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In 2007, we reported on Judge Gants’
summary judgment decision in this action, which concerns
the three-part test for evaluating the propriety of a
decision of a corporation to engage in a transaction
with an interested party, for example one of the
corporation’s officers or directors. See Houle v.
Low, 407 Mass. 810 (1990). Under Houle, a
court must determine 1) whether the directors who made
the decision were independent, unbiased, and acted in
good faith; and, if so, 2) whether the independent
directors conducted a thorough and careful analysis;
and, if so, 3) whether the decision was contrary to the
great weight of the evidence. In his earlier opinion,
Judge Gants denied Boston Sand’s motion for summary
judgment because the record did not permit the Court to
find, as a matter of law, that this test had been met.
The Court then conducted a bench trial, and issued its
findings and conclusions in this opinion.
In this second opinion, Judge Gants began
by addressing a last ditch argument by Boston Sand that
the Houle test did not apply. Citing the American Law
Institute’s Principles of Corporate Governance, Boston
Sand argued that the board’s decision to ratify the
lease between the company and an interested board member
was a “curative ratification,” which can only be
overturned by the plaintiff demonstrating that “the
terms of the transaction are so clearly outside the
range of reasonableness that the directors who |
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authorized the transaction could not have
reasonably concluded at the time of such authorization
that the transaction was fair to the corporation.” Judge
Gants rejected this argument, holding that Massachusetts
law clearly requires that a decision to ratify an
earlier transaction or to dismiss a lawsuit challenging
such transaction, must be reviewed under the “heightened
standard” of Houle. The Court held that Boston
Sand could not avoid the more stringent standard by
conveniently assigning this “curative ratification”
label to the self-interested transaction.
Judge Gants then proceeded to apply the
Houle test and concluded that Boston Sand did not
meet its burden of proving that the directors who
ratified the lease were independent, unbiased and acted
in good faith. The Court found that one of the
disinterested directors was a very close friend of the
interested director, and therefore was not truly
independent. As to the second disinterested director,
the Court found his review of the transaction to be
wholly deficient, as he in large part relied on
information provided by an interested party and did not
conduct a thorough or careful review. The Court found
that the third disinterested director’s analysis of the
transaction was even less rigorous than the second
director.
Having failed to meet the Houle test,
Boston Sand must demonstrate the substantive fairness of
the transaction, which will be determined at a second
evidentiary hearing.
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