TP Orthodontics, Inc., Christopher K. Kesling, DDS, MS, Adam Kesling, and Emily Kesling, Individually and derivatively on behalf of TP Orthodontics, Inc. v. Andrew C. Kesling
FOR PUBLICATION Sep 03 2013, 5:34 am
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT/ ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
INTERVENOR, TP ORTHODONTICS: ANDREW C. KESLING:
SEAN M. CLAPP THOMAS G. BURROUGHS
ELIZABETH M. ELLIS MICHAEL W. HILE
Clapp Ferrucci Katz & Korin, PC
Fishers, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR JOINT APPELLEES
CHRISTOPHER K. KESLING, DDS, MS,
ADAM KESLING AND EMILY KESLING:
ROBERT W. WRIGHT
Dean-Webster Wright LLP
Indianapolis, Indiana
SHAW R. FRIEDMAN
Friedman & Associates, P.C.
LaPorte, Indiana
JOHN A. CONWAY
JOHN A. DRAKE
Ladue Curran & Kuehn LLC
South Bend, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
TP ORTHODONTICS, INC., )
)
Appellant-Intervenor, )
________________________________________ )
)
CHRISTOPHER K. KESLING, DDS, MS, )
ADAM KESLING, and EMILY KESLING, )
Individually and derivatively on behalf of )
TP ORTHODONTICS, INC., )
)
Plaintiffs-Appellees, )
)
vs. )
) No. 46A03-1207-MI-324
ANDREW C. KESLING, individually )
and as TRUSTEE OF THE ANDREW )
C. KESLING TRUST DATED MARCH )
28, 2001, and THE ANDREW C. KESLING )
TRUST DATED MARCH 28, 2001, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL FROM THE LAPORTE SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Richard R. Stalbrink, Jr., Judge
Cause No. 46D02-1001-MI-15
September 3, 2013
OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
VAIDIK, Judge
Case Summary
In 2010, three sibling shareholders, Christopher, Adam, and Emily Kesling (“the
siblings”), filed suit against their brother, Andrew Kesling, on behalf of the family
business, TP Orthodontics (“TPO”). In response, TPO’s board of directors established a
special litigation committee to determine whether to pursue the siblings’ derivative
claims against Andrew, the president of TPO. After an investigation, the committee
issued a written report in which it recommended pursuing some of the siblings’ claims
but not others. If a special litigation committee rejects derivative plaintiffs’ claims,
Indiana law requires that those claims be dismissed, provided that the committee was
disinterested and acted in good faith in reaching its decision. In accordance with Indiana
law, TPO filed a motion to dismiss the rejected claims and attached a heavily redacted
2
copy of the committee’s report. The siblings demanded access to the unredacted report,
but TPO refused to produce it. The trial court ultimately ordered TPO to produce the
report, and this interlocutory appeal followed.
The issue before us is whether a corporation must give derivative plaintiffs access
to the report that the corporation relies on when seeking dismissal of the plaintiffs’
claims. We conclude that the corporation’s arguments against production are outweighed
by basic considerations of necessity and fairness. Derivative plaintiffs must show that the
special litigation committee was not disinterested or did not act in good faith in order to
survive a corporation’s motion to dismiss. The best evidence of whether the committee
acted in good faith is the committee’s report explaining how it so acted. Not only do
derivative plaintiffs need the report in order to challenge the committee’s good faith, our
trial-court judges need this report to make informed decisions.
We acknowledge that attorney-client privilege will undoubtedly infiltrate many of
these reports; indeed, it is entirely conceivable that part of any special litigation
committee’s reasoning for rejecting a claim will be based on counsel’s advice that a claim
is unlikely to succeed on the merits or too costly given the prospects of success. And in
such a case, the very reason that the committee acted in good faith is because of an
attorney’s advice. Thus, we find that where a corporation forms a special litigation
committee, and the corporation later requests dismissal of derivative plaintiffs’ claims
based on the findings of that committee, privilege as to the committee’s report is waived.
We affirm the trial court’s order compelling production of the special litigation
committee report and remand for further proceedings.
3
Facts and Procedural History
In 2010, the siblings filed a complaint against their brother Andrew in LaPorte
Superior Court on behalf of the family business, TPO. Although TPO is based in
Indiana, the privately held company manufactures and distributes orthodontic products
around the world. Collectively, the siblings own 11% of TPO voting stock and Andrew
owns 51%. Andrew is the president of TPO.
