Ubc 2
Ubc 2
UNIT OVERVIEW:
In this unit the legal and fiduciary obligations of management and directors; the scope of those obligations and to
whom they are owed; and the constraints on those powers and limitations shall be examined.
UNIT OUTCOME:
One of the realities inherent to separate corporate personhood is the strange asymmetry that the corporate person
can only act as a result of and through human action and interaction. Corporate takeovers and changes of control
highlight how vested interests and other frailties of the human condition complicate corporate life. You will be
introduced to the kind of legal mechanisms and maneuvers used to resist takeovers (including “poison pills”) as
well as the limits of the legitimate use of such tactics. Conflicts of interest situations as well as personal
opportunities that arise through the corporation are other situations where similar factors of human frailty come into
play. By the end of this unit you will develop an understanding of what it means for directors and officers to act “in
the best interests of the corporation” when changes are happening.
UNIT READINGS:
Please read the following materials:
Casebook pages 303-426
BCBCA sections 136-137, 142, 157; CBCA sections 122-123, 147-153; Securities act (B.C.) sections 57.2
Parke v. Daily News Ltd. [1962] 2 All E.R. 929
Re. W and M Roith Ltd. [1967] 1 All E.R. 427
CW Shareholdings Inc. v. WIC Western International Communications Ltd. (1998), 39 O.R. (3d) 755 (Ont. S.C.)
http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/1998/1998canlii14838/1998canlii14838.html
(http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/1998/1998canlii14838/1998canlii14838.html)
TOPIC 1: LEGAL OBLIGATIONS OF MANAGEMENT: THE STANDARD OF CARE, DILIGENCE AND SKILL
Please read pages 303-426 of the Casebook
A. Statutory Provisions
BCBCA section 142(1): “A director or officer of a company, when exercising the powers and performing the
functions of a director or officer of the company, as the case may be, must . . . (b) exercise the care, diligence and
skill that a reasonably prudent individual would exercise in comparable circumstances.”
CBCA section 122(1): “Every director and officer of a corporation in exercising their powers and discharging their
duties shall . . . (b) exercise the care, diligence and skill that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in
comparable circumstances.”
Also quoted in Peoples Department Stores Inc. v. Wise (at page 326 of the Casebook) was the 1971
Dickerson Report “Proposals for a New Business Corporations Law for Canada”, authored by Robert W.V.
Dickerson, John L. Howard and Leon Getz, and which preceded the enactment of the CBCA by four years.
The Dickerson Report:
Described the common law standard as being the degree of care, skill and diligence that could reasonably be
expected from someone having the directors knowledge and experience;
Recommended at II, ap. 74 the creation of an objective standard requiring directors and officers to meet the
standard of a “reasonably prudent person”
This was obviously an attempt to raise the standard of directors. As can readily be seen from CBCA section 122(1)
the objective standard was rejected and “reasonable prudence” was put in the context of “comparable
circumstances”. This subjective test prevailed and remains with us.
However the jurisprudence does not actually seem to follow the statutory words, and insists on an
objective standard. Again please refer to Peoples Department Stores Inc. v. Wise (at page 327 of the
Casebook) where the following is said:
“The words “in comparable circumstances”, modify the statutory standard by requiring the context in which a given
decision was made to be taken into account. This is not the introduction of a subjective element relating to the
competence of the director, but rather the introduction of a contextual element into the statutory standard of care. It
is clear that s. 122(1) (http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/stat/rsc-1985-c-c-44/latest/rsc-1985-c-c-
44.html#sec122subsec1_smooth) (b) requires more of directors and officers than the traditional common law duty
of care outlined in, for example, Re City Equitable Fire Insurance, supra.
The standard of care embodied in s. 122(1) (http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/stat/rsc-1985-c-c-44/latest/rsc-1985-
c-c-44.html#sec122subsec1_smooth) (b) of the CBCA (http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/stat/rsc-1985-c-c-
44/latest/rsc-1985-c-c-44.html) is . . . an objective standard. The factual aspects of the circumstances surrounding
the actions of the director or officer are important . . . as opposed to the subjective motivation of the director or
officer.” (Emphasis added)
Now please read Soper v. Canada [1998] 1 F.C. 124 (C.A.) at pages 319-320 of the Casebook and note how
the court wrestles with the question of standard to be applied to directors.
Under the Income Tax Act the directors of a corporation are not liable for the failure to make employee remittances
if the directors show they exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill of a reasonably prudent person in the
circumstances.
Robertson J.A. made the following observations on the law:
“The second proposition that I wish to discuss is the following: a director need not exhibit in the performance of his
or her duties a greater degree of skill and care than may reasonably be expected from a person of his or her
knowledge and experience…
Third, a director is not obliged to give continuous attention to the affairs of the company, nor is he or she even
bound to attend all meetings of the board. However when, in the circumstances, it is reasonably possible to attend
such meetings, a director ought to do so. Subsequent English cases, though, went to more of an extreme,
permitting a director to avoid liability despite having missed all board meetings for a period of several years…
Fourth, in the absence of grounds for suspicion, it is not improper for a director to rely on company officials to
perform honestly duties that have been properly delegated to them. Further to this point, it is the exigencies of
business and the company’s articles of association that, together, will determine whether it is appropriate to
delegate a duty. The larger the business, for instance, the greater will be the need to delegate…
Hence, in the event that the reasonably prudent person is unskilled (which possibility is discussed above), the
statute requires only the exercise of a degree of care which is commensurate with that person’s level of skill. It is in
this manner that skill and care are clearly interconnected. That being said, it is worth emphasizing that it is
insufficient for a director to assert simply that he or she did his or her best if, having regard to that
individual’s level of skill and business experience, he or she failed to act reasonably prudently.” (Emphasis
added)
[Please note that the final two paragraphs quoted above are not contained in the Casebook version.]
Some further points with respect to Peoples Department Stores Inc. v. Wise:
1. Note the very important distinction drawn below in BCE v. 1976 Debentureholders (discussed earlier in this
course), concerning the distinction in the direction of the duty of care and the fiduciary duties:
“A second remedy lies against the directors in a civil action for breach of duty of care. As noted, s. 122(1)
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec122subsec1) (b) of the CBCA
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en) requires directors and officers of a corporation to
“exercise the care, diligence and skill that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in comparable
circumstances”. This duty, unlike the s. 122(1) (https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-
en#!fragment/sec122subsec1) (a) fiduciary duty, is not owed solely to the corporation, and thus may be the
basis for liability to other stakeholders in accordance with principles governing the law of tort and extra-
contractual liability: Peoples Department Stores. Section 122(1) (https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-
c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec122subsec1) (b) does not provide an independent foundation for claims. However,
applying the principles of The Queen in right of Canada v. Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 205, courts
may take this statutory provision into account as to the standard of behavior that should reasonably be expected.”
(Emphasis added)
2. The business judgment rule is well described in at page 332 of the Casebook in terms of the court not
second-guessing “business judgments, as long as they are made in an informed way (and in accordance with
fiduciary obligations. It is really just a statement of the principle of curial deference to managerial decisions,
which only makes sense since the court has no authority to make such decisions.”
3. The point is made in Peoples Department Stores Inc. v. Wise that directors may rely on others in certain
ways, as statutorily permitted. This is not entirely a simple and straightforward rule as the following excerpt
illustrates:
“When faced with the serious inventory management problem, the Wise brothers sought the advice of the vice-
president of finance, David Clément. The Wise brothers claimed as an additional argument that in adopting the
solution proposed by Clément, they were relying in good faith on the judgment of a person whose profession lent
credibility to his statement, in accordance with the defence provided for in s. 123(4)
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec123subsec4) (b) (now s.123(5)) of the CBCA
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en) . The Court of Appeal accepted the argument. We
disagree.
The reality that directors cannot be experts in all aspects of the corporations they manage or supervise shows the
relevancy of a provision such as s. 123(4) (https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-
en#!fragment/sec123subsec4) (b). At the relevant time, the text of s.123(4)
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec123subsec4) read:
“123. (4) A director is not liable under section 118, 119 or 122 if he relies in good faith on
(a) financial statements of the corporation represented to him by an officer of the corporation or in a written report
of the auditor of the corporation fairly to reflect the financial condition of the corporation; or
(b) a report of a lawyer, accountant, engineer, appraiser or other person whose profession lends credibility to a
statement made by him.
Although Clément did have a bachelor’s degree in commerce and 15 years of experience in administration
and finance with Wise, this experience does not correspond to the level of professionalism required to
allow the directors to rely on his advice as a bar to a suit under the duty of care. The named professional
groups in s. 123(4) (https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec123subsec4) (b)
were lawyers, accountants, engineers, and appraisers. Clément was not an accountant, was not subject to
the regulatory overview of any professional organization and did not carry independent insurance
coverage for professional negligence. The title of vice-president of finance should not automatically lead to a
conclusion that Clément was a person “whose profession lends credibility to a statement made by him”. It is
noteworthy that the word “profession” is used, not “position”. Clément was simply a non-professional
employee of Wise. His judgment on the appropriateness of the solution to the inventory management problem
must be regarded in that light. Although we might accept for the sake of argument that Clément was better
equipped and positioned than the Wise brothers to devise a plan to solve the inventory management problems, this
is not enough. Therefore, in our opinion, the Wise brothers cannot successfully invoke the defence provided by s.
