Cambridge Retirement System v. Slavko James Joseph Bosnjak ( 2014 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    CAMBRIDGE RETIREMENT SYSTEM,                   )
    derivatively on behalf of Unilife Corporation, )
    )
    Plaintiff,           )
    v.                                 )   C.A. No. 9178-CB
    )
    SLAVKO JAMES JOSEPH BOSNJAK,                   )
    JEFF CARTER, JOHN LUND, WILLIAM                )
    GALLE, MARY KATHERINE WOLD,                    )
    MARC FIRESTONE, and ALAN                       )
    SHORTALL,                                      )
    )
    Defendants,           )
    )
    and                                     )
    )
    UNILIFE CORPORATION,                           )
    )
    Nominal Defendant. )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: June 9, 2014
    Date Decided: June 26, 2014
    Christine S. Azar and Ned Weinberger of Labaton Sucharow LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Christopher J. Keller, Eric J. Belfi and Michael W. Stocker of Labaton
    Sucharow, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
    M. Duncan Grant and James G. McMillan, III of Pepper Hamilton LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Jay A. Dubow of Pepper Hamilton, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attorneys for
    Defendants.
    BOUCHARD, C.
    I.     INTRODUCTION
    This action involves derivative claims for breach of fiduciary duty (Count I) and
    corporate waste (Count II) concerning compensation paid to the non-executive directors
    of Unilife Corporation (“Unilife” or the “Company”) since November 2010.                 The
    challenged compensation consists of two components: (1) equity awards the Unilife
    directors granted to themselves subject to obtaining stockholder approval for those
    awards and (2) cash compensation the directors paid to themselves without obtaining
    stockholder approval.
    Unilife has moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to make a pre-suit demand
    upon the Unilife board of directors or to plead facts that excuse such a demand and, as to
    certain claims, for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. For the
    reasons set forth below, I conclude that demand is excused under the first prong of
    Aronson because the claims involve self-dealing transactions implicating a majority of
    the members of Unilife’s board of directors at the time suit was filed. I also conclude that
    the fiduciary duty claim should be dismissed for failure to state a claim for relief insofar
    as it relates to the outside directors’ equity awards because each of those awards was
    specifically approved by Unilife’s stockholders and that the corporate waste claim fails to
    satisfy the stringent standard for stating such a claim. Defendants did not seek to dismiss
    the fiduciary duty claim for failure to state a claim for relief insofar as that claim relates
    to cash compensation paid to the directors for their services as directors. Thus, that claim
    survives.
    1
    II.     BACKGROUND1
    A.    The Parties
    Unilife is a manufacturer and supplier of injectable drug delivery systems,
    including retractable syringes. In 2002, the Company was founded in Sydney, Australia.
    In 2008, Unilife moved its operations to York, Pennsylvania.            In 2010, Unilife
    redomiciled from Australia to the State of Delaware and became listed on the NASDAQ
    Global Market.
    Since its formation in 2002, Unilife has failed to turn a profit or to generate
    significant revenues. During its last three fiscal years,2 Unilife’s revenues declined from
    $6.7 million in fiscal year 2011, to $5.5 million in fiscal year 2012, to $2.7 million in
    fiscal year 2013. During this same period, the Company incurred losses of $40.7 million
    in fiscal year 2011, $52.3 million in fiscal year 2012 and $63.2 million in fiscal year
    2013.
    1
    Unless otherwise noted, the facts recited in this Memorandum Opinion are based on the
    allegations in plaintiff’s complaint, documents integral to or incorporated in the
    complaint, or facts of which the Court may take judicial notice. Plaintiff acknowledges
    that the Company’s 2010 to 2013 proxy statements are incorporated by reference into its
    complaint. Pl.’s Answering Br. 7.
    2
    Unilife’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. For example, its fiscal year 2011
    ended on June 30, 2011.
    2
    Plaintiff Cambridge Retirement System is a Massachusetts-based retirement
    system. It has held Unilife common stock continuously since November 2010, and
    challenges the compensation paid to Unilife’s outside directors during this period.3
    From November 2010 until November 2012, Unilife’s board of directors had
    seven members, consisting of its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Alan Shortall,
    and six outside directors: Slavko James Joseph Bosnjak, Jeff Carter, John Lund, William
    Galle, Mary Katherine Wold and Marc Firestone. Firestone left the board in November
    2012. As of the date the complaint in this action was filed on December 20, 2013, the
    board consisted of six directors: Shortall, Bosnjak, Carter, Lund, Galle and Wold.
