IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
THOMAS SANDYS, Derivatively on Behalf of )
ZYNGA INC., )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) C.A. No. 9512-CB
)
MARK J. PINCUS, REGINALD D. DAVIS, )
CADIR B. LEE, JOHN SCHAPPERT, DAVID M. )
WEHNER, MARK VRANESH, WILLIAM )
GORDON, REID HOFFMAN, JEFFREY )
KATZENBERG, STANLEY J. MERESMAN, )
SUNIL PAUL and OWEN VAN NATTA, )
)
Defendants, )
)
and )
)
ZYNGA INC., a Delaware Corporation, )
)
Nominal Defendant. )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: November 17, 2015
Date Decided: February 29, 2016
Norman M. Monhait and P. Bradford deLeeuw, ROSENTHAL, MONHAIT &
GODDESS, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Jeffrey S. Abraham and Philip T. Taylor,
ABRAHAM, FRUCHTER & TWERSKY, LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for
Plaintiff.
Elena C. Norman, Nicholas J. Rohrer and Paul J. Loughman, YOUNG CONAWAY
STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Jordan Eth, Anna Erickson
White and Kevin A. Calia, MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP, San Francisco, California;
Attorneys for Defendants Mark J. Pincus, Reginald D. Davis, Cadir B. Lee, John
Schappert, David M. Wehner, Mark Vranesh, Owen Van Natta, and Nominal Defendant
Zynga Inc.
Bradley D. Sorrels and Jessica A. Montellese, WILSON SONSINI GOODRICH &
ROSATI, P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Steven M. Schatz, Nina Locker and Benjamin M.
Crosson, WILSON SONSINI GOODRICH & ROSATI, P.C., Palo Alto, California;
Attorneys for Defendants William Gordon, Reid Hoffman, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Stanley J.
Meresman and Sunil Paul.
BOUCHARD, C.
A stockholder of Zynga Inc. brings this derivative suit to recover damages the
company allegedly suffered because the Zynga board approved exceptions to lockup
agreements and other trading restrictions that allowed certain directors and officers to sell
some of their Zynga shares in an April 2012 secondary offering. Shortly after the
secondary offering, Zynga’s share price fell dramatically. Plaintiff’s central grievance is
that fiduciaries of the company sold shares in the secondary offering when they knew the
company’s performance was suffering and decided to cash out before the market was
made aware.
Plaintiff filed this suit in April 2014 asserting three claims. Count I asserts that
certain directors and officers who sold shares in the secondary offering misused
confidential internal information concerning the company’s deteriorating performance.
Count II asserts that the board breached its duty of loyalty by approving the secondary
offering, causing the company to suffer reputational harm and exposing it to liability in
other lawsuits arising out of these events. Count III asserts that the board and certain
officers injured the company by failing to implement controls to ensure that Zynga would
timely report material changes to its financial condition and by failing to disclose such
information.
Defendants moved to stay this case in favor of other then-pending actions, or to
dismiss it due to plaintiff’s failure to make a pre-suit litigation demand and for failure to
state a claim for relief. For the reasons explained below, the action will be dismissed
because of plaintiff’s failure to demonstrate that making a demand would have been
futile.
1
Significant to the demand futility analysis here, the composition of Zynga’s board
underwent important changes between approval of the secondary offering and the filing
of the complaint. As I explained in a related case, at least half of the Zynga directors who
approved the challenged transaction sold some of their Zynga shares in the secondary
offering and may have received an unfair personal benefit as a result.1 But by the time
this action was filed, two of the directors who sold shares in the secondary offering had
left the board and had been replaced by two outside directors who had no involvement in
the underlying events.
Delaware law entrusts a board comprised of an independent, disinterested majority
of directors with the power to decide whether it is in the corporation’s best interests to
pursue claims on its behalf, including claims against fellow directors and officers. Thus,
before a stockholder may assert such claims derivatively on the corporation’s behalf, the
stockholder either must make a pre-suit demand on the board or demonstrate why it
would be futile to do so. To demonstrate demand futility, a plaintiff must plead
particularized facts demonstrating that the board in place when suit was filed could not
have made an impartial decision about whether or not to pursue the corporation’s claims.
Focusing on that time frame, plaintiff’s complaint fails to plead particularized facts
casting reasonable doubt on that board’s ability to decide impartially whether it would be
in Zynga’s best interests to pursue the claims asserted in this case. Thus, plaintiff has
failed to establish demand futility, and this action will be dismissed.
1
See Lee v. Pincus, 2014 WL 6066108 (Del. Ch. Nov. 14, 2014).
2
I. BACKGROUND
Unless noted otherwise, the facts recited in this opinion come from the allegations
in plaintiff’s Verified Shareholder Derivative Complaint (the “Complaint”) and certain
corporate filings integral to the Complaint.2 Facts regarding the circumstances of board
members are recited as of the date the Complaint was filed, the relevant point in time for
assessing demand futility.3
A. The Parties
Nominal defendant Zynga Inc. is a Delaware corporation headquartered in
California. Zynga develops and markets social games such as FarmVille and Words with
Friends, primarily through the gaming platform of Facebook, Inc. Plaintiff Thomas
Sandys owns 400 shares of Zynga Class A common stock, which he acquired on
February 3, 2012. He has been a Zynga stockholder at all relevant times.
The Complaint names twelve individuals as defendants. Eight of the individual
defendants were members of Zynga’s board at the time of the April 2012 secondary
offering (the “Secondary Offering”). Three of those board members were also members
of management: Mark J. Pincus, Zynga’s founder and Chief Executive Officer from
2007 to 2013; John Schappert, Zynga’s Chief Operating Officer from May 2011 to
August 2012; and Owen Van Natta, Zynga’s Executive Vice President and Chief
Business Officer from August 2010 to November 2011. The other five board members
2
See In re Santa Fe Pac. Corp. S’holder Litig., 669 A.2d 59, 69-70 (Del. 1995).
3
Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927, 933-34 (Del. 1993) (noting that circumstances of “the
board that would be considering the demand” determine demand futility analysis).
3
were outside directors: William Gordon, Reid Hoffman, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Stanley J.
Meresman and Sunil Paul. I refer to these eight directors together as the “Secondary
Offering Board.”
Four of the members of the Secondary Offering Board sold stock in the Secondary
Offering: Pincus, Schappert, Van Natta, and Hoffman. Pincus alone personally received
$198 million in gross proceeds for shares he sold in the Secondary Offering. Through his
ownership of enhanced voting Class B and Class C common stock, Pincus controls
approximately 61% of the total voting power in Zynga.
The other four individuals named as defendants (Reginald D. Davis, Cadir B. Lee,
Mark Vranesh, and David M. Wehner) served in various executive positions at Zynga
during time periods relevant to this case. Each of them sold shares of Zynga stock in the
Secondary Offering. I refer to these four individuals and the four directors who sold
shares in the Secondary Offering (Pincus, Hoffman, Schappert, and Van Natta)
collectively as the “Secondary Offering Participants.”
As of the date of the Complaint, two members of the Secondary Offering Board
(Schappert and Van Natta) had left and three new persons had joined the board: John
Doerr, Ellen Siminoff, and Don Mattrick. Mattrick was serving both as a director and as
the Chief Executive Officer of Zynga at the time this action was filed.
4
The table below summarizes the composition of Zynga’s board of directors when
the Secondary Offering was approved and when demand was made on the board in
conjunction with the filing of the Complaint (the “Demand Board”): 4
Sold Shares in
Secondary Offering Board Demand Board
Secondary Offering
Schappert ✓
Van Natta ✓
Gordon Gordon
Hoffman Hoffman ✓
Katzenberg Katzenberg
Meresman Meresman
Paul Paul
Pincus Pincus ✓
Mattrick
Doerr
Siminoff
B. The IPO and the Lock-Ups
On December 16, 2011, Zynga sold shares of Class A common stock in its initial
public offering (the “IPO”). Zynga and its directors, officers, and various employees
entered into lock-up agreements (the “Lock-Ups”) with the underwriters of the IPO that
prohibited them from selling shares of Zynga stock for up to 165 days following the IPO.