123(4) (https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en#!fragment/sec123subsec4) (b) of the CBCA
(https://zoupio.lexum.com/calegis/rsc-1985-c-c-44-en) but must rely on the other defences raised.” (Emphasis
added)
Please also read the brief discussion on all this at Note 6 on pages 332-333 of the Casebook. As well please refer
to section 157 of the BCBCA:
“157. (1) A director of a company is not liable under section 154 and has complied with his or her duties under
section 142 (1) if the director relied, in good faith, on
(a) financial statements of the company represented to the director by an officer of the company or in a written
report of the auditor of the company to fairly reflect the financial position of the company,
(b) a written report of a lawyer, accountant, engineer, appraiser or other person whose profession lends credibility
to a statement made by that person,
(c) a statement of fact represented to the director by an officer of the company to be correct, or
(d) any record, information or representation that the court considers provides reasonable grounds for the actions
of the director, whether or not
(i) the record was forged, fraudulently made or inaccurate, or
(ii) the information or representation was fraudulently made or inaccurate.
(2) A director of a company is not liable under section 154 if the director did not know and could not reasonably
have known that the act done by the director or authorized by the resolution voted for or consented to by the
director was contrary to this Act.”
C. Insider Trading
Please read the short section on “Insider Trading Rules” at page 333 of the casebook.
Please read the following relevant provisions of the Securities Act [RSBC 1996] Chapter 418 which provide:
“57.2 (1) In this section, “issuer” means
(a) a reporting issuer, or
(b) any other issuer whose securities are publicly traded.
(2) A person must not enter into a transaction involving a security of an issuer, or a related financial instrument of a
security of an issuer, if the person
(a) is in a special relationship with the issuer, and
(b) knows of a material fact or material change with respect to the issuer, which material fact or material change
has not been generally disclosed.
(3) An issuer or a person in a special relationship with an issuer must not inform another person of a material fact
or material change with respect to the issuer unless
(a) the material fact or material change has been generally disclosed, or
(b) informing the person is necessary in the course of business of the issuer or of the person in the special
relationship with the issuer.
(4) A person who proposes to
(a) make a take over bid, as defined in section 92, for the securities of an issuer,
(b) become a party to a reorganization, amalgamation, merger, arrangement or similar business combination with
an issuer, or
(c) acquire a substantial portion of the property of an issuer,
must not inform another person of a material fact or material change with respect to the issuer unless
(d) the material fact or material change has been generally disclosed, or
(e) informing the person is necessary to effect the take over bid, business combination or acquisition.
(5) If a material fact or material change with respect to an issuer has not been generally disclosed, the issuer, or a
person in a special relationship with the issuer with knowledge of the material fact or material change, must not
recommend or encourage another person to enter into a transaction involving a security of the issuer or a related
financial instrument of a security of the issuer.
Liability for insider trading, tipping and recommending
136. (1) If an issuer, or a person in a special relationship with an issuer, contravenes section 57.2, a person referred
to in subsection (2) of this section has a right of action against the issuer or the person in a special relationship
with the issuer.
(2) A person may recover losses incurred in relation to a transaction involving a security of the issuer, or a related
financial instrument of a security of the issuer, if the transaction was entered into during the period
(a) starting when the contravention occurred, and
(b) ending at the time the material fact or material change is generally disclosed.
(3) If a court finds a person liable in an action under subsection (1), the amount payable to the plaintiff by the
person is the lesser of
(a) the losses incurred by the plaintiff, and
(b) an amount determined in accordance with the regulations.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (1), in determining the losses incurred by a plaintiff, a court must not include an
amount that the defendant proves is attributable to a change in the market price of the security that is unrelated to
the material change or the material fact.
Accounting for benefits
136.1 (1) If a person is an insider, affiliate or associate of an issuer, and if the person contravenes section 57.2, the
person must pay to the issuer an amount equal to
(a) the benefit that the person received as a result of the contravention, and
(b) the benefit that all persons received as a result of the contravention.
(2) If a person contravenes section 57.3, the person must pay to the investor, as defined in that section, an amount
equal to
(a) the benefit that the person received as a result of the contravention, and
(b) the benefit that all persons received as a result of the contravention.
Due diligence defence for insider trading
136.2 A person is not liable under section 136 or 136.1 (1) if, after a reasonable investigation occurring before the
person
(a) entered into the transaction,
(b) informed another person of the material fact or material change, or
(c) recommended or encouraged a transaction,
the person had no reasonable grounds to believe that the material fact or material change had not been generally
disclosed.
Action by commission on behalf of issuer
D. Miscellaneous Duties
Please read the section of the Casebook titled “Miscellaneous Statutory Duties” at pages 333-335. This
short section deals with particular obligations on managers that are not capable of being sorted or
organized in a simple way. It would not be surprising if these sorts of miscellaneous duties and obligations
grow as the power of what managers actually do and their compensation continues to grow.
Please read the decision in Hogg v. Cramphorn Ltd. [1966] 3 All E.R. 420 (Ch.D.) at pages 348-350 of the
Casebook.
The board of Cramphorn Ltd. had company shares issued to a trust for the benefit of its employees in order to
prevent the take-over of the company. There was a genuine belief among the board and the chairman and
managing director of Cramphorn Ltd., Colonel Cramphorn, that such a take-over was bad for company; that it
would change the business and unsettle employees. The Court found the new shares issued by the board to be
invalid. The purpose of preventing the takeover, however sincerely motivated, was found not be a valid one, and
accordingly the directors had violated their duties by issuing the shares. Buckley J. found that “…The power to
issue shares was a fiduciary power and if as I think, it was exercised for an improper motive, the issue of these
shares is liable to be set aside…”
Please note the contents of BC Standard Articles paragraph 3.1 as they are not dissimilar from the articles
in issue in Hogg v. Cramphorn Ltd.
“Subject to the Business Corporations Act and the rights, if any, of the holders of issued shares of the Company,
the Company may issue, allot, sell or otherwise dispose of the unissued shares and issued shares held by the
Company, at the times, to the persons, including directors, in the manner, on the terms and conditions and for the
issue prices (including any premium at which shares with par value may be issued) that the directors may
determine. The issue price for a share with par value must be equal to or greater than the par value of the share.”
Please also note that the improper issuance of shares could only be validated if the decision was to be ratified
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratified) by the shareholders at a general meeting
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_meeting) . Validating mistakes and miscue’s through shareholder ratification at
a general meeting is actually quite a practical and logical step when you on it. In many situations (though probably
not in the case of a takeover bid) it may not even be a necessarily difficult step.
Please consider for your-self the question raised in Note 1 on page 350 of the Casebook.
Please read the case of Teck Corp. v. Millar (1972), 33 DLR (3d) 288 (BCSC) at pages 350-357 of the
Casebook. The question to ask while reading Teck Corp. v. Millar is why was Hogg v. Cramphorn was not
followed by Teck Corp. v. Millar?
Similar to Hogg v. Cramphorn, Teck Corp. v. Millar, (1972), 33 DLR (3d) 288 (BCSC) deals the fiduciary duty
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiduciary_duty) of corporate directors in the context of a takeover
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takeover) bid.
Teck Corp. argued that the board of Afton Mines Ltd. had entered into a deal with Canadian Exploration Ltd
(“Canex”) and Placer Development Ltd. to prevent Teck from gaining control of Afton Mines Ltd. and had thereby
acted for an improper purpose. In fact Teck had over time come to acquire a majority of Afton’s shares. Afton
Mines Ltd. argued that it believed it was in the best interests of Afton to make a deal with Canex and not Teck.
Accordingly they argued that the board of Afton had acted in that company’s interest despite the adverse effect on
Teck, Teck’s shares in Afton, and Teck’s desire to own Afton. The court found that it was unnecessary for the board
to act pursuant to a majority shareholder’s wishes in order for it to be acting in the best interests of the company.
That applied even if the actions of the board prevented the majority shareholder from taking control of the
company.
The court found that the board had a reasonable belief that a deal with Canex was better for the company than
would have been a deal with Teck. The board therefore acted in good faith in entering into the agreement with
Canex. Accordingly Afton’s actions in hindering Teck’s efforts to obtain control of Afton were not improper. In
summary the court concluded that hostile take-overs may be resisted by corporate directors provided they are
acting in good faith, and that they have reasonable grounds to believe that the take-over will cause substantial
harm to the interests of the company’s shareholders. In the words Berger J. of the BC Supreme Court:
“A classical theory that once was unchallengeable must yield to the facts of modern life. In fact, of course, it has. If
today the directors of a company were to consider the interests of its employees no one would argue that in doing
so they were not acting bona fide in the interests of the company itself. Similarly, if the directors were to consider
the consequences to the community of any policy that the company intended to pursue, and were deflected in their
commitment to that policy as a result, it could not be said that they had not considered bona fide the interests of the
shareholders.
I appreciate that it would be a breach of their duty for directors to disregard entirely the interests of a company’s
shareholders in order to confer a benefit on its employees: Parke v. Daily News Ltd. But if they observe a decent
respect for other interests lying beyond those of the company’s shareholders in the strict sense, that will not, in my
view, leave directors open to the charge that they have failed in their fiduciary duty to the company.”
