Electronic Arts’ Attempt to Exclude My Precatory Shareholder Proposal

Editor’s Note: This post is from Lucian Bebchuk of Harvard Law School.

Electronic Arts, Inc. recently submitted to the SEC a no-action request seeking concurrence of the SEC Staff that a shareholder proposal I submitted may be excluded from the company’s proxy materials for the 2008 annual meeting. In response to the company’s no-action request, I filed a complaint, through my counsel, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The complaint seeks, among other things, a declaratory judgment that Electronic Arts may not exclude my proposal from the company’s proxy materials and an injunction requiring the company to include the proposal.

My proposal is precatory and recommends that the board of directors submit to a shareholder vote an amendment to the company’s charter or by-laws. The suggested amendment, if adopted, could facilitate by-law amendments initiated by shareholders. In particular, the suggested amendment could require the company to submit to a shareholder vote shareholder-initiated proposals for changing the by-laws that meet certain procedural and substantive requirements. The suggested amendment could also require the company to include such proposals in the company’s proxy materials for the annual meeting.

I view my precatory proposal as rather moderate and believe that its passage and implementation could well benefit the company’s shareholders. Many shareholders, I believe, would vote for the proposal if given the opportunity to do so. I also believe that, for the reasons indicated in the complaint, the company’s attempt to exclude the proposal from the company’s proxy materials is entirely without merit. I hope that the company will change its position and allow shareholders to vote on my precatory proposal. The text of my proposal is available here, the company’s no-action request is available here, and my complaint is available here.

I would like to express my appreciation to the law firm of Grant & Eisenhofer for its invaluable legal advice and representation in this matter. I also wish to thank Greg Taxin and Julie Gresham of Spotlight Capital, and my Harvard Law School colleagues Victor Brudney, Allen Ferrell, Howell Jackson, Reinier Kraakman, and Mark Roe, for helpful comments and conversations on my shareholder proposal.

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