The original expiration date of the Lock-Ups was May 28, 2012.
4
Hoffman, Meresman, Katzenberg, and Mattrick were members of Zynga’s board when
the Complaint was filed, but they have since left the board.
5
On March 7, 2012, Zynga’s board met to discuss the Secondary Offering, through
which certain stockholders would be permitted to sell shares before the expiration of the
Lock-Ups. In that meeting, the board approved the Secondary Offering, including the
sales of some of the shares held by director defendants Hoffman, Pincus, Schappert, and
Van Natta. These four directors comprised a majority of the board members who
approved the Secondary Offering because one member of Zynga’s then eight-member
board (Sunil Paul) was absent.
On March 13, the Audit Committee of the board approved exceptions to the
trading window restrictions in Zynga’s 10b5-1 trading plan to allow the Secondary
Offering Participants to sell shares in the Secondary Offering. The next day, Zynga
announced the Secondary Offering through a Registration Statement on Form S-1.
On March 26, Zynga announced that the underwriters for the IPO, Morgan Stanley
& Co. LLC and Goldman, Sachs & Co., had agreed to the release of the Lock-Ups in
connection with the Secondary Offering. On March 28, the board’s pricing committee
approved a Secondary Offering price of $12 per share. The full board did not meet to
ratify the authority of the pricing committee until April 18, after the Secondary Offering
had taken place.
On March 29, 2012, Zynga filed a prospectus regarding the Secondary Offering
(the “Prospectus”), which included the company’s historical operating financial metrics.
The Prospectus did not disclose recent trends in certain operating metrics, which plaintiff
alleges had begun worsening. For instance, average bookings per user (“ABPU”), a key
6
operating metric, had begun falling.5 Daily average users (“DAU”), a figure reported on
a daily basis to members of Zynga management including Pincus, Schappert, Wehner,
and Van Natta, also had leveled off in the first quarter of 2012.6 The Prospectus
discussed the risk associated with Zynga’s reliance on Facebook for revenue through the
placement of Zynga products in Facebook’s news feed, but did not discuss upcoming
changes to Facebook’s news feed algorithm that would become effective around April 2,
2012, which would negatively impact Zynga’s performance.
On or about April 3, 2012, Zynga announced that the Secondary Offering had
been completed. The Secondary Offering Participants sold a total of about 20 million
shares for about $236 million, out of a total of about 49 million shares that were sold for
approximately $515 million in the entire Secondary Offering.7 Zynga’s current
non-executive employees were not able to participate in the Secondary Offering because
they were not exempted from Zynga’s trading window restrictions, which disallowed
stock sales until three days after an earnings announcement. Zynga’s former employees
were not able to participate because they were not exempted from the Lock-Ups.
5
Compl. ¶ 69.
6
Compl. ¶¶ 75-76.
7
Certain venture capital investors made some of the remaining sales. Compl. ¶ 113.
7
C. Zynga’s Stock Price Falls Significantly After the Secondary Offering
On April 26, 2012, Zynga announced its earnings for the first quarter of 2012,
which ended on March 31, 2012. These earnings reflected a 9.8% decline in APBU. On
April 27, the market price of Zynga’s shares declined by 9.6% to close at $8.52 per share.
Over the following months, negative trends in Zynga’s financials continued.
ABPU fell 16% further in the second quarter of 2012. After the announcement of those
results, Zynga’s stock closed at $3.18 per share, down 37% from the previous day’s close
of $5.08 per share.
On October 4, 2012, Zynga announced another set of earnings and lowered its
full-year 2012 outlook. The company also announced an impairment charge of between
$75 million and $85 million regarding the assets of OMGPOP, Inc., another game maker
that Zynga had acquired in March 2012. By October 5, 2012, Zynga’s stock price had
fallen to $2.29 per share, a decrease of 81% from the $12 per-share price of the
Secondary Offering.
D. Related Litigation Challenging the Secondary Offering.
In the wake of the rapid decline in Zynga’s stock price after the Secondary
Offering, several litigations were filed before this action commenced in April 2014.
On July 30, 2012, an action was filed in the United States District Court for the
Northern District of California asserting claims under Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act.8 This action was later consolidated with several other suits. None of
8
Compl. ¶ 117(d); Class Action Complaint for Violations of the Federal Securities Laws,
DeStefano v. Zynga, Inc., Case No. 12-CV-4007 (JSW) (N.D. Cal. July 30, 2012).
8
Zynga’s outside directors was named as a defendant in the consolidated action, as
amended.9 A final settlement was recently approved in that case.10
On August 1, 2012, a class action captioned Reyes v. Zynga was filed in a
California state court asserting claims against the Secondary Offering Board under
Sections 11, 12(a)(2), and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933. 11 When plaintiff filed his
case here, Reyes already had survived a demurrer for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.12
In February 2015, the Reyes action was voluntarily dismissed with prejudice.13
On April 4, 2013, a former Zynga employee filed an action in this Court captioned
Lee v. Pincus, C.A. No. 8458-CB, on behalf of a class of current and former Zynga
employees who were not permitted to sell their shares in the Secondary Offering or for a
certain period thereafter because they were not exempted from the Lock-Ups or the
trading window restrictions (the “Delaware Class Action”). The Delaware Class Action
named the Secondary Offering Board as defendants, along with Zynga, Goldman Sachs,
9
See First Amended Complaint for Violation of Federal Securities Laws, In re Zynga Inc.
Sec. Litig., Lead Case No. 12–CV-4007 (JSW) (N.D. Cal. Mar. 31, 2014).
10
See Order Granting Motion for Final Approval of Class Action Settlement and Motion
for Attorneys’ Fees, DeStefano v. Zynga, Inc., 2016 WL 537946 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 11,
2016) (approving settlement providing for creation of a $23 million settlement fund).
11
Reyes v. Zynga, Inc., Case No. CGC-12-522876 (Cal. Super. Ct. Aug. 1, 2012).
12
See Order Overruling Defendants’ Demurrers to Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint on the
Ground That the Court Lacks Subject Matter Jurisdiction, Reyes, Case No. CGC-12-
522876 (Cal. Super. Ct. Aug. 26, 2013). The case later survived a demurrer for failure to
state a claim. See Order Overruling Defendants’ Demurrer to Plaintiff’s Amended
Complaint, Reyes, Case No. CGC-12-522876 (Cal. Super. Ct. Sept. 29, 2014).
13
Tr. Oral Arg. 7 (Nov. 17, 2015).
9
and Morgan Stanley. The primary claim asserted in that action was for breach of
fiduciary duty against the Secondary Offering Board for approving the Secondary
Offering on the theory that four of its members who sold some of their shares in the
Secondary Offering before Zynga’s stock price declined significantly had received an
unfair benefit to the detriment of the class members. I concluded that the plaintiff had
stated a direct claim for relief on November 14, 2014,14 and later certified the class.15
E. Procedural Posture
On April 4, 2014, after obtaining books and records regarding the Secondary
Offering under 8 Del. C. § 220, plaintiff filed the Complaint in this action. It asserts
three derivative claims on behalf of Zynga, which is named as a nominal defendant:
Count I asserts a Brophy16 claim against the Secondary Offering Participants,
alleging that they breached their fiduciary duties by misusing Zynga’s
confidential information when they sold shares in the Secondary Offering
while in possession of materially adverse, non-public information about the
company.
Count II asserts a claim for breach of the duty of loyalty against the Secondary
Offering Board for approving the Secondary Offering and against the Audit
14
See Lee v. Pincus, 2014 WL 6066108, *5-7, *13 (Del. Ch. Nov. 14, 2014).
15
Lee v. Pincus, Order Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Class Certification, 2015 WL
9490433 (Del. Ch. Dec. 30, 2015) (ORDER).
16
Brophy v. Cities Serv. Co., 70 A.2d 5 (Del. Ch. 1949).
10
Committee members for exempting the Secondary Offering Participants from
trading restrictions to allow them to sell in the Secondary Offering.