Perhaps it is a bit more obtuse then the direct approach taken by the learned trial judge in Teck Corp. v. Millar, but
there is a different, more psychological way, the two cases may be rationalized at least somewhat. That is by more
closely examining who was being protected and with what intention. In Hogg v. Cramphorn the directors of
Cramphorn Ltd. seemed essentially to feel that the takeover was bad for company in that it would change the
business and unsettle employees. Thus the best interests of the shareholders might be seen as perhaps being
somewhat of a less direct factor in their deliberations. However in Teck v. Millar the interests of the shareholders
seems far more of a central factor to the decision making of the board. It is of course a great irony of the somewhat
strange fact pattern in Teck v. Millar that Teck was already a majority holder of the shares in the company it was
trying to take over – and despite that fact the best interests of the company was not defined by the identity of the
majority shareholder of that company’s stock.
We now turn to the cases of Parke v. Daily News Ltd. [1962] 2 All ER 92 & Re W & M Roith Ltd. [1967] 1 All
ER 427. Please read them:
In Parke v. Daily News Ltd. the Daily News Ltd. published two newspapers that were running at a loss over a
number of years. The board entered into a contract to sell the newspapers disposing of substantially all company’s
assets. The result of the transaction would be the “redundancy” and termination of an overwhelming majority of
employees. The directors proposed to use balance of the sale proceeds to provide give compensatory payments to
those who were going to lose their jobs. The minority shareholders challenged this saying that such payments
would be “ultra vires” the company.
Plowman J. quoted Bowen L.J. in Hutton v. West Cork Ry Co (1883), 23 ChD at p 670:
“Bona fides cannot be the sole test, otherwise you might have a lunatic conducting the affairs of the company and
paying away its money with both hands in a manner perfectly bona fide yet perfectly irrational. The test must be
what is reasonably incidental to, and within the reasonable scope of carrying on, the business of the company.”
Plowman J. went on to say:
“The conclusions which, I think, follow from these cases are: first, that a company’s funds cannot be applied in
making ex gratia payments as such; secondly, that the court will inquire into the motives actuating any gratuitous
payment, and the objectives which it is intended to achieve; thirdly, that the court will uphold the validity of
gratuitous payments if, but only if, after such inquiry it appears that the tests enumerated by Eve J are satisfied;
fourthly, that the onus of upholding the validity of such payments lies on those who assert it…
In my judgment, therefore, the defendants were prompted by motives which, however laudable, and however
enlightened from the point of view of industrial relations, were such as the law does not recognise as a sufficient
justification. Stripped of all its side issues, the essence of the matter is this, that the directors of the defendant
company are proposing that a very large part of its funds should be given to its former employees in order to
benefit those employees rather than the company, and that is an application of the company’s funds which the law,
as I understand it, will not allow. If this is right, then it appears to me to follow from Hutton v West Cork Ry Co that
the proposal to pay compensation is one which a majority of shareholders is not entitled to ratify.”
In Re W & M Roith Ltd. Mr. Roith, the controlling director had provided many years services to W & M Roith Ltd.
without a service contract. He was then given a service agreement providing for payment of a pension to his widow
if he died while still a director. Mr. Roith was already in poor health at time of agreement. He died two months later.
The pension was paid for several years and then the company went into liquidation. Mr. Roith’s executors put in a
claim in the liquidation for the capitalized value of the pension. The liquidator rejected the claim.
It was held (again by Plowman J.) that the claim for the pension could not be supported. This was because the
pension was not for the benefit of the company, nor incidental to the carrying on of the company’s business.
1. How should charitable and political contributions be treated? Are they for the benefit of the company or
the individuals from the company who may want to go to fancy dinners and associate with the powerful
or self aggrandize in some other way?
2. As a shareholder how might you reconcile the issue of the fiduciary duties of directors to what is in the
best interests of the corporation and the “rights” of the corporation as a corporate person to act in the
way it feels is best?
Please read the following story from ars technica which can be found here:
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/03/at-apple-shareholders-meeting-tim-cook-tells-off-climate-change-deniers/
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/03/at-apple-shareholders-meeting-tim-cook-tells-off-climate-change-deniers/)
“At Apple shareholder’s meeting, Tim Cook tells off climate change deniers: “If you want me to do things
only for ROI reasons, you should get out of this stock.”
by Megan Geuss (http://arstechnica.com/author/megan-geuss/) – Mar 1 2014, 1:30pm PST
Apple’s Maiden, North Carolina data center will be largely powered by Apple’s own solar panel arrays and
methane-powered fuel cells.
Apple, Inc.
At a shareholders meeting on Friday, CEO Tim Cook angrily defended
(http://www.macrumors.com/2014/02/28/tim-cook-angrily-rejects-ncppr-proposal/) Apple’s environmentally-friendly
practices against a request from the conservative National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR) to drop
those practices if they ever became unprofitable.
NCPPR put forward a shareholder’s proposal asking Apple to disclose how much it spends on sustainability
programs. If those costs detracted from Apple’s bottom line, the NCPPR demanded that Apple discontinue the
programs and commit only to projects that are explicitly profitable. Cook apparently became angry at the group’s
request. According to an account from MacObserver (http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/tim-cook-soundly-
rejects-politics-of-the-ncppr-suggests-group-sell-apples-s) :
What ensued was the only time I can recall seeing Tim Cook angry, and he categorically rejected the worldview
behind the NCPPR’s advocacy. He said that there are many things Apple does because they are right and just, and
that a return on investment (ROI) was not the primary consideration on such issues.
“When we work on making our devices accessible by the blind,” he said, “I don’t consider the bloody ROI.” He said
that the same thing about environmental issues, worker safety, and other areas where Apple is a leader.
…
He didn’t stop there, however, as he looked directly at the NCPPR representative and said, “If you want me to do
things only for ROI reasons, you should get out of this stock.”
For the better part of the last decade, Apple has taken on a number of sustainability projects and adopted practices
to reduce waste and carbon emissions. In 2012, it broke ground (http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/02/apple-
confirms-plans-for-oregon-data-center-outlines-green-initiatives/) on a data center
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/10/apple-breaks-ground-on-mammoth-colossal-gargantuan-oregon-data-
center/) in Oregon in order to take advantage of low-cost renewable energy and has plans
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/05/what-it-takes-to-make-a-green-apple/) to make all of its facilities reliant on
green energy. It generally scores highly (http://ww2.epeat.net/publicsearchresults.aspx?
stdid=1&return=searchoptions&epeatcountryid=1&rating=3&ProductType=3) with EPEAT
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/07/apple-leaving-green-product-registry-epeat-was-a-mistake/) , a federal
environmental group that keeps a registry of “green” digital devices. And in May 2013, it hired Lisa Jackson
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/05/apple-hires-former-epa-head-to-handle-environmental-issues/) , who
formerly ran the Environmental Protection Agency, to help Apple with sustainability.
NCPPR later issued a blustery press release (http://www.nationalcenter.org/PR-
Apple_Tim_Cook_Climate_022814.html) about how Apple’s desire to “combat so-called climate change” would
destroy shareholder value. It accused “the Al gore contingency in the room” of greeting its questions “with boos and
hisses.”
According to the press release, Justin Danhof, director of the National Center’s Free Enterprise Project, said “Mr.
Cook made it very clear to me that if I, or any other investor, was more concerned with return on investment than
reducing carbon dioxide emissions, my investment is no longer welcome at Apple.”
It seems clear that Apple won’t halt its projects for climate change deniers, and the rest of its shareholders weren’t
troubled by that at all. The NCPPR’s proposal received just 2.95 percent of the vote.”
A vote of the majority of the shareholders on some issue as to which they are competent binds the minority and
the corporation.
A shareholder’s vote is not disqualified by a private interest being at stake.
So in the absence of fraud or oppression a breach of director’s duty to avoid conflict can be “ratified” by a
majority of shareholders including the vote of the conflicted director.
Two points worthy of note about this case.
First it is worthy of mention that the court makes a clear distinction between the conflicted party as a director
exercising their rights as a director and the same individual exercising their shareholder rights. Mr. J.H. Beatty quite
rightly was absent from the directors meeting that approved the transaction. Accordingly his vote as a director was
never made or considered in the equation. However Mr. Beatty did vote his shares as shareholder to ratify the
directors’ decision and that was judged to be perfectly valid by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (though
not by the court below). This is an excellent illustration of how the roles of directors and shareholders are – at least
in theory.
Secondly, apart from the point immediately above the principles set out in the case would appear to constitute
rather austere rules for what is often a very complex (and even unavoidable) subject in the “real world”.
“…it seems clear that the statute also addresses the problem of a director or officer who has no monetary interest
in a person on the other side, yet who is likely to have an emotional involvement. Thus, a deal in which the
corporation is negotiating with a close relative, or even a close personal friend, of one of the directors or officers
ought to be suspect. …one can assume that the courts will address their attention to the blood relation question…
the only question will be to what degree of relationship the section extends. The answer is once again, subsumed
under the requirement that the interest itself be “material”.