    B.     Non-Management Director Compensation
    During the period at issue, Unilife compensated its outside directors through a
    combination of equity awards and cash compensation. Significant to the pending motion,
    the Unilife board conditioned its grant of each of the challenged equity awards on
    obtaining stockholder approval, which the stockholders provided.
    On January 8, 2010, in connection with Unilife’s redomiciliation from Australia to
    the State of Delaware, the Company’s stockholders approved the adoption of its 2009
    Stock Incentive Plan (the “2009 Plan”).4 Thereafter, on two separate occasions, the
    3
    In the face of a challenge to its standing to assert claims concerning compensation paid
    to the outside directors before November 2010, Cambridge explicitly disclaimed any
    intention to seek repayment of such compensation. Pl’s Answering Br. 7, n.7.
    4
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. F at 24, 38, 49 (Unilife Corp., Amended Registration Statement
    (Form 10) (Feb. 11, 2010)).
    3
    stockholders approved specific equity awards that the directors had granted themselves
    under the 2009 Plan conditioned on the receipt of stockholder approval.
    At a stockholders’ meeting held on December 1, 2010, Unilife’s stockholders
    approved grants of options to directors Wold and Firestone to purchase 100,000 shares of
    common stock each under the 2009 Plan.5         These grants were the subject of two
    proposals (Proposals No. 3-4) for stockholder approval described in a proxy statement
    dated October 18, 2010.
    Proposal No. 3 explained that the 100,000 options for Wold would have an
    exercise price of $6.83 per share based on the closing price of the Company’s shares on
    May 11, 2010 (the date the Unilife board approved the grant), would be exercisable for
    five years and would vest as follows: 16,667 options would vest within three business
    days of the Company obtaining stockholder approval, 25,000 shares would vest on the 12
    month anniversary and 24 month anniversary of the date of grant and 33,333 shares
    would vest on the 36 month anniversary of the date of grant. Proposal No. 4 provided the
    same information concerning the 100,000 options for Firestone except that they would
    have an exercise price of $6.19 per share based on the closing price of the Company’s
    shares on July 27, 2010, the date the Unilife board approved the grant.6 The proxy
    statement also disclosed that the common stock underlying the options for Wold and
    5
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. B at 39-40 (Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form
    14A) (Oct. 14, 2011)).
    6
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. A at 15-16 (Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form
    14A) (Oct. 18, 2010)).
    4
    Firestone have a “market value” of $683,000 and $619,000, respectively, based on the
    closing price of the Company’s common stock on the date Unilife’s board approved each
    grant.
    At a stockholders’ meeting held on December 1, 2011, Unilife’s stockholders
    approved grants of 45,000 stock-based awards each to directors Bosnjak, Carter, Galle,
    Lund, Wold and Firestone under the 2009 Plan.7 These grants were the subject of six
    proposals (Proposals No. 5-10) for stockholder approval described in a proxy statement
    dated October 14, 2011. Proposals No. 5-10 explained that each non-executive director
    would receive 15,000 securities (either in the form of shares of common stock or
    phantom stock units) in each of 2011, 2012 and 2013 (assuming the director remained in
    service on the grant date).8 The proxy statement also disclosed that the 45,000 securities
    to be granted to each of the non-executive directors have a “market value” of $189,000
    based on the closing price of the Company’s common stock on September 30, 2011, the
    date on which the board approved the grant.
    In addition to receiving the foregoing equity awards, the outside directors each
    received cash compensation during the relevant period consisting of a mix of retainer and
    meeting fees. The fee structure for the outside directors was disclosed in Unilife’s
    7
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. C at 11(Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form 14A)
    (Oct. 16, 2012)).
    8
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. B at 37-40 (Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form
    14A) (Oct. 14, 2011)). This proxy statement also included a proposal (Proposal No. 12)
    to amend the 2009 Plan. See 
    id. at 44-52.