Count III asserts a Caremark17 claim against all defendants, alleging that they
breached their fiduciary duties by failing to put controls in place to ensure that
Zynga made adequate public disclosures and avoided material omissions in its
public statements.
On December 9, 2014, after the case had been stayed voluntarily by the parties for
over eight months, defendants filed a motion (1) to stay this case in favor of the securities
class actions pending in state and federal courts in California, and (2) to dismiss this case
under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 for failure to make a pre-suit litigation demand, and
under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim for relief. Briefing was
not completed until May 2015, and argument was heard on November 17, 2015.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
Plaintiff brings all of his claims derivatively on behalf of Zynga under Court of
Chancery Rule 23.1, alleging that each of them has caused harm to Zynga.18 Defendants
do not dispute that the claims are derivative in nature.
The Brophy and Caremark claims (Counts I and III) are derivative because any
harm stemming from the misuse of Zynga’s confidential information or from oversight
failures that allowed Zynga to make material misstatements or violate laws accrues to
17
In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Deriv. Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996).
18
Compl. ¶¶ 118, 123, 128, 134.
11
Zynga itself and to its stockholders only indirectly.19 Although the theory of liability for
Count II tracks the fiduciary duty claim asserted directly in the Delaware Class Action,
the relief sought in this action is different. As I read the Complaint, plaintiff here seeks
to recover for reputational harm to Zynga and for any liability it may incur in the federal
securities class action and the Delaware Class Action.20 Accordingly, I will analyze each
of the claims as being derivative. Because I conclude that demand was not excused for
each of the claims thus necessitating dismissal of the Complaint, I do not address any of
defendants’ other arguments for a stay or dismissal of this case.
A. Demand Futility Standard
Under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1, a derivative plaintiff’s complaint must
“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.”21 This rule is the
procedural embodiment of the substantive requirement that a plaintiff must either make a
19
See Latesco, L.P. v. Wayport, Inc., 2009 WL 2246793, at *6 (Del. Ch. July 24, 2009)
(“A Brophy claim is fundamentally derivative in nature, because it arises out of the
misuse of corporate property—that is, confidential information—by a fiduciary of the
corporation, for the benefit of the fiduciary and to the detriment of the corporation.”);
Stone v. Ritter, 911 A.2d 362, 365 (Del. 2006) (applying Caremark standard to derivative
oversight claims); see also Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., 845 A.2d 1031,
1033 (Del. 2004) (holding that whether claim is direct or derivative turns solely on who
suffered the alleged harm and who would receive the benefit of any recovery).
20
See Compl. ¶ 118.
21
Ct. Ch. R. 23.1(a).
12
demand upon the board to initiate the litigation or demonstrate that such a demand would
be futile.22
To determine whether a plaintiff’s demand upon the board would be futile,
Delaware courts employ one of two tests. The first, articulated in Aronson v. Lewis,
requires the plaintiff to plead facts that create a reasonable doubt either that “the directors
are disinterested and independent” or that “the challenged transaction was otherwise the
product of a valid exercise of business judgment.”23 The Aronson test does not apply
when “the board that would be considering the demand did not make a business decision
which is being challenged in the derivative suit.”24 For instance, it will not apply when
the board did not undertake a business decision or when a majority of the members that
made the challenged decision have been replaced.25 In such situations, this Court instead
applies the Rales test, under which plaintiff must create a reasonable doubt that “the
board of directors could have properly exercised its independent and disinterested
business judgment in responding to a demand” at the time the complaint was filed.26
22
See In re EZCORP Inc. Consulting Agreement Deriv. Litig., 2016 WL 301245, at *32-
33 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2016).
23
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 814 (Del. 1984).
24
Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927, 933-34 (Del. 1993).
25
Id.
26
Id. at 934.
13
Demand futility is assessed claim by claim.27 I will now address each of plaintiff’s
claims, addressing at the outset whether to apply the Aronson or Rales test to each claim.
B. Demand Is Not Excused for the Brophy Claim
Count I asserts a Brophy claim against the Secondary Offering Participants based
on their alleged misuse of Zynga’s confidential information to sell their shares in the
Secondary Offering. Four of these defendants (Hoffman, Pincus, Schappert, and Van
Natta) were directors at the time of the Secondary Offering, but their decision to sell
shares was an individual choice, not a decision of the board.28 Consequently, Count I
does not challenge a business decision of the board, and the Rales test applies.
Under the Rales test, I must determine if plaintiff has created a reasonable doubt
as to whether Zynga’s board of directors at the time this case was filed was able to
properly exercise its independent and disinterested business judgment in responding to a
demand to file suit. To do so, plaintiff must create a reasonable doubt that at least five of
the nine directors on the Demand Board were disinterested and independent. Conversely,
if there are five directors on the Demand Board for whom plaintiff does not create such a
27
MCG Capital Corp. v. Maginn, 2010 WL 1782271, at *18 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2010)
(“Demand futility must be determined on a claim-by-claim basis.”).
28
See In re Career Educ. Corp. Deriv. Litig., 2007 WL 2875203, at *12 (Del. Ch. Sept.
28, 2007) (“Plaintiffs challenge insider stock sales made by various directors. Because
this is not a specific action taken by the entire board, Rales is the proper standard.”);
Zimmerman v. Braddock, 2005 WL 2266566, at *6 (Del. Ch. Sept. 8, 2005) (“[S]ince the
alleged insider trading was not an affirmative action of the [board], demand futility is
evaluated under the Rales standard . . . .”), rev’d on other grounds, 906 A.2d 776 (Del.
2006).
14
reasonable doubt, then plaintiff fails to meet his burden under Rule 23.1 of establishing
that demand would be futile.
For purposes of this test, an “interested” director is one who receives from a
corporate transaction a personal benefit not equally shared by the stockholders, such that
he or she could face liability if the transaction were subjected to entire fairness scrutiny. 29
Under Rales, a director who faces a substantial likelihood of personal liability also is
unable to consider demand impartially.30
Count I challenges the Secondary Offering Participants’ sale of shares in the
Secondary Offering. Because Hoffman and Pincus are the only members of the Demand
Board who sold shares in the Secondary Offering and received a benefit from the alleged
wrongdoing, they are the only members of the Demand Board who face potential liability
under Brophy. Consequently, the other seven directors on the Demand Board are not
interested in Count I for purposes of the Rales test,31 and I need only to determine
whether plaintiff has created a reasonable doubt about their independence.
A director lacks independence for purposes of determining demand futility when
he or she is sufficiently beholden to someone interested in the litigation that he or she
29
See Guttman v. Huang, 823 A.2d 492, 502 (Del. Ch. 2003); Rales, 634 A.2d at 936.
30
Guttman, 823 A.2d at 501.
31
See id. at 502 (noting that the impartiality inquiry under Rales and Aronson involves
assessing whether plaintiff pleads facts creating a sufficient likelihood of liability for the
trading activity).
15
may be unable to consider the demand impartially.32 On a motion to dismiss a claim for
demand futility, the heightened requirement to plead particularized facts under Rule 23.1
is softened by the countervailing requirement that the Court draw all reasonable
inferences from such facts in favor of the plaintiff.33 The Court’s task of assessing
independence can be a difficult one. It requires considering all of the alleged facts and
reasonable inferences that stem from them in their totality, rather than examining each
pled fact in isolation.34 Although plaintiff gets the benefit of all reasonable inferences
from the totality of such facts, these inferences “must logically flow from particularized
facts alleged by the plaintiff,” and plaintiff will not benefit from conclusory allegations.35
A director on the Demand Board will lack independence under Rales for purposes
of Count I only if plaintiff alleges that he or she is beholden to one or more of the targets
of the Brophy claim (i.e., the Secondary Offering Participants) such that a reasonable
doubt exists as to his or her independence in deciding whether to assert that claim. No
allegations are made in the Complaint challenging the independence of any of the
directors on the Demand Board vis-à-vis any of these individuals other than Pincus or
Hoffman. I will next assess the allegations of independence from Pincus and Hoffman on
a director-by-director basis.
