The Limits of Delaware Corporate Law: Internal Affairs, Federal Forum Provisions, and Sciabacucchi

J. Grundfest
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Federal Forum Provisions [FFPs] respond by providing that, for Delaware-chartered entities, Securities Act claims must be litigated in federal court or in Delaware state court. \n \nIn Sciabacucchi, Chancery applies “first principles” to invalidate FFPs primarily on grounds that charter provisions may only regulate internal affairs, and that Securities Act claims are always external. In so concluding, Sciabacucchi adopts a novel definition of internal affairs that is narrower than precedent, and asserts that plaintiffs have a federal right to bring state court Securities Act claims. It describes all Securities Act plaintiffs as purchasers who are not owed fiduciary duties at the time of purchase. The opinion constrains all actions of the Delaware legislature relating to the DGCL to comply with its novel definition of “internal affairs.” \n \nSciabacucchi’s logic and conclusion are fragile. The opinion conflicts with controlling U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent and relies critically on assumptions of fact that are demonstrably incorrect. It asserts that FFPs are “contrary to the federal regime” because they preclude state court litigation of Securities Act claims. But the U.S. Supreme Court in Rodriguez holds that there is no immutable right to litigate Securities Act claims in state court, and enforces an agreement that precludes state court Securities Act litigation. Sciabacucchi assumes that Securities Act plaintiffs are never existing stockholders to whom fiduciary duties are owed. But SEC filings and the pervasiveness of order splitting conclusively establish that purchasers are commonly existing holders protected by fiduciary duties. The opinion fears hypothetical extraterritorial application of the DGCL. To prevent this result, it invents a novel definition of “internal affairs” that it applies to constrain all of the Legislature’s past and future activity. But the opinion nowhere addresses the large corpus of U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent that already precludes extraterritorial applications of the DGCL. It thus invents novel doctrine that conflicts with established precedent in an effort to solve a problem that is already solved. The opinion’s novel, divergent definition of “internal affairs” also conflicts with U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent that the opinion nowhere considers. \n \nSciabacucchi is additionally problematic from a policy perspective. By using Delaware law to preclude a federal practice in federal court under a federal statute that is permissible under federal law, Sciabacucchi veers Delaware law sharply into the federal lane and creates unprecedented tension with the federal regime. Its narrow “internal affairs” definition invites sister states to regulate matters traditionally viewed as internal by Delaware, and advances a position inimical to Delaware’s interests. By propounding its divergent internal affairs constraint as a categorical restriction on the General Assembly's actions, past and future, the opinion causes the judiciary to intrude into the legislature’s lane. And, data indicate that the opinion in Sciabacucchi caused a statistically and economically significant decline in the stock price of recent IPO issuers with FFPs in their organic documents. \n \nIn contrast, a straightforward textualist approach would apply the doctrine of consistent usage and use simple dictionary definitions to preclude any extension of the DGCL beyond its traditional bounds. Textualism avoids all of the concerns that inspire the invention of a divergent “internal affairs” definition. Textualism does not require counter-factual assumptions, conflict with U.S. or Delaware Supreme Court precedent, cause Delaware to constrain federal practice in a manner inconsistent with federal law, or advocate policy positions inimical to Delaware’s interest. Textualism also interprets the DGCL in a manner that profoundly constrains the ability of all Delaware corporations to adopt mandatory arbitration of Securities Act claims. Textualism validates FFPs in a manner that precludes the adverse, hypothetical, collateral consequences that animate Sciabacucchi’s fragile analysis, without generating Sciabacucchi’s challenging sequelae.","PeriodicalId":215226,"journal":{"name":"CGN: Other Corporate Governance: Internal Governance","volume":"124 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"CGN: Other Corporate Governance: Internal Governance","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3448651","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Securities Act of 1933 provides for concurrent federal and state jurisdiction. Securities Act claims were historically litigated in federal court, but in 2015 plaintiffs began filing far more frequently in state court where dismissals are less common and weaker claims more likely to survive. D&O insurance costs for IPOs have since increased significantly. Today, approximately 75% of defendants in Section 11 claims face state court actions. Federal Forum Provisions [FFPs] respond by providing that, for Delaware-chartered entities, Securities Act claims must be litigated in federal court or in Delaware state court. In Sciabacucchi, Chancery applies “first principles” to invalidate FFPs primarily on grounds that charter provisions