    5
    October 18, 2010 proxy statement,9 but stockholder approval of that fee structure was not
    sought. Some directors also received other forms of cash compensation. When all of the
    cash amounts are combined with the value of the equity awards, the outside directors
    received a total of $1,356,040 in fiscal year 2012, or approximately 25% of the
    Company’s revenues that year, and a total of $668,240 in fiscal year 2013, or
    approximately 24% of the Company’s revenues that year.10
    According to the complaint, these amounts not only constitute an extraordinary
    percentage of the Company’s revenues, but are excessive when compared to other
    companies in Unilife’s sector. In particular, Cambridge alleges that, of eleven healthcare
    companies with market capitalizations between $41 million and $718 million, nine paid
    their directors, on average, less than $100,000 each in 2012 and eight paid their directors
    less than $70,000 each.      By contrast, Unilife, which has had an average market
    capitalization of $287.9 million over the past five years, paid its outside directors average
    compensation of $226,007 in fiscal year 2012.11
    9
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. A at 11-12 (Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form
    14A) (Oct. 18, 2010)). In its proxy statement dated October 7, 2013, Unilife disclosed a
    new fee structure for compensating its outside directors that increased the annual
    retainers and eliminated the per meeting fees. Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. D at 11-12 (Unilife
    Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form 14A) (Oct. 7, 2013)).
    10
    Compl. ¶ 23.
    11
    Compl. ¶ 24.
    6
    C.     Procedural History
    On December 20, 2013, Cambridge filed this derivative action on behalf of
    Unilife. The complaint asserts two claims against the director defendants, the first for
    breach of fiduciary duty and the second for waste of corporate assets. The defendants
    moved to dismiss both claims for failure to make demand under Court of Chancery Rule
    23.1. They also moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
    granted under Rule 12(b)(6) parts of the first claim and the second claim in its entirety.
    III.     ANALYSIS
    I first turn to the question whether the complaint alleges facts excusing demand
    before turning to whether the claims alleged in the complaint state a claim for relief.
    A.     The Failure to Make a Demand
    Where a decision of a corporation’s board of directors is challenged, demand may
    be excused under either prong of the familiar two-prong Aronson test if particularized
    facts have been alleged to create a reasonable doubt that “(1) the directors are
    disinterested and independent [or] (2) the challenged transaction was otherwise the
    product of a valid exercise of business judgment.”12 Plaintiff alleges that demand is
    excused here under the first prong of Aronson because five of the six members of the
    Unilife board at the time this action was filed are personally interested in their own
    compensation for their service as directors, which is the subject of the claims in this
    litigation. I agree and conclude that demand is excused for this reason.
    12
    Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
    , 814 (Del. 1984).
    7
    This conclusion is squarely supported by Chancellor Allen’s decision in Steiner v.
    Meyerson.13 There, confronted with a similar challenge to outside director compensation,
    Chancellor Allen found the first prong of Aronson to be satisfied in a straightforward, one
    sentence analysis: “As the outside directors comprise a majority of the Telxon board and
    are personally interested in their compensation levels, demand upon them to challenge or
    decrease their own compensation is excused.”14
    Defendants attempt to distinguish Steiner on the theory that the loyalty of the
    outside directors “was otherwise impugned” by virtue of their involvement in other
    transactions with Telxon’s then chief executive officer, Robert Meyerson, which were the
    subject of other claims in the case.15 This argument is inconsistent with the principle,
    cited in defendants’ brief, that demand futility analysis is conducted on a claim-by-claim
    basis.16 Indeed, there is no indication in Chancellor Allen’s Rule 23.1 analysis in Steiner,
    quoted above, that he considered anything other than the outside directors’ personal
    13
    Steiner v. Meyerson, 
    1995 WL 441999
    (Del. Ch. July 19, 1995).
    14
    
    Id. at *11.
    15
    Defs.’ Opening Br. 29. Defendants similarly try to distinguish Seinfeld v. Slager, 
    2012 WL 2501105
    (Del. Ch. June 29, 2012), which included claims challenging compensation
    paid to certain executives and a claim challenging the payment of stock awards to the
    outside directors, who made up a majority of the board. Tellingly, the defendants in
    Seinfeld moved to dismiss the executive compensation claims under Rule 23.1 but did not
    try to do so with respect to the outside director compensation claim. 
    Id. at *1.
    16
    Defs.’ Opening Br. 48. See Beam ex rel. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v.
    Stewart, 
    833 A.2d 961
    , 977 n.48 (Del. Ch. 2003) aff'd, 
    845 A.2d 1040
    (Del. 2004) (citing
    Yaw v. Talley, 
    1994 WL 89019
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Mar. 2, 1994); Needham v. Cruver, 
    1993 WL 179336
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. May 12, 1993)).