32
Beam v. Stewart, 845 A.2d 1040, 1050 (Del. 2004).
33
See Del. Cnty. Emps. Ret. Fund v. Sanchez, 124 A.3d 1017, 1020 (Del. 2015).
34
See id. at 1019.
35
Wood v. Baum, 953 A.2d 136, 140 (Del. 2008) (quoting Beam, 845 A.2d at 1048).
16
1. Katzenberg
Plaintiff makes no allegations regarding Katzenberg’s relationships with Hoffman
or Pincus, nor does he suggest that Katzenberg is dependent on his board membership or
any other relationship with Zynga such that he could be beholden to Pincus, its
controlling stockholder. The Complaint therefore does not raise a reasonable doubt as to
Katzenberg’s independence for purposes of the Brophy claim.
2. Meresman
Plaintiff does not allege that Meresman lacks independence from Pincus or that he
is dependent on his Zynga board membership. His only allegation regarding Meresman’s
lack of independence from Hoffman is that he and Hoffman both serve as directors of
LinkedIn.36 Plaintiff does not allege that Hoffman exerts any sort of control over
Meresman’s board position or that Meresman is dependent on his position on LinkedIn’s
board. Common membership on the board of another corporation is not a sufficient
allegation to raise a reasonable doubt as to Meresman’s independence.37 The Complaint
therefore does not raise a reasonable doubt as to Meresman’s independence for purposes
of the Brophy claim.
36
Compl. ¶ 117(i).
37
See Beam, 845 A.2d at 1051 (noting that collegiality and moving in same business
circles is insufficient to establish lack of independence); In re Dow Chem. Co. Deriv.
Litig., 2010 WL 66769, at *9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 11, 2010) (“That directors of one company
are also colleagues at another institution does not mean that they will not or cannot
exercise their own business judgment with regard to the disputed transaction.”).
17
3. Siminoff
Plaintiff contends that Siminoff lacks independence from Pincus because Siminoff
and her husband are co-owners of a private airplane with Pincus.38 In briefing this
motion, plaintiff characterized Siminoff as a “close family friend” of Pincus but added no
factual allegations to explain the basis for that characterization.39 “[T]o render a director
unable to consider demand, a relationship must be of a bias-producing nature.
Allegations of mere personal friendship or a mere outside business relationship, standing
alone, are insufficient to raise a reasonable doubt about a director’s independence.”40
Plaintiff’s allegations concerning co-ownership of an asset and friendship do not reveal a
sufficiently deep personal connection to Pincus so as to raise a reasonable doubt about
Siminoff’s independence from Pincus.
Plaintiff also alleges that Siminoff lacks independence from Hoffman because they
both serve as directors of Mozilla Corporation. This allegation is insufficient for the
same reasons regarding Meresman and Hoffman’s common board membership discussed
above.
4. Gordon and Doerr
Plaintiff challenges the independence of Gordon and Doerr in several ways based
on their status as partners at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. To start, plaintiff argues
38
The Complaint does not explain whether there are other co-owners of this airplane.
39
See Pl.’s Ans. Br. 54.
40
Beam, 845 A.2d at 1050.
18
that Gordon and Doerr lack independence from Hoffman because Hoffman has invested
in and sits on the board of Shopkick, Inc., a company in which Kleiner Perkins also has
invested. Plaintiff does not attempt to explain how the fact that Gordon and Doerr’s
employer and Hoffman have invested in the same company would make Gordon and
Doerr beholden to Hoffman. Plaintiff instead asserts in conclusory fashion that they
would not wish to threaten their relationship as business partners in Shopkick. This
allegation does not explain how their relationship as co-investors in Shopkick could be
threatened. Even if it did, an alleged risk of straining a business relationship is a far cry
from an allegation that one director is beholden to or deeply connected to another. This
allegation does not raise a reasonable doubt as to Gordon’s and Doerr’s independence
from Hoffman.
Plaintiff next alleges that Gordon and Doerr “share interlocking business
relationships”41 with Hoffman and Pincus due to investments in One Kings Lane, an e-
commerce company Pincus’ wife founded. Kleiner Perkins and Hoffman both provided a
funding round to One Kings Lane, the amounts of which are not specified in the
Complaint. Pincus is implicated by virtue of being the founder’s husband. None of these
allegations satisfies the Rales test. Plaintiff does not explain how investments by Kleiner
Perkins in One Kings Lane could make two Kleiner Perkins partners beholden to the
founder’s spouse (Pincus) or to a fellow investor (Hoffman). The fact that venture
41
Compl. ¶ 117(k).
19
capitalists and entrepreneurs have overlapping investments as alleged here does not raise
a reasonable doubt as to the investors’ independence from each other.
In his briefing, plaintiff raises a new allegation that Zynga and certain of its
executive officers have invested in Kleiner Perkins funds, thereby compromising
Gordon’s and Doerr’s independence.42 Plaintiff supports this allegation with an affidavit
containing an excerpt from the Prospectus that describes Zynga’s investment in the
Kleiner Perkins funds as a $500,000 capital subscription. Although the Complaint
mentions for different purposes the filings from which plaintiff retrieved this information
(the Prospectus and the April 2013 definitive proxy), those filings were not incorporated
by reference into or attached to the Complaint. Thus, these new factual allegations are
not properly before the Court.43
Even if I were to consider this new information, plaintiff does not allege that this
$500,000 investment is material to Kleiner Perkins such that its partners would be
considered beholden to Pincus. Plaintiff points to In re Google, Inc. Shareholder
Derivative Litigation44 for the proposition that these investments could undercut
Gordon’s and Doerr’s independence. In that case, plaintiffs alleged that “Doerr has
42
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 51.
43
See Del. Cnty. Emps. Ret. Fund v. Sanchez, 124 A.3d at 1021 n.14 (declining to
consider additional facts regarding director’s independence raised in briefing and
argument) (“[T]he proper way for the plaintiffs to have used these materials is by seeking
to amend their complaint. It is not fair to the defendants, to the Court of Chancery, or to
this Court, nor is it proper under the rules of either court, for the plaintiffs to put facts
outside the complaint before us.”).
44
2012 WL 1611064 (N.D. Cal. May 8, 2012).
20
sought substantial investments from Google in private companies in which Kleiner
Perkins is a major investor, including one company that was bought by Google in 2007
and that resulted in a $5 million profit for Kleiner Perkins.”45 Plaintiffs in Google thus
alleged both the magnitude of profit accruing to Kleiner Perkins as a result of Google’s
purchase of a company, and that Doerr personally had sought investments from Google.
Plaintiff fails to make any such allegations here, instead stating only that Zynga made
what appears to be a modest investment in a Kleiner Perkins fund. These allegations fail
to raise a reasonable doubt that Gordon and Doerr lack independence from Pincus.
Finally, plaintiff notes that Zynga’s 2013 proxy statement does not list Gordon and
Doerr as independent directors under NASDAQ listing rules, although neither the proxy
statement nor plaintiff specifies the reason for this. This Court has noted that stock
exchange independence requirements “are a useful source for this court to consider when
assessing an argument that a director lacks independence,”46 but also that the stock
exchange requirements are not dispositive.47 Director independence under stock
45
Id. at *9.
46
In re MFW S’holders Litig., 67 A.3d 496, 510 (Del. Ch. 2013), aff’d sub nom. Kahn v.
M&F Worldwide Corp., 88 A.3d 635 (Del. 2014).
47
See id. (“. . . the fact that directors qualify as independent under the NYSE rules does
not mean that they are necessarily independent under our law in particular circumstances
. . . .”). The inverse proposition—that a director’s lack of independence under stock
exchange rules does not necessarily mean the director lacks independence under
Delaware law—does not necessarily follow, but the proposition logically runs in both
directions. See In re EZCORP, 2016 WL 301245, at *36 (“The fact that a director
qualifies as independent for purposes of a governing listing standard is therefore a helpful
fact which, all else equal, makes it more likely that the director is independent for
purposes of Delaware law. The opposite is likewise true.”).
