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Code · Pennsylvania · Title 15 — CORPORATIONS AND UNINCORPORATED ASSOCIATIONS · Chapter 33

§ 3321. Standard of conduct for directors.

679 words·~3 min read·/pa/title-15/chapter-33/3321

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§ 3321. Standard of conduct for directors.
(a)Consideration of interests.-- Without regard to whether the benefit corporation is subject to section 1715 (relating to exercise of powers generally) or 1716 (relating to alternative standard), in discharging the duties of their respective positions, the board of directors, committees of the board and individual directors of a benefit corporation, in considering the best interest of the benefit corporation:
(1)shall consider the effects of any action upon:
(i)the shareholders of the benefit corporation;
(ii)the employees and work force of the benefit corporation and its subsidiaries and suppliers;
(iii)the interests of customers as beneficiaries of the general or specific public benefit purposes of the benefit corporation;
(iv)community and societal considerations, including those of any community in which offices or facilities of the benefit corporation or its subsidiaries or suppliers are located;
(v)the local and global environment;
(vi)the short-term and long-term interests of the benefit corporation, including benefits that may accrue to the benefit corporation from its long-term plans and the possibility that these interests may be best served by the continued independence of the benefit corporation; and
(vii)the ability of the benefit corporation to accomplish its general public benefit purpose and any specific public benefit purpose; and
(2)may consider:
(i)matters listed in section 1715(a); and
(ii)any other pertinent factors or the interests of any other group that they deem appropriate; but
(3)shall not be required to give priority to any matter referred to in paragraph
(1)or
(2)over any other such matter or to regard any such matter as dominant or controlling unless the benefit corporation has stated in its articles its intention to give priority to certain interests related to its accomplishment of its general public benefit purpose or of a specific public benefit purpose identified in its articles.
(b)Coordination with other provisions of law.-- The consideration of matters in the manner required under subsection
(a)shall not constitute a violation of section 1712 (relating to standards of care, justifiable reliance and business judgment rule). A benefit corporation:
(1)shall not be subject to section 1715(a) and
(b)or section 1716(a); but
(2)shall be subject to section 1715(c),
(d)and
(e)unless its articles or bylaws provide that it is subject to section 1716, and references in section 1715(c),
(d)and
(e)to the fiduciary duty of directors or the standard set forth in section 1712 include the provisions of subsection (a).
(c)Exoneration from personal liability.-- Regardless of whether the bylaws of a benefit corporation include a provision eliminating or limiting the personal liability of directors authorized under section 1713 (relating to personal liability of directors):
(1)A director shall not be personally liable, as such, for monetary damages for any action taken as a director in the course of performing the duties specified in subsection
(a)unless the action constitutes self-dealing, willful misconduct or recklessness.
(2)A director shall not be personally liable for monetary damages for failure of the benefit corporation to pursue or create general public benefit or a specific public benefit.
(d)Limitation on standing.-- A director does not have a duty to a person that is a beneficiary of the general public benefit purpose or a specific public benefit purpose of a benefit corporation arising from the status of the person as a beneficiary.
(e)Ownership of shares.-- A director's ownership of, or other interest in, the shares of a benefit corporation does not alone create a conflict of interest on the part of the director with respect to the director's performance of the duties of a director under subsection (a), except to the extent the ownership or interest would create a conflict of interest if the corporation were not a benefit corporation.
15c3321v
(Nov. 21, 2016, P.L.1328, No.170, eff. 90 days; Nov. 3, 2022, P.L.1791, No.122, eff. 60 days)
2022 Amendment. Act 122 amended subsecs. (a)(3),
(b)and
(c)and added subsec. (e).
Cross References. Section 3321 is referred to in sections 3302, 3322, 3323 of this title.
15c3322s
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