Master Delaware Supreme Court clarifies the corporate opportunity doctrine and rejects a per se duty to present every opportunity to the board. with this comprehensive case brief.
Broz v. Cellular Information Systems is a cornerstone Delaware Supreme Court decision on the corporate opportunity doctrine, a core component of the director's duty of loyalty. It addresses when a director who holds positions in multiple, related enterprises may personally pursue a business opportunity without first formally offering it to the corporation on whose board he serves. The case carefully applies the Guth v. Loft factors, emphasizing a context-sensitive inquiry into financial ability, line of business, corporate interest or expectancy, and conflicts of interest.
For law students and practitioners, Broz is significant because it dispels the notion that directors must present every industry-adjacent opportunity to the board. Instead, it teaches that corporate opportunity analysis is fact-intensive and time-specific: the corporation's financial capacity, strategic posture (including divestiture vs. acquisition), and actual interest at the time the opportunity arises are determinative. It also clarifies that the interests of a prospective acquirer do not automatically become those of the target before control passes, and that disclosure and board rejection are safe harbors, not absolute prerequisites, when the facts demonstrate no corporate opportunity exists.
673 A.2d 148 (Del. 1996)
Robert F. Broz served as a director of Cellular Information Systems, Inc. (CIS), a cellular telecommunications company, while also acting as president and sole owner of RFB Cellular, Inc. (RFB), an independent cellular operator. During a period when CIS was financially constrained and pursuing a strategy of selling rather than acquiring cellular licenses to reduce debt, Mackinac Cellular Corporation (MCC) approached Broz, in his personal capacity, about purchasing the Michigan-2 Rural Service Area cellular license. Broz negotiated to acquire the license through RFB. He did not formally present the opportunity to the CIS board, although he discussed it informally with certain CIS directors and officers and believed CIS lacked both the financial capacity and strategic inclination to pursue the acquisition. Around the same time, PriCellular Corporation was negotiating to acquire CIS and was interested in expanding coverage in the region that included Michigan-2. After the RFB transaction closed and before PriCellular actually obtained control of CIS, CIS (ultimately under new ownership) sued Broz, alleging he usurped a corporate opportunity and breached his duty of loyalty by failing to present the opportunity to CIS and by acquiring the license for himself. The Delaware Court of Chancery found a breach and imposed a constructive trust, but the Delaware Supreme Court reversed.
Did a CIS director breach his fiduciary duty of loyalty by usurping a corporate opportunity when he arranged for his wholly owned company to purchase a cellular license that was arguably within CIS's line of business without first formally presenting the opportunity to CIS's board?
Under Delaware's corporate opportunity doctrine, as articulated in Guth v. Loft, Inc., a director may not appropriate for himself an opportunity belonging to the corporation. Whether an opportunity belongs to the corporation turns on a fact-specific inquiry into (1) whether the corporation is financially able to exploit the opportunity; (2) whether the opportunity is within the corporation's line of business; (3) whether the corporation has an interest or reasonable expectancy in the opportunity; and (4) whether by taking the opportunity, the fiduciary will be placed in a position inimical to his duties to the corporation. If these factors indicate the opportunity is corporate, the director must present it to the corporation and may only pursue it after effective rejection by a disinterested board. If the factors show the opportunity is not corporate, the director is not obligated to present the opportunity and may pursue it personally, particularly where the opportunity was presented in the director's individual capacity and no corporate resources or confidential information were misused. The analysis is performed based on facts and circumstances existing when the opportunity arose; interests of a prospective acquirer are not imputed to the corporation prior to the transfer of control.
No. The Delaware Supreme Court held that Broz did not breach his duty of loyalty to CIS. The opportunity was not a corporate opportunity of CIS under the Guth factors, and Broz had no duty to make a formal presentation to or obtain a formal rejection from the CIS board before pursuing the license through his own company.