In their complaint, the siblings alleged that Andrew had acted wrongfully in a
number of ways, such as exchanging currency at a loss to the company, failing in
corporate governance—specifically, failing to implement counseling or sensitivity
training at TPO, which resulted in several sexual-harassment claims and litigation—
improperly charging travel and entertainment expenses to TPO, taking improper
advances on royalty and patent payments, and using TPO funds for personal expenses.
The siblings claimed that Andrew’s actions caused economic loss to the company and its
shareholders.
Andrew sought to stay the litigation and appoint a committee to determine whether
litigation on behalf of TPO was in the corporation’s best interests, and TPO filed a
motion to intervene. The trial court granted both motions. In July, TPO’s board of
directors established a special litigation committee (“the committee”) to investigate the
siblings’ allegations. TPO also retained the Indianapolis-based law firm of Wooden &
McLaughlin LLP to assist the committee with its investigation. Over the next year, the
three-member committee met thirty times, reviewed approximately 10,000 pages of
categorized documents, and conducted over forty interviews with employees and others
4
involved with TPO. In August 2011, the committee completed its Special Litigation
Committee Report (“the report”), which is the subject of this litigation. See Appellant’s
App. p. 357-86.1 The report was authored by the committee members, none of whom are
attorneys, with assistance from Wooden & McLaughlin counsel. Id. at 357.
Only TPO directors were allowed to see the report.2 In the report, the committee
concluded that TPO should pursue only a few of the siblings’ claims against Andrew;
specifically, the claims related to patent and royalty payments and corporate governance.
The committee concluded that it was not in TPO’s best interests to pursue the other
claims.
Shortly after the report was completed, TPO filed a motion to dismiss the rejected
claims and filed a copy of the report, along with related exhibits, under seal. The entire
report consists of a cover page, four table-of-contents pages, a 139-page report, and a
signature page. But in the copy TPO attached to its motion, more than 100 pages were
redacted. An affirmation attached to the report, signed by James Hutton, TPO’s
secretary, states that the report was redacted to “prevent disclosure of attorney-client
privileged information and attorney work product prepared in anticipation of litigation . .
. .” Id. at 181-83. The unredacted pages describe TPO’s creation and operation, id. at
361-66, the professional background of each committee member, id. at 366-68, and
1
The report spans only twenty-nine pages in the record because the redacted pages are reflected
on a single page. See Appellant’s App. p. 387 (page reads “Pages 25 through 107 Redacted”).
2
TPO states that only the board of directors received the report, with the exception of Andrew,
who was not permitted to see the document. The siblings argue that there is no proof of either fact, but
we need not belabor this point. What matters is that the siblings do not have access to the report.
5
investigation procedure, id. at 369-73. The report also identifies the claims that the
committee approved and those it rejected. Id. at 374-77, 381-83, 385.
A few days later, the siblings filed a motion to compel TPO to produce the entire,
unredacted report, and the trial court heard arguments on the motion. The siblings argued
that in practice, a special litigation committee’s report is regularly provided to plaintiffs,
citing two Indiana cases, Cutshall v. Barker, 733 N.E.2d 973 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000), and
Marcuccilli v. Ken Corp., 766 N.E.2d 444 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), reh’g denied, for
support. Tr. p. 8. The siblings claimed that without the unredacted report, they were
“dealing with a blank slate,” making it impossible to respond to TPO’s motion to dismiss.
Id. They said that they were unable to challenge the committee’s good-faith investigation
or its disinterestedness—the sole grounds for challenging a special litigation committee’s
conclusions under Indiana law. In support of their claim that TPO should be required to
produce the unredacted report, the siblings relied on a federal case interpreting Michigan
law, In re Perrigo, 128 F.3d 430 (6th Cir. 1997). Finally, the siblings argued that TPO
had not shown that production of the report would violate any privilege.
