Antelope Valley Press

Meta attorneys ask judge to dismiss suit

- By RANDALL CHASE AP Business Writer

WILMINGTON, Del. — Attorneys for Meta and Mark Zuckerberg asked a Delaware judge on Wednesday to dismiss a shareholde­r lawsuit asserting novel claims about the roles of corporate leaders and arguing that the loyalties of Meta directors should not lie exclusivel­y with the social media giant.

James McRitchie, who runs a website focused on corporate governance and shareholde­r activism, argues that Meta’s directors have breached their duties to the company by putting profits over broader societal and economic interests, including Meta shareholde­rs’ investment­s in other companies.

While Delaware law requires corporate directors to act as fiduciarie­s in the best interests of their stockholde­rs, including maximizing the value of their shares, attorneys for McRitchie argue that Delaware courts should recognize a “portfolio theory” of corporate governance that takes into account external factors.

They argue, for example, that Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp, has prioritize­d profits while downplayin­g the detrimenta­l effects of its products on society and the global economy. That, in turn, can negatively affect the investment portfolios of Meta shareholde­rs who also have invested in other companies, they contend.

“What we’re saying is that (board) decisions should look at the overall portfolio considerat­ion,” attorney Kurt Heyman, who was peppered with questions during a lengthy backand-forth discussion with Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster.

Among the ills the lawsuit blames on Meta’s social media platforms are mental health problems among young Instagram users, online human traffickin­g, “vaccine hesitancy,” incitement­s to violence and harassment, misleading or false political ads, and “election misinforma­tion.”

“If the decisions that maximize the company’s long-term cash flows also imperil the rule of law or public health, the portfolios of its diversifie­d stockholde­rs are likely to be financiall­y harmed by those decisions,” McRitchie’s complaint states.

Attorneys for Meta say McRitchie’s claims fly in the face of decades of Delaware corporate law and should be dismissed with prejudice. In their motion to dismiss, they note that, under Delaware law, corporate directors have no duty to consider or protect a stockholde­r’s investment­s in other companies. While directors of a corporatio­n have the discretion under Delaware’s “business judgment” rule to consider broader constituen­cies beyond their shareholde­r base when making decisions, they have no obligation to do so, they add.

“The plaintiff’s claims are antithetic­al to core foundation­s of Delaware law,” Meta attorney James Kramer told Laster.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States