21
exchange rules “is qualitatively different from, and thus does not operate as a surrogate
for, this Court’s analysis of independence under Delaware law for demand futility
purposes.”48 Stock exchange rules may involve bright-line tests for independence, but
Delaware law requires “a case-by-case fact specific inquiry based on well-pled factual
allegations.”49
Plaintiff makes no specific allegations as to why Gordon and Doerr lack
independence under the NASDAQ rules, or whether they lack independence under those
rules due to a relationship with Pincus, with another executive, or with Zynga itself. The
absence of any such allegations makes it difficult to gauge whether Gordon’s and Doerr’s
lack of NASDAQ independence matters because it is not apparent if it stems from
circumstances I already have considered and found insufficient to question their
independence under Delaware law, or from something else. Their status under the
NASDAQ rules might have sufficed to raise a reasonable doubt as to their independence
if that issue had been a tough call based on the totality of the allegations made in the
Complaint. But that is not the case here. No aspect of the allegedly interlocking business
relationships involving Gordon and Doerr discussed above comes close to creating a
reasonable doubt about their independence in my view. It would be unreasonable,
moreover, to infer that their lack of NASDAQ independence resulted from an
undisclosed conflict that was significant enough to disqualify them for demand futility
48
Teamsters Union 25 Health Servs. & Ins. Plan v. Baiera, 119 A.3d 44, 61 (Del. Ch.
2015).
49
Id.
22
purposes, when the underlying factual basis for such an inference is entirely absent from
the record. Consequently, drawing all reasonable inferences in plaintiff’s favor,
Gordon’s and Doerr’s status under the NASDAQ rules fails to raise a reasonable doubt as
to their independence from Hoffman or Pincus for demand futility purposes.
*****
For the reasons explained above, I conclude that plaintiff has raised no reasonable
doubt regarding the disinterestedness or independence of five of the nine directors on the
Demand Board (Katzenberg, Meresman, Siminoff, Gordon, and Doerr) with respect to
the Brophy claim. For this reason, Count I is dismissed for failure to allege demand
futility under the Rales test.
In considering the question of independence for Count I, I have focused on the
independence of these five directors vis-à-vis the targets of the Brophy claim, namely the
Secondary Offering Participants, which include Pincus and Hoffman. Count II is directed
against the members of the Secondary Offering Board, and Count III is directed against
all defendants. The question of independence for those claims thus implicates whether
any of the directors on the Demand Board lacks independence from any other member of
the Secondary Offering Board (for Count II) or any of the defendants (for Count III)
aside from the allegations concerning Pincus and Hoffman addressed above. That issue
23
is easily resolved, as the Complaint, with one exception, does not contain any such
allegations.50
C. Demand Is Not Excused for the Secondary Offering Claim
Count II of the Complaint asserts that the Secondary Offering Board breached its
fiduciary duties in approving the Secondary Offering and the Lock-Up restructuring.51
Plaintiff does not take a position in his brief whether the Aronson test or the Rales test
should apply to this claim. Plaintiff instead argues simply that a majority of the Demand
Board would be unable to impartially consider a demand relating to the Secondary
Offering because six of its nine members “were involved with the approval of the
Offering and Lock-Up restructuring which is subject to an entire fairness review.”52
Before analyzing this issue, I address what test should apply to determine whether
demand is excused as to Count II.
50
The exception is the allegation, discussed below, that “Doerr would not threaten his
ongoing business relationship with Gordon by voting to initiate litigation against
Gordon” because they are both partners at Kleiner Perkins. Compl. ¶ 117(g).
51
Compl. ¶¶ 124-28. Although the Complaint also referred to the Audit Committee’s
waiver of the trading restrictions, see Compl. ¶¶ 58, 126, plaintiff made little effort to
advance a demand futility argument in its brief based on the trading restriction waivers.
In any event, demand would not be excused for the trading restriction waivers for the
same reason that it is not excused for the Secondary Offering Board’s decision to
restructure the Lock-Ups—that is, plaintiff has failed to allege particularized facts
providing a reason to doubt the impartiality of a majority of the directors on the Demand
Board to decide whether to initiate or to refrain from initiating litigation against any of
the directors on the Secondary Offering Board, which would include the members of its
Audit Committee.
52
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 36.
24
At a superficial level, a good argument could be made under past precedents to
apply the Aronson test to Count II because it involves an affirmative decision of the
Secondary Offering Board, a majority of whom continued to serve on the Demand Board.
In my opinion, however, Count II should be evaluated under the Rales test.
As noted above, the Aronson test requires the plaintiff to plead facts that create a
reasonable doubt either that (1) “the directors are disinterested and independent” or (2)
“the challenged transaction was otherwise the product of a valid exercise of business
judgment.”53 The challenge in applying this test when the composition of a board has
changed concerns the second prong because it focuses on the board that approved the
underlying transaction rather than the board that must decide whether the corporation
should enter litigation in response to a demand.
In Harris v. Carter, Chancellor Allen noted that “Aronson has been criticized as
focusing the test for futility on the wrong time,”54 probably because in most cases
(including Aronson itself) “the board that approves ‘the challenged transaction’ and the
board upon whom a demand could be made is one and the same.”55 Chancellor Allen
53
Aronson, 473 A.2d at 814.
54
582 A.2d 222, 229 (Del. Ch. 1990).
55
Id. See also Aronson, 473 A.2d at 810-12 (noting that “futility is gauged by the
circumstances existing at the commencement of a derivative suit” and that “if the
underlying transaction supported a reasonable inference that the business judgment rule
did not apply, then the directors who approved the transaction were potentially liable for
a breach of their fiduciary duty, and thus, could not impartially consider a stockholder’s
demand.”).
25
went on to explain that the operative focus should be on the impartiality of the board in
place at the time of the demand and not at the time of the challenged transaction:
What, in the end, is relevant is not whether the board that approved the
challenged transaction was or was not interested in that transaction but
whether the present board is or is not disabled from exercising its right and
duty to control corporate litigation. I do not consider that Aronson intended
to determine that demand under Rule 23.1 upon an independent board that
has come into existence after the time of the “challenged transaction”
would be excused if the board that approved the challenged transaction did
not qualify for business judgment protection.56
Three years later, in Rales, in the context of deciding a certified question, the
Delaware Supreme Court acknowledged that the Aronson test was not suited to address
all questions of demand futility and identified three scenarios in which it would not
apply:
Consistent with the context and rationale of the Aronson decision, a court
should not apply the Aronson test for demand futility where the board that
would be considering the demand did not make a business decision which
is being challenged in the derivative suit. This situation would arise in
three principal scenarios: (1) where a business decision was made by the
board of a company, but a majority of the directors making the decision
have been replaced, (2) where the subject matter of the derivative suit is not
a business decision of the board, and (3) where, as here, the decision being
challenged was made by the board of a different corporation.57
In identifying these three scenarios, the Court included a qualification that they were the
“principal” scenarios where Aronson would not apply, implying that there could be other
scenarios. In my opinion, this case presents such a scenario.
56
Harris v. Carter, 582 A.2d at 230.
57
Rales, 634 A.2d at 934.
26
Here, a majority of the members of the Secondary Offering Board had a personal
financial interest in the transaction such that they may have received an unfair benefit and
the transaction may be subjected to entire fairness review.58 Furthermore, because a
majority of the directors from the Secondary Offering Board were not replaced, none of
the exceptions identified in Rales applies here. Critically, however, enough of the
interested members of that board were replaced (and an additional director was added) so
that the Demand Board had a majority of directors (seven of nine) who derived no
personal financial benefit from the challenged transaction. To my mind, it makes no
sense under these circumstances to focus any aspect of the demand futility inquiry on the
board that approved the underlying transaction, as the second prong of Aronson
contemplates. Just as Chancellor Allen realized in Harris v. Carter that Aronson’s
second prong should not excuse demand when a disinterested new board steps in, demand
here should not be excused if a majority of the Demand Board can impartially consider a
demand, even when less than a majority of them were replaced.
