{"title":"关键任务:Caremark、Blue Bell和网络安全治理主管","authors":"H. Pace, L. Trautman","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3938128","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"If the potential for Caremark liability hangs like the sword of Damocles over corporate directors of Delaware corporations, then that sword has been considerably more secure than that of the original myth. For decades, Chancellor Allen’s description of a Caremark claim as “possibly the most difficult theory in corporation law upon which a plaintiff might hope to win a judgment” held true. Caremark claims that survived a motion to dismiss were for decades few and far between. That changed in 2019. In the space of little over a year, Delaware courts have allowed five Caremark claims to survive in the corporation context and one claim to survive in the limited partnership context. The thread holding that sword is beginning to look more like the single horse hair of myth. The scope and likelihood of Caremark liability are matters of considerable interest and concern for directors. Under most circumstances, a board simply doing its job poorly is relevant only to the directors’ duty of care and protected by the business judgment rule, exculpatory provisions under Section 102(b)(7), and advancement and indemnification. Failure to monitor under Caremark, however, is a breach of the duty of loyalty. A breach of the duty of loyalty is not protected by the business judgment rule. It cannot be exculpated. And it cannot be covered by indemnification. 2019 marked an abrupt shift in Caremark in application, if not in theory. In June of that year the Supreme Court of Delaware (“Delaware Supreme Court”) reversed a decision by the Delaware Court of Chancery (“Chancery Court”) dismissing a claim against the directors of Blue Bell Creameries, Inc. (“Blue Bell”) under Caremark. Within a little over a year, the Chancery Court would sustain Caremark claims in four cases. In Clovis, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a pharmaceutical company who allowed the company to misrepresent the clinical trial success of one of its three drugs. In Hughes, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a Chinese company incorporated in Delaware that suffered from severe and pervasive accounting issues. In Teamsters Local, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a large pharmaceutical company who allowed an indirect subsidiary to essentially operate a criminal enterprise. And in Boeing, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of an airplane manufacturer who did not pay attention to safety issues. Cybersecurity has become just such a mission critical risk for large corporations. This Article makes four key arguments. Black letter Caremark doctrine has not changed, but it is newly reinvigorated and the risks of Caremark liability for directors is greater than just a few years ago. Future Caremark liability will be centered on failure to provide board-level oversight of mission critical risks. Cybersecurity is mission critical to effectively all large companies today. The risk of Caremark liability can be mitigated by taking a few simple steps to ensure that the board is addressing cybersecurity. This Article is the first to make these arguments together and the first to make the final argument.","PeriodicalId":7317,"journal":{"name":"Accounting","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Mission Critical: Caremark, Blue Bell, and Director Responsibility for Cybersecurity Governance\",\"authors\":\"H. Pace, L. 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Under most circumstances, a board simply doing its job poorly is relevant only to the directors’ duty of care and protected by the business judgment rule, exculpatory provisions under Section 102(b)(7), and advancement and indemnification. Failure to monitor under Caremark, however, is a breach of the duty of loyalty. A breach of the duty of loyalty is not protected by the business judgment rule. It cannot be exculpated. And it cannot be covered by indemnification. 2019 marked an abrupt shift in Caremark in application, if not in theory. In June of that year the Supreme Court of Delaware (“Delaware Supreme Court”) reversed a decision by the Delaware Court of Chancery (“Chancery Court”) dismissing a claim against the directors of Blue Bell Creameries, Inc. (“Blue Bell”) under Caremark. Within a little over a year, the Chancery Court would sustain Caremark claims in four cases. In Clovis, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a pharmaceutical company who allowed the company to misrepresent the clinical trial success of one of its three drugs. In Hughes, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a Chinese company incorporated in Delaware that suffered from severe and pervasive accounting issues. In Teamsters Local, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a large pharmaceutical company who allowed an indirect subsidiary to essentially operate a criminal enterprise. And in Boeing, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of an airplane manufacturer who did not pay attention to safety issues. Cybersecurity has become just such a mission critical risk for large corporations. This Article makes four key arguments. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