    8
    financial interest in their own compensation when deciding that demand was excused as
    to the claim challenging that compensation.17
    Defendants press two other arguments in an effort to avoid the straightforward
    application of the first prong of Aronson to this case. First, defendants argue that a
    director’s interest in his own compensation should not be considered “disabling” under
    Aronson unless it is alleged that the compensation is material to the particular director in
    question.18 Defendants have not identified any authority applying a materiality standard
    to a self-dealing transaction and I decline to do so.19 Substantial precedent supports the
    opposite conclusion: where self-dealing is present, a plaintiff need not plead that a
    director’s interest in a challenged transaction is material to him to establish that the
    director has a disabling interest.
    17
    In 2000, Chancellor Allen’s successor granted defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment on the outside director compensation claim. Merchants’ Nat. Properties, Inc.
    v. Meyerson, 
    2000 WL 1041229
    (Del. Ch. July 24, 2000). On appeal, the Delaware
    Supreme Court reversed and remanded noting, among other things, that “the trial court
    did not consider the interplay between the Directors’ compensation and the possible
    breach of fiduciary duties.” Telxon Corp. v. Meyerson, 
    802 A.2d 257
    , 266 (Del. 2002).
    This comment was directed to the analysis the trial court conducted when granting
    summary judgment in 2000, and did not concern Chancellor Allen’s analysis at the
    motion to dismiss stage under Rule 23.1, which was not appealed.
    18
    Defs.’ Opening Br. 29.
    19
    See, e.g., Def.’s Opening Br. 29-32, citing Grobow v. Perot, 
    539 A.2d 180
    , 185 (Del.
    1988) (receipt of director’s fees alone, without more, did not render outside directors
    interested in a share repurchase from a major stockholder); In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv.
    Litig., 
    731 A.2d 342
    , 359 (Del. Ch. 1998) (outside director whose “salary as a teacher is
    low compared to her directors’ fees” not beholden to Disney’s chief executive officer
    regarding challenge to another executive’s severance package); Orman v Cullman, 
    794 A.2d 5
    , 27 (Del. Ch. 2002) (outside director’s interest in serving as a director of a
    surviving corporation did not render him interested in a merger transaction).
    9
    In articulating the two-prong test for determining whether demand is excused, the
    Supreme Court in Aronson defined “interest” to mean “that directors can neither appear
    on both sides of a transaction nor expect to derive any personal financial benefit from it
    in the sense of self-dealing.”20 In Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., the Supreme Court
    described self-dealing to exist when “a director deals directly with the corporation, or has
    a stake in or is an officer or director of a firm that deals with the corporation.”21 The
    Supreme Court further explained that “[t]raditionally, the term ‘self-dealing’ describes
    the ‘situation when a [corporate fiduciary] is on both sides of a transaction . . . .’”22 The
    transactions at issue here, the Unilife directors’ payment of compensation to themselves,
    are classic forms of self-dealing.
    In Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc. (“Cede II”), the Supreme Court held that a
    personal financial benefit must be “material” to a director to qualify as a disabling
    interest, but in doing so, the Court distinguished self-dealing transactions.23 Specifically,
    in Cede II, the Supreme Court affirmed Chancellor Allen’s holding that “[a]bsent
    evidence of self-dealing, . . . evidence of any personal or special benefit accruing to a
    director . . . in an otherwise arms-length transaction does not establish a lack of
    independence sufficient to rebut the business judgment rule unless the director’s self-
    20
    
    Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812
    .
    21
    Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
    , 1169 (Del. 1995) (subsequent
    history omitted) (citing 
    8 Del. C
    . § 144(a)).
    22
    
    Id. (quoting Sinclair
    Oil Corp. v. Levien, 
    280 A.2d 717
    , 720 (Del. 1971)).
    23
    Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    634 A.2d 345
    , 362-63 (Del. 1993) (subsequent history
    omitted).
    10
    interest is also found to be ‘material.’”24 In so ruling, the Court noted the Chancellor’s
    conclusion that a “plaintiff’s burden of proof of a director’s self-interest in an arms-
    length third-party transaction should be greater than in a classic self-dealing transaction
    where a director or directors stand on both sides of a transaction.”25
    The lack of a materiality standard for self-dealing transactions at common law is
    consistent with § 144 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, which applies to self-
    dealing transactions. Specifically, § 144 applies to any “contract or transaction [1]
    between a corporation and 1 or more of its directors or officers, or [2] between a
    corporation and any other corporation, partnership, association, or other organization in
    which 1 or more of its directors or officers, are directors or officers, or have a financial
    interest.”26     Significantly, § 144 does not contain any qualification for materiality.
