LARRY JOPLIN, Chief Judge.
¶ 1 Plaintiff/Appellant Gregory M. Egleston (Plaintiff), derivatively on behalf of Chesapeake Energy Corporation, seeks review of the trial court's order granting the motion to dismiss of Nominal Defendant/Appellee Chesapeake Energy Corporation (Chesapeake). Plaintiff asserts the trial court erred in dismissing his Verified Shareholder's Derivative and Demand Refused Petition on the finding that Chesapeake's current Board of Directors, Defendants Aubrey K. McClendon, Archie W. Dunham, Frederic M. Poses, Bob G. Alexander, R. Brad Martin, Vincent J. Intrieri, Merrill A. Miller, V. Burns Hargis, and Louis Allen Simpson, exercised reasonable business judgment when it deferred action on Plaintiff's litigation demand.
¶ 2 On November 9, 2012, Plaintiff filed his Verified Shareholder's Derivative and Demand Refused Petition. Plaintiff alleged that Defendant Aubrey K. McClendon is a co-founder of Chesapeake, and has served as its Chief Executive Officer since its inception. Plaintiff also alleged that McClendon and the remaining Defendants were and/or are members of the Chesapeake Board of Directors at all times relevant to the allegations of Plaintiff's Petition.
¶ 3 Plaintiff alleged that he had reviewed the books and records produced by Chesapeake, filings by the Securities Exchange Commission, and other publicly available documents and reports which revealed, inter alia, a pattern of self-dealing, usurpation of corporate opportunities and conflicts of interest by McClendon and former and/or current members of the Board of Directors, in derogation of corporate rules of governance and their fiduciary duties, to the damage of the company and its shareholders. Plaintiff also alleged that, on or about August 10, 2012, he made a Demand on Chesapeake's Board of Directors to take immediate legal action against McClendon and former members of the Board of Directors to recover damages for breach of fiduciary duty, to enforce the rules of corporate governance, and to remove McClendon as CEO. Plaintiff further alleged the Board of Directors refused his Demand, and "defer[red] further action on the Demand during the pendency of related litigation, Board review, and administrative inquiries and investigations," but "failed to meet the standard of good faith and did not exercise valid judgment in refusing the Demand because" the Board failed to conduct any investigation of the allegations of the Petition and decided to defer action on the Demand after a single meeting, tainted by the presence of former Board members against whom the Petition set forth allegations of wrongdoing.
¶ 5 Plaintiff responded. Plaintiff asserted the Board's decision to defer action on his Demand, without substantial independent investigation and in the presence of directors against whom he alleged wrongful acts, demonstrated its failure to exercise good faith or valid business judgment. Plaintiff further asserted the decision to defer action on his Demand constituted neither the grant or denial of his Demand, and did not preclude this action. Plaintiff lastly requested leave to amend his petition if the trial court granted the motion to dismiss.
¶ 6 Chesapeake responded, and the trial court ordered further briefing. After hearing the parties' arguments, and considering the briefs and materials submitted, the trial court held:
Plaintiff appeals, and the matter stands submitted on the trial court record.
¶ 7 Oklahoma statute provides:
12 O.S.2023.1. So, "[a] stockholder ... may bring suit only when the corporation refuses to maintain or defend an action." Hargrave v. Canadian Valley Elec. Coop., Inc., 1990 OK 43, ¶ 11, 792 P.2d 50, 54; Kurtz v. Clark, 2012 OK CIV APP 103, ¶ 20, 290 P.3d 779, 787. "The demand requirement exists to protect the decision making authority of the corporate board, and the board's right to manage the affairs of the corporation, which includes the authority to make decisions on whether to initiate litigation." Kurtz, 2012 OK CIV APP 103, ¶ 20, 290 P.3d at 787. (Citations omitted.)
¶ 8 That is to say, "the purpose of the demand requirement is to ensure that the corporate board's management decisions are respected, [and] a critical inquiry in any shareholder's derivative suit is whether the board, upon receiving a shareholder's demand, conducted an investigation in good faith and made a determination that initiating litigation was not in the corporation's best interest." Kurtz, 2012 OK CIV APP 103, ¶ 21, 290 P.3d at 787. (Citations omitted.) "When applying the business judgment rule, courts presume that `in making a business decision the directors of a corporation acted on an informed basis, in good faith and in the honest belief that the action taken was in the best interests of the company and its shareholders.'" Beard v. Love, 2007 OK CIV APP 118, ¶ 29, 173 P.3d 796, 804. (Citations omitted.) "Whenever any action or inaction by a board of directors is subject to review according to the traditional business judgment rule, the issues before the Court are independence, the reasonableness of its investigation and good faith," and "when a board refuses a demand, the only issues to be examined are the good faith and reasonableness of its investigation." Kurtz, 2012 OK CIV APP 103, ¶ 24, 290 P.3d at 788, fn. 12. (Citations omitted.)
¶ 9 In this respect, Plaintiff alleged that, in refusing his Demand, Chesapeake's Board "failed to meet the standard of good faith and did not exercise valid judgment in refusing the Demand." Particularly, Plaintiff alleged Board determined to refuse his Demand after a single meeting, conducted no adequate independent investigation, nor appointed any special or independent committee to review the allegations of the Demand. Plaintiff further alleged that, in the discussion of the Demand, Board failed to exclude McClendon and former members of the Board against whom the Demand alleged wrongdoing, thereby compromising the ability of the current Board to validly exercise its business judgment, and demonstrating the current Board's "bad faith." Plaintiff lastly alleged the current Board, as the Demand-alleged recipients of excessive compensation, were "interested" and "incapable of considering and reviewing the Demand."
