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Published byEarl Pierce Modified over 9 years ago
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Outsourcing of Critical Thinking by Corporate Boards: Developments in International Law Profs. Ashley Burrowes, PhD FCA & John E. Karayan, JD PhD
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Duties of Boards of Directors Role of Boards Duties derive from Common Law, Statutes, & Ethics Overall: Fiduciary Duty of Due Care
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Duties of Boards of Directors Enhanced by Company Law Enhanced By Securities Laws for publicly traded Due Care and Financial Statements
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Excuses for Dumb Decisions Company Law waters down Common Law rules: Delaware “business judgment rule” Securities laws waters down Common Law rules: Due Care and Financial Statements SOX: mandatory 1 person on Audit Committee with minimum financial literacy (not expertise)
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In re Walt Disney Derivative Litigation (Del. June 8, 2006) Disney CEO Eisner teams with Pres.Wells Wells dies sudden; Eisner bad heart Eisner tries to reteam with Ovitz Eisner dumps Ovitz (no-fault) after only 14 months
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$10M per Month for Leaving Ovitz gets $130 million severance under Board-approved 5 yr employment contract remaining salary+ 7.5M/yr bonus + options “Shareholders” sue Board for breach of fiduciary duty, etc.
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Reliance on Experts Irwin Russell Disney Director & Chair of Compensation Committee Board lead financial negotiations Wrote case study warning that terms were “extraordinary”, exceeded Disney + US standards +“raise very strong criticism” Instead of disclosure, new study
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Reliance on Experts, Redux Exec comp. consultant Graef Crystal + Ray Watson, member Disney Comp. Committee & former Chair of Board Black Shoales spreadsheets Crystal memo: 5 year total $23.6m /year After Announce, Committee meets & gets “term sheets” only
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“Empty Head, Pure Heart” Defense Presumption Defective Judgment excused so long as good faith/not gross negligence conflicts of interest disclosed followed process reliance on experts allowed
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Outsourcing Critical Thinking The Disney Rule allows reliance on outside “Experts” International Dimensions: Ministry of Economic Development v Feeney and Ors (District Court, Auckland CRI-2008-044-29199, 2 August 2010) [“Feltex”]
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An Unwelcome Export from America Feltex: ANZAC’s Enron Financial statements in public offering and subsequent periods did not meet IFRS standards: true an fair view E.g., ending balances on one not tie to other; ratio analyses shows very odd trends; defaults on long term loans required reclass to current liability Reliance on defective Ernst & Young opinions freed the Feltex Five from criminal securities charges
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