Wal-Mart loses bid to keep documents on bribery probe from shareholder


The Delaware Supreme Court affirmed on Wednesday a lower court ruling that ordered Wal-Mart Stores Inc to provide a shareholder with documents related to the company's internal probe of allegations the retailer had paid bribes in Mexico.

The story also said Wal-Mart leaders rejected an investigator's recommendation to expand the investigation and instead covered it up. Wal-Mart is under investigation by US and Mexican authorities who are trying to determine if crimes were committed.

Wal-Mart spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said the ruling was procedural and did not address the merits of the allegations. "The allegations against the company have been the subject of an ongoing, thorough internal investigation that has not yet reached final conclusion," she said.

The shareholder's attorney, Stuart Grant of Grant & Eisenhofer, said the ruling resolved significant legal issues. "We are very pleased with the result. After almost two years we eagerly await these documents and the truth they will reveal," he said.

The Indiana Electrical Workers Pension Trust Fund IBEW exercised its right as a stockholder in 2012 to demand company provide documents related to the bribery probe. Eventually a dispute over information requested led the trust to sue in Delaware, where Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart is incorporated. Wal-Mart appealed a ruling by then-Chancellor Leo Strine in 2013 ordering the retailer to provide seven years of documents, including some never reviewed by the board and others Wal-Mart said were subject to attorney-client privilege.

The Delaware Supreme Court's unanimous ruling rejected Wal-Mart's arguments and said in a 39-page opinion that certain lower-ranking officials had a "reporting relationship" to members of the board, making their communications relevant.

In addition, the Supreme Court held that the attorney-client privilege could not protect information if the documents are essential to proving a breach of fiduciary duties.

Books-and-records requests like the one by the pension trust often lead to a shareholder filing what is known as a derivative lawsuit. In such cases, a shareholder sues the board on behalf of the corporation to recover damages caused by directors acting in their own interests.

Successful derivative cases often result in corporate governance changes rather than monetary damages that are more common in successful securities class actions. - Reuters

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