DOVER, Del. — A Delaware judge on Wednesday approved a $139 million cash settlement between News Corp. and shareholders in a lawsuit over the British phone hacking scandal and the media conglomerate's purchase of an entertainment company run by News Corp. founder Rupert Murdoch's daughter.
The settlement approved by Vice-Chancellor John Noble brings an end to a lawsuit in which shareholders alleged that News Corp. directors, in blind deference to Murdoch, ignored several red flags about the extent of the hacking. The shareholders alleged that the directors failed to act until the scandal exploded in 2011 after British authorities reopened an investigation into the Murdoch-owned tabloid News of the World.
The damaging financial fallout included the folding of the best-selling News of the World after 168 years and News Corp. being pressured to withdraw a $12 billion takeover bid for satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC.
The plaintiffs also alleged that News Corp. directors breached their fiduciary duties to shareholders by acquiescing to Murdoch's decision to buy Shine Group, a television production company controlled by his daughter Elisabeth, at an allegedly inflated price of more than $600 million.
Defense attorneys rejected the allegations, and the company, which is based in New York but incorporated in Delaware, settled the case without admitting any wrongdoing.
Plaintiffs' attorney Jay Eisenhofer told Noble that the settlement was one that his clients were "enthusiastic to support."
Attorneys said the cash settlement is the largest in a shareholder derivative lawsuit, in which stockholders file suit on behalf of a company against its corporate leaders.
"It's the largest cash derivative settlement that I've ever seen," Noble said.