The first source of civil liability for directors is State corporate law. The law of the state of incorporation applies, in accordance with the “internal affairs” doctrine.
Assuming a company is incorporated in New York, the New York Business Corporation Law (BSC) is the governing statute. It disciplines directors at Art. 7:
- BSC § 717 states the directors’ duty of loyalty and duty of care (“(a) A director shall perform his duties as a director, including his duties as a member of any committee of the board upon which he may serve, in good faith and with that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would use under similar circumstances” (Business Corporation Law § 717(a) (Consol., Lexis Advance through 2022 released Chapters 1-12)).
- Directors are allowed to rely upon “opinions, reports or statements” by officers or other employees of the company, experts or committees that the directors believe to be reliable and competent.
- The Business Judgement Rule presumption applies: according to case law, courts do not inquire into directors’ good-faith determinations regarding the corporation best interests, unless the director acted in absence of a “legitimate and lawful business purpose” or he/she wasted the company assets (M&M Country Store, Inc. v Kelly, 159 AD3d 1102 [3d Dept 2018]; See also Auerbach v Bennett, 47 NY2d 619 [1979] and Matter of Kenneth Cole Prods., Inc., Shareholder Litig., 27 NY3d 268 [2016]). A director who breached his/her fiduciary duties is liable for all damages “naturally flowing from their wrongdoing or misconduct, even though the precise result could not have been foreseen” (Id.).
- Because of the duty of loyalty, a director may be liable if a personal interest conflicting with the “best interest of the company” impairs the director’s ability to be objective.
- Directors are not individually liable for participation in a breach of contract, while they are liable to third parties for participation in a corporation’s tort or if they “directed, controlled, approved, or ratified the decision that led to the plaintiff's injury” (Fletcher v Dakota, Inc., 99 AD3d 43 [1st Dept 2012]).
- Under BSC § 719, directors are jointly and severally liable for any injury caused to creditors or shareholders by specific corporate actions they voted for or concurred in, unless they performed their duties according to BSC § 717 (a).
- Directors’ misconduct is punished under BSC § 720, which provides for a cause of action against directors:
“(1) […] to compel the defendant to account for his official conduct in the following cases:
(A) The neglect of, or failure to perform, or other violation of his duties in the management and disposition of corporate assets committed to his charge.
(B) The acquisition by himself, transfer to others, loss or waste of corporate assets due to any neglect of, or failure to perform, or other violation of his duties.
(C) In the case of directors or officers of a benefit corporation organized under article seventeen of this chapter: (i) the failure to pursue the general public benefit purpose of a benefit corporation or any specific public benefit set forth in its certificate of incorporation; (ii) the failure by a benefit corporation to deliver or post an annual report as required by section seventeen hundred eight of article seventeen of this chapter; or (iii) the neglect of, or failure to perform, or other violation of his or her duties or standard of conduct under article seventeen of this chapter.
(2) To set aside an unlawful conveyance, assignment or transfer of corporate assets, where the transferee knew of its unlawfulness.
(3) To enjoin a proposed unlawful conveyance, assignment or transfer of corporate assets, where there is sufficient evidence that it will be made”.
- It is relevant to notice that, under New York Not-For-Profit Corporation Law (NPC), while a similar liability to that in BSC § 719 and § 720 is provided for in NPC § 719 and § 720, NPC § 720-a limits the directors’ liability by stating that “no person serving without compensation as a director, officer, key person or trustee of a corporation, association, organization or trust […] shall be liable to any person other than such corporation, association, organization or trust based solely on his or her conduct in the execution of such office unless the conduct of such director, officer or trustee with respect to the person asserting liability constituted gross negligence or was intended to cause the resulting harm to the person asserting such liability”.
The second source of directors’ liability is security law, which can impose both civil and criminal liability on directors for violation of state and federal provisions. For instance, federal statutes such as the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 may impose liability. Moreover, the Securities and Exchange Commission rules and regulations apply to directors’ conduct.
Moreover, Banking law § 7015 establishes a form of directors’ liability, reaffirming the duty of loyalty and duty of care and stating, in relation to trust companies, that if directors “disregard provisions of Bank Law and bylaws of company, or negligently allow them to be disregarded, and loss is thereby suffered by trust company”, they are “negligent and are liable for the loss so suffered”.
In addition, similarly to the correspondent corporate provision, according to banking law “a director of a bank may rely in good faith upon a report prepared in the ordinary course of business by an officer or committee charged with responsibility for such report”.
Civil, as well as criminal, liability may arise from violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, which prohibits corrupt payment to foreign officials and bars indemnification of directors and officers for fines.
If a company wishes to list a security on the New York Stock Exchange or the National Association of Securities Dealers Automatic Quotation System, it must abide to their regulations (NYSE Listing Manual and Nasdaq Marketplace Rules), which provide for best practices and recommendations affecting also directors’ liability.
Finally, according to BSC § 402(b), the corporation’s certificate of incorporation may modify and limit the directors’ liability, within certain specific limitations.