v. Donald, 
    673 A.2d 1207
    , 1216
    (Del. 1996)).
    183
    Sandys, 152 A.3d at 128 (quoting Sanchez, 
    124 A.3d at
    1024 n.25).
    184
    
    Id.
    44
    producing nature.”185 Alleging that a director had a “personal friendship” with someone else,
    or that a director had an “outside business relationship,” are “insufficient to raise a reasonable
    doubt” that the director lacked independence.186 “Consistent with [the] predicate materiality
    requirement, the existence of some financial ties between the interested party and the
    director, without more, is not disqualifying.”187
    Like the Court of Chancery below, we hold that Tri-State failed to raise a reasonable
    doubt that either Thiel, Hastings, or Bowles was beholden to Zuckerberg.188
    1.      Hastings
    The complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt that Hastings lacked independence
    from Zuckerberg. According to the complaint, Hastings was not independent because:
    • “Netflix purchased advertisements from Facebook at relevant times,” and
    maintains “ongoing and potential future business relationships with” Facebook.189
    • According to an article published by The New York Times, Facebook gave to
    Netflix and several other technology companies “more intrusive access to users’
    personal data than it ha[d] disclosed, effectively exempting those partners from
    privacy rules.”190
    • “Hastings (as a Netflix founder) is biased in favor of founders maintaining control
    of their companies.”191
    185
    Beam, 
    845 A.2d at 1050
    .
    186
    
    Id.
    187
    M&F Worldwide, 
    88 A.3d at 649
    .
    188
    Because the complaint failed to raise a reasonable doubt that Hastings, Thiel, or Bowles were not
    independent, this Opinion need not address whether Desmond-Hellmann was beholden to
    Zuckerberg.
    189
    A60.
    190
    A61.
    191
    A60.
    45
    • “Hastings has . . . publicly supported large philanthropic donations by founders
    during their lifetimes. Indeed, both Hastings and Zuckerberg have been
    significant contributors . . . [to] a well-known foundation known for soliciting and
    obtaining large contributions from company founders and which manages donor
    funds for both Hastings . . . and Zuckerberg . . . .”192
    These allegations do not raise a reasonable doubt that Hastings was beholden to
    Zuckerberg. Even if Netflix purchased advertisements from Facebook, the complaint does
    not allege that those purchases were material to Netflix or that Netflix received anything
    other than arm’s length terms under those agreements. Similarly, the complaint does not
    make any particularized allegations explaining how obtaining special access to Facebook
    user data was material to Netflix’s business interests, or that Netflix used its special access to
    user data to obtain any concrete benefits in its own business.
    Further, having a bias in favor of founder-control does not mean that Hastings lacks
    independence from Zuckerberg. Hastings might have a good-faith belief that founder
    control maximizes a corporation’s value over the long-haul. If so, that good-faith belief
    would play a valid role in Hasting’s exercise of his impartial business judgment.193
    Finally, alleging that Hastings and Zuckerberg have a track record of donating to
    similar causes falls short of showing that Hastings is beholden to Zuckerberg. As the Court
    192
    
    Id.
    193
    See generally Frederick Hsu Living Tr. v. ODN Hldg. Corp., 
    2017 WL 1437308
    , at *18
    (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017) (“[T]he fiduciary relationship requires that the directors act prudently,
    loyally, and in good faith to maximize the value of the corporation over the long-term for the benefit
    of the providers of presumptively permanent equity capital, as warranted for an entity with a
    presumptively perpetual life in which the residual claimants have locked in their investment.”
    (citation omitted)).
    46
    of Chancery noted below, “[t]here is no logical reason to think that a shared interest in
    philanthropy would undercut Hastings’ independence. Nor is it apparent how donating to
    the same charitable fund would result in Hastings feeling obligated to serve Zuckerberg’s
    interests.”194 Accordingly, the Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s holding that the
    complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt about Hastings’s independence.
    2.   Thiel
    The complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt that Thiel lacked independence from
    Zuckerberg. According to the complaint, Thiel was not independent because:
    • “Thiel was one of the early investors in Facebook,” is “its longest-tenured board
    member besides Zuckerberg,” and “has . . . been instrumental to Facebook’s
    business strategy and direction over the years.”195
    • “Thiel has a personal bias in favor of keeping founders in control of the companies
    they created . . . .”196
    • The venture capital firm at which Thiel is a partner, Founders Fund, “gets ‘good
    deal flow’” from its “high-profile association with Facebook.”197
    • “According to Facebook’s 2018 Proxy Statement, the Facebook shares owned by
    the Founders Fund (i.e., by Thiel and Andreessen) will be released from escrow
    in connection with” an acquisition.198
    • “Thiel is Zuckerberg’s close friend and mentor.”199
    • In October 2016, Thiel made a $1 million donation to an “organization that paid
    [a substantial sum to] Cambridge Analytica” and “cofounded the Cambridge
    194
    Op. at 896.
    195
    A57-58.
    196
    A58.
    197
    