What is meant by “material”… In the context of conflict of interest contracts, the meaning of “material contract” and
“material interest” is conditioned by the purpose behind the section. The purpose is to identify those negotiations in
which a corporate manager’s ability to bargain effectively on behalf of the corporation may be inhibited by some
interest he has in the other side. Any personal relationship or monetary interest he may have in the other side that
might be thought to be an inhibiting factor is a material interest if disclosure of the relationship or interest might be
relevant to the corporate decision whether to involve the particular manager in the negotiations. Whether to
participate in a proposed contract is a corporate decision and the corporation is entitled to full disclosure from its
fiduciaries of all facts that might affect that decision.” (Emphasis added)
147. (1) For the purposes of this Division, a director or senior officer of a company holds a disclosable interest in a
contract or transaction if
(a) the contract or transaction is material to the company,
(b) the company has entered, or proposes to enter, into the contract or transaction, and
(c) either of the following applies to the director or senior officer:
(i) the director or senior officer has a material interest in the contract or transaction;
(ii) the director or senior officer is a director or senior officer of, or has a material interest in, a person who has a
material interest in the contract or transaction.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) and this Division, a director or senior officer of a company does not hold a
disclosable interest in a contract or transaction if
(a) the situation that would otherwise constitute a disclosable interest under subsection (1) arose before the coming
into force of this Act or, if the company was recognized under this Act, before that recognition, and was disclosed
and approved under, or was not required to be disclosed under, the legislation that
(i) applied to the corporation on or after the date on which the situation arose, and
(ii) is comparable in scope and intent to the provisions of this Division,
(b) both the company and the other party to the contract or transaction are wholly owned subsidiaries of the same
corporation,
(c) the company is a wholly owned subsidiary of the other party to the contract or transaction,
(d) the other party to the contract or transaction is a wholly owned subsidiary of the company, or
(e) the director or senior officer is the sole shareholder of the company or of a corporation of which the company is
a wholly owned subsidiary.
(3) In subsection (2), “other party” means a person of which the director or senior officer is a director or senior
officer or in which the director or senior officer has a material interest.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (1) and this Division, a director or senior officer of a company does not hold a
disclosable interest in a contract or transaction merely because
(a) the contract or transaction is an arrangement by way of security granted by the company for money loaned to,
or obligations undertaken by, the director or senior officer, or a person in whom the director or senior officer has a
material interest, for the benefit of the company or an affiliate of the company,
(b) the contract or transaction relates to an indemnity or insurance under Division 5,
(c) the contract or transaction relates to the remuneration of the director or senior officer in that person’s capacity
as director, officer, employee or agent of the company or of an affiliate of the company,
(d) the contract or transaction relates to a loan to the company, and the director or senior officer, or a person in
whom the director or senior officer has a material interest, is or is to be a guarantor of some or all of the loan, or
(e) the contract or transaction has been or will be made with or for the benefit of a corporation that is affiliated with
the company and the director or senior officer is also a director or senior officer of that corporation or an affiliate of
that corporation.
(2) A director or senior officer of a company is not liable to account for and may retain the profit referred to in
subsection (1) of this section in any of the following circumstances:
(a) the disclosable interest was disclosed before the coming into force of this Act under the former Companies Act
that was in force at the time of the disclosure, and, after that disclosure, the contract or transaction is approved in
accordance with section 149 of this Act, other than section 149 (3);
(b) the contract or transaction is approved by the directors in accordance with section 149, other than section 149
(3), after the nature and extent of the disclosable interest has been disclosed to the directors;
(c) the contract or transaction is approved by a special resolution in accordance with section 149, after the nature
and extent of the disclosable interest has been disclosed to the shareholders entitled to vote on that resolution;
(d) whether or not the contract or transaction is approved in accordance with section 149,
(i) the company entered into the contract or transaction before the director or senior officer became a director or
senior officer of the company,
(ii) the disclosable interest is disclosed to the directors or the shareholders, and
(iii) the director or senior officer does not participate in, and, in the case of a director, does not vote as a director
on, any decision or resolution touching on the contract or transaction.
(3) The disclosure referred to in subsection (2) (b), (c) or (d) of this section must be evidenced in a consent
resolution, the minutes of a meeting or any other record deposited in the company’s records office.
(4) A general statement in writing provided to a company by a director or senior officer of the company is a
sufficient disclosure of a disclosable interest for the purpose of this Division in relation to any contract or transaction
that the company has entered into or proposes to enter into with a person if the statement declares that the director
or senior officer is a director or senior officer of, or has a material interest in, the person with whom the company
has entered, or proposes to enter, into the contract or transaction.
(5) In addition to the records that a shareholder of the company may inspect under section 46, that shareholder
may, without charge, inspect
(a) the portions of any minutes of meetings of directors, or of any consent resolutions of directors, that contain
disclosures under this section, and
(b) the portions of any other records that contain those disclosures.
(6) In addition to the records a former shareholder of the company may inspect under section 46, that former
shareholder may, without charge, inspect the records referred to in subsection (5) (a) and (b) of this section that are
kept under section 42 and that relate to the period when that person was a shareholder.
(7) Sections 46 (7) and (8), 48 (1) and (3) and 50 apply to the portions of minutes, resolutions and records referred
to in subsections (5) and (6) of this section.
149. (1) A contract or transaction in respect of which disclosure has been made in accordance with section 148 may
be approved by the directors or by a special resolution.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a director who has a disclosable interest in a contract or transaction is not entitled to
vote on any directors’ resolution referred to in subsection (1) to approve that contract or transaction.
(3) If all of the directors have a disclosable interest in a contract or transaction, any or all of those directors may
vote on a directors’ resolution to approve the contract or transaction.
(4) Unless the memorandum or articles provide otherwise, a director who has a disclosable interest in a contract or
transaction and who is present at the meeting of directors at which the contract or transaction is considered for
approval may be counted in the quorum at the meeting whether or not the director votes on any or all of the
resolutions considered at the meeting.
Powers of court
150. (1) On an application by a company or by a director, senior officer, shareholder or beneficial owner of shares of
the company, the court may, if it determines that a contract or transaction in which a director or senior officer
has a disclosable interest was fair and reasonable to the company,
(a) order that the director or senior officer is not liable to account for any profit that accrues to the director or senior
officer under or as a result of the contract or transaction, and
(b) make any other order that the court considers appropriate.
(2) Unless a contract or transaction in which a director or senior officer has a disclosable interest has been
approved in accordance with section 148 (2), the court may, on an application by the company or by a director,
senior officer, shareholder or beneficial owner of shares of the company, make one or more of the following orders
if the court determines that the contract or transaction was not fair and reasonable to the company:
(a) enjoin the company from entering into the proposed contract or transaction;
(b) order that the director or senior officer is liable to account for any profit that accrues to the director or senior
officer under or as a result of the contract or transaction;
(c) make any other order that the court considers appropriate.
(a) a director or senior officer of the company has an interest, direct or indirect, in the contract or transaction,
(b) a director or senior officer of the company has not disclosed an interest he or she has in the contract or
transaction, or
(c) the directors or shareholders of the company have not approved the contract or transaction in which a director
or senior officer of the company has an interest.
152. Except as is provided in this Division, a director or senior officer of a company has no obligation to
(a) disclose any direct or indirect interest that the director or senior officer has in a contract or transaction, or
(b) subject to section 192, account for any profit that accrues to the director or senior officer under or as a result of
a contract or transaction in which the director or senior officer has a disclosable interest.
153. (1) If a director or senior officer of a company holds any office or possesses any property, right or interest that
could result, directly or indirectly, in the creation of a duty or interest that materially conflicts with that individual’s
duty or interest as a director or senior officer of the company, the director or senior officer must disclose, in
accordance with this section, the nature and extent of the conflict.
(2) The disclosure required from a director or senior officer under subsection (1)
(a) must be made to the directors promptly
(i) after that individual becomes a director or senior officer of the company, or
(ii) if that individual is already a director or senior officer of the company, after that individual begins to hold the
office or possess the property, right or interest for which disclosure is required, and
(b) must be evidenced in one of the ways referred to in section 148 (3).”
F. Corporate Opportunities
Please read pages 363-392 of the Casebook.
The Canadian case of Cook v. Deeks [1916] 1 A.C. 554 (Ont. J.C.P.C.) provides a useful fact pattern from
which to proceed.
The facts were that the Toronto Construction Co. (“TCC”) had four shareholders (each holding a quarter of the
company’s shares) each of whom who were also the directors of that company. TCC helped with railway
construction for the CPR. Three of the directors wanted to exclude the fourth, Mr. Cook, from the business and
accordingly agreed to a contract with the CPR for building a line at the Guelph Junction
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guelph_Junction_Railway) and Hamilton
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton,_Ontario) branch in their own three names, and not in the name of TCC.
They then passed a shareholder resolution declaring that the company had no interest in that contract between the
three and the CPR. Mr. Cook sued arguing that the contract did indeed belong to the Toronto Construction Co. and
that the shareholder resolution ratifying the actions of the three other shareholder directors was not valid.
