Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB15 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/27/2025

                    89R15624 PRL-F
 By: Meyer H.B. No. 15


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to business entities.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 1.002(55-a), Business Organizations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (55-a)  "National securities exchange" means:
 (A)  an exchange registered as a national
 securities exchange under Section 6, Securities Exchange Act of
 1934 (15 U.S.C. Section 78f); or
 (B)  a stock exchange that:
 (i)  has its principal office in this state;
 and
 (ii)  has received approval by the
 securities commissioner under Subchapter C, Chapter 4005,
 Government Code.
 SECTION 2.  Subchapter B, Chapter 1, Business Organizations
 Code, is amended by adding Section 1.056 to read as follows:
 Sec. 1.056.  LAWS GOVERNING FORMATION, INTERNAL AFFAIRS, AND
 GOVERNANCE OF DOMESTIC ENTITY.  (a)  The plain meaning of the text
 of this code may not be supplanted, contravened, or modified by the
 laws or judicial decisions of any other state.
 (b)  The managerial officials of a domestic entity, in
 exercising their powers with respect to the domestic entity, may
 consider the laws and judicial decisions of other states and the
 practices observed by entities formed in those other states.  The
 failure or refusal of a managerial official to consider, or to
 conform the exercise of the managerial official's powers to, the
 laws, judicial decisions, or practices of another state does not
 constitute or imply a breach of this code or of any duty existing
 under the laws of this state.
 SECTION 3.  Section 2.115(b), Business Organizations Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b)  The governing documents of a domestic entity [may
 require], consistent with applicable state and federal
 jurisdictional requirements, may require:
 (1)  that any internal entity claims shall be brought
 only in a court in this state; and
 (2)  that one or more courts in this state having
 jurisdiction shall serve as the exclusive forum and venue for any
 internal entity claims.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter B, Chapter 2, Business Organizations
 Code, is amended by adding Section 2.116 to read as follows:
 Sec. 2.116.  WAIVER OF TRIAL BY JURY. (a)  In this section,
 "internal entity claim" has the meaning assigned by Section 2.115.
 (b)  The governing documents of a domestic entity may contain
 an enforceable waiver of the right to a jury trial concerning any
 internal entity claim, regardless of whether the applicable
 governing document is signed by the members, owners, officers, or
 governing persons.
 (c)  A waiver of jury trial in the governing documents of a
 domestic entity shall be a knowing and informed waiver of a person
 who:
 (1)  voted for or affirmatively ratified the governing
 document containing the waiver;
 (2)  acquired an equity security of the domestic entity
 at a time at which the waiver was included in the governing
 documents; or
 (3)  is otherwise shown by evidence satisfactory to an
 appropriate court to have knowingly and informedly consented or
 acquiesced to the waiver.
 SECTION 5.  Section 4.051, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 4.051.  GENERAL RULE.  (a)  A filing instrument
 submitted to the secretary of state takes effect on filing, except
 as permitted by Section 4.052 or as provided by the provisions of
 this code that apply to the entity making the filing or other law.
 (b)  Subject to Subsection (c), a revised filing instrument,
 curing the deficiencies in the initial rejected filing instrument
 identified by the secretary of state, is considered filed as of the
 date of the delivery to the secretary of state of the initial
 rejected filing instrument and takes effect as specified in this
 subchapter if the revised filing instrument:
 (1)  is delivered to the secretary of state not later
 than the 10th business day following the date on which the notice of
 rejection is mailed by the secretary of state;
 (2)  is found to be acceptable by the secretary of
 state; and
 (3)  is the first revised filing instrument.
 (c)  Subsection (b) applies to a filing instrument that
 creates or forms a new domestic entity or amends the name of an
 existing domestic entity only if:
 (1)  the name of the new domestic entity or the amended
 name of the existing domestic entity, as applicable, was reserved
 under Subchapter C, Chapter 5, or was registered under Subchapter
 D, Chapter 5, with the secretary of state by or on behalf of the
 filer on or before the date the initial rejected filing instrument
 is delivered to the secretary of state; and
 (2)  the name reservation or registration remains in
 effect at least until the revised filing instrument delivered to
 the secretary of state under Subsection (b) takes effect.
