New
York, Dec 30 : Wells Fargo & Co would pay up to $2.5 million in
attorneys' fees and implement certain corporate governance changes under a
proposed settlement of lawsuits brought by shareholders on behalf of the
company, according to a securities filing by Wells.
The suits were filed
in U.S. District Court in Northern California in 2010 on behalf of Wells Fargo
and its shareholders against current and former directors and executives largely
related to conduct at Wachovia bank, which Wells bought in 2008.
The
suits claim that from 2005 to 2008 the former Wachovia defendants disregarded
"their fundamental responsibilities" with respect to Wachovia's acquisition of
mortgage lender Golden West Financial and other activities at Wachovia,
according to settlement documents. The suits also allege that Wells directors
did not pursue "valuable claims" that it inherited in the Wachovia acquisition,
according to the documents.
Wells bought Wachovia as the lender verged on
collapse due to ballooning mortgage losses and a run on its deposits. All the
defendants denied wrongdoing and filed motions to dismiss, according to the
documents.
A hearing will be held on the settlement on March 5, according
to the filing by Wells with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
governance changes include a requirement that the risk committee of the Wells
Fargo board hire an outside consultant for three years.
Under the
proposed settlement, the defendants would not make any payments to Wells Fargo
or the plaintiffs, according to the securities filing. Wells will pay any
attorneys' fees.
Ends
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Wells Fargo agrees to proposed settlement on shareholder actions
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