    Instead, by its plain terms, it applies to self-dealing contracts and transactions irrespective
    of whether they are material to a director’s personal financial circumstances.
    Analyzing the Supreme Court’s decisions in Cinerama and Cede II and their
    interplay with § 144, then-Vice Chancellor Strine determined that the materiality test
    articulated in those decisions does not apply when a director is deemed interested by
    24
    
    Id. at 362
    (emphasis added).
    25
    Id.
    26
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 144(a).
    11
    virtue of § 144. Rather, a materiality standard only applies when § 144 is inapplicable.27
    Chancellor Chandler similarly explained in Orman v. Cullman, that the need to
    demonstrate materiality to establish the interest of a director in a transaction applies only
    “in the absence of self-dealing” and that “whenever a director stands on both sides of the
    challenged transaction he is deemed interested and allegations of materiality have not
    been required.”28
    Finally, it bears mention that Chancellor Allen, who articulated the materiality test
    that was affirmed in Cede II, did not impose a materiality requirement in Steiner, which
    was decided after Cede II. In fact, the Chancellor found that demand was excused in
    Steiner despite his observation that the compensation for the directors “seem[ed] quite
    within a range that could be paid in good faith by a company seeking to attract
    competent, committed directors.”29
    Defendants base their second argument to avoid a straightforward application of
    the first prong of Aronson on 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(h). That provision states that “[u]nless
    otherwise restricted by the certificate of incorporation or bylaws, the board of directors
    shall have the authority to fix the compensation of directors.”
    27
    HMG/Courtland Properties, Inc. v. Gray, 
    749 A.2d 94
    , 112-14 (Del. Ch. 1999);
    Harbor Fin. P’rs. v. Huizenga, 
    751 A.2d 879
    , 887 (Del. Ch. 1999) (materiality standard
    “is inapplicable when a director’s interest implicates § 144.”).
    28
    Orman v. Cullman, 
    794 A.2d 5
    , 23, 25 n.50 (Del. Ch. 2002).
    29
    Steiner, 
    1995 WL 441999
    , at *7.
    12
    According to defendants, the “only way to give effect to Section 141(h) is to
    require derivative plaintiffs not only to allege that a majority of directors are interested in
    their own compensation, but also to allege particularized facts” that would satisfy the
    second prong of Aronson, i.e., to create a reasonable doubt that the directors’ approval of
    their own compensation was the product of a valid exercise of business judgment.30
    Defendants provide no authority to support this novel interpretation of § 141(h).
    Section 141(h) was enacted in 1969 in response to early Delaware cases that called
    into question the ability of directors to receive compensation for their services.31 In 1922,
    the Delaware Supreme Court declared in Lofland v. Cahall that directors “have no right
    to compensation for services rendered within the scope of their duties as directors, unless
    it is authorized by the charter, by–laws, or the stockholders of the company.”32 In 1928,
    the Court of Chancery affirmed this principle in Finch v. Warrior Cement Corp.33 In a
    contemporaneous analysis of the 1969 amendments to the Delaware General Corporation
    Law, it was explained that § 141(h) “was intended to lay to rest a suggestion by way of
    dictum . . . that directors are not empowered to vote compensation for members of the
    30
    Defs.’ Reply Br. 3.
    31
    57 Del. Laws ch. 148, § 6 (1969). See also 1 Edward P. Welch et al., Folk on the
    Delaware General Corporate Law, §141.16, at 4-342 (6th ed. 2014).
    32
    Lofland v. Cahall, 
    118 A. 1
    , 3 (Del. 1922).
    33
    Finch v. Warrior Cement Corp., 
    141 A. 54
    , 63-64 (Del. Ch. 1928).
    13
    board unless authorized by a vote of stockholders or by a specific charter or by-law
    provision.”34
    On its face, § 141(h) only speaks to the authority of directors to set their own
    compensation. It does not address the standard of review applicable to such a decision.
    Given the plain text of § 141(h), its legislative history and the lack of any authority
    supporting defendants’ novel interpretation of the statute, I reject defendants’ invitation
    to rewrite the disjunctive two-prong test of Aronson to require that both prongs be
    satisfied when analyzing demand futility regarding a challenge to director compensation
    that plainly satisfies the first prong.
    For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that plaintiff’s failure to make a demand is
    excused.
    B.       Motion to Dismiss Under Rule 12(b)(6)
    A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim must be
    denied “unless the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover under any reasonably
    conceivable set of circumstances.”35 “In determining whether a pleading meets this
    minimal standard, this Court draws all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor,
    34
    S. Samuel Arsht and Walter K. Stapleton, Analysis of the 1969 Amendments to the
    Delaware Corporation Law, 2 Corporation (P-H) at 350 (1969).