 SECTION 6.  Section 21.218, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (b-2) and
 (b-3) to read as follows:
 (b)  On written demand stating a proper purpose, a holder of
 shares of a corporation for at least six months immediately
 preceding the holder's demand, or a holder of at least five percent
 of all of the outstanding shares of a corporation, is entitled to
 examine and copy, at a reasonable time at the corporation's
 principal place of business or other location approved by the
 corporation and the holder, the corporation's books, records of
 account, minutes, share transfer records, and other records,
 whether in written or other tangible form, if the records are
 [record is] reasonably related to and appropriate to examine and
 copy for that proper purpose.  For purposes of this subsection, the
 records of the corporation shall not include e-mails, text messages
 or similar electronic communications, or information from social
 media accounts unless the particular e-mail, communication, or
 social media information affects an action by the corporation.
 (b-2)  This subsection applies only to a corporation that has
 a class or series of voting shares listed on a national securities
 exchange or that has made an affirmative election to be governed by
 Section 21.419.  For purposes of Subsection (b), a written demand
 shall not be for a proper purpose if the corporation reasonably
 determines that the demand is in connection with:
 (1)  an active or pending derivative proceeding in the
 right of the corporation under Subchapter L that is or is expected
 to be instituted or maintained by the holder or the holder's
 affiliate; or
 (2)  an active or pending civil lawsuit to which the
 corporation, or its affiliate, and the holder, or the holder's
 affiliate, are or are expected to be adversarial named parties.
 (b-3)  Subsection (b-2) does not impair any rights of:
 (1)  the holder or the holder's affiliate to obtain
 discovery of records from the corporation in:
 (A)  a civil lawsuit described by Subsection
 (b-2)(2); or
 (B)  the derivative proceeding subject to Section
 21.556; or
 (2)  the holder to obtain a court order to compel
 production of records of the corporation for examination by the
 holder as provided by Subsection (c).
 SECTION 7.  Section 21.416, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
 (g)  This subsection applies only to a corporation that has a
 class or series of voting shares listed on a national securities
 exchange or that has made an affirmative election to be governed by
 Section 21.419.  The board of directors may adopt resolutions that
 authorize the formation of a committee of independent and
 disinterested directors to review and approve transactions,
 whether or not contemplated at the time of the committee's
 formation or a petition under Section 21.4161, involving the
 corporation or any of its subsidiaries and a controlling
 shareholder, director, or officer.
 SECTION 8.  Subchapter I, Chapter 21, Business Organizations
 Code, is amended by adding Section 21.4161 to read as follows:
 Sec. 21.4161.  DETERMINATION OF INDEPENDENT AND
 DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS. (a)  A corporation that adopts a
 resolution to authorize the formation of a committee of independent
 and disinterested directors under Section 21.416(g) may petition a
 court having appropriate jurisdiction to hold an evidentiary
 hearing to determine whether the directors appointed to the
 committee are independent and disinterested with respect to any
 transactions involving the corporation or any of its subsidiaries
 and a controlling shareholder, director, or officer.
 (b)  In the petition, the corporation shall designate legal
 counsel to act on behalf of the corporation and its shareholders,
 other than the controlling shareholder, director, or officer
 involved in the transaction, and shall give notice to the
 shareholders of the designated counsel and the petition.
 (c)  If the corporation has a class of its shares listed on a
 national securities exchange, the notice required by Subsection (b)
 may be provided through the filing of a current report with the
 United States Securities and Exchange Commission in accordance with
 the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C.
 Section 78 et seq.), and any rules promulgated under that Act.
 (d)  Promptly after receiving a petition, and not earlier
 than the 10th day after the date the notice required under
 Subsection (b) is given, the court shall hold a preliminary hearing
 to determine the appropriate legal counsel to represent the
 corporation and its shareholders, other than the controlling
 shareholder, director, or officer involved in the transaction,
 whether or not the same as the legal counsel identified in the
 petition. Any other legal counsel representing a shareholder,
 other than the controlling shareholder, director, or officer
 involved in the transaction, may participate in the hearing to
 request designation by the court as the appropriate legal counsel.
