For those who haven't had the time and/or stamina to wade through these hefty court filings, here's a brief summary of what I've been able to piece together. I
[from
http://174.123.24.242/leagle/xmlResult.aspx?page=1&xmldoc=2001358262F3d96_1350.xml&docbase=CSLWAR2-1986-2006&SizeDisp=7]...On or about March 26, 1997, the Liquidators [..] consented to the Creditors' Committee's pursuing Commodore's claims for fraud, waste and mismanagement against the defendants, various former officers and directors of Commodore
The plantiff is listed as Commodore International itself, Commodore Electronics Ltd, and the creditors of Commodore. The defendants in this case are listed as: Irving Gould, Mehdi R. Ali, Alexander M. Haig, Jr., Ralph D. Seligman, Burton Winberg, J. Edward Goff, Hock E. Tan, Ronald B. Alexander, and Anthony D. Ricci.
So in other words, those folks Commodore owed the dosh to, as well as Commodore itself as a corporation, are suing the officers for dirty misdeeds which they 'allegedly' performed during their time at the helm of C=. Rather inconveniently for the creditors, Irving Gould passed away before this case was settled, so the claims continued on against his Estate instead. They're charging the defendants with gross mismanagement, fraud, and waste. There were two live cases on this issue being perused against the directors: the first in New York, with the other in the Bahamas. Both these cases were live as late as 2001, but from what I've been able to piece together, the case filed in New York has been dismissed on the grounds a similar case was being pursued against Commodore at the Bahamas Supreme Court. That Bahamas case is scheduled to go to trial 'late in 2011', and the creditors are suing for
$100 million in damages:
[from
http://www.oakbridgeins.com/clients/blog/commodore.pdf]Since filing for bankruptcy, Commodore and its officers and directors have been named in a variety of lawsuits in jurisdictions throughout the world. (Id. ΒΆ 39.) All of these lawsuits have been resolved except for a pending action in the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas, in which the plaintiffs seek damages in the amount of $100 million (the “Bahamas Litigation”). To date, Defendants have incurred approximately $14 million in losses as a result of the various lawsuits.
The plaintiffs in the Bahamas Litigation are seeking $100 million in damages ... Defendants have already incurred approximately $14 million in losses ... [the] trial in the Bahamas Litigation is scheduled to commence by the end of 2011
In addition, the insurance taken out by these directors - presumably meant to absolve them from having to pay out of their own pockets if they should be found guilty - isn't sufficient to fully protect them. The insurance was underwritten by a number of different firms, which each underwrote a different 'layer' of the insurance protection -- and many of those firms have now gone out of business. As a result, the court in that case has ruled that the remaining insurance firms aren't responsible for paying out any claims in the other layers, which would have been the responsibility of the bankrupt firms:
[from
http://www.oakbridgeins.com/clients/blog/commodore.pdf]At the time of its bankruptcy filing, Commodore had in place a directors and officers liability insurance tower totaling $51 million in coverage provided by six different insurance companies through nine different policies (the “Tower”)......
......In 2001, prior to Defendants’ submission of claims pursuant to the excess policies, Reliance Insurance Company (“Reliance”) was ordered into liquidation at the request of the Pennsylvania Insurance Department. Subsequently, in 2003, the Home Insurance Company (“Home Insurance”) was ordered into liquidation at the request of the New Hampshire Insurance Commissioner. Because of the insolvency of Reliance and Home Insurance, Defendants will not be reimbursed for claims filed under the first, third, and fourth-layer excess policies.
This all means that, should the directors be found guilty of fraud, waste, mismanagement, they'll probably have to cough up at least some of the damages out of their own pockets, rather than making the insurance firms pick up the tab.
And so the unresolved story of Commodore's liquidation continues... a full 17 years after that fateful day in April, 1994...