To be clear, the Rales test investigates the same sources of potential partiality that
Aronson would examine. As many members of this Court have recognized, the Rales test
functionally covers the same ground as the Aronson test in determining the impartiality of
58
See Lee v. Pincus, 2014 WL 6066108, at *13 (concluding that plaintiff had “pled facts
sufficient to rebut the business judgment standard of review because the lockup
restructuring was not approved by a majority of disinterested and independent
directors.”).
27
directors.59 That ground focuses on three circumstances that may cast doubt on a
director’s impartiality. First, a director may have a personal interest in considering a
plaintiff’s litigation demand because the director obtained a financial benefit from the
challenged transaction not shared by the stockholders generally, raising the risk of
liability for self-dealing. Second, a director may have a personal interest in considering a
plaintiff’s litigation demand because the director otherwise faces a substantial risk of
liability in the litigation, such as for approving the challenged transaction in bad faith so
as to be susceptible to a non-exculpated claim for breach of fiduciary duty. Third, a
director may lack independence from someone who is at risk of liability under those first
two categories because the director is controlled by or beholden to such person.
59
See, e.g., Guttman v. Huang, 823 A.2d at 501 (Strine, V.C.) (“Upon closer
examination, however, that singular inquiry [under Rales] makes germane all of the
concerns relevant to both the first and second prongs of Aronson.”); In re China Agritech,
Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 2013 WL 2181514, at *16 (Del. Ch. May 21, 2013) (Laster,
V.C.) (noting that the Rales test asks questions regarding a director’s risk of liability in
the litigation that are “precisely the questions that Aronson asks”); David B. Shaev Profit
Sharing Account v. Armstrong, 2006 WL 391931, at *4 (Del. Ch. Feb. 13, 2006) (Lamb,
V.C.) (“This court has held in the past that the Rales test, in reality, folds the two-pronged
Aronson test into one broader examination. It allows, in other words, a court to
determine both whether a corporate board on which demand might be made is
disinterested and independent, and whether a majority of directors face a substantial
likelihood of personal liability, because doubt has been created as to whether their actions
were products of a legitimate business judgment.”) aff’d, 911 A.2d 802 (Del. 2006); see
also 2 David A. Drexler et al., Delaware Corporation Law and Practice § 42.03[2][a] at
42-15 to -16 (2015) (interpreting Aronson’s first prong analysis as regarding “interested
director transactions” in which directors “had personally profited from a challenged
transaction” and its second prong analysis as regarding “complaints not involving
directorial self-dealing” wherein “the threat of personal liability for having approved the
challenged transaction” was at issue, requiring particularized facts showing likelihood of
liability based on transactional flaws).
28
The utility of the Rales test is not that it examines different subject matter from
that of the Aronson test, but that it provides a cleaner, more straightforward formulation
to probe the core issue in the demand futility analysis for each board member who would
be considering plaintiff’s demand: “whether there is a reason to doubt the impartial[ity]
of the directors, who hold the authority under 8 Del. C. § 141(a) to decide [for the
corporation] ‘whether to initiate, or refrain from entering, litigation.’”60 Applying Rales,
I will now assess whether plaintiff has alleged facts creating a reasonable doubt that a
majority of the Demand Board directors could impartially decide whether to pursue
plaintiff’s Secondary Offering claim.
Beginning with the independence of the Demand Board directors, as I concluded
above, Katzenberg, Siminoff, Meresman, Gordon, and Doerr are independent from
Pincus and Hoffman.61 Plaintiff only makes one other allegation regarding the
independence of any of these directors—specifically, that Doerr would not wish to
initiate litigation against Gordon, his partner at Kleiner Perkins. Plaintiff does not allege
that Doerr is beholden to Gordon or that they have any relationship aside from being
partners at the same venture capital firm. Without more, these allegations do not cast a
60
See Teamsters Union 25, 119 A.3d at 67 (Del. Ch. 2015) (quoting Zapata Corp. v.
Maldonado, 430 A.2d 779, 782 (Del. 1981)). Indeed, although I recognize that the
Supreme Court in Rales declined to adopt a “universal demand requirement,” Rales, 634
A.2d at 934, it is not apparent what scenario implicating a question of demand futility
could not sensibly be analyzed under the Rales test given how it has now been applied for
over two decades.
61
See supra Part II.B.
29
reasonable doubt on his independence from Gordon.62 Consequently, none of these
directors lacks independence for demand futility purposes concerning Count II.
Siminoff and Doerr, both of whom joined Zynga’s board after approval of the
Secondary Offering, as well as Katzenberg, Meresman, and Gordon, did not sell shares in
the Secondary Offering and thus derived no personal financial benefit from it. Thus, the
only open question concerning the impartiality of these five individuals is whether any of
them who served on the Secondary Offering Board (i.e., Katzenberg, Meresman or
Gordon) could be interested based on the theory that they face substantial litigation risk
for approving the Secondary Offering, thereby potentially biasing their decision whether
to pursue litigation.
Plaintiff asserts that entire fairness review will apply to the decision to approve the
Secondary Offering because it was approved by an interested majority of directors.63
Relying on In re China Agritech, Inc., plaintiff argues that the non-selling directors on
the Secondary Offering Board are interested because of the litigation risk they would face
in an entire fairness challenge.64 After China Agritech was decided, however, the
Delaware Supreme Court made clear in Cornerstone Therapeutics that, even if the entire
62
See supra note 37.
63
Paul did not participate in the meeting during which the Secondary Offering Board
voted to approve the transaction. Consequently, directors planning to sell shares in the
Secondary Offering accounted for four out of the seven votes in favor of the transaction.
64
See In re China Agritech, 2013 WL 2181514, at *17 (determining that litigation risk
Audit Committee members faced regarding an entire fairness challenge to a certain
transaction raised “reasonable doubt about their ability to disinterestedly consider a
litigation demand”).
30
fairness standard applies to the Court’s review of a transaction, a “plaintiff seeking only
monetary damages must plead non-exculpated claims against a director who is protected
by an exculpatory charter provision” to state a viable claim against that director.65
Zynga’s charter contains an exculpatory 102(b)(7) provision.66 Thus, to show that
a particular director is interested based on the theory that the director faces a substantial
risk of personal liability for approving the Secondary Offering,67 plaintiff must plead
particularized facts demonstrating an intentional dereliction of duties or conscious
disregard for the directors’ responsibilities, such that a reasonable inference of bad faith
or a breach of the duty of loyalty exists that would overcome the exculpatory provision in
Zynga’s certificate of incorporation.68
65
See In re Cornerstone Therapeutics Inc., S’holder Litig., 115 A.3d 1173, 1175 (Del.
2015).
66
Rohrer Aff. Ex. 11 (Sixteenth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of
Zynga Inc.) at Art. IX (“To the fullest extent permitted by law, no director of the
corporation shall be personally liable for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty
as a director of the Corporation.”). I may take judicial notice of the contents of Zynga’s
certificate of incorporation. See Zucker v. Andreessen, 2012 WL 2366448, at *1 n.1 (Del.
Ch. June 21, 2012) (“Delaware courts may take judicial notice of certificates of
incorporation filed with the Secretary of State on a motion to dismiss under Rule 23.1.”).
67
See Rattner v. Bidzos, 2003 WL 22284323, at *9 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30, 2003).
68
See In re Goldman Sachs Grp., Inc. S’holder Litig., 2011 WL 4826104, at *12 (Del.
Ch. Oct. 12, 2011) (noting that because of 102(b)(7) clause, plaintiff must make
particularized allegations of scienter or bad faith); In re Lear Corp. S’holder Litig., 967
A.2d 640, 647-48 (Del. Ch. 2008) (requiring plaintiffs to “plead specific facts that
support the inference that the Lear directors breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty”
because a 102(b)(7) clause prevented liability for care breaches, including gross
negligence).
31
This analysis is irrelevant to Siminoff and Doerr, who were not on the board at the
time of the Secondary Offering. That leaves Gordon, Katzenberg, and Meresman.
Plaintiff does not allege particularized facts leading to a reasonable inference that any of
them consciously disregarded their duties in approving the Secondary Offering.