    Id.
    198
    
    Id.
    199
    A57.
    47
    Analytica-linked data firm Palantir.”200 Even though “[t]he Cambridge Analytica
    scandal has exposed Facebook to regulatory investigations”201 and litigation,
    Zuckerberg did not try to remove Thiel from the board.
    • Similarly, Thiel’s “acknowledge[ment] that he secretly funded various lawsuits
    aimed at bankrupting [the] news website Gawker Media” lead to “widespread
    calls for Zuckerberg to remove Thiel from Facebook’s Board given Thiel’s
    apparent antagonism toward a free press.”202 Zuckerberg ignored those calls and
    did not seek to remove Thiel from Facebook’s board.
    These allegations do not raise a reasonable doubt that Thiel is beholden to
    Zuckerberg. The complaint does not explain why Thiel’s status as a long-serving board
    member, early investor, or his contributions to Facebook’s business strategy make him
    beholden to Zuckerberg. And for the same reasons provided above, a director’s good faith
    belief that founder controller maximizes value does not raise a reasonable doubt that the
    director lacks independence from a corporation’s founder.
    While the complaint alleges that Founders Fund “gets ‘good deal flow’” from Thiel’s
    “high-profile association with Facebook,”203 the complaint does not identify a single deal
    that flowed to—or is expected to flow to—Founders Fund through this association, let alone
    any deals that would be material to Thiel’s interests. The complaint also fails to draw any
    connection between Thiel’s continued status as a director and the vesting of Facebook stock
    200
    A59.
    201
    
    Id.
    202
    
    Id.
    203
    A58.
    48
    related to the acquisition. And alleging that Thiel is a personal friend of Zuckerberg is
    insufficient to establish a lack of independence.204
    The final pair of allegations suggest that because “Zuckerberg stood by Thiel” in the
    face of public scandals, “Thiel feels a sense of obligation to Zuckerberg.”205 These
    allegations can only raise a reasonable doubt about Thiel’s independence if remaining a
    Facebook director was financially or personally material to Thiel. As the Court of Chancery
    noted below, given Thiel’s wealth and stature, “[t]he complaint does not support an inference
    that Thiel’s service on the Board is financially material to him. Nor does the complaint
    sufficiently allege that serving as a Facebook director confers such cachet that Thiel’s
    independence is compromised.”206 Accordingly, this Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s
    holding that the complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt about Thiel’s independence.
    3.     Bowles
    The complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt that Bowles lacked independence
    from Zuckerberg. According to the complaint, Thiel was not independent because:
    • “Bowles is beholden to the entire board” because it granted “a waiver of the
    mandatory retirement age for directors set forth in Facebook’s Corporate
    Governance Guidelines,” allowing “Bowles to stand for reelection despite having
    reached 70 years old before” the May 2018 annual meeting.207
    204
    See, e.g., Beam, 
    845 A.2d at 1050
    .
    205
    Op. at 898.
    206
    Id. at 898-99.
    207
    A56-57.
    49
    • “Morgan Stanley—a company for which [Bowles] . . . served as a longstanding
    board member at the time (2005-2017)—directly benefited by receiving over
    $2 million in fees for its work . . . in connection with the Reclassification . . . .”208
    • Bowles “ensured that Evercore and his close friend Altman financially benefitted
    from the Special Committee’s engagement” without properly vetting Evercore’s
    competency or considering alternatives.209
    These allegations do not raise a reasonable doubt that Bowles is beholden to
    Zuckerberg or the other members of the Demand Board. The complaint does not make any
    particularized allegation explaining why the board’s decision to grant Bowles a waiver from
    the mandatory retirement age would compromise his ability to impartially consider a
    litigation demand or engender a sense of debt to the other directors. For example, the
    complaint does not allege that Bowles was expected to do anything in exchange for the
    waiver, or that remaining a director was financially or personally material to Bowles.
    The complaint’s allegations regarding Bowles’s links to financial advisors are
    similarly ill-supported. None of these allegations suggest that Bowles received a personal
    benefit from the Reclassification, or that Bowles’s ties to these advisors made him beholden
    to Zuckerberg as a condition of sending business to Morgan Stanley, Evercore, or his “close
    friend Altman.”210 Accordingly, this Court affirms the Court of Chancery’s holding that the
    complaint does not raise a reasonable doubt about Bowles’s independence.211
    208
    A57.
    209
    Id.
    210
    Id.
    211
    The factual section of the complaint also alleges that “Bowles privately told Zuckerberg” that
    Bowles was “proud to be a small part of [Zuckerberg’s] life” after learning about Zuckerberg’s plan
    50
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons provided above, the Court of Chancery’s judgment is affirmed.
    to make accelerated donations to fulfill his pledge. See A33. Tri-State did not repeat this allegation
    in the portion of the complaint addressing demand futility. See A56-57. It is therefore unclear
    whether the complaint relies on this assertion to establish that Bowles lacks independence.
    Nonetheless, Tri-State has argued below and on appeal that Bowles’s expression of gratitude is
    “hardly a sign of director independence” and is “a harbinger of [his] flawed tenure on the Special
    Committee.” Opening Br. 43. To the extent Tri-State intended to rely on this allegation to help
    establish that demand is futile, this Court agrees entirely with the Court of Chancery’s analysis.
    “These allegations suggest that Zuckerberg and Bowles had a collegial relationship, which is not
    sufficient to compromise Bowles’s independence.”               250 A.3d at 899; see also Beam,
    
    845 A.2d at 1050
     (noting that the existence of a “personal friendship” is insufficient to establish that
    a director is not independent).
    51