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privy_Council) found that the three
directors had breached their duty of loyalty to the company. Perhaps the more challenging point was how the court
would deal with the issue of the shareholder ratification that had occurred given their previous decision in North-
West Transportation v. Beatty (1887), 12 APP. CAS. 589 (ONT. J.C.P.C.) where it was decided that in the
absence of fraud or oppression a breach of director’s duty to avoid conflict can be “ratified” by a majority of
shareholders including the vote of the conflicted director. The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privy_Council) accomplished feat in Cooks v. Deeks by drawing a distinction between
contracting with the corporation as was the case in North-West Transportation v. Beatty (where Mr. Beatty was
selling his boat to North-West Transportation), and contracting outside the corporation as was the case in Cook v.
Deeks (where TCC was not directly involved in the transaction). Does this really make sense on a principled
basis, or is it a “distinction without a difference”?
In the end the three director/shareholders had to account to TCC for the profits they had made on the contractual
opportunity, and those were held in trust for the Toronto Construction Co. (of which you will recall Mr. Cook had a
one-quarter interest).
Please read the fascinating case of Regal (Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver [1942] 1 All E.R. 378 at pages 365-369 of
the Casebook which deals with what happens when directors (and a lawyer) acting in good faith and in the
best interests of their company follow through personally on a “corporate opportunity”. The entire case
can be found here: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1942/1.html
(http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1942/1.html)
In this case the defendants were the directors of Regal (Hastings) Ltd., a company which operated a movie theatre.
Regal (Hastings) Ltd. created Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Limited, intending it to be a subsidiary to acquire
two nearby movie theatres the Elite and the De Luxe.
Because of a lack of money at the time in Regal (Hastings) Ltd., the directors and solicitors of Regal (Hastings)
Ltd. personally paid for 60% of the shares in Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Limited. Regal (Hastings) Ltd.
had the remaining 40%. Please note that “it was assumed throughout that the defendants acted in the best
interests of Regal” as stated at the bottom of the note introducing the case and which appears at page 365 of the
Casebook.
Ultimately the shares in Regal (Hastings) Ltd. and the 3,000 shares in Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Limited not
owned by Regal (Hastings) Ltd. were sold to Oxford & Berkshire Cinemas Ltd. Part of the consideration was for the
3,000 shares Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Limited not owned by Regal (Hastings) Ltd. and as a result, the
defendants (the directors and solicitors of Regal (Hastings) Ltd. who personally paid for 60% of the shares in
Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Limited) made a profit.
Oxford & Berkshire Cinemas Ltd. now in control of Regal (Hastings) Ltd., causes Regal (Hastings) Ltd. to sue its
former directors seeking an account of profits made on the sale of their personal shares in Hastings Amalgamated
Cinemas Limited.
As an aside, leading counsel for the defendant Gulliver was Denning, Q.C.
The House of Lords reversed the High Court and the Court of Appeal, finding that the defendants had profited “by
reason of the fact that they were directors of Regal and in the course of the execution of that office”. Accordingly
they were made to account for their profits to Regal (Hastings) Ltd. and therefore ultimately to Oxford & Berkshire
Cinemas Ltd.
Per Lord Russell:
“The rule of equity which insists on those who by use of a fiduciary position make a profit, being liable to account
for that profit, in no way depends on fraud, or absence of bona fides; or upon questions or considerations as
whether the property would or should otherwise have gone to the plaintiff, or whether he took a risk or acted as he
did for the benefit of the plaintiff, or whether the plaintiff has in fact been damaged or benefited by his action. The
liability arises from the mere fact of a profit having in the stated circumstances been made…
In the result I am of opinion that the directors standing in a fiduciary relationship to Regal in regard to the exercise
of their powers as directors, and having obtained these shares by reason and only by reason of the fact that they
were directors of Regal and in the course of the execution of that office, are accountable for the profits which they
have made out of them. The equitable rule laid down in Keech v. Sandford, ex parte James and similar authorities
applies to them in full force. It was contended that these cases were distinguishable by reason of the fact that it
was impossible for Regal to get the shares owing to lack of funds, and that the directors in taking the shares were
really acting as members of the public. I cannot accept this argument. It was impossible for the cestui quo
trust in Keech v. Sandford to obtain the lease, nevertheless the trustee was accountable: and the suggestion that
the directors were applying simply as members of the public is a travesty of the facts. They could, had they wished,
have protected themselves by a resolution (either antecedent or subsequent) of the Regal share-holders in general
meeting. In default of such approval, the liability to account must remain.”
Per Lord Wright: “The Court of Appeal held that, in the absence of any dishonest intention, or negligence, or
breach of a specific duty to acquire the shares for the appellant company, the respondents as directors were
entitled to buy the shares themselves. Once, it was said, they came to a bona fide decision that the appellant
company could not provide the money to take up the shares, their obligation to refrain from acquiring those shares
for themselves came to an end. With the greatest respect, I feel bound to regard such a conclusion as dead in the
teeth of the wise and salutary rule so stringently enforced in the authorities. It is suggested that it would have been
mere quixotic folly for the four respondents to let such an occasion pass when the appellant company could not
avail itself of it; Lord King, L.C., faced that very position when he accepted that the person in the fiduciary position
might be the only person in the world who could not avail himself of the opportunity.”
Per Lord Porter: “In these circumstances it is to my mind immaterial that the directors saw no way of raising the
money save from amongst themselves and from the solicitor to the company, or indeed that the money could in fact
have been raised in no other way. The legal proposition may, I think, be broadly stated by saying that one
occupying a position of trust must not make a profit which he can acquire only by use of his fiduciary position, or if
he does he
must account for the profit so made. For this proposition the cases
of Keech v. Sandford (1726), Sel. Cas. Temp. King. 61, and exparte
James (1803) 8 Ves. jun. 337 are sufficient authority…
… To treat the problem in this way is, in my view, to look at it as involving a claim for negligence or misfeasance
and to neglect the wider aspect. Directors, no doubt, are not trustees, but they occupy a fiduciary position towards
the company whose board they form. Their liability in this respect does not depend upon breach of duty but upon
the proposition that a director must not make a profit out of property acquired by reason of his relationship to the
company of which he is director. It matters not that he could not have acquired the property for the company itself—
the profit which he makes is the company’s, even though the property by means of which he made it was not and
could not have, been acquired on its behalf. Adopting the words of Lord Eldon in ex parte James (supra), ” the
general interests of justice require it, “as no Court is equal to the examination and ascertainment of the truth in
much the greater number of cases.”
Discussion Activity 7.5:
In this way the court chose to affirm the duty of good faith and in effect embrace the strict principle
respecting conflicts of interest set out Aberdeen Railway Co. v. Blaikie Bros. (though that case is never
directly mentioned). Perhaps this makes sense if you consider that no matter what may be the conscious
or stated intention, a directors’ subjective judgement may well be (subconsciously) clouded by the
existence of a countervailing interest, usually that of self-interest.
Was this the right answer?
We might begin by wondering what was the practical effect of the decision? It was that the ultimate
purchaser of the companies (Oxford & Berkshire Cinemas Ltd.) Effectively received a rebate of their
purchase price. Is this result a concern? Is it logical? How is it that something seemed perfectly legitimate
(even necessary and desirable) when done by Regal (Hastings) Ltd., which apparently created value for
Regal (Hastings) Ltd. And which arguably could have been done in no other way, can be revisited ex post
facto in this way? Should regal be denied a claim just because its shareholders change? Why should the
effects of corporate personality distort the general law of fiduciary duties?
Please consider briefly sharing your views on these questions and your reasons.
Lord Russell concluded his judgment in Regal (Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver with the following statement:
“One final observation I desire to make. In his judgment the
Master of the Rolls stated that a decision adverse to the directors
in the present case involved the proposition that if directors bona
fide decide not to invest their company’s funds in some proposed
investment, a director who thereafter embarks his own money
therein is accountable for any profits which he may derive there-
from. As to this, I can only say that to my mind the facts
of this hypothetical case bear but little resemblance to the story
with which we have had to deal.”
The facts were that a prospector, Mr. Dickson, owned a number of mineral claims one of which was adjacent to
claims held by Peso Silver Mines. Mr. Dickson offered to sell them to Peso silver mines, but the offer was rejected
by the Peso Silver Mines board. Subsequently, three other investors approached Mr. Cropper who was the
managing director of Peso Silver Mines and member of its board, and the four of them formed a private company
that acquired Mr. Dickson’s claims and developed them. Later still, control of Peso Silver Mines changed hands
and the newly reconstituted Peso Silver Mines sued Mr. Cropper seeking to purchase his holdings in the now
profitable mine at Mr. Cropper’s cost, or to account for the proceeds of the transaction.
Significantly the defendants in Peso Silver Mines v. Cropper had acted entirely in good faith in connection with the
board’s decision not to pursue an opportunity. Therefore the Supreme Court of Canada found that they could
arrange for their own separate company to take the opportunity represented by Mr. Dickson’s claims perfectly
lawfully. And they could keep the resulting profits. There had been a valid rejection of a business opportunity by
Peso Silver Mines (as it was then controlled), subject to procedural constraints, and which the board in good faith
duly exercised. Accordingly a director acting in his personal capacity could take the opportunity perfectly lawfully at
a later time.
Cartwright J. stated:
“On the facts of the case at bar I find it impossible to say that the respondent obtained the interests he holds in
Cross Bow and Mayo by reason of the fact that he was a director of the appellant and in the course of the
execution of that office.