The Court engaged in a holistic application of the Guth factors and rejected the Chancery Court's more formalistic approach. First, CIS was not financially able to exploit the opportunity. At the time MCC approached Broz, CIS was burdened by significant debt, constrained by lender covenants and liquidity issues, and was actively divesting cellular licenses to reduce leverage. That posture made new acquisitions impractical and inconsistent with board-level strategy. Second, although the opportunity was within the broad line of business of cellular telecommunications, the Court emphasized that this factor is not dispositive. Delaware law requires more than mere industry adjacency; what matters is the totality of circumstances at the time. Third, CIS lacked any concrete interest or reasonable expectancy in the particular Michigan-2 license. The record showed CIS was seeking to sell, not buy, similar assets and had not been pursuing the specific license. That the seller or its banker may have at some point generally canvassed the market or that discussions occurred elsewhere did not create a cognizable CIS expectancy in this specific asset. Fourth, taking the opportunity did not place Broz in a position inimical to his duties because CIS had no realistic capacity or intent to pursue the license, and the opportunity was presented to Broz in his personal capacity as the owner of RFB. There was no showing that Broz exploited CIS's confidential information or corporate resources to secure the deal. The Court acknowledged that Broz informally discussed the opportunity with certain CIS directors, but it held that a formal board presentation and rejection is a safe harbor, not a mandatory prerequisite, where the Guth analysis shows the opportunity is not corporate. Finally, the Court rejected CIS's reliance on PriCellular's interests. A potential acquirer's strategic preferences cannot be imputed to the target before control changes hands. The corporate opportunity determination is made at the time the opportunity arises and on the basis of the corporation's then-existing financial condition and strategy, not on the basis of a bidder's plans. Because the record established that CIS lacked the financial ability and a reasonable expectancy, and because Broz acted in his individual capacity without misuse of CIS assets or information, the Court reversed the Chancery Court's imposition of a constructive trust and entered judgment for Broz.
Broz is a leading Delaware case clarifying the corporate opportunity doctrine and the duty of loyalty for directors with parallel business interests. It teaches that: (1) corporate opportunity is a flexible, fact-intensive standard anchored in the Guth factors; (2) there is no per se duty to present every potentially relevant opportunity to the board; (3) financial incapacity and a divestiture strategy weigh heavily against finding a corporate opportunity; (4) the analysis is frozen at the time the opportunity arises; and (5) a prospective acquirer's interests are not automatically those of the target. For students, Broz provides a blueprint for organizing corporate opportunity analyses on exams and in practice, and it underscores the protective function of timely, well-documented disclosures even when formal presentation is not strictly required.
No. Delaware law provides a safe harbor if a director discloses an opportunity and obtains a disinterested rejection, but Broz makes clear that formal presentation is not mandatory when the Guth factors demonstrate the opportunity is not corporate. If the corporation lacks financial capacity or a reasonable expectancy, and the opportunity was presented to the director in his individual capacity without misuse of corporate assets or information, the director may proceed without a formal board rejection.
Financial capacity is a central Guth factor. In Broz, CIS was financially constrained and was divesting licenses to reduce debt, which weighed strongly against finding that the opportunity belonged to CIS. Debt covenants, liquidity constraints, and a board-level strategy to sell rather than buy can negate financial ability and undercut any reasonable expectancy.
No. While line of business is relevant, it is not dispositive. Delaware courts look at the totality of circumstances, including financial ability and whether the corporation had an actual interest or expectancy in the specific opportunity. In Broz, even though the license was within the cellular industry, other factors showed it was not a corporate opportunity for CIS.
No. The interests of a bidder or prospective acquirer are not imputed to the target corporation before control passes. Broz holds that the analysis is conducted as of the time the opportunity arises, based on the target's then-existing condition and strategy. PriCellular's interest in the license did not create a CIS corporate opportunity prior to the acquisition closing.
Directors should contemporaneously document the corporation's financial condition and strategic posture, avoid using corporate resources or confidential information, and, where practicable, disclose the opportunity to disinterested directors or a committee. While Broz shows formal presentation is not always required, disclosure and potential rejection remain powerful risk mitigants and can provide a clear evidentiary record if challenged later.
Typical equitable remedies include imposing a constructive trust over the usurped asset, ordering disgorgement of profits, or awarding damages. In Broz, the Chancery Court imposed a constructive trust, but the Delaware Supreme Court reversed because it found no corporate opportunity and thus no breach.
Broz v. Cellular Information Systems confirms that Delaware's corporate opportunity doctrine is a nuanced, circumstance-driven standard rather than a rigid rule demanding formal presentation of every opportunity. By anchoring the analysis in the corporation's actual financial capacity, business strategy, and specific interest at the time the opportunity arises, the decision protects both corporate interests and entrepreneurial directors who act in good faith without exploiting corporate resources.
For law students, Broz is an essential pairing with Guth v. Loft: together they supply the analytical framework and the practical limits on the corporate opportunity doctrine. The case demonstrates how to argue both sides of the Guth factors, how timing and context can be outcome-determinative, and why prudent disclosure and documentation remain best practices even when the law does not make them mandatory.
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