In response, TPO pointed out that Cutshall and Marcuccilli only mentioned
special litigation committee reports in passing; whether a report must be produced was
not at issue in either case.3 More importantly, TPO argued that the business-judgment
rule prohibits inquiry into the substance of a committee’s decision; courts may only
inquire into a committee’s investigative procedures and methodologies. Id. at 25. By
requesting the unredacted report, the siblings sought to go beyond the bounds of
3
Although Andrew’s counsel also participated at the hearing, his arguments aligned with TPO’s;
for the sake of brevity, we discuss TPO’s arguments here. We treat Andrew’s arguments on appeal in the
same fashion.
6
permissible access under the business-judgment rule. TPO agreed, however, to engage in
limited additional discovery relevant to the committee’s investigation. See Appellant’s
App. p. 225. Finally, TPO stood firm in its position that the report contained privileged
material. Counsel told the trial court the corporation would not object if the court wished
to review the unredacted report in camera to evaluate its privilege claims. Tr. p. 89. The
trial court did not review the unredacted report.
After the hearing, the trial court granted the siblings’ motion and ordered TPO to
file the unredacted report under seal and produce copies to the parties. The court also
issued a protective order preventing any party from disclosing the report’s contents to
third parties. In the order, Judge Richard Stalbrink interpreted Indiana Code section 23-
1-32-4 and Indiana’s business-judgment rule, but said he found no Indiana case law
“directly on point.” Appellant’s App. p. 9-13. He went on to adopt the reasoning of the
federal court in Perrigo. 128 F.3d at 430. In Perrigo, the federal court concluded that
“as a matter of fairness and practicality, the derivative plaintiffs . . . will need the
[committee’s] report in order to ‘rebut the presumption that [the corporation] acted in
good faith and made a reasonable investigation.’” Id. at 438 (emphasis added). Judge
Stalbrink reached a similar conclusion, saying “it would only seem fair that the parties
involved should be provided an opportunity to adequately conduct a review of the []
report to determine if they did, in fact, conduct their investigation in good faith . . . .”
Appellant’s App. p. 11. He also explained that if he did not have access to the entire
report, “all that is before the court is the assertion that the investigation was extensive and
7
expensive and therefore must have been in good faith.” Id. at 12. The ruling made no
mention of privilege.
In March 2012, TPO filed a motion to certify the trial court’s order for
interlocutory appeal, which the trial court granted. This Court subsequently accepted
jurisdiction over this appeal.4
Discussion and Decision
The question posed in this appeal is whether a corporation must provide the report
of its special litigation committee to derivative plaintiffs. We begin our analysis by
setting forth Indiana law regarding shareholder derivative suits and special litigation
committees.
Indiana Code section 23-1-32-4 sets forth all the requirements for a special
litigation committee. The Section allows a corporation’s board of directors to establish a
committee of three or more disinterested directors—or other disinterested persons—to
determine whether “the corporation has a legal or equitable right or remedy” and
“whether it is in the best interests of the corporation to pursue that right or remedy, if any,
or to dismiss a proceeding that seeks to assert that right or remedy on behalf of the
corporation.” Ind. Code § 23-1-32-4(a)(1), (2). A committee is independent in that it is
not subject to the direction or control of the board of directors, and the board may not
terminate it. I.C. § 23-1-32-4(b).
If a special litigation committee determines that a derivative proceeding on the
corporation’s behalf is not in the corporation’s best interests, that determination is
4
We held oral argument in this case on August 6, 2013. We commend counsel for their astute
and spirited advocacy throughout this case.
8
“presumed to be conclusive against any shareholder making a demand or bringing a
derivative proceeding . . . .” I.C. § 23-1-32-4(c). A plaintiff may only challenge this
determination by arguing that the committee was not “disinterested” or the committee’s
determination “was not made after an investigation conducted in good faith.” I.C. § 23-
1-32-4(c)(1), (2). What constitutes a good-faith investigation will depend in part on the
adequacy and appropriateness of a committee’s investigatory procedures, which depends
on the nature and complexity of the claim. I.C. § 23-1-32-4 cmt. (c).5 A director or other
committee member is “disinterested” if that person:
(1) has not been made a party to a derivative proceeding seeking to assert
the right or remedy in question, or has been made a party but only on
the basis of a frivolous or insubstantial claim or for the sole purpose of
seeking to disqualify the director or other person from serving on the
committee;
(2) is able under the circumstances to render a determination in the best
interests of the corporation; and
(3) is not an officer, employee, or agent of the corporation or of a related
corporation. However, an officer, employee, or agent of the corporation
or a related corporation who meets the standards of subdivisions (1) and
(2) shall be considered disinterested in any case in which the right or
remedy under scrutiny is not assertable against a director or officer of
the corporation or the related corporation.