When Dickson, at Dr. Aho’s suggestion, offered his claims to the appellant it was the duty of the respondent as
director to take part in the decision of the board as to whether that offer should be accepted or rejected. At that
point he stood in a fiduciary relationship to the appellant. There are affirmative findings of fact that he and his
co-directors acted in good faith, solely in the interests of the appellant and with sound business reasons in
rejecting the offer. There is no suggestion in the evidence that the offer to the appellant was accompanied by
any confidential information unavailable to any prospective purchaser or that the respondent as director had
access to any such information by reason of his office. When, later, Dr. Aho approached the appellant it was
not in his capacity as a director of the appellant, but as an individual member of the public whom Dr. Aho was
seeking to interest as a co-adventurer.”
Are Peso Silver Mines v. Cropper and Regal (Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver really that similar? In Regal
(Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver all of Regal (Hastings) Ltd.’s directors were interested in the relevant opportunity.
They could not have passed a board resolution that would effectively waive the opportunity and so allow
the directors to take it for their own benefit. Since they were all interested parties there would not have
been anyone to pass such a resolution – all of the directors would have had to be “outside the room”. In
Peso Silver Mines v. Cropper there was a fully functioning board that could do and did do their job.
Please read the case of Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. v. Cooley [1972] 2 All E.R. 162 (Eng.
Birmingham Assizes) at pages 372-376 of the Casebook.
Mr. Cooley was a distinguished architect who was employed as the managing director of Industrial Development
Consultants Ltd., the plaintiff. Mr. Cooley tried on behalf of Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. to negotiate a
contract in respect of lucrative pending project to design a depot in Letchworth
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letchworth) with the Eastern Gas Board (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Eastern_Gas_Board&action=edit&redlink=1) . The negotiation was unsuccessful and Eastern Gas Board
(http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eastern_Gas_Board&action=edit&redlink=1) advised Mr. Cooley that they
did not want to contract with Industrial Development Consultants Ltd., but only with him. Mr. Cooley then told the
board of Industrial Development Consultants Ltd., that he was unwell and asked to resign from his job on early
notice. The board of Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. agreed to this request and accepted Mr. Cooley’s
resignation. Mr. Cooley then took on the work of design a depot in Letchworth
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letchworth) for the Eastern Gas Board (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Eastern_Gas_Board&action=edit&redlink=1) on his own account. Industrial Development Consultants Ltd.
subsequently discovered this and sued Mr. Cooley for breach of his duty of loyalty.
Mr. Cooley was found liable. Why? There were a number of reasons that emerge from the case:
When Mr. Cooley acquired knowledge of the Eastern Gas Board interest in him as the designer of the depot in
Letchworth (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letchworth) , Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. did not have
that knowledge and would have wanted it.
The information came to Mr. Cooley at a time when Mr. Cooley had only one single capacity – as a director of
Industrial Development Consultants Ltd.
The information was of interest to Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. and Mr. Cooley had the obligation to
pass it on.
The fact that Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. could not or would not have obtained the benefit (i.e.
because the Eastern Gas Board would not have been willing to deal with Industrial Development Consultants
Ltd.) is irrelevant.
It is irrelevant that if Mr. Cooley is found liable to Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. the net effect would
be that Industrial Development Consultants Ltd. would obtain a benefit that, by definition, it could not otherwise
have obtained – authority for this being found in Regal (Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver as well as subsequent
cases.
Please read the English translation of the decision in Gravino v. Enerchem Transport Inc. [2008] J.Q. NO
9347 (QUE. C.A.) at pages 377-389 of the Casebook. You can find the full decision in French here if that is
in any way helpful to you: http://www.canlii.org/fr/qc/qcca/doc/2008/2008qcca1820/2008qcca1820.html
(http://www.canlii.org/fr/qc/qcca/doc/2008/2008qcca1820/2008qcca1820.html)
The facts were that a company called Ultramar began negotiations with Enerchem Transport Inc. (“ETI”), for the
subchartering by ETI of three Ultramar tankers. Nicholas Gravino and Richard Carson were at the time
shareholders and directors of ETI and actively participated in the negotiations with Ultramar. No agreement was
reached. Subsequently Mr. Gravino and Mr. Carson sold their ETI shares and a few months later they ended their
employment with ETI. For a variety for reasons not directly relevant Mr. Gravino and Mr. Carson were not bound by
a non-compete clause. Following their departure, Mr. Gravino and Mr. Carson founded Petro-Nav Inc., a company
that competed directly with ETI. They also recruited from ETI its then vice president marketing, Marian Zaremba, to
join Petro-Nav Inc. Almost a year later, Ultramar assigned its lease agreement over the tankers Mr. Gravino and Mr.
Carson had previously attempted to negotiate for while directors and shareholders of ETI, to a subsidiary of Petro-
Nav Inc.
ETI alleged that its former directors and officers had appropriated to themselves a business opportunity they had
developed on behalf of their former employer, and that accordingly Mr. Gravino and Mr. Carson had breached their
duty of loyalty to ETI.
The reasons for judgment in this case are not exceptionally helpful except, perhaps, as to:
Duty of loyalty owed to ETI by its ex-officers in this case was all the greater given the high level of responsibility
associated with the positions they had held in ETI.
On the topic of a “maturing business opportunity” it is clear that a director cannot use for their own profit or
that of a third party any information obtained by reason of their duties, unless authorized to do so.
In effect, four main factors must be weighed in order to determine whether misappropriation of a maturing
business opportunity has taken place:
1. i) the degree to which the interests of the director and the interests of the company were in conflict,
2. ii) the degree to which the business opportunity had, at the time in question, acquired its own specific and
identifiable character,
iii) the proximity in time between the emergence of the business opportunity and its exploitation, and
1. iv) the proximity in character between the business opportunity pursued by the company and the contract or
business concluded by the director for his own profit or the profit of a third party.
Please read the excerpts from D.D. Prentice and J. Payne on “The Corporate Opportunity Doctrine” at
pages 389-392 of the Casebook. This article represents a succinct and important summary of the
application of the duty of loyalty to corporate opportunities.
As you have perhaps come to appreciate the three most important factors when it comes to the application of the
duty of loyalty to corporate opportunities are:
The facts;
The facts; and
The facts.
H. Ratification
Please read pages 396-400 of the Casebook.
Ratification by the shareholders is a tool often used to retroactively remedy mistakes that have been made.
You will recall the case of Regal (Hastings) Ltd. v. Gulliver where the directors and solicitors of Regal (Hastings)
Ltd., acting indisputably in the best interests of Regal (Hastings) Ltd., personally paid for 60% of the shares to
acquire two movie houses because Regal (Hastings) Ltd. did not at the time have the funds to do so. In that case
Lord Russell observed that the directors “could, had they wished, have protected themselves by a
resolution (either antecedent or subsequent) of the Regal shareholders in general meeting.” (Emphasis
added)
Also relevant are the words of Harman L.J. in Bamford v. Bamford [1969] 1 All E.R. 969 (C.A.):
“It is trite law, I had thought, that if directors do acts, as they do every day, especially in private companies, which,
perhaps because there is no quorum, or because their appointment was defective, or because some- times there
are no directors properly appointed at all, or because they are actuated by improper motives, they go on doing for
years, carrying on the business of the company in the way in which, if properly constituted, they should carry it on,
and then they find that everything has been so to speak wrongly done because it was not done by a proper board,
such directors can, by making a full and frank disclosure and calling together the general body of the
shareholders, obtain absolution and forgiveness of their sins; and provided the acts are not ultra vires the
company as a whole everything will go on as if it had been all right from the beginning. I cannot believe
that is not a commonplace of company law. It is done every day. Of course, if the majority of the general
meeting will not forgive and approve, then the directors must pay for it.”
Note as well the statutory provisions relevant to the question of ratification whereby evidence of
shareholder approval is admissible but not decisive. BCBCA section 233(6) and CBCA Section 242 of the
CBCA provide as follows:
233. (6) No application made or legal proceeding prosecuted or defended under section 232 or this section may be
stayed or dismissed merely because it is shown that an alleged breach of a right, duty or obligation owed to the
company has been or might be approved by the shareholders of the company, but evidence of that approval or
possible approval may be taken into account by the court in making an order under section 232 or this section.
242. (1) An application made or an action brought or intervened in under this Part shall not be stayed or dismissed
by reason only that it is shown that an alleged breach of a right or duty owed to the corporation or its subsidiary
has been or may be approved by the shareholders of such body corporate, but evidence of approval by the
shareholders may be taken into account by the court in making an order…”
When directors act in the best interests of the company and in good faith, it matters not that they also benefit
from their action (in this case by becoming more entrenched in the company). In other words self-entrenchment
will not necessarily be inferred where retaining control is secondary to the more important purpose of acting in
good faith and in the company best interests.
It is the duty of the directors in a take-over battle to take all reasonable steps to maximize shareholders value.
In maximizing shareholder value directors may rely on professional advice as to the adequacy of a bid, and that
such reliance will be evidence of acting in good faith and on reasonable grounds.