    35
    Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Capital Holdings LLC, 
    27 A.3d 531
    , 537
    (Del. 2011); see also Winshall v. Viacom Int’l., Inc., 
    76 A.3d 808
    , 813 n.12 (Del. 2013).
    14
    accepts all well-pleaded factual allegations as true, and even accepts ‘vague allegations in
    the Complaint as ‘well pleaded’ if they provide the defendant notice of the claim.’”36
    1.     The Fiduciary Duty Claim
    a.     Cash Compensation
    With one exception discussed below, defendants did not move to dismiss the
    fiduciary duty claim for failure to state a claim for relief under Rule 12(b)(6) insofar as
    that claim pertains to the cash compensation Unilife’s directors paid themselves. This
    was a sensible decision. In reversing a subsequent grant of summary judgment in the
    Steiner case discussed above, the Delaware Supreme Court held that, “[l]ike any other
    interested transaction, directoral self-compensation decisions lie outside the business
    judgment rule’s presumptive protection, so that, where properly challenged, the receipt of
    self-determined benefits is subject to an affirmative showing that the compensation
    arrangements are fair to the corporation.”37 Thus, because demand is excused for the
    reasons stated above, this aspect of the fiduciary duty claim survives and it will be the
    defendants’ burden to demonstrate the fairness of the cash compensation paid to the
    outside directors.
    36
    Seinfeld v. Slager, 
    2012 WL 2501105
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. June 29, 2012) (quoting Cent.
    Mortg. 
    Co., 27 A.3d at 535
    ).
    37
    Telxon Corp. v. Meyerson, 
    802 A.2d 257
    , 265 (Del. 2002) (citing Hall v. John S. Isaacs
    & Sons Farms, Inc., 
    146 A.2d 602
    , 610-11 (Del. Ch. 1958), aff'd in part, 
    163 A.2d 288
    (Del. 1960); Meiselman v. Eberstadt, 
    170 A.2d 720
    (Del. Ch. 1961); Wilderman v.
    Wilderman, 
    315 A.2d 610
    (Del. Ch. 1974)).
    15
    The one aspect of cash compensation for which defendants have sought dismissal
    concerns $346,392 and $216,479 that was paid to defendant Carter in fiscal years 2011
    and 2012, respectively. These amounts are reported in the Company’s proxy statements
    in a table entitled “Director Compensation” under             the subheading “All Other
    Compensation” and are accompanied by a footnote stating that “Mr. Carter’s other
    compensation includes amounts paid to a consulting entity of which Mr. Carter is the
    principal.”38
    At oral argument, plaintiff’s counsel represented that plaintiff challenges only the
    compensation paid to the outside directors for their service as directors and does not
    challenge amounts paid to Carter for consulting services.39           The use of the word
    “includes” in the footnote quoted above, however, leaves open the possibility that some
    of Carter’s “other compensation” may have been paid for his services as a director and
    not as a consultant.
    In a letter filed after oral argument, defendants’ counsel contends that all of the
    amounts appearing in the “other compensation” line for Carter were paid for consulting
    services, notwithstanding the text of the footnote, based on an extrapolation of a currency
    exchange rate between Australian and United States dollars and other disclosures
    38
    Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. B at 9 & n.5 (Unilife Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form
    14A) (Oct. 14, 2011)) (emphasis added); Defs.’ Opening Br. Ex. C at 10 & n.8 (Unilife
    Corp., Definitive Proxy Statement (Form 14A) (Oct. 16, 2012)) (emphasis added).
    39
    Mot. to Dismiss Hr’g Tr. at 40, June 9, 2014.
    16
    contained in the proxy statement.40 Although defendants’ explanation makes sense, I
    cannot resolve this issue from the allegations of the complaint and the face of the proxy
    statements incorporated therein. Accordingly, this aspect of the fiduciary duty claim will
    not be dismissed so that plaintiff can verify in discovery whether the full amounts
    reported as “other compensation” for Carter were paid solely for consulting services.
    b.     Equity Awards
    Insofar as the fiduciary duty claim pertains to the equity awards the outside
    directors received, defendants argue that they are protected by the business judgment rule
    because each of those awards was approved by a disinterested majority of Unilife’s
    stockholders. I agree and dismiss this aspect of the fiduciary duty claim because plaintiff
    has failed to plead facts to legitimately call into question the validity of the stockholders’
    approval or to rebut the presumption of the business judgment rule.
