Directors and officers ("D&O") liability insurance generally protects directors and officers against legal expenses and personal liability for acts and omissions taken in their capacity as directors and officers of the insured company. In a recent case, coverage was excluded where directors also acted as investors of the company.
In Goggin v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA, No. N17C-10-083 PRW CCLD (Super. Ct. Del. Nov. 30, 2018), the Delaware Superior Court held that a D&O insurance contract at issue excluded coverage where claims against directors arose out of acts in their capacities as both directors of and investors in the company.
The case involved two directors of U.S. Coal Corporation who
were also investors in the company. The underlying claims related
to alleged breaches of fiduciary duties that were asserted by the
trustee in U.S. Coal's bankruptcy proceeding. During the
relevant period, U.S. Coal maintained D&O coverage under a
policy issued by National Union. Although the D&O policy
covered liabilities and expenses arising out of acts and omissions
by the investor-directors, National Union ultimately denied
coverage to the directors on the basis that the alleged fiduciary
duty claims did not "arise out of" alleged wrongdoing
solely in the directors' capacity as U.S. Coal directors. The
court agreed and held that National Union properly applied the
insurance contract's "capacity"
exclusion for claims arising out of "any actual or alleged act
or omission of an Individual Insured serving in any capacity, other
than as [a director or officer] of a Company."
The decision applied a "but for" test in assessing the applicability of the capacity exclusion. If the claim would not have existed "but for" the directors' conduct as investors, the claim is not based on the director's conduct solely as a director of the insured entity and the "capacity" exclusion applies to deny coverage. Of course, the opposite would also be true. In applying the court's pesky "but for" or "sole capacity" analysis, no fiduciary duty claim could have been asserted against the investors in U.S. Coal who did not also have fiduciary duties as directors.
The decision rests substantially on the facts underlying the
alleged breaches of fiduciary duty and the specific language of the
insurance policy at issue. However, taken as a whole, it should be
a warning to investors who are also involved in management of a
portfolio company that a careful review of D&O policies by
experienced advisers is important to understanding whether
investors will be protected against the claims they anticipate and
to assisting portfolio companies negotiate exceptions to
exclusionary language in policies that would deny anticipated
coverage. Such a review is especially important for
investor-directors who provide troubled company financing or who
act in multiple other capacities with an insured company (e.g.,
member-manager, management consultant, lender, financial adviser,
restructuring manager, etc.).
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.