In considering the proper actions to be taken by directors in takeover bid scenarios, it is of some importance to
come to grips with the principle that emerges from the U.S. case of Revlon Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings Inc. 506 A.2d 173 (Del. 1986) which states that once defensive measures taken by the directors are
moot , the role of directors changes from defenders of the corporation to auctioneers trying to get the best sale
price for the company to benefit the shareholders. The exact words of Justice Moore of the Supreme Court of
Delaware were:
“However, when Pantry Pride increased its offer to $50 per share, and then to $53, it became apparent to all that
the break-up of the company was inevitable. The Revlon board’s authorization permitting management to negotiate
a merger or buyout with a third party was a recognition that the company was for sale. The duty of the board had
thus changed from the preservation of Revlon as a corporate entity to the maximization of the company’s value at a
sale for the stockholders’ benefit. This significantly altered the board’s responsibilities under the Unocal standards.
It no longer faced threats to corporate policy and effectiveness, or to the stockholders’ interests, from a grossly
inadequate bid. The whole question of defensive measures became moot. The directors’ role changed from
defenders of the corporate bastion to auctioneers charged with getting the best price for the stockholders at a sale
of the company.”
The Ontario Court of Appeal soundly rejected this so-called “Revlon Duty” for Ontario (at least) in Maple
Leaf Foods Inc. v. Schneider Corp., (1998) 42 O.R. (3d) 177 (Ont. C.A.). Weiler J.A. for the Court of Appeal held:
“The decision in [Revlon] stands for the proposition that if a company is up for sale, the directors have an obligation
to conduct an auction of the company’s shares. Revlon is not the law in Ontario. In Ontario, an auction need not be
held every time there is a change in control of a company.
An auction is merely one way to prevent the conflicts of interest that may arise when there is a change of control by
requiring that directors act in a neutral manner toward a number of bidders…The more recent Paramount decision
in the United States …has recast the obligation of directors when there is a bid for change of control as an
obligation to seek the best value reasonably available to shareholders in the circumstances. This is a more flexible
standard, which recognizes that the particular circumstances are important in determining the best transaction
available, and that a board is not limited to considering only the amount of cash or consideration involved as would
be the case with an auction…There is no single blueprint that directors
must follow…
When it becomes clear that a company is for sale and there are several bidders, an auction is an appropriate
mechanism to ensure that the board of a target company acts in a neutral manner to achieve the best value
reasonably available to shareholders in the circumstances. When the board has received a single offer and has no
reliable grounds upon which to judge its adequacy, a canvass of
the market to determine if higher bids may be elicited is appropriate, and may be necessary….”
So where does our law stand on the duty of the corporation to the shareholders?
Please note carefully the discussion in middle paragraph of page 407 of the Casebook. Not only does it constitute
an important summary of the prevailing situation but also offers a very useful formulation to try and reconcile the
divergent strands: “One way to make sense of this is that the Supreme Court of Canada’s interpretation [in BCE v.
1976 Debentureholders discussed earlier] of the duty of loyalty is such that directors may consider the interests of
creditors and other stakeholders, but not that they must do so. Moreover, the rejection of Revlon can also be
understood as the rejection of an idea that directors are confined to a short time frame when deciding what is in the
best interests of the corporation.”
1. 347883 Alberta Ltd. v. Producers Pipelines Inc. (1991) 3 B.L.R. (2d) 237 (C.A.) at pages 409-419 of the
Casebook;
2. Brant Investments Ltd. v. Keeprite Inc. (1991) 3 O.R. (3d) 289 (C.A.) at pages 421-426 of the Casebook;
and
3. CW Shareholdings Inc.WIC Western International Communications Ltd. (1998), 39 O.R. (3d) 755 (Ont.
SC) which can be found here:
http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/1998/1998canlii14838/1998canlii14838.html
(http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/1998/1998canlii14838/1998canlii14838.html)
These cases involve illustrations of courts wrestling with how to give relevant context to the duty of
loyalty. That is that Directors must act honestly, in good faith, and with a view to the best interests of the
corporation and furthermore exercise the care, diligence and skill that a reasonable person would exercise
in like circumstances. Such specific responsibilities of the directors become considerably more
challenging to navigate in change of control situations where the corporation can be said to be “in play”.
347883 Alberta Ltd. v. Producers Pipelines Inc. dealt with a “shareholder’s rights agreement”, also known as a
poison pill defence. A “Poison pill” is a defensive strategy against corporate takeovers. It can broadly be defined as
an extra-ordinary manoeuvre by the directors and/or shareholders of the company to be acquired designed to
make that target company less attractive to the hopeful acquirer, often by adding burdensome costs if the takeover
succeeds. In 347883 Alberta Ltd. v. Producers Pipelines Inc. the directors of Producers Pipelines Inc., a public
company that the parent company of 347883 Alberta Ltd. wished to acquire, enacted a “shareholders rights
agreement”. That shareholders rights agreement would give each of the fewer than 200 shareholders of Producers
Pipelines Inc. 10 shares for the price of $75. The offer was crafted in such a way that 347883 Alberta Ltd. (as a
subsidiary of the putative acquirer) would not receive these rights and the acquirer’s own shares would be greatly
diluted. In dealing with the appropriate conduct of directors Sherstobitoff J.A. reviewed the state of the law
extensively and concluded:
“In summary, when a corporation is faced with susceptibility to a take-over bid or an actual take-over bid, the
directors must exercise their powers in accordance with their overriding duty to act bona fide and in the best
interests of the corporation even though they may find themselves, through no fault of their own, in a conflict of
interest situation. If, after investigation, they determine that action is necessary to advance the best interests of the
company, they may act, but the onus will be on them to show that their acts were reasonable in relation to the
threat posed and were directed to the benefit of the corporation and its shareholders as a whole, and not for an
improper purpose such as entrenchment of the directors.
Since the shareholders have the right to decide to whom and at what price they will sell their shares, defensive
action must interfere as little as possible with that right. Accordingly, any defensive action should be put to the
shareholders for prior approval where possible, or for subsequent ratification if not possible. There may be
circumstances where neither is possible, but that was not so in this case. Defensive tactics that result in
shareholders being deprived of the ability to respond to a takeover bid or to a competing bid are unacceptable.”
The end result was that the Ontario Court of Appeal determined that the shareholder’s rights agreement in this
particular case was to be set aside.
The facts in Brant Investments Ltd. v. KeepRite Inc. involved a complex corporate transaction where the board
of the parent company Inter-City Gas purchased 64% of the shares in KeepRite Inc. a company that sold air
conditioning equipment. Then Inter-City Gas transferred the shares it had acquired in Keeprite Inc. to Inter-City
Manufacturing, a subsidiary of Inter-City Gas, which made heating equipment. Thereafter, following the
recommendation of an independent committee of the board of KeepRite Inc., KeepRite Inc. purchased $20 million
of assets from two companies that were subsidiaries of Inter-City Manufacturing. An issue of rights to existing
shareholders financed this purchase. Of note was that this rights offering required an amendment to the articles of
KeepRite Inc. that was passed by a special resolution of the shareholders. The minority shareholders of Keeprite
Inc. objected to the transaction, brought an oppression action, and applied for an order to fix the fair value of their
shares to be put to the corporation.
In simplified form this was essentially a transaction where the board of a parent proposed to purchase the assets of
a subsidiary, and the shareholders of the parent company objected.
McKinlay J.A. agreed with the lower court that section 234 (now section 241) of the CBCA was not offended by the
actions of KeepRite Inc. Accordingly the action of the minority shareholders of KeepRite Inc. against that company
failed. The court found:
“There can be no doubt that on application under s. 234 the trial judge is required to consider the nature of
the impugned acts and the method in which they were carried out. That does not mean that the trial judge
should substitute his own business judgment for that of managers, directors, or a committee such as the
one involved in assessing this transaction. Indeed, it would generally be impossible for him to do so,
regardless of the amount of evidence before him. He is dealing with the matter at a different time and place; it is
unlikely that he will have the background knowledge and expertise of the individuals involved; he could have little or
no knowledge of the background and skills of the persons who would be carrying out any proposed plan; and it is
unlikely that he would have any knowledge of the specialized market in which the corporation operated. In short,
he does not know enough to make the business decision required. That does not mean that he is not well
equipped to make an objective assessment of the very factors which s. 234 requires him to assess. Those factors
have been discussed in some detail earlier in these reasons.
It is important to note that the learned trial judge did not say that business decisions honestly made should not be
subjected to examination. What he said was that they should not be subjected to microscopic examination…Having
carefully reviewed the major aspects of the appellants’ criticisms of the transaction, he came to the conclusion that
in no way, either substantively or procedurally, offended the provisions of s. 234. Having carefully reviewed all of
the exhibits and transcribed evidence to which we were referred, I have no hesitation in agreeing with the
correctness of his assessment…”
One of the key points about Brant Investments Ltd. v. KeepRite Inc. is that the case illustrates well the sense of
“protection” (real or imagined) that “independent committees” can provide in a corporate setting, particularly in a
takeover scenario. The key factor would appear to be the appearance of objectivity and focus which an
independent committee is capable of bring to business judgments regarding what would be in the best interests of
the corporation. Accordingly it has become fairly standard practice for independent committees to be formed and
convened at an early stage of takeover issues (and others as well) that might prove contentious. Given that most, if
not almost all takeovers meet these criteria, “independent committees” are unlikely to be going out of style any time
soon.