 (e)  After the court determines the appropriate legal
 counsel under Subsection (d), the court shall promptly hold an
 evidentiary hearing as to whether the directors on the committee
 are independent and disinterested with respect to transactions
 involving the corporation or any of its subsidiaries and a
 controlling shareholder, director, or officer. The appropriate
 legal counsel determined under Subsection (d) and legal counsel for
 the corporation may participate in the hearing.  After hearing and
 reviewing the evidence presented, the court shall make its
 determination as to whether the directors on the committee are
 independent and disinterested.
 (f)  The court's determination that the directors are
 independent and disinterested under Subsection (e) shall be
 dispositive in the absence of facts, not presented to the court,
 constituting evidence sufficient to prove that one or more of those
 directors is not independent and disinterested with respect to a
 particular transaction involving the corporation or any of its
 subsidiaries and a controlling shareholder, director, or officer.
 SECTION 9.  Section 21.418, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (f) to read as follows:
 (f)  This subsection applies only to a corporation that has a
 class or series of voting shares listed on a national securities
 exchange or has made an affirmative election to be governed by
 Section 21.419.  Regardless of whether the conditions of Subsection
 (b) are satisfied, neither the corporation nor any of the
 corporation's shareholders will have a cause of action against any
 director or officer for breach of duty with respect to the making,
 authorization, or performance of the contract or transaction
 because the director or officer had the relationship or interest
 described by Subsection (a) or took any of the actions authorized by
 Subsection (d) unless the cause of action is permitted by Section
 21.419.
 SECTION 10.  Subchapter I, Chapter 21, Business
 Organizations Code, is amended by adding Section 21.419 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 21.419.  PRESUMPTIONS FOR DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS OF
 CERTAIN CORPORATIONS. (a)  This section applies only to a
 corporation that has:
 (1)  a class or series of voting shares listed on a
 national securities exchange; or
 (2)  included in its governing documents a statement
 affirmatively electing to be governed by this section.
 (b)  In taking or declining to take any action on any matters
 of a corporation's business, a director or officer is presumed to
 act:
 (1)  in good faith;
 (2)  on an informed basis;
 (3)  in furtherance of the interests of the
 corporation; and
 (4)  in obedience to the law and the corporation's
 governing documents.
 (c)  Neither a corporation nor any of the corporation's
 shareholders has a cause of action against a director or officer of
 the corporation as a result of any act or omission in the person's
 capacity as a director or officer unless:
 (1)  the claimant rebuts one or more of the
 presumptions established by Subsection (b); and
 (2)  it is proven by the claimant that:
 (A)  the director's or officer's act or omission
 constituted a breach of one or more of the person's duties as a
 director or officer; and
 (B)  the breach involved fraud, intentional
 misconduct, an ultra vires act, or a knowing violation of law.
 (d)  The presumptions established by this section:
 (1)  are in addition to any legal presumption arising
 under common law or this code, in favor of any managerial official
 of a corporation to which this section applies; and
 (2)  do not abrogate, preempt, or lessen any other
 defense, presumption, immunity, or privilege under other
 constitutional, statutory, case, or common law or rule provisions,
 in favor of any managerial official of any domestic entity,
 including any corporation to which this section does not apply.
 (e)  In alleging fraud, intentional misconduct, an ultra
 vires act, or a knowing violation of the law under Subsection
 (c)(2)(B), a party must state with particularity the circumstances
 constituting the fraud, intentional misconduct, ultra vires act, or
 knowing violation of law.
 (f)  This section does not limit the effect of a provision
 contained in the certificate of formation or similar instrument of
 a corporation limiting monetary liability of a governing person as
 permitted by Section 7.001.
 SECTION 11.  Section 21.551(2), Business Organizations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (2)  "Shareholder" includes:
 (A)  a shareholder as defined by Section 1.002;
 (B)  [or] a beneficial owner whose shares are held
 in a voting trust or by a nominee on the beneficial owner's behalf;
 or
 (C)  two or more shareholders acting in concert
 under an informal or formal agreement or understanding with respect
 to a derivative proceeding.