    In a series of decisions, this Court has dismissed otherwise self-interested
    transactions involving director compensation because of the effect of stockholder
    approval of such transactions. In Steiner, discussed above, after sustaining a claim for
    breach of fiduciary duty challenging the cash payments made to the outside directors of
    Telxon, Chancellor Allen dismissed that part of the claim challenging stock option grants
    to them based on stockholder approval of the plan under which the options were granted.
    He explained that:
    40
    Letter from James G. McMillan, III to The Honorable Andre G. Bouchard (June 9,
    2014).
    17
    Unlike the other self-interested transactions challenged by plaintiff, the
    stock option plan was presented to the Telxon shareholders at the 1991
    annual meeting and approved by a majority of the stockholders. The
    Supreme Court held in Kerbs v. California Eastern Airways, Inc., Del.
    Supr., 
    90 A.2d 652
    , 655 (1952) that “[s]tockholders’ ratification of voidable
    acts of directors is effective for all purposes unless the action of the
    directors constituted a gift of corporate assets to themselves or was ultra
    vires, illegal, or fraudulent.” 41
    Chancellor Allen thus held that, in the absence of any allegation that “the option plan was
    ultra vires, illegal or fraudulent, the only basis on which the plan may be successfully
    attacked is that it constitutes a gift of corporate assets or waste.”42
    Several years later, in In re 3COM Corp. Shareholders Litigation, the Court cited
    Steiner with approval and held that “[d]ecisions of directors who administer a stockholder
    approved director stock option plan are entitled to the protection of the business judgment
    rule, and, in the absence of waste, a total failure of consideration, they do not breach their
    duty of loyalty by acting consistently with the terms of the stockholder approved plan.”43
    More recently, in Desimone v. Barrows, then-Vice Chancellor Strine dismissed under
    Rule 12(b)(6) claims challenging option grants to outside directors because “stockholders
    approved the issuance of the exact number of options to be awarded annually to the
    Outside Directors and the date of issuance.”44
    41
    Steiner, 
    1995 WL 441999
    , at *7.
    42
    
    Id. 43 In
    re 3COM Corp., 
    1999 WL 1009210
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 25, 1999).
    44
    Desimone v. Barrows, 
    924 A.2d 908
    , 917 (Del. Ch. 2007).
    18
    Here, as in Desimone, Unilife’s stockholders approved each of the specific equity
    awards challenged in this action. As explained above, in 2010, Unilife stockholders
    approved the grant of up to 100,000 options to two of the Company’s outside directors
    and, in 2011, approved the grant of up to 45,000 stock-based awards to six of the
    Company’s outside directors.
    Plaintiff alleges that these stockholder approvals were not valid because the proxy
    statements on which the votes were based “omitted or included materially misleading
    information concerning, inter alia, whether the Unilife’s outside director compensation is
    in line with director compensation paid at comparable firms, the identity of truly
    comparable companies, and the average director compensation at those firms.”45
    Significantly, plaintiff has not identified any Delaware authority deeming such
    benchmarking information to be material. Nor has plaintiff identified any provision of
    the federal securities laws requiring the disclosure of such information concerning
    outside director compensation.
    Under Delaware law, “[t]o state a claim for breach by omission of any duty to
    disclose, a plaintiff must plead facts identifying (1) material, (2) reasonably available (3)
    45
    Compl. ¶ 25. As plaintiff acknowledges, the benchmarking information Unilife
    provided in its proxy statements only concerned executive compensation and not outside
    director compensation. Pl.’s Answering Br. 38. As such, the issue here is not whether
    the disclosures contained in the proxy statements were misleading, but whether Unilife
    omitted material information by failing to include benchmarking information relevant to
    outside director compensation.
    19
    information that (4) was omitted from the proxy materials.”46           “The burden of
    establishing materiality rests with the plaintiff, who must demonstrate ‘a substantial
    likelihood that the disclosure of the omitted fact would have been viewed by the
    reasonable investor as having significantly altered the ‘total mix’ of information made
    available.’”47
    In my opinion, the absence of benchmarking information for outside director
    compensation was not a material omission from Unilife’s 2010 and 2011 proxy
    statements because the proxy statements disclosed all material terms of the precise equity
    awards that the stockholders were being asked to approve.
