George Mannes

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Disney Settlement Doubles as Flashback

12/20/04 - 01:31 PM EST

DIS

George Mannes

It's official: Disney (DIS - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) directors have a lot less leeway than they used to.

On Monday, Disney settled a Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement action arising from charges that Disney failed to disclose certain related-party transactions between the company and its directors, and didn't disclose certain compensation paid to a director.

The settlement carries no fine or other penalty. Disney agreed to cease and desist from violating federal securities laws pertaining to proxy solicitation and periodic reporting.

Nearly all the directors at issue are no longer on the company's board, and Disney has spent much of the year tightening its corporate governance standards. Still, the settlement serves to remind investors of the accusations of clubbiness and worse that for many years nipped at the heels of CEO Michael Eisner.

A Disney spokesman declined to comment on the settlement Monday.

Disney's shares, which have climbed steadily from an August low of $20.88, dropped 3 cents Monday to trade at $27.34.

Along with the Delaware trial revolving around agent Mike Ovitz's ill-fated employment by Disney in the mid-1990s, Monday's news serves as one more sign that Disney's presidency and board of directors isn't quite as imperial as it used to be.

At issue in the settlement were Disney's previously publicized failures to disclose certain financial ties to directors -- ties that in some cases cast doubt on certain board members' status as independent directors.

From 1999 through 2001, the adult children of three Disney board members -- Stanley Gold, Reveta Bowers and Raymond Watson -- were employed by Disney, receiving compensation in excess of $60,000, the threshold amount under securities law requiring Disney to disclose employment. Disney didn't disclose employment until August 2002.

The wife of another director, John Bryson, earned more than $1 million annually working for a company 50% owned by Disney. Bryson joined Disney's board in September 2000, but his wife's employment wasn't disclosed until August 2002.

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