Plaintiff’s arguments generally focus on the directors’ knowing approval of the
Secondary Offering and on the fact that the Secondary Offering was approved by a
majority-conflicted board at the time. But plaintiff makes no particularized allegations
that Gordon, Katzenberg, or Meresman knowingly failed to inform themselves about the
Secondary Offering or otherwise consciously disregarded their directorial duties, as is
required to allege a non-exculpated claim against them. Consequently, although the
transaction itself may be subject to entire fairness review, plaintiff has not pled
particularized allegations against a majority of the Demand Board members
demonstrating that they face a substantial litigation risk for approving the Secondary
Offering.69
**** *
Because at least five directors on the Demand Board are independent and
disinterested for purposes of the Secondary Offering claim, plaintiff fails to allege that
demand would be futile, and Count II is dismissed.70
69
See Teamsters Union 25, 119 A.3d at 65 n.121 (declining to excuse demand under
second prong of Aronson even when transaction may be subject to entire fairness review).
70
Although I need not analyze more than five directors, I would reach the same
conclusion regarding Paul, who did not participate in the Secondary Offering or even
vote to approve it.
32
D. Demand Is Not Excused for the Caremark Claim
Count III is essentially a Caremark claim against all defendants alleging that they
failed to ensure that Zynga maintained adequate controls regarding its public disclosures
and failed to disclose material information to the public.71 For instance, plaintiff alleges
that the Prospectus drew an overly optimistic picture of Zynga’s financial situation, while
defendants knew of or recklessly disregarded recent negative trends, including in ABPU
and DAU. Regarding the change to the Facebook algorithm, plaintiff alleges that Pincus
would have been aware of these changes before they were implemented, due to his
relationship with Facebook’s CEO. The Complaint also alleges that defendants
authorized or failed to monitor practices that resulted in legal and regulatory violations.
The Rales test applies here because the claim in question “is not a business
decision of the Board but rather a violation of the Board’s oversight duties.” 72 I will
therefore assess whether plaintiff has alleged a reasonable doubt that a majority of the
Demand Board directors would be independent and disinterested in deciding whether to
pursue plaintiff’s Caremark claim.
1. Siminoff and Doerr
Siminoff and Doerr are disinterested because they joined the board after the
alleged Caremark violations occurred. As to their independence, they are independent
71
Compl. ¶ 131.
72
Wood v. Baum, 953 A.2d at 140. See also In re Dow Chem. Co. Deriv. Litig., 2010
WL 66769, at *6 n.25 (Del. Ch. Jan. 11, 2010) (“Plaintiffs’ other claims as to failure to
supervise (enabling bribery and insider trading) are not board decisions and, thus, are
appropriately analyzed under Rales.”).
33
from defendants for the reasons explained above.73 Siminoff and Doerr are therefore
impartial for purposes of Count III.
2. Katzenberg, Gordon, and Meresman
As explained above, there is no reasonable doubt as to whether Katzenberg,
Gordon, and Meresman are independent from defendants.74 This leaves the question of
whether they are disinterested. In the context of an alleged oversight violation, there is
no transaction in which the directors may be interested. Thus, for the directors to have a
disabling interest, they must face meaningful litigation risk with a substantial likelihood
of personal liability for the alleged violation.75
Plaintiff argues that Zynga’s directors who were on the board at the time of the
Secondary Offering and the alleged disclosure failures, including Katzenberg, Gordon,
and Meresman, face a substantial likelihood of personal liability for the alleged
Caremark violations. A Caremark claim “is possibly the most difficult theory in
corporation law upon which a plaintiff might hope to win a judgment” in the absence of a
conflict of interest or other suspect circumstances.76 Katzenberg, Gordon, and Meresman
face no such circumstances here. Because Zynga has a 102(b)(7) provision, they would
not face a substantial likelihood of personal liability unless plaintiff pleads a non-
73
See supra Parts II.B.3-4 and II.C.
74
See supra Part II.B.
75
See Rattner v. Bidzos, 2003 WL 22284323, at *9.
76
In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Deriv. Litig., 698 A.2d at 967.
34
exculpated claim by alleging that the directors acted in bad faith or consciously
disregarded their directorial responsibilities.77
Despite these significant pleading hurdles, plaintiff alleges that the directors were
exposed to a substantial threat of liability stemming from their failure to ensure that
Zynga maintained adequate systems and controls relating to its public disclosures, which
caused Zynga to make public statements containing material omissions.78 He further
argues that the directors ignored two red flags: the request in March 2012 to waive
trading restrictions pertaining to the Secondary Offering during a period of declining
business prospects, and the decision not to write down the value of the OMGPOP assets
until October 2012 even though those assets allegedly should have been impaired much
earlier.79 The fatal problem with these allegations is that the Complaint does not contain
particularized facts linking them to the outside directors’ knowledge or actions.80
77
See supra Part II.C and note 69.
78
Compl. ¶¶ 131-32; Pl.’s Ans. Br. 40-42.
79
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 42-43.
80
See In re China Auto. Sys. Inc. Deriv. Litig., 2013 WL 4672059, at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug.
30, 2013) (rejecting Caremark derivative claim) (“Nowhere within the Complaint are
allegations of particularized facts about the Defendants’ knowledge of any ‘red flags.’
Nothing is alleged about any specific deficiencies of the Company’s or Audit
Committee’s internal financial controls during the Relevant Period. And, the Complaint
lacks particularized allegations about any Defendant’s conscious disregard of Board or
Committee meetings or responsibilities.”); In re Citigroup Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 964
A.2d 106, 128 (Del. Ch. 2009) (“Plaintiffs fail to plead ‘particularized facts suggesting
that the Board was presented with ‘red flags’ alerting it to potential misconduct’ at the
Company.”).
35
For instance, plaintiff alleges that even though some of Zynga’s user metrics were
trending downward in early 2012, a service known as AppData reported upward trends to
investors.81 Plaintiff does not plead any facts, however, suggesting that any of the
outside directors were involved in creating the information that AppData allegedly
disseminated. In fact, the Complaint admits that AppData only provides estimates
because it does not have access to any internal company metrics.82 Plaintiff does allege
that certain members of Zynga’s management (including defendants Pincus, Schappert,
Wehner, and Van Natta) received daily reports of Zynga’s daily average users and were
therefore aware that the company’s daily average users had leveled off before the
Secondary Offering. Critically, however, plaintiff does not allege that any outside
directors, including Katzenberg, Gordon, and Meresman, received this information.
Plaintiff makes other similar allegations without pleading facts suggesting knowledge by
the outside directors.
Similarly, plaintiff asserts that defendants knowingly or recklessly increased
Zynga’s earnings guidance despite powerful indications to the contrary. Specifically,
referring generally to the “defendants,” he states that they failed to disclose:
(i) that Zynga’s publicly announced projections were overly optimistic and
unattainable; (ii) the ABPU was experiencing a negative trend; (iii) the
DAU was stagnating during 1Q2012; (iv) the negative Facebook feed trend
was exasperated by the Facebook algorithm change; (v) the delay in
launching The Ville; (vi) the OMGPOP asset was substantially impaired.83
81
Compl. ¶¶ 73-76.
82
Compl. ¶ 29.
83
Compl. ¶ 131.
36
Again, the fatal problem with these allegations is that they are not made with particularity
against the outside director defendants. To the contrary, plaintiff alleges that internal
management received regular updates in user trend data,84 that the weekly bookings
reports containing delays and other negative information about important Zynga games
including The Ville were “internal” documents,85 and that changes to Facebook’s
algorithms and associated negative Facebook feed trends were discussed in internal
company e-mails, through alleged conversations between Pincus and Facebook’s CEO,
and via a notification to Pincus and Schappert.86 Missing from this list are any
allegations that the outside directors, including Katzenberg, Gordon, and Meresman, saw
any of these alleged red flags.