I.C. § 23-1-32-4(d)(1)-(3).
Section 23-1-32-4 creates a presumption in favor of Indiana corporations;
specifically, the presumption that the decisions made by corporations’ special litigation
committees is conclusive against shareholders. Shareholders may only overcome that
presumption by challenging the committee’s disinterestedness or good-faith
5
Indiana Code section 23-1-17-5 provides that published official comments “may be consulted
by the courts to determine the underlying reasons, purposes, and policies of this article and may be used
as a guide in its construction and application.”
9
investigation. The statute codifies the business-judgment rule, which has long been
recognized in Indiana. The rule describes the basic principle of judicial reluctance to
interfere in corporate matters and the presumption that corporate directors act in an
informed, good faith, and honest manner when managing corporate affairs. See In re
Guidant S’holders Derivative Litig., 841 N.E.2d 571, 575 (Ind. 2006); see also G & N
Aircraft, Inc. v. Boehm, 743 N.E.2d 227, 238 (Ind. 2001); Lees Inns of Am., Inc. v.
William R. Lee Irrevocable Trust, 924 N.E.2d 143, 157 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), trans.
denied. Over time, two formulations of the business-judgment rule have emerged: the
restrained and deferential Auerbach approach, which puts corporate decision-making
largely outside judicial review, and the more aggressive Zapata approach, which allows a
court to exercise its own business judgment in evaluating a special litigation committee’s
decisions. Indiana has adopted the Auerbach approach. See I.C. § 23-1-32-4 cmt. (c)
(expressly rejecting Zapata v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d 779 (Del. 1981), and following
Auerbach v. Bennett, 393 N.E.2d 994 (N.Y. 1979)).
In practice, Indiana’s application of the business-judgment rule limits the scope of
inquiry into a committee’s investigation. In Cutshall, we explained it this way:
While the court may properly inquire as to the adequacy and
appropriateness of the committee’s investigative procedures and
methodologies, it may not under the guise of consideration of such factors
trespass in the domain of business judgment.
Thus, the courts cannot inquire as to which factors were considered by that
committee or the relative weight accorded them in reaching that substantive
decision . . . inquiry into such matters would go to the very core of the
business judgment made by the committee. To permit judicial probing of
such issues would be to emasculate the business judgment doctrine as
applied to the actions and determinations of the special litigation
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committee. Its substantive evaluation of the problems posed and its
judgment in their resolution are beyond our reach.
733 N.E.2d at 978 n.6 (citing Auerbach, 393 N.E.2d at 1002) (formatting altered).
Although there are many cases applying the business-judgment rule in the
derivative-claim setting, there are no Indiana cases addressing the precise issue before us;
that is, whether a plaintiff may compel production of a special litigation committee’s
report.
I. Motion to Dismiss
Before reaching the substantive issues in this case, the siblings ask us to dismiss
this appeal due to TPO’s failure to comply with the requirements of Appellate Rule 10.
The siblings made this argument to the motions panel, and the panel rejected it. See
Order on State’s Motion to Dismiss, Cause No. 46A03-1207-MI-324 (Ind. Ct. App. Jan.
11, 2013). According to the siblings, notice of completion was issued and served but not
filed with the Court of Appeals, and TPO never filed a motion to compel the trial-court
clerk to file the notice in accordance with Rule 10(F). In the event that notice of
completion is not filed, Rule 10(F) requires an appellant to seek an order from this Court
compelling the clerk to complete the record and file such notice. Failure to do so subjects
the appellant’s appeal to dismissal.
But as TPO explains, the trial-court clerk certified that she timely prepared the
notice of completion and sent copies to the parties and the Court of Appeals clerk (as well
as our Supreme Court and Tax Court) by United States mail, postage prepaid. This
certification entitled TPO to the presumption that the trial-court clerk had done her duty.
See INB Trust No. 337 v. Veljanoski, 593 N.E.2d 1263, 1266 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992)
11
(citation omitted), reh’g denied, trans. denied. For some reason, this notice was not
immediately reflected on the appellate docket. However, after the siblings filed their
motion to dismiss, the docket was updated to reflect the notice, with the certificate-of-
service date listed as October 1, 2012, which was timely.