may only regulate internal affairs, and that Securities Act claims are always external. In so concluding, Sciabacucchi adopts a novel definition of internal affairs that is narrower than precedent, and asserts that plaintiffs have a federal right to bring state court Securities Act claims. It describes all Securities Act plaintiffs as purchasers who are not owed fiduciary duties at the time of purchase. The opinion constrains all actions of the Delaware legislature relating to the DGCL to comply with its novel definition of “internal affairs.” Sciabacucchi’s logic and conclusion are fragile. The opinion conflicts with controlling U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent and relies critically on assumptions of fact that are demonstrably incorrect. It asserts that FFPs are “contrary to the federal regime” because they preclude state court litigation of Securities Act claims. But the U.S. Supreme Court in Rodriguez holds that there is no immutable right to litigate Securities Act claims in state court, and enforces an agreement that precludes state court Securities Act litigation. Sciabacucchi assumes that Securities Act plaintiffs are never existing stockholders to whom fiduciary duties are owed. But SEC filings and the pervasiveness of order splitting conclusively establish that purchasers are commonly existing holders protected by fiduciary duties. The opinion fears hypothetical extraterritorial application of the DGCL. To prevent this result, it invents a novel definition of “internal affairs” that it applies to constrain all of the Legislature’s past and future activity. But the opinion nowhere addresses the large corpus of U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent that already precludes extraterritorial applications of the DGCL. It thus invents novel doctrine that conflicts with established precedent in an effort to solve a problem that is already solved. The opinion’s novel, divergent definition of “internal affairs” also conflicts with U.S. and Delaware Supreme Court precedent that the opinion nowhere considers. Sciabacucchi is additionally problematic from a policy perspective. By using Delaware law to preclude a federal practice in federal court under a federal statute that is permissible under federal law, Sciabacucchi veers Delaware law sharply into the federal lane and creates unprecedented tension with the federal regime. Its narrow “internal affairs” definition invites sister states to regulate matters traditionally viewed as internal by Delaware, and advances a position inimical to Delaware’s interests. By propounding its divergent internal affairs constraint as a categorical restriction on the General Assembly's actions, past and future, the opinion causes the judiciary to intrude into the legislature’s lane. And, data indicate that the opinion in Sciabacucchi caused a statistically and economically significant decline in the stock price of recent IPO issuers with FFPs in their organic documents. In contrast, a straightforward textualist approach would apply the doctrine of consistent usage and use simple dictionary definitions to preclude any extension of the DGCL beyond its traditional bounds. Textualism avoids all of the concerns that inspire the invention of a divergent “internal affairs” definition. Textualism does not require counter-factual assumptions, conflict with U.S. or Delaware Supreme Court precedent, cause Delaware to constrain federal practice in a manner inconsistent with federal law, or advocate policy positions inimical to Delaware’s interest. Textualism also interprets the DGCL in a manner that profoundly constrains the ability of all Delaware corporations to adopt mandatory arbitration of Securities Act claims. Textualism validates FFPs in a manner that precludes the adverse, hypothetical, collateral consequences that animate Sciabacucchi’s fragile analysis, without generating Sciabacucchi’s challenging sequelae.
特拉华州公司法的限制:内部事务,联邦论坛条款和Sciabacucchi
1933年的证券法规定了联邦和州的同时管辖权。《证券法》的诉讼历来是在联邦法院提起的,但在2015年,原告开始更频繁地在州法院提起诉讼,在州法院,驳回诉讼的情况不那么常见,较弱的索赔更有可能存活。自那以来,ipo的董事和行政管理保险成本大幅上升。今天,在第11条索赔中,大约75%的被告面临州法院的诉讼。《联邦论坛条款》对此作出回应,规定对于特拉华州特许实体,《证券法》索赔必须在联邦法院或特拉华州法院提起诉讼。在Sciabacucchi案中,衡平法院主要依据宪章条款可能只规范内部事务,而《证券法》的权利要求总是外部事务,从而应用“第一原则”来宣告ffp无效。在结论中,Sciabacucchi采用了一种新的内部事务定义,该定义比先例更窄,并断言原告拥有向州法院提起证券法索赔的联邦权利。它将所有证券法原告描述为在购买时不承担信托义务的购买者。该意见限制了特拉华州立法机构与DGCL有关的所有行动,以符合其对“内部事务”的新定义。夏巴库奇的逻辑和结论是脆弱的。该意见与美国和特拉华州最高法院的主导判例相冲突,并严重依赖于对事实的假设,这些假设显然是不正确的。它声称,ffp“违反了联邦制度”,因为它们排除了州法院对证券法索赔的诉讼。但美国最高法院在罗德里格斯案中认为,在州法院提起证券法诉讼并没有不可改变的权利,并强制执行一项排除州法院证券法诉讼的协议。Sciabacucchi假设《证券法》的原告从来都不是负有信托义务的现有股东。但美国证券交易委员会(SEC)提交的文件和普遍存在的分单行为最终证明,买家通常是受信托责任保护的现有持有者。该意见担心假定的DGCL的域外适用。为了防止出现这种结果,它发明了一个“内部事务”的新定义,用以限制立法机关过去和未来的所有活动。但该意见没有提及美国和特拉华州最高法院的大量判例,这些判例已经排除了DGCL的域外适用。因此,为了解决已经解决的问题,它发明了与已有先例相冲突的新理论。该意见对“内部事务”的新颖、不同的定义也与美国和特拉华州最高法院的先例相冲突,该意见没有考虑到这一点。此外,从政策角度来看,Sciabacucchi也存在问题。夏巴库奇利用特拉华州的法律在联邦法院排除联邦法律允许的联邦法规下的联邦行为,将特拉华州的法律急剧转向联邦法律,并与联邦政权产生了前所未有的紧张关系。其狭隘的“内部事务”定义邀请姐妹州来管理传统上被特拉华州视为内部事务的事务,并推进了一种不利于特拉华州利益的立场。该意见将其不同的内部事务限制主张为对大会过去和未来行动的绝对限制,从而导致司法部门侵入立法机构的领域。并且,数据表明,Sciabacucchi中的意见导致最近在其有机文件中具有ffp的IPO发行人的股价在统计上和经济上显著下降。相比之下,直接的文本主义方法将应用一致用法的原则,并使用简单的字典定义来排除DGCL超出其传统界限的任何扩展。文本主义避免了所有引起人们对“内部事务”定义歧见的顾虑。文本主义不要求反事实假设,不要求与美国或特拉华州最高法院先例相冲突,不要求特拉华州以与联邦法律不一致的方式限制联邦实践,也不要求主张不利于特拉华州利益的政策立场。文本主义还以一种深刻限制所有特拉华州公司采用《证券法》索赔强制仲裁能力的方式解释DGCL。文本主义在某种程度上验证了ffp,排除了为Sciabacucchi的脆弱分析提供动力的不利的、假设的、附带的后果,而不会产生Sciabacucchi具有挑战性的后遗症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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