    The 2010 proxy statement disclosed the exact number of options to be awarded to
    directors Wold and Firestone (100,000 each), the exercise price for those options ($6.83
    per share for Wold and $6.19 per share for Firestone), the exercisability period for the
    options (five years from the date of grant) and the schedule over which the options would
    vest. Similarly, the 2011 proxy statement disclosed the exact number of equity awards
    to be issued to directors Bosnjak, Carter, Galle, Lund, Wold and Firestone (45,000 each),
    the nature of those awards (shares of common stock of phantom stock units), and the
    schedule over which those awards would vest. Thus, whether or not the value of these
    46
    Pfeffer v. Redstone, 
    965 A.2d 676
    , 686 (Del. 2009) (quoting O'Reilly v. Transworld
    Healthcare, Inc., 
    745 A.2d 902
    , 926 (Del. Ch. 1999)).
    47
    Gantler v. Stephens, 
    965 A.2d 695
    , 710 (Del. 2009) (quoting Stroud v. Grace, 
    606 A.2d 75
    , 84 (Del. 1992)).
    20
    equity awards, viewed in isolation or together with other compensation, were in line with
    the levels of compensation paid to the outside directors of Unilife’s alleged peer
    companies, Unilife’s stockholders cannot legitimately claim they were not made aware of
    the material terms of what they were being asked to approve.48
    Because plaintiff has failed to undermine the validity of the stockholder approvals
    on which the equity awards in question were expressly conditioned, the business
    judgment rule applies to the board’s decision to grant those awards in the first instance.
    “[W]here business judgment presumptions are applicable, the board's decision will be
    upheld unless it cannot be ‘attributed to any rational business purpose.’”49 Although
    plaintiff has alleged facts suggesting that the amount of compensation paid to Unilife’s
    directors may be excessive relative to its revenues and its alleged peers, it cannot be said
    that the payment of such compensation had no rational business purpose.
    For the foregoing reasons, I grant defendants’ motion to dismiss the fiduciary duty
    claim insofar as it relates to the equity awards that were approved by Unilife’s
    stockholders.
    2.   The Waste Claim
    “[A] plaintiff faces an uphill battle in bringing a waste claim, and a plaintiff must
    allege particularized facts that lead to a reasonable inference that the director defendants
    48
    See 3COM, 
    1999 WL 1009210
    , at *1 (rejecting need to disclose option values under
    Black-Scholes where “the plan’s material terms” were disclosed).
    49
    Kahn v. M & F Worldwide Corp., 
    88 A.3d 635
    , 654 n.41 (Del. 2014) (quoting In re
    Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 
    906 A.2d 27
    , 74 (Del. 2006) (citation omitted)).
    21
    authorized an exchange that is so one sided that no business person of ordinary, sound
    judgment could conclude that the corporation has received adequate consideration.”50
    This Court has described the waste standard as an “extreme test, very rarely satisfied by a
    shareholder plaintiff, because if under the circumstances any reasonable person might
    conclude that the deal made sense, then the judicial inquiry ends.”51 “Where . . . the
    corporation has received any substantial consideration and where the board has made a
    good faith judgment that in the circumstances the transaction was worthwhile, a finding
    of waste is inappropriate, even if hindsight proves that the transaction may have been ill-
    advised.”52
    The complaint alleges that the compensation paid to Unilife’s directors since 2010
    constitutes an excessive percentage of its revenues during this period (25% and 24%,
    respectively, in fiscal years 2012 and 2013) and is excessive relative to eleven other
    healthcare companies with market capitalizations between $41 million and $718 million.
    These allegations raise questions concerning the fairness of the outside directors’
    compensation, but they do not rise to the level necessary to establish a complete failure of
    consideration or that the director defendants authorized an exchange that was so one-
    sided that no reasonable business person could conclude that Unilife received adequate
    50
    Seinfeld, 
    2012 WL 2501105
    , at *3 (Jun. 29, 2012) (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted).
    51
    Zupnick v. Goizueta, 
    698 A.2d 384
    , 387 (Del. Ch. 1997) (quoting Steiner, 
    1995 WL 441999
    , at *1).
    52
    Seinfeld, 
    2012 WL 2501105
    , at *9 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    22
    consideration. Accordingly, the claim for corporate waste fails to state a claim for relief
    and is dismissed.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I is GRANTED
    insofar as it relates to the equity awards issued to Unilife’s outside directors, but
    DENIED insofar as it relates to the cash compensation paid to the outside directors.
    Count II is dismissed in its entirety.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    23