posted on 2012-04-16, 15:35authored byMartin Petrin
The recent financial crisis has triggered a renewed emphasis on corporate
directors’ duty to exercise oversight. In contrast to the area of discrete
decision-making, where academics only rarely dispute the board’s almost
complete insulation from liability, there is considerable resistance to the idea
that oversight should be subject to equally strict limits to hold directors
responsible. Yet, Delaware courts have made it clear that they continue to
severely limit, and not expand, directors’ oversight liability, leading Delaware
in the opposite direction than that which many of its critics would advocate.
Both policy and theoretical considerations, however, support Delaware’s
decision to maintain strict limits on oversight liability. Such restraints protect
directors’ ability to exercise independent business judgment, encourage risk
taking and board service by qualified individuals, and prevent directors from
assuming the role as insurers of business risks. In addition, limits on
oversight liability reduce monitoring costs and promote efficient functioning
of boards. Thus, as this Article argues, Delaware’s current solution works and
strikes the correct balance between directors’ accountability and authority.
History
Citation
Virginia Law & Business Review, 2011, 5 (3), pp. 433-480.
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Law