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Demoulas v. Demoulas
Super Markets, Inc., 2004 Mass. Super. LEXIS 286
(August 2, 2004, 03-3741 BLS) (Van Gestel, J.). |
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In yet another chapter of the on-going
Demoulas litigation saga, the Court rejected Plaintiff
Arthur S. Demoulas’s contention that the Company’s board
of directors was subject to Defendant Arthur T.
Demoulas’s controlling interest, such that a pre-suit
demand before bringing a derivative action would have
been futile.
Arthur T. asked that the corporation
waive its right of first offer so that he could transfer
his shares to his wife and ultimately into an
irrevocable voting trust. His purpose was to free
himself of fiduciary duties that would prevent him from
pursuing other business interests. The Company’s board
initially rejected the request. Then after a subsequent
meeting, presentation by Arthur T., and |
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negotiation of an agreement imposing some
restrictions on Arthur T., the Board granted the
request. Arthur S. brought a derivative action against
Arthur T. and the Board.
Following Houle v. Low, 407 Mass. 810
(1990), the Court held an evidentiary hearing and
concluded that the Company directors had proven that
they were not interested, biased or under Arthur T.’s
controlling interest. Quoting a recent Delaware Chancery
Court decision, the Court formulated the standard to be
applied as “whether a director is, for any reason,
incapable of making a decision with the best interests
of the corporation in mind.” Id. at *47 (quoting
In re Oracle Corp. Derivative Lit., 824 A.2d 917, 938
(Del. Ch. 2003).
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