NRS78.138. Directors and officers: Exercise of powers; performance of duties; presumptions and considerations; liability to corporation and stockholders.  


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  •       1.  Directors and officers shall exercise their powers in good faith and with a view to the interests of the corporation.

          2.  In performing their respective duties, directors and officers are entitled to rely on information, opinions, reports, books of account or statements, including financial statements and other financial data, that are prepared or presented by:

          (a) One or more directors, officers or employees of the corporation reasonably believed to be reliable and competent in the matters prepared or presented;

          (b) Counsel, public accountants, financial advisers, valuation advisers, investment bankers or other persons as to matters reasonably believed to be within the preparer’s or presenter’s professional or expert competence; or

          (c) A committee on which the director or officer relying thereon does not serve, established in accordance with NRS 78.125, as to matters within the committee’s designated authority and matters on which the committee is reasonably believed to merit confidence,

    Ê but a director or officer is not entitled to rely on such information, opinions, reports, books of account or statements if the director or officer has knowledge concerning the matter in question that would cause reliance thereon to be unwarranted.

          3.  Directors and officers, in deciding upon matters of business, are presumed to act in good faith, on an informed basis and with a view to the interests of the corporation.

          4.  Directors and officers, in exercising their respective powers with a view to the interests of the corporation, may consider:

          (a) The interests of the corporation’s employees, suppliers, creditors and customers;

          (b) The economy of the State and Nation;

          (c) The interests of the community and of society; and

          (d) The long-term as well as short-term interests of the corporation and its stockholders, including the possibility that these interests may be best served by the continued independence of the corporation.

          5.  Directors and officers are not required to consider the effect of a proposed corporate action upon any particular group having an interest in the corporation as a dominant factor.

          6.  The provisions of subsections 4 and 5 do not create or authorize any causes of action against the corporation or its directors or officers.

          7.  Except as otherwise provided in NRS 35.230, 90.660, 91.250, 452.200, 452.270, 668.045 and 694A.030, or unless the articles of incorporation or an amendment thereto, in each case filed on or after October 1, 2003, provide for greater individual liability, a director or officer is not individually liable to the corporation or its stockholders or creditors for any damages as a result of any act or failure to act in his or her capacity as a director or officer unless it is proven that:

          (a) The director’s or officer’s act or failure to act constituted a breach of his or her fiduciary duties as a director or officer; and

          (b) The breach of those duties involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law.

      (Added to NRS by 1991, 1184; A 1993, 951; 1999, 1580; 2001, 3171; 2003, 3084)