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On October 1, 2024, in In re TransUnion Derivative Stockholder Litigation, Vice Chancellor Will in the Delaware Court of Chancery dismissed a derivative suit against the Directors of TransUnion for allegedly breaching their fiduciary duty of oversight in relation to agreements made pursuant to a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”) consent order.  The Court

Earlier this year, in Cantor Fitzgerald v. Ainslie, the Delaware Supreme Court reiterated that “[t]he courts of this State hold freedom of contract in high—some might say, reverential—regard” in interpreting alternative entity agreements. A recent case, Mehra v. Teller, starkly illustrates the court’s strict enforcement of unambiguous contract language. After a full trial, Chancellor

Judge Medinilla’s recent opinion in Cytotheryx, Inc. v. Castle Creek Biosciences, Inc. is a reminder for practitioners to carefully consider whether an integration clause in a purchase agreement will be sufficient to bar extra-contractual misrepresentation claims. And although fraud claims arising out of M&A transactions often are brought against sellers, the decision also offers an

The 2024 Chambers Global Practice Guide for “Shareholders’ Rights & Shareholder Activism”, with contributions from Kai Liekefett, Derek Zaba, Ram Sachs, and Evan Grosch, is now available. The guide provides an overview of corporate governance and shareholder activism based on the latest legal developments and market trends.
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It may seem obvious that “[e]quity cannot bless th[e] deliberate violation of an explicit statutory prohibition,” but in the recent Delaware Court of Chancery decision, TS Falcon I, LLC v. Golden Mountain Financial Holdings Corp., Vice Chancellor Lori Will reminded us of this maxim in the context of setting record dates for annual stockholders’ meetings. 

A recent Delaware decision has demonstrated the limits of the absolute litigation privilege, holding that it did not protect an LLC member from claims that his defamatory statements triggered contractual repurchase rights of his membership interests. Absolute litigation privilege, in Delaware and many other jurisdictions, protects parties from actions for allegedly defamatory statements made during