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Featured researches published by Sean J. Griffith.


Texas Law Review | 2015

Confronting the Peppercorn Settlement in Merger Litigation: An Empirical Analysis and a Proposal for Reform

Jill E. Fisch; Sean J. Griffith; Steven Davidoff Solomon

Shareholder litigation challenging corporate mergers is ubiquitous, with the likelihood of a shareholder suit exceeding 90%. The value of this litigation, however, is questionable. The vast majority of merger cases settle for nothing more than supplemental disclosures in the merger proxy statement. The attorneys that bring these lawsuits are compensated for their efforts with a court-awarded fee. This leads critics to charge that merger litigation benefits only the lawyers who bring the claims, not the shareholders they represent. In response, defenders of merger litigation argue that the lawsuits serve a useful oversight function and that the improved disclosures that result are beneficial to shareholders.This Article offers a new approach to assessing the value of these claims by empirically testing the relationship between merger litigation and shareholder voting on the merger. If the supplemental disclosures produced by the settlement of merger litigation are valuable, they should affect shareholder voting behavior. Specifically, supplemental disclosures that are, in effect, “compelled” by settlement should produce new and unfavorable information about the merger and lead to a lower percentage of shares voted in favor of it. Applying this hypothesis to a hand-collected sample of 453 large public company mergers from 2005-2012, we find no such effect. We find no significant evidence that disclosure-only settlements affect shareholder voting.These findings warrant a reconsideration of Delaware merger law. Specifically, under current law, supplemental disclosures are viewed by courts as providing a substantial benefit to the shareholder class. In turn, this substantial benefit entitles the plaintiffs’ lawyers to an award of attorneys’ fees. Our evidence suggests that this legal analysis is misguided and that supplemental disclosures do not in fact constitute a substantial benefit. As a result, and in light of the substantial costs generated by public company merger litigation, we argue that courts should reject disclosure settlements as a basis for attorney fee awards.Our approach responds to critiques of merger litigation as excessive and frivolous by reducing the incentive for plaintiffs’ lawyers to bring weak cases, but it would have an additional benefit. Current practice drags state court judges into the task of indirectly promulgating disclosure standards in connection with the approval of fee awards. We argue, instead, for a more efficient specialization between state and federal courts in the regulation of mergers: public company merger disclosure should be policed by the federal securities laws while state corporate law focuses on substantive fairness.


University of Chicago Law Review | 2006

Predicting Corporate Governance Risk: Evidence from the Directors' & Officers' Liability Insurance Market

Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


Georgetown Law Journal | 2006

The Missing Monitor in Corporate Governance: The Directors' & Officers' Liability Insurer

Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


Archive | 2010

Ensuring corporate misconduct : how liability insurance undermines shareholder litigation

Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


University of Pennsylvania Law Review | 2006

Uncovering a Gatekeeper: Why the SEC Should Mandate Disclosure of Details concerning Directors' and Officers' Liability Insurance Policies

Sean J. Griffith


Journal of Empirical Legal Studies | 2012

Predicting Securities Fraud Settlements and Amounts: A Hierarchical Bayesian Model of Federal Securities Class Action Lawsuits

Blakeley B. McShane; Oliver P. Watson; Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


University of Pennsylvania Law Review | 2008

How the Merits Matter: Directors' and Officers' Insurance and Securities Settlements

Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


Archive | 2008

How the Merits Matter: D&O Insurance and Securities Settlements

Tom Baker; Sean J. Griffith


Duke Law Journal | 2005

Good Faith Business Judgment: A Theory of Rhetoric in Corporate Law Jurisprudence

Sean J. Griffith


Brooklyn law review | 2004

Spinning and Underpricing: A Legal and Economic Analysis of the Preferential Allocation of Shares in Initial Public Offerings

Sean J. Griffith

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Tom Baker

University of Pennsylvania

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Jill E. Fisch

University of Pennsylvania

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Matthew D. Cain

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

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