Based on these facts, we see no basis for overruling the motions panel. See In re
Estate of Eguia, 917 N.E.2d 166, 169 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (this Court is reluctant to
overrule orders decided by the motions panel).
II. Standard of Review
TPO argues that this case poses a legal question requiring interpretation of the
special litigation committee statute, Section 23-1-32-4. But the statute makes no mention
of a committee report; thus, we cannot agree that this is a matter of statutory
interpretation.
Rather, this is a discovery dispute, albeit a complex one. Our trial courts are
vested with broad discretion with respect to discovery issues. “Decisions regarding
discovery matters will be reversed only if there has been an abuse of that discretion.”
Fifth Third Bank v. PNC Bank, 885 N.E.2d 52, 54 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008) (citing Hartford
Fin. Servs. Group, Inc. v. Lake Cnty. Park and Recreation Bd., 717 N.E.2d 1232, 1234
(Ind. Ct. App. 1999) (citations omitted)). An abuse of discretion occurs when a trial
court’s conclusion is against logic and the natural inferences that can be drawn from the
facts and circumstances before the trial court, and where there is no rational basis for the
trial court’s decision. Id.
III. Relevancy
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The siblings contend that the entire report is relevant to the issue of whether the
committee conducted a good-faith investigation of their claims. TPO argues that only the
unredacted portions are relevant to good faith. Relevancy as it relates to disinterestedness
is not at issue; the parties agree that disinterestedness is a straightforward issue and that
the committee members in this case were disinterested.
Under Indiana Evidence Rule 401, relevant evidence is “evidence having any
tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of
the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” TPO
defines relevance in terms of procedures and methodologies. The corporation claims it
produced all the relevant information here (committee-member profiles, the number of
meetings, interviews, documents, etc.), and any information beyond that is irrelevant.
Because it has never produced the entire report, TPO essentially asks this Court—as well
as the siblings and trial court—to trust that it has provided all the relevant information.
But the unredacted report paints a partial picture, at best. It describes what the
committee did—not what it may have failed to do or may have done incorrectly or
incompletely. The committee may have failed to investigate all of the siblings’
complaints or theories of relief. The committee may have failed to interview a key
employee, or may have interviewed that employee for less than five minutes. See Peller
v. The S. Co., 707 F. Supp. 525, 529 (N.D. Ga. 1988) (“The conduct of the interviews is a
most important factor in determining whether the [committee] pursued its charge with
diligence and zeal, or whether it played softball with critical players.”). The committee
may have investigated the wrong issues as well. See Boland v. Boland, 31 A.3d 529, 566
13
(Md. 2011) (“The [committee] cannot arrive at a reasonable answer if it addresses the
wrong issues. Thus, addressing the wrong issues is an example of unreasonable
methodology.”). Any of these failures may give rise to a material question about the
good faith of the committee’s investigation. But the siblings would not know of these
issues unless they had access to the entire report. We conclude that the entire report is
relevant to the issue of good faith.
IV. Access to the Report
Having determined that a committee’s entire report is relevant, we now consider
whether a corporation may refuse to produce it. Judge Stalbrink said no. We agree.
TPO refused to produce the entire report in part because it claimed the redacted
material is privileged.6 This Court has yet to consider privilege in the context of a special
litigation committee’s report. But other courts have held that a special litigation
committee’s report may contain privileged material. See Perrigo, 128 F.3d at 438; In re
Cont’l Ill. Secs. Litig., 732 F.2d 1302, 1314 (7th Cir. 1984); Joy v. North, 692 F.2d 880,
893-94 (2d Cir. 1982); Hollinger Int’l. Inc. v. Hollinger Inc., 230 F.R.D. 508, 514 (N.D.
Ill. 2005); In re Dayco Corp. Derivative Secs. Litig., 99 F.R.D. 616, 620-22 (S.D. Ohio
1983).7 Certainly attorney-client communications will infiltrate many special litigation
committee reports, particularly where reports contain attorney advice as to how a
6
We use the term “privileged” to encompass attorney-client communications and attorney work
product.
7
These cases did not limit derivative plaintiffs’ access to the report based on privilege.