¶ 10 Oklahoma law in this area is not well-developed. This being so, and our law patterned on that of the state of Delaware, we may look to the decisions of the Delaware courts for instruction. Kurtz, 2012 OK CIV APP 103, ¶ 19, 290 P.3d at 786-787; Beard, 2007 OK CIV APP 118, ¶ 20, 173 P.3d at 802; Woolf v. Universal Fidelity Life Ins. Co., 1992 OK CIV APP 129, ¶ 6, 849 P.2d 1093, 1095.
¶ 11 Regarding the allegation of the Board's insufficient investigation, "[b]y electing to make a demand, a shareholder plaintiff tacitly concedes the independence of a majority of the board to respond." Spiegel v. Buntrock, 571 A.2d 767, 777 (Del.1990). "A board's refusal to accede to a shareholder's demand is subject to judicial review according to the traditional business judgment rule." Spiegel, 571 A.2d at 775-76. "[W]hen a board refuses a demand, the only issues to be examined are the good faith and reasonableness
¶ 12 However, "there is obviously no prescribed procedure that a board must follow." Levine, 591 A.2d 194, 214 (Del.1991). "[A] formal investigation will not always be necessary because the directors may already have sufficient information regarding the subject of the demand to make a decision in response to it." Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927, 935, fn. 11 (Del.1993). See also, Halpert Enterprises, Inc. v. Harrison, 2008 WL 4585466 (2d Cir.2008).
¶ 13 In the present case, the Petition and Board's response to Plaintiff's demand demonstrate that Board appreciated the substance of Plaintiff's complaints. The Petition and Board's response also demonstrate that Board was sufficiently informed to conclude the substance of Plaintiff's complaints were the subject of its own investigation, other shareholder derivative suits, and investigations by the Department of Justice, the Securities Exchange Commission, and the Michigan Attorney General. The record does not demonstrate that Board acted otherwise than adequately informed of the substance of Plaintiff's complaints.
¶ 14 Regarding the allegations of Board's lack of independence, a Board member's receipt of compensation does not ipso facto establish a conflict of interest. In re E.F. Hutton Banking Practices Litigation, 634 F.Supp. 265, 271 (S.D.N.Y.1986). Even where the Board has previously approved its own compensation, later challenged as improper, "[t]he fact that a Corporation's directors have previously approved transactions subsequently challenged in a derivative suit does not inevitably lead to the conclusion that those directors, bound by their fiduciary obligation to the corporation, will refuse to take up the suit," and absent a specific allegation that the approval of their compensation packages "themselves or calculation thereof involved some form of self-dealing," a conflict of interest is not shown. Id.
¶ 15 In this respect, however, "the size and structure of executive compensation are inherently matters of judgment," and, unless constituting a waste of corporate assets, i.e., "an exchange of corporate assets for consideration so disproportionately small as to lie beyond the range at which any reasonable person might be willing to trade," executive compensation set by a Board's compensation committee, and later approved by the Board, falls within the protection of the business judgment rule. Brehm v. Eisner, 746 A.2d 244, 263 (Del.Supr.2000). (Footnotes omitted.) In the present case, the Board members' compensation was set by a Compensation Committee, apparently operating within its delegated authority, and, as a matter of "waste," Board's approval of an executive compensation package "will be upheld unless it cannot be `attributed to any rational business purpose.'" In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative Litigation, 906 A.2d 27, 74 (Del.Supr.2006) (Footnotes omitted.) Plaintiff's Petition does not allege sufficient facts to establish Board's conflict of interest as a result of the member's receipt of compensation.
¶ 16 The Plaintiff's allegations of Board's dominance by McClendon and/or the previous Board members, divesting Board of its presumption of disinterest, are reasonably
Sachs v. Sprague, 401 F. SupP.2d 159, 164 (D.Mass.2005).
¶ 17 That said, the decisions are also in accord that a board's decision to defer or refuse action on a shareholder's demand due to the pendency of related litigations constitutes a reasonable exercise of business judgment. In Maccoumber v. Austin, 2004 WL 1745751, (N.D.Ill.2004), a federal District Court in the Northern District of Illinois held that a board's decision to delay investigation of the shareholder's demands pending the outcome of related litigation in state court was not unreasonable and dismissed the derivative petition as premature. In Mozes v. Welch, 638 F.Supp. 215 (D.Conn.1986), the federal District Court in Connecticut held that a board's decision to delay investigation of the shareholder's demands pending the outcome of related grand jury proceedings was not only reasonable, but required. 638 F.Supp. at 222.
320 Fed.Appx. at 639. (Emphasis added.)
¶ 18 Board's decision to defer action on Plaintiff's derivative petition constituted a denial of Plaintiff's demand. Furman v. Walton, 2007 WL 1455904, *2, fn. 1 (N.D.Cal. 2007). Board's decision to defer action on Plaintiff's derivative petition pending the outcome of related investigations by the Department of Justice, the Securities Exchange Commission, the Michigan Attorney General, and other shareholder derivative actions constituted a reasonable exercise of business judgment. The trial court did not err in so holding and dismissing the Plaintiff's petition.
BELL, Acting P.J., and MITCHELL, J. (sitting by designation), concur.