Are Corporate Super PAC Contributions Waste or Self-Dealing? A Closer Look

88 Pages Posted: 2 Aug 2013 Last revised: 22 Nov 2014

Date Written: July 23, 2014

Abstract

Management has exclusive domain over a corporation's day-to-day affairs; shareholders play no role in ordinary business decisions. Thus, in a post-Citizens United world, management may cause a corporation to contribute to a Super PAC without any shareholder input. If a shareholder discovers the contribution and objects, her only options under state corporation law are to elect a new board, sell her shares or sue management for breach of fiduciary duty – i.e., "vote, sell or sue."

Unfortunately, for most shareholders of publicly traded corporations, neither "vote" nor "sell" is an effective response a Super PAC contribution. Ousting the board is not an option due to the collective action problem. Selling one's shares also is no remedy because the stock market will already know of and have reacted to the contribution.

But what about "sue"? Many corporate law scholars have summarily rejected this option, urging that management's decision to make the contribution would be protected by the business judgment rule. Yet, no such scholar has thoroughly analyzed this issue.

Bucking this trend, two authors recently have urged that shareholders could successfully sue to challenge a corporate Super PAC contribution. However, these commentaries have been ignored in the law reviews and summarily panned in the blogosphere, leaving the idea largely unexamined. This Article remedies that oversight.

After close scrutiny, one of the two theories proffered in these two papers – waste – is a sure loser in all but the most extreme circumstances. There is simply no good argument that a typical corporate Super PAC contribution meets the nearly-impossible-to-satisfy waste standard.

By contrast, the second theory – self-dealing – may be viable if the candidate supported by the Super PAC advocates policies that favor the financial interests of management over those of most Americans. Yet, although self-dealing is a better theory than waste, it is nonetheless uncertain to succeed due to the attenuated causal connection between any Super PAC contribution and any potential financial benefit to management.

As such, a shareholder derivative lawsuit challenging a Super PAC contribution faces long odds – unless, perhaps, she advances a theory other than waste or self-dealing.

Keywords: Citizens United, Super PAC, Corporation, Political Contribution, Charitable Donation, MN Forward, Target Corporation

Suggested Citation

Leahy, Joseph Kieran, Are Corporate Super PAC Contributions Waste or Self-Dealing? A Closer Look (July 23, 2014). Missouri Law Review, Vol. 79, No. 4 (2014), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2304852 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2304852

Joseph Kieran Leahy (Contact Author)

South Texas College of Law - Houston ( email )

1303 San Jacinto Street
Houston, TX 77002
United States
7136462936 (Phone)

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