LEGAL
There is extensive caselaw and detailed statutory provisions pertaining to the fiduciary duties of members of the board of directors and directors of public companies, as well as directors of private companies that have received substantial amounts of funding from venture capitalists and institutional investors, and regularly attend in-person and online educational institutes and programs that focus on specific legal and ethical issues that they are likely to encounter during their work on the board and its various committees. In contrast, relatively little attention has been paid to the fiduciary duties of those persons who are charged with carrying out the directives of the board and managing the business on a day-to-day basis: the officers of the corporation.
Caselaw regarding the duties and obligations of corporate officers is meager, and there is no consensus on the applicability of well-known guidelines that are frequently cited when assessing director behavior, such as the "business judgment rule." Moreover, attorneys purporting to specialize in corporate governance often concentrate their counseling on board members and spend relatively little time working with officers and providing them with guidelines that can be used for them to understand the potential legal ramifications of their conduct and the duties that might be imposed upon them outside of any specific employment-related agreement they might have with the corporation.
Recently scholars and governance commentators have come forward to offer several good reasons for taking specific steps to educate officers regarding their fiduciary obligations to the corporations that they serve. First, it can be expected that the conduct of officers will be subject to increasing scrutiny in a manner similar to the attention that has been focused on directors and thus it is in the interests of both the corporation and its individual officers for officers to understand the legal standards associated with their performance before a lawsuit is filed. Second, it has been argued that formalized efforts to inform officers of their duties and obligations, and the resources available to them to discharge their duties in a proper and lawful manner, will increase the likelihood that officers will act properly, engage in positive conduct, and refrain from actions that further their own interests at the expense of the corporation and its shareholders. Third, investing time and effort in educating officers provides a platform for explaining legal principles and concepts (e.g., duties of loyalty and care) that would otherwise remain vague and uncertain to officers.
Experienced attorneys can and should provide officers with examples of how familiar legal principles work in practice and help officers determine when they should stop and seek the guidance of their superiors and counsel. Education fosters a sense of personal responsibility among officers and recognition that they, rather than the corporation’s lawyers, must ultimately be comfortable that their actions are consistent with their fiduciary duties to the corporation. Another byproduct of attorney involvement in the education process is that it builds a bridge between the officer and the attorney, making the officer more comfortable in approaching the attorney for advice, and it allows the attorney to proactively work with officers to spot and manage potential problems in a way that reduces the risk and potential liabilities for both the officer and the corporation.
Johnson was one of the first to offer guidance on counseling officers regarding their unique corporate governance responsibilities and did so by combining and integrating guidelines and processes from both the Model Business Corporations Act (MBCA) and the Restatement of Agency, a prudent approach given that it should be assumed that officers will be held to the standards of both the MBCA and the Restatement. The following guidelines should be laid out for officers in an orientation before they assume their duties and should be codified in some way in a formal code of conduct:
An officer should be aware of, and strictly adhere to, the procedures available for obtaining the corporation’s consent to conduct by the officer that would otherwise constitute a breach of the officer’s duties to the corporation including the officer’s obligations to act in good faith and make disclosures of all material facts that the officer knows, has reason to know, or should know would reasonably affect the corporation’s in granting or withholding its consent.
For further information, see L. Johnson, "Having the Fiduciary Duty Talk: Model Advice for Corporate Officers (and Other Senior Agents)," Business Lawyer, 63 (2007), 147 (includes "model fiduciary advice" for corporate officers which the author recommends should be given before officers take up their duties) and the article in Business Transactions Solution on Westlaw at § 33:253.
Learn more about this subject August 30 with the West LegalEdCenter program “Educating Corporate Officers on Their Fiduciary Duties and Obligations”
Alan Gutterman is a regular contributor to Corporate Counsel Connect. He is the Founding Director of the Business Counselor Institute and the International Center for Growth-Oriented Sustainable Entrepreneurship. His publications on governance counseling and other matters are available on Westlaw at the "Business Counselor" page.