如果Caremark的潜在责任就像悬在特拉华州公司董事头上的达摩克利斯之剑,那么这把剑比最初的神话要安全得多。几十年来,大法官艾伦对Caremark索赔的描述“可能是公司法中最难的理论,原告可能希望在此基础上赢得判决”,这是正确的。在驳回动议中幸存下来的Caremark索赔在几十年里寥寥无几。这种情况在2019年发生了变化。在一年多一点的时间里,特拉华州法院已经允许五项Caremark的索赔在公司背景下继续存在,一项在有限合伙背景下继续存在。握着那把剑的线开始看起来更像神话中的单根马毛。Caremark责任的范围和可能性是董事们非常感兴趣和关注的问题。在大多数情况下,董事会仅仅是糟糕地完成了自己的工作,这只与董事的注意义务有关,并受到商业判断规则、第102(b)(7)条下的免责条款以及晋升和赔偿的保护。然而,未能在Caremark下进行监控是对忠诚义务的违反。违反忠诚义务不受商业判断规则的保护。这是不能开脱的。而且不包括在赔偿中。2019年标志着Caremark在应用上的突然转变,如果不是在理论上的话。同年6月,特拉华州最高法院(“特拉华州最高法院”)撤销了特拉华州衡平法院(“衡平法院”)驳回Blue Bell Creameries, Inc.(“Blue Bell”)董事在Caremark项下提出的索赔的决定。在一年多一点的时间里,衡平法院在四起案件中支持了Caremark的索赔。在Clovis案中,衡平法院支持了Caremark对一家制药公司董事的索赔,该公司允许该公司歪曲其三种药物之一的临床试验成功。在休斯案中,衡平法院支持Caremark对一家在特拉华州注册的中国公司董事的索赔,该公司存在严重而普遍的会计问题。在Teamsters Local一案中,衡平法院支持了Caremark对一家大型制药公司董事的索赔,该公司允许间接子公司实质上经营一家犯罪企业。在波音公司一案中,衡平法院支持了Caremark对一家飞机制造商董事的索赔,因为他们没有注意到安全问题。网络安全已经成为大公司的关键任务风险。本文提出了四个关键论点。黑色字母的Caremark原则没有改变,但它最近重新焕发了活力,董事们承担Caremark责任的风险比几年前更大。Caremark未来的责任将集中在未能对关键任务风险提供董事会层面的监督上。如今,网络安全对所有大公司来说都是至关重要的任务。通过采取一些简单的步骤来确保董事会正在解决网络安全问题,可以减轻Caremark承担责任的风险。这篇文章是第一个把这些论点放在一起的,也是第一个做最后论证的。
Mission Critical: Caremark, Blue Bell, and Director Responsibility for Cybersecurity Governance
If the potential for Caremark liability hangs like the sword of Damocles over corporate directors of Delaware corporations, then that sword has been considerably more secure than that of the original myth. For decades, Chancellor Allen’s description of a Caremark claim as “possibly the most difficult theory in corporation law upon which a plaintiff might hope to win a judgment” held true. Caremark claims that survived a motion to dismiss were for decades few and far between. That changed in 2019. In the space of little over a year, Delaware courts have allowed five Caremark claims to survive in the corporation context and one claim to survive in the limited partnership context. The thread holding that sword is beginning to look more like the single horse hair of myth. The scope and likelihood of Caremark liability are matters of considerable interest and concern for directors. Under most circumstances, a board simply doing its job poorly is relevant only to the directors’ duty of care and protected by the business judgment rule, exculpatory provisions under Section 102(b)(7), and advancement and indemnification. Failure to monitor under Caremark, however, is a breach of the duty of loyalty. A breach of the duty of loyalty is not protected by the business judgment rule. It cannot be exculpated. And it cannot be covered by indemnification. 2019 marked an abrupt shift in Caremark in application, if not in theory. In June of that year the Supreme Court of Delaware (“Delaware Supreme Court”) reversed a decision by the Delaware Court of Chancery (“Chancery Court”) dismissing a claim against the directors of Blue Bell Creameries, Inc. (“Blue Bell”) under Caremark. Within a little over a year, the Chancery Court would sustain Caremark claims in four cases. In Clovis, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a pharmaceutical company who allowed the company to misrepresent the clinical trial success of one of its three drugs. In Hughes, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a Chinese company incorporated in Delaware that suffered from severe and pervasive accounting issues. In Teamsters Local, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of a large pharmaceutical company who allowed an indirect subsidiary to essentially operate a criminal enterprise. And in Boeing, the Chancery Court sustained a Caremark claim against directors of an airplane manufacturer who did not pay attention to safety issues. Cybersecurity has become just such a mission critical risk for large corporations. This Article makes four key arguments. Black letter Caremark doctrine has not changed, but it is newly reinvigorated and the risks of Caremark liability for directors is greater than just a few years ago. Future Caremark liability will be centered on failure to provide board-level oversight of mission critical risks. Cybersecurity is mission critical to effectively all large companies today. The risk of Caremark liability can be mitigated by taking a few simple steps to ensure that the board is addressing cybersecurity. This Article is the first to make these arguments together and the first to make the final argument.