14
committee should proceed on particular claims.8 Indeed, the committees’ reasoning for
rejecting claim may well be based on counsel’s advice that a claim is unlikely to succeed
on the merits. And in such a case, the very reason that the committee acted in good faith
is because of an attorney’s advice.
But privilege can be waived, such as in as in malpractice or ineffective-assistance
claims. See Canfield v. Sandock, 563 N.E.2d 526, 529 (Ind. 1990) (by bringing personal-
injury claim, plaintiff waived physician-patient privilege as to matters causally and
historically related to the condition at issue and directly medically relevant to claim,
counterclaim, or defense), reh’g denied; Carter v. State, 738 N.E.2d 665, 674 n.6 (Ind.
2000) (“Carter sought to have trial counsel’s testimony excluded from the post-
conviction court on the basis of the attorney-client privilege and now asks us to ignore
the testimony as well. However, as the post-conviction court correctly noted, a defendant
waives the attorney-client privilege when he files a petition for post-conviction relief on
the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel.”). We hold that this is another instance
where privilege is waived because the report is necessary to the litigation and requiring
its production comports with fairness.9 Our holding is limited to the committee’s report
only—the written report, or in the case a written report does not exist, an oral report to
the corporation’s board of directors. Any other claims of privilege are not affected by our
holding.
8
The trial court did not rule on the issue of privilege. Supra, p. 8. For the purposes of our
analysis in this case, we assume that the report contains privileged material.
9
We do not address the issue of whether a report must be disclosed to the public; we hold only
that the report must be produced to derivative plaintiffs.
15
We allow access to the committee report because Indiana law permits the siblings
to make two challenges to the committee’s determination—they can argue that the
committee was not disinterested or that their investigation was not made in good faith.
The most relevant source of that information is undoubtedly the committee’s report. The
siblings cannot make their statutorily allowed challenges, particularly their good-faith
challenge, without access to the entire report.10
This reality is reflected in case law. In the two Indiana cases that mention a
special litigation committee’s report, Cutshall and Barker, the plaintiffs had access to the
committees’ reports. And we can find no case outside of our state in which derivative
plaintiffs have been denied access to a committee’s report. Indeed, in two cases where
corporations tried to deny the plaintiffs access to the report, their attempts were flatly
rejected. See Perrigo, 128 F.3d at 438 (“As a matter of fairness and practicality, the
derivative plaintiffs . . . will need the Report in order to rebut the presumption that [the
corporation] acted in good faith and made a reasonable investigation.”) (quotation
omitted); Joy, 692 F.2d at 893 (“[I]f the . . . committee recommends termination and a
motion for judgment follows, the committee must disclose to the court and the parties not
only its report but all underlying data.”).
Importantly, not just derivative plaintiffs need access to the entire report. Our trial
judges need access to the report as well. Without access to these reports, they cannot
properly evaluate the parties’ claims. See Perrigo, 128 F.3d at 438 (“[T]he court must
10
We are unmoved by TPO’s argument that the siblings can obtain this information through
traditional discovery methods. The report is the best, most comprehensive evidence of the committee’s
good faith. Other methods of discovering this information will be cumbersome and expensive and will
require frequent trial-court intervention.
16
have the report before it can properly rule on Perrigo’s motion and perform its judicial
function.”). Judge Stalbrink acknowledged that reality in this case: “[Without the report]
all that is before the court is an assertion that the investigation was extensive and
expensive and therefore must have been in good faith.” Appellant’s App. p. 12.
Providing these reports to trial courts will put critically relevant information in the hands
of our trial judges, allowing them to make informed decisions regarding the future of
derivative plaintiffs’ claims.
In closing, we acknowledge TPO’s concerns about the potential implications of
our holding on the business-judgment rule, but we do not share them. There is no reason
to believe that simply allowing derivative plaintiffs access to committee reports will lead
to trespass into the domain of business judgment. We are confident in the ability of our
trial courts to interpret Indiana’s business-judgment rule and reject claims that threaten to
emasculate that rule.
We therefore affirm the trial court’s order compelling TPO to file a copy of the
entire report under seal and produce a copy to the siblings and their counsel, and we
remand for further proceedings.
Affirmed.
KIRSCH, J., and PYLE, J., concur.
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