By Tom Hals
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - Big pension funds
have been fighting for years to hold Wal-Mart's board of directors
liable for covering up a purported bribery scandal in Mexico.
The
outcome of the case turns in part on an unusual question: if a top
judge offers unsolicited legal advice to plaintiffs, is it negligent to
ignore it?
The case stems from an investigation by The New York Times in 2012 over allegations that Wal-Mart Stores Inc (N:WMT), the largest U.S. retailer, covered up $24 million in bribes paid by its Mexican subsidiary to build stores.
A federal investigation is underway, and Wal-Mart has said it is cooperating with authorities.
California
State Teachers' Retirement System, or CalSTRS, and New York City
pension funds sued Wal-Mart in Delaware, where the retailer is
incorporated, with allegations that the board members failed to
investigate the bribery, which Wal-Mart has denied. The funds brought
what is known as a derivative lawsuit, and typical of such cases, the
funds are seeking governance changes.
Earlier this year, a nearly identical case in Arkansas was dismissed for procedural reasons.
Wal-Mart
on Thursday asked the Delaware court to dismiss the pension fund case,
saying it would be unfair for the retailer to face the allegations
twice.
The pension funds' lawyer, Stuart Grant, countered that
the funds should not be bound by the Arkansas case, which he claimed was
so poorly handled it amounted to negligence.
Grant reminded the
court on Thursday that the first judge to handle the Delaware case had
warned shareholders they would lose without a thorough investigation
first. The Delaware shareholders heeded the warning and have spent three
years fighting for documents, and the Arkansas shareholders did not.
Delaware law applied in both cases.
"One of the top jurists is
telling people you're foolish to move forward with that case in
Arkansas," said Delaware Court of Chancery's chief judge, Andre
Bouchard, at Thursday's hearing. Bouchard asked Wal-Mart's lawyer: "Why
isn't that grossly deficient?"
Theodore Boutrous, the lawyer for
Wal-Mart, argued that qualified lawyers handled the Arkansas case, which
he said was dismissed because Wal-Mart's board acted properly.
Leo
Strine was originally assigned to the Delaware case. He was later
promoted to the Delaware Supreme Court and Bouchard took over the
Wal-Mart case.
Strine had warned in a July 2012 hearing
that a case against Wal-Mart would fail if shareholders did not make
targeted allegations that some board members knew of the bribery scheme
and concealed it.
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