Plaintiff’s allegations against the outside directors regarding the OMGPOP
impairment fare no better. Plaintiff challenges the failure to write down the assets of
OMGPOP as impaired until October 2012, despite substantial decreases in the projected
users of Draw Something, its most important game, in May and June 2012. None of
these allegations, however, specifically mentions the outside directors. Plaintiff further
84
Plaintiff quotes a passage in the Prospectus stating that ABPU “provides useful
information to investors and others in understanding and evaluating our results in the
same manner as our management and board of directors.” Compl. ¶ 70 (quoting
Prospectus at 42). This passage may support plaintiff’s contention that the metric is an
important one, but it does not speak to the frequency with which the outside directors
received this information.
85
Compl. ¶¶ 46, 83.
86
Compl. ¶¶ 72-73, 86.
37
alleges that the company’s finance team prepared an impairment analysis in June 2012
that determined OMGPOP did not need to be impaired at the time. Whether or not the
conclusion of that analysis was correct, which the parties vigorously dispute, it hardly
raised a “red flag” of the need to take an impairment charge at the time even if one
assumes that the outside directors saw it—a fact which is not alleged.
Finally, plaintiff alleges that at various times the Audit Committee discussed
Zynga’s financial results and earnings press releases for 2011 and for the first quarter of
2012, statements related to the Secondary Offering, and the acquisition of OMGPOP.
These allegations implicate Meresman, who was a member of the Audit Committee. But
the Complaint is devoid of allegations that the Audit Committee received or reviewed
other internal forecasts or financial metrics, game-specific performance data, or
information about the OMGPOP impairment decision.
Citing Pfeiffer v. Toll, plaintiff argues that allegations pled generally against the
defendants without differentiating among them are sufficient to establish demand futility
because knowledge of core financials fundamental to the business should be imputed to
outside directors.87 Pfeiffer is distinguishable for a significant reason. There, as the
Court made clear, the allegations of the outside directors’ knowledge were being assessed
on the lower pleading standard of Rule 12(b)(6) rather than the heightened pleading
87
Pfeiffer v. Toll, 989 A.2d 683, 693 (Del. Ch. 2010) (“It would afford an ostrich-like
immunity to directors not to grant the plaintiff a Rule 12(b)(6) inference that the Outside
Director Defendants knew about core information of this type.”), abrogated on other
grounds by Kahn v. Kolberg Kravis Roberts & Co., L.P., 23 A.3d 831 (Del. 2011).
38
standard of Rule 23.1.88 Indeed, the Court in Pfeiffer distinguished other decisions of this
Court precisely because they “were decided under Rule 23.1’s particularity standard and
in a procedural posture where the plaintiff sought to establish demand futility by showing
that the directors faced a substantial risk of liability.”89 Additionally, the outside
directors in Pfeiffer sold substantial amounts of their stock during the period in question,
giving rise to a potential inference that they were aware of negative information. No such
allegations are pled here to support such inferences.
In sum, without particularized allegations that Katzenberg, Gordon, or Meresman
knew of recent internal company data, plaintiff’s “red flags” allegations against them boil
down to the contention that they should have known trouble was afoot at the company
merely because the Secondary Offering was proposed. It is not reasonable to infer,
however, that the mere proposal to conduct the Secondary Offering served as a “red flag”
if the outside directors are not alleged to have had knowledge of non-public negative
trends. The Secondary Offering had the stated purpose of facilitating an orderly
distribution of shares and increasing Zynga’s public float,90 and was not inherently
88
Id. at 691-93 (“The Complaint is not subject to any heightened pleading standard. . . .
Although a plaintiff must plead with particularity when attempting to establish demand
futility, that is not the issue here. I have already held that demand is futile in light of the
companion federal securities action, which brings the role of Rule 23.1 to a close. . . .
Outside of the procedural context of Rule 23.1, a complaint need only plead a reasonable
basis from which knowledge can be inferred. . . . Several factors combine to convince me
that knowledge and use of inside information is adequately pled under the plaintiff-
friendly Rule 12(b)(6) standard.”).
89
Id. at 693.
90
Compl. ¶ 59.
39
suspect. Consequently, these three outside directors are disinterested because they face
no meaningful risk of liability for a Caremark claim.
*****
For the reasons explained above, five of the nine members of the Demand Board
were disinterested and independent with respect to the Caremark claim. Accordingly,
Count III is dismissed for failure to plead demand futility.
E. Lack of Impartiality Due to Related Litigation
Plaintiff makes a standalone argument that the directors on the Secondary Offering
Board “would be unable to impartially consider a litigation demand in this Action for fear
that it would undercut their defense” in the Delaware Class Action, relying again on
Pfeiffer v. Toll.91 This argument is inapplicable to Doerr and Siminoff, who joined the
Zynga board after the Secondary Offering and were not named as defendants in that
action. As for Katzenberg, Meresman, and Gordon, none of them faces a substantial risk
of liability for the claims in the Delaware Class Action given Zynga’s 102(b)(7)
exculpatory provision and the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in Cornerstone for the
reasons discussed above.92
Pfeiffer is distinguishable. In that case, the Court concluded that the board was
unable to consider a demand impartially in light of the fact that the directors were named
91
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 45-46.
92
See supra Part II.C. Katzenberg, Paul, and Meresman were voluntarily dismissed from
the Delaware Class Action in August 2015, a few months after Cornerstone was decided.
Because the Demand Board is assessed at the time the Complaint is filed, their
subsequent dismissal does not factor into my analysis.
40
as defendants in a related federal securities action that had “survived a motion to dismiss
under the rigorous standards for pleading securities fraud.”93 Here, no ruling on the
sufficiency of the allegations in the Delaware Class Action had been made when the
Complaint was filed in this action.94
Finally, plaintiff raises in briefing the threat of liability associated with the Reyes
case. His argument for demand futility because of Reyes fails for two reasons. First, the
Complaint does not refer to Reyes. Although Reyes was pending when plaintiff filed this
action, he failed even to mention its existence in his Complaint and did not amend the
Complaint to include it later. Thus, these allegations are not properly before the Court.95
Second, the late-raised allegations in plaintiff’s brief concerning the Reyes case
fail to cast a reasonable doubt as to the outside directors’ disinterestedness because they
are superficial and conclusory. Plaintiff alleges that the outside directors potentially may
be liable for alleged violations of Section 11 of the Securities Act and cites one paragraph
of the Reyes complaint to note that the complaint “contested both statements of fact and
93
Pfeiffer v. Toll, 989 A.2d at 690.
94
Plaintiff points out that the United States District Court for the District of Delaware
had denied a motion to dismiss the Delaware Class Action, which had been removed to
federal court. Pl.’s Ans. Br. 46. The district court’s denial of defendants’ motion to
dismiss did not address the merits of the claims. The district court considered whether
those claims were preempted under the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act, and
concluded that the case should be remanded to the Court of Chancery. See Lee v. Pincus,
2013 WL 6804640, at *2 (D. Del. Dec. 23, 2013).
95
See supra note 43.
41
opinion”96 and that it alleged that the directors “issued false and misleading statements
and omitted material information from the Prospectus.”97 But plaintiff provides no
further support or explanation for how the directors would face a substantial risk of
liability in Reyes.98 Plaintiff’s late-raised allegations regarding the Reyes case are too
vague and conclusory to cast a reasonable doubt as to the outside directors’
disinterestedness.
Because neither the Delaware Class Action nor the Reyes case raises any
reasonable doubts as to the outside directors’ impartiality, these arguments do not change
the conclusion that the Demand Board was not disabled from deciding whether to pursue
any of plaintiff’s claims.99
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that demand would
have been futile with respect to any of the claims in the Complaint. Accordingly,
defendants’ motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
96
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 46.
97
Pl.’s Ans. Br. 16.
98
Plaintiff does argue that the survival of a motion to dismiss would have increased the
directors’ risk of liability, but this did not occur until several months after he filed the
Complaint.
99
Although the Complaint referenced the federal securities action, plaintiff did not
challenge in his brief the impartiality of the Demand Board based on the claims asserted
in that action, presumably because Zynga’s outside directors were not defendants in that
case when this action was filed.
42