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The erosion of the power of the board
of directors
by John Owen
Gwathmey, David I. Meyers and
W. Lake
Taylor, Jr.
Virginia Business
June 2005
Recent developments in both private
securities litigation and enforcement actions by the
Securities and Exchange Commission have begun to erode
the traditional board of directors’ protections
of indemnification and insurance. Much attention has
been paid to the recent settlements of lawsuits against
Worldcom and Enron directors, in which the outside directors
agreed to pay out-of-pocket with their personal assets
as a condition to being able to settle the claims against
them. Regardless of whether these developments are good
public policy, they are a fact of life in today’s
corporate boardroom, a fact that will, without question,
serve as a restraint upon the exercise of power by the
board of directors. Less widely publicized is the attempt
of unions and other institutional shareholders to limit
the authority of the board of directors through the
shareholder proposal process and the acquiescence of
the SEC in this attack.
The cornerstone of American corporation
law has always been that the business and affairs of
the corporation are managed under the direction of
the
board of directors — at least until recently.
Based upon recent SEC actions, decided in part as
a
result of headline grabbing corporate scandals, this
fundamental corporation law principle is now being
threatened.
Corporations are creatures of state
law. Virtually every state provides that the shareholders
of the corporation choose the individuals to whom the
management of the business and affairs of the corporation
is entrusted. In short, state law empowers shareholders
to elect the board of directors. Thereafter, shareholders
vote only on extraordinary transactions, such as charter
amendments, mergers and dissolution of the corporation.
In each case, however, shareholders generally vote only
after the board of directors has approved the matter
and then submitted it to the shareholders.
Institutional shareholders have greatly
increased their ownership of American corporations.
Some of these institutional shareholders, typically
unions and pension plans for government employees, push
agendas that are focused on objectives that may not
be in the best interests of the corporation or the majority
of its shareholders. The rise to power of institutions
that claim to represent shareholder interests, such
as Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass,
Lewis & Co., which has gone unchecked, has mirrored
the increased ownership of American corporations by
these institutional shareholders. These organizations
have sought to restrict the statutory power of directors
through various tactics, including supporting “withhold-the-vote”
campaigns on elections of directors, bylaw amendments
that bind the hands of board of directors with respect
to such ordinary business decisions as executive compensation
and proposals to change the vote required to elect directors
from a plurality to a majority of the votes cast.
Historically, corporations have been
able to limit the effectiveness of aggressive shareholder
proposals by excluding those proposals from consideration
by the shareholders because they violate either state
or federal law. Recently, however, the SEC has in several
cases required corporations to include shareholder proposals
that, if implemented, would violate state law. In doing
so, the SEC has ignored law firm opinions to this effect.
While the power of the board of directors
should not go unchecked, it is in the best interests
of shareholders if the business and affairs of the corporation
continue to be managed under the direction of the board
of directors. This fundamental process ensures the efficient
operation of the corporation and maximizes shareholder
value.
In response to shareholder proposals
to adopt bylaw amendments that may violate state law,
the Virginia General Assembly recently enacted amendments
to the Virginia Stock Corporation Act. These amendments,
which are effective as of July 1, clarify that any shareholder
restrictions on the duties and powers of a board of
directors must be set forth either in the corporation’s
charter or a valid shareholders’ agreement. As
ISS and other institutional shareholders continue to
attack the bedrock principles of corporation law, additional,
more far-reaching amendments may be required to preserve
the most basic tenets of corporate governance.
John
Owen Gwathmey and Dave Meyers are partners and Lake
Taylor is a senior associate at Hunton & Williams
LLP in Richmond. All are members of the Corporate Governance
Section of the Global Capital Markets Mergers and Acquisition
Team. |