CW Shareholdings Inc. v. WIC Western International Communications Ltd. involved an offer made by
CanWest Global Communications Corp. (“CanWest”) to acquire all of the Class A voting shares of WIC Western
International Communications Ltd. (“WIC”) and all of the publicly traded Class B non-voting shares of WIC at a
price of $39 per share. At the relevant time the Class A voting shares of WIC were held approximately 49.96% by
Shaw Communications Inc. and 50% by Cathton Holdings.
In response to the offer from CanWest, the board of WIC created a “special committee”, which included the CEO,
to consider the offer. The board of WIC subsequently recommended through a “Directors’ Circular” that the
shareholders of WIC not accept the offer from CanWest. The board of WIC also passed without the approval of its
shareholders a “shareholders rights plan”.
In its various decisions dealing with the WIC matter the Ontario Securities Commission identified certain challenges
with the non-independence of WIC’s “special committee” relating to the participation of John Lacey the CEO of WIC
at the relevant time and of another director, Robert Manning, who represented Cathton Holdings, the largest holder
of the Class A shares of WIC, who was at first allowed to attend meetings of the special committee but without
voting rights. The OSC considered the special committee not to truly be an independent committee:
“From the evidence of Messrs. Lacey, Eyton and Spafford, it appears clear to us that the Special Committee was
set up for purposes of convenience only, and not as an independent committee. In our view, in a take-over bid
context a committee which includes as an active participant the president and chief executive officer of the
corporation and, as an observer and resource, a representative of a shareholder which has 50% of the votes, is not
an independent committee. The fact that Mr. Lacey has a “golden parachute” agreement, does not in our view
change this position.
In these circumstances, it is our view that we must place less reliance on the review by the Special Committee of
the Bid, and possible alternative methods of achieving a more beneficial result to shareholders, than we would if
the Special Committee had been truly an independent committee.”
As well in its reasons to cease trade the shareholder rights plan, the Ontario Securities Commission stated in
relation to the testimony of Rhys Eyton, the Chair of the “special committee” that:
“We should also note that Mr. Eyton’s apparent view that the board of a target company, as well as its
shareholders, are entitled to take part in the decision as to whether to accept the bid is not correct, based on
previous decisions of the Commission, if by his statement to that effect Mr. Eyton meant any more than that the
board of the target company is entitled to advise the shareholders and attempt to provide them with alternatives.”
The rights plan was cease-traded by securities regulators, and thereafter negotiations began between WIC and
Shaw Communications Inc., who made a cash and share offer valued at $43.50 per share for all of the outstanding
Class B nonvoting shares. Related to this offer WIC and Shaw Communications Inc. entered into a “pre-acquisition
agreement” which granted Shaw Communications:
An irrevocable option to purchase WIC’s radio assets (which were said to have been underperforming) at a
fixed price of $160 million. Note that these radio assets only represented 0.6% of WIC’s total income in 1997.
A break fee of $30 million if certain events transpired within a limited time; and
A covenant which would prevent WIC from soliciting or encouraging any other “acquisition proposals”, but which
did allow WIC to negotiate, approve and recommend unsolicited bona fide acquisition proposals.
Subsequently CanWest increased its bid to $43.50 on condition that the Court setting aside the pre-acquisition
agreement. Over and above the various proceedings Canwest had started before securities commissions, it also
applied to the Ontario courts to set aside the pre-acquisition agreement and for relief from “oppression” in
accordance section 241 of the CBCA. The issue before the courts was whether WIC’s Board had breached its
fiduciary duties by approving the pre-acquisition agreement with Shaw. In the end while the Ontario Court (General
Division) can be said to have been somewhat critical of certain aspects of the pre-acquisition agreement and might
be seen as questioning to some degree the independence of the special committee, it did not set aside the pre-
acquisition agreement and concluded that the WIC Board had acted in accordance with its fiduciary duties.
Mr. Justice Blair contextualized the concept of a corporation being “in play” and described the duties of directors in
such circumstances:
“The law as it relates to the general duties of the directors of Canadian corporations is not controversial. The
directors must exercise the common law fiduciary and statutory obligations (a) to act honestly and in good faith with
a view to the best interests of the corporation, and (b) in doing so, to exercise the care, diligence and skill that a
reasonably prudent person would exercise in comparable circumstances: see the Canada Business Corporations
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-37, s.122. In the context of a hostile takeover bid situations where the corporation is “in play”
(i.e., where it is apparent there will be a sale of equity and/or voting control) the duty is to act in the best interests of
the shareholders as a whole and to take active and reasonable steps to maximize shareholder value by conducting
an auction…
In assessing whether or not directors have met their fiduciary and statutory obligations, as outlined earlier in these
Reasons, Canadian courts have generally approached the subject on the basis of what has become known as the
“business judgment rule”. This rule is an extension of the fundamental principle that the business and affairs of a
corporation are managed by or under the direction of its board of directors. It operates to shield from court
intervention business decisions which have been made honestly, prudently, in good faith and on reasonable
grounds. In such cases, the board’s decisions will not be subject to microscopic examination and the Court will be
reluctant to interfere and to usurp the board of director’s function in managing the corporation. …
The directors’ actions are not to be judged against the perfect vision of hindsight, and should be measured against
the facts as they existed at the time the impugned decision was made. In addition, the court should be reluctant to
substitute its own opinion for that of the directors where the business decision was made in reasonable and
informed reliance on the advice of financial and legal advisors appropriately retained and consulted in the
circumstances. See Rogers Communications Inc. v. MacLean Hunter Ltd., supra, at p. 245; Armstrong World
Industries Inc. v. Arcand (1997), 36 B.L.R. (2d) 171 (Ont. Gen. Div. [Commercial List]); Olympia & York Enterprises
Ltd. v. Hiram Walker Resources Ltd., supra at pp. 270-273.”
ASSIGNMENT #2
You are a young corporate lawyer at the well-known British Columbia law firm Wie, Haight, Raye & Darr. The firm’s
client Gates Williams makes an appointment to meet with you. He arrives at your office with J.O.B. Steves whom
he introduces as his partner in a new venture. Mr. Williams asks you to incorporate a new company under the
BCBCA.
They tell you that the company is being formed to exploit a potentially highly profitable new business opportunity
that has arisen as the result a decision by the Canadian International Development Agency (“CIDA”) an agency of
Canada’s Department of External Affairs to invite tenders from private sector companies for contracts to provide
services that CIDA wishes to have provided in Guatemala. Mr. Williams mentions that Mr. Steves’ son-in-law is a
very senior official at CIDA.
Mr. Williams that the shareholdings in the new company will be as follows:
1. Gates Williams 1000 Class A Voting common shares to be paid for in cash
2. O.B. Steves 1000 Class A Voting common shares to be paid for in cash
3. C. Ahn 100 Class A Voting common shares (who is not at the meeting) to be paid for in cash
Mr. Williams asks you whether Wie, Haight, Raye & Darr would take 200 Class A Voting common shares in lieu of
fees.
Since Mr. Williams and Mr. Steves are in rather a rush they tell you that the company should have standard form
articles along the lines of the model BC Articles, that Mr. Williams will be the sole officer and director of the
company and that Mr. Steves will call later with additional instructions and information. Later the same day Mr.
Williams (not Mr. Steves) calls and asks you prepare an employment agreement between Mr. Williams as President
& CEO, and the new company. The employment agreement will have a term of two years and provide a salary of
$500,000 per year.
Please identify briefly any legal or, in the light of the following provisions of the Law Society of BC Code of
Professional Conduct, any ethical issues: s. 1.1-1 (definition of “conflict of interest”); s. 3.2-7; s. 3.2-8; s. 3.4-1; s.
3.4-28.
Please answer in three pages or less (one and half spacing). It is not necessary to repeat the facts.
Search
Search
UNIT 1 (WEEK 1): INTRODUCING BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS & THEIR REAL WORLD CONTEXTS
UNIT 4 (WEEKS 4 & 5): CORPORATE PERSONHOOD – SOME SPECIFIC ISSUES AND PROBLEMS
UNIT 8 (WEEKS 12 & 13): MAJORITY RULE & PROTECTING MINORITY INTERESTS
REVIEW UNIT
[Wiki Version] UNIT 1 (WEEK 1): INTRODUCING BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS & THEIR REAL WORLD
CONTEXTS
Wiki Materials
Resources
Email Subscribe
Subscribe Unsubscribe
RSS (http://bizorglaw.allard.ubc.ca/feed/)
My Badges
(https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/badges/shareholder/)
(https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/badges/officer/)
(https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/badges/director/)
(https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/badges/chair/)
Featured Posts
Unbearable weirdness: The portrayal of In-House Counsel in “Pretty Woman”
(https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/2019/06/26/unbearable-weirdness-the-portrayal-of-in-house-counsel-in-pretty-woman/)
The Jet Mindset (https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/2016/08/31/the-1/)
Capturing the Essence (https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/2016/08/29/looking-forward/)
The Corporate Bear & Friends (https://bizorg.allard.ubc.ca/2016/08/16/bear-slider-updated/)
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US)