 SECTION 12.  Section 21.552(a), Business Organizations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Subject to Subsection (b), a shareholder may not
 institute or maintain a derivative proceeding unless:
 (1)  the shareholder:
 (A)  was a shareholder of the corporation at the
 time of the act or omission complained of; or
 (B)  became a shareholder by operation of law
 originating from a person that was a shareholder at the time of the
 act or omission complained of; [and]
 (2)  the shareholder fairly and adequately represents
 the interests of the corporation in enforcing the right of the
 corporation; and
 (3)  for a corporation with common shares listed on a
 national securities exchange or that has made an affirmative
 election to be governed by Section 21.419, at the time the
 derivative proceeding is instituted, the shareholder beneficially
 owns a number of the common shares sufficient to meet the required
 ownership threshold to institute a derivative proceeding in the
 right of the corporation identified in the corporation's
 certificate of formation or bylaws, provided that the required
 ownership threshold does not exceed three percent of the
 outstanding shares of the corporation.
 SECTION 13.  Section 21.554, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (c), (d),
 (e), and (f) to read as follows:
 (b)  The court shall appoint a panel under Subsection (a)(3)
 if the court determines [finds] that the individuals recommended by
 the corporation are independent and disinterested and are otherwise
 qualified with respect to expertise, experience, independent
 judgment, and other factors considered appropriate by the court
 under the circumstances to make the determinations.  An individual
 appointed by the court to a panel under this section may not be held
 liable to the corporation or the corporation's shareholders for an
 action taken or omission made by the individual in that capacity,
 except for an act or omission constituting fraud or wilful
 misconduct.
 (c)  Before the corporation's determination of how to
 proceed on the allegations under Subsection (a), the corporation
 may petition the court in which the derivative proceeding has been
 instituted, or a court having proper jurisdiction if no derivative
 proceeding has been instituted, to request a determination as to
 whether the directors identified or appointed under Subsection
 (a)(1) or (2) are independent and disinterested with respect to the
 allegations made in the demand.
 (d)  For purposes of Subsection (c), if a derivative
 proceeding was not instituted, the corporation must promptly
 deliver a copy of the petition to the shareholder making the demand
 who will have the right, if promptly exercised, to challenge the
 petition before the court makes its determination.
 (e)  After hearing and reviewing the evidence presented, the
 court shall make its determination as to whether the directors are
 independent and disinterested.
 (f)  A court's determination that the directors or
 individuals are independent and disinterested under this section
 shall be dispositive in the absence of discovery of facts, not
 presented to the court, constituting evidence sufficient to prove
 that one or more of those directors or individuals are not
 independent and disinterested.
 SECTION 14.  Section 21.561, Business Organizations Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
 (c)  For purposes of Subsection (b), a substantial benefit to
 the corporation does not include additional or amended disclosures
 made to the shareholders, regardless of materiality.
 SECTION 15.  Section 21.562(a), Business Organizations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In a derivative proceeding brought in the right of a
 foreign corporation, the matters covered by this subchapter are
 governed by the laws of the jurisdiction of formation of the foreign
 corporation, except for Sections 21.555, 21.560, and 21.561, which
 with respect to foreign corporations are procedural provisions and
 do not relate to the internal affairs of the foreign corporation,
 unless applying the laws of the jurisdiction of formation of the
 foreign corporation requires otherwise with respect to Section
 21.555.
 SECTION 16.  (a)  Section 4.051, Business Organizations
 Code, as amended by this Act, applies only to a filing instrument
 submitted to the secretary of state on or after the effective date
 of this Act. A filing instrument submitted to the secretary of
 state before the effective date of this Act is governed by the law
 in effect on the date the filing instrument was submitted, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 (b)  Sections 21.552(a) and 21.561, Business Organizations
 Code, as amended by this Act, apply only to a derivative proceeding
 instituted on or after the effective date of this Act.  A derivative
 proceeding instituted before the effective date of this Act is
 governed by the law in effect on the date the proceeding was
 instituted, and the former law is continued in effect for that
 purpose.
 SECTION 17.  This Act takes effect immediately if it
 receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
 house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.
 If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
 effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2025.