In my latest ethics column for The Bencher, the national publication for the American Inns of Court, I highlight here a recent unpublished decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that reversed a decision of a trial judge imposing penalties on lawyers admitted pro hac vice, as well as others, for allegedly impugning the trial judge’s character. The appellate court also required that another judge hear the case on remand.

A special feature of the article is a link to a compilation prepared by the former chief counsel for the Office of Disciplinary Counsel, an arm of the Delaware Supreme Court, of decisions and private ethics rulings in Delaware regarding standards for lawyers admitted pro hac vice. That compilation is available here.

Scully v. Nighthawk Radiology Holdings, Inc., C.A. No. 5890-VCL (Mar. 11, 2011)(Report of Special Counsel). This Report concluded that there was neither forum shopping nor collusive behavior in the settlement of a class action related to the $170 million merger of Nighthawk Radiology and Virtual Radiologic Corporation.

Issues Addressed (as quoted from the Special Counsel’s Report):

1. Is forum-shopping for purposes of securing an advantageous settlement a wrong under existing law, taking into account Prezant v. De Angelis, 636 A.2d 915 (Del. 1994), and other authorities? What is (or should be) the standard for determining when a settlement is collusive?

2. What role, if any, should the disfavored forum (here, the Court of Chancery) have when it receives notice of what appears to be a collusive
settlement?

3. My principal concern has been that, given the manner in which representative action settlements typically are presented, the court in the favored forum (here, the Arizona Superior Court) would not have reason to learn about (i) forum shopping efforts or (ii) prior adverse rulings or commentary by the court in the disfavored forum. Is this concern valid and, if so, how should it be addressed?

4. Lawyers are the repeat players in the multi-jurisdictional litigation process. What remedy, if any, should there be if counsel is found to have engaged in a collusive settlement? Should the pro hac vice status of forwarding counsel be revoked? Should the revocation go beyond the civil action relating to the collusive settlement? If Delaware counsel participates in a collusive settlement, what action should be taken?

5. How should the answers to the foregoing questions be applied to the facts
of this case? 

Procedural Setting

The Delaware Court of Chancery appointed a Special Counsel to address the above issues "from the point of view of Delaware and the public interest". If not sui generis,  the appointment of a Special Counsel in this context is unusual for corporate litigation in Delaware, and may be compared in the world of corporate law, in an academic sense, with the unfortunate tremors experienced in Japan a few days ago. The genesis of the Special Counsel’s decision was a status conference in December, held in the Court of Chancery in connection with the approval of a class action lawsuit in Arizona. The status conference was memorialized in a transcript ruling here. The class action involved in this matter related to the merger of Nighthawk Radiology and Virtual Radiologic Corp. The Court of Chancery raised issues sua sponte about a possible "reverse auction" and the exploitation of several cases pending in multiple forums (or fora). The Court of Chancery was concerned about whether a settlement reached in a related Arizona case was intended to avoid the scrutiny of the Delaware Court and if there was pressure for the Delaware counsel to join the Arizona settlement or "lose out on fees."

The Special Counsel’s Report (the "Report")

The Special Counsel appointed by the Court of Chancery in this matter was the highly-regarded veteran corporate litigator Gregory P. Williams of Richards Layton and Finger in Wilmington. The Report was filed with the Court two days ago in the form of a "Brief of Special Counsel" authored by the Special Counsel and Richards Layton associate Blake Rohrbacher. Their 42-page magnum opus is available here. Likely to be as widely read as a major decision from the court, it includes a reference to many transcript rulings from the Court of Chancery in recent cases. Transcript rulings are often cited in briefs to the Court of Chancery in corporate litigation. An index to the voluminous Compendium of transcript rulings referred to in the brief is available here, and the actual Compendium of transcript rulings (weighing in a 627-pages) is available here.

Short Overview of the Special Counsel’s Report

The AmLaw Daily blog has a short post that provides a brief synopsis of the Special Counsel’s brief, which we refer to as the Report, here.  According to The AmLaw Daily, the stakes involved in the outcome of the Report included at least one lawyer’s continuing ability to "litigate in the country’s most important business court" as well as "the rules and guidelines for plaintiffs’ and defense lawyers litigating a swell of merger-related class actions." This momentous Report could easily stimulate a long commentary the length of a typical law review article, but the goal here is much more modest. I will attempt merely to highlight a few of the key aspects of the Report and encourage readers to make time to read the entire document linked above. It is truly "must reading" for anyone interested in the latest developments in Delaware law on this topic.

The Special Counsel describes the three-part background of the Report, before he addresses the issues listed above, as follows: 

First the brief discusses forum-shopping in the context of multi-jurisdictional class actions, including the “reverse auction” phenomenon, in which plaintiffs’ counsel are said to underbid each other to settle with defendants and secure higher attorneys’ fees. Next, the brief discusses the effects of the “settlement class” procedure, in which the Court does not certify a class until the settlement is approved. Then, the brief addresses the Court’s review of settlements, particularly those involving issues of potential collusion.

Forum Shopping

Regarding the topic of forum-shopping in the context of multi-jurisdictional class actions, the Report quotes from a recent Chancery transcript ruling as follows:

"Plaintiffs gain some leverage by filing deal litigation in multiple courts. As this Court has recognized, plaintiffs’ lawyers may choose multiple forums to gain advantage in the contest for lead counsel status; they also do so to force defendants to engage with their individual suits.See, e.g., In re Compellent Techs., Inc. S’holder Litig., C.A. No. 6084-VCL, at 20 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 2011) (TRANSCRIPT) (“[W]hen everybody is filing in the same forum, you’re not guaranteed to get control of a case. But if you then go and file in another forum, you do have control of that case and then the defendants have to deal with you. You may get control of the entire action but, at a minimum, you get control of a piece of the litigation for purposes of the fee negotiations.”)."  Report at 2.

The Report also cites to the duty of an attorney to zealously represent her client as required by the Rules of Professional Conduct, as a consideration in determining the best forum in which to file suit. See also Delaware Principles of Professionalism at A(4).

Related to the discussion of forum-shopping in corporate litigation, is the increased attention given by scholars and practitioners to non-Delaware courts deciding issues of Delaware law–perhaps due to the aversion that some plaintiffs may have to the greater scrutiny they might find in Delaware. See, e.g., Professor Larry Ribstein’s discussion of this topic and the related issue of jurisdictional competition, available here. See also the discussion available here, of a related article by Professors John Armour, Bernard Black and Brian Cheffins. Also notable is the analysis by Professor Joseph Grundfest here and Professor Stephen Bainbridge’s discussion here of a somewhat related issue of "choice of forum provisions" in bylaws and corporate charters. See also the draft article by Professor Brian Quinn here about plaintiffs bringing Delaware-law based claims in non-Delaware courts.

The Special Counsel concludes that: "… forum-shopping for purposes of securing an advantageous settlement is not an independent wrong under existing Delaware law. That is, such forum-shopping should not be equated with a collusive settlement".

Collusion

After a review of the leading commentary by scholars as well as court decisions from around the country, the Special Counsel formulated the following definition:

a collusive settlement in the context of stockholder deal litigation appears to involve, at its core, an explicit or implicit agreement between counsel for plaintiffs and counsel for defendants to require less consideration for the settling class in exchange for (1) exclusive dealings with particular plaintiffs’ counsel and/or (2) more consideration for plaintiffs’ counsel.  Factors that should give rise to heightened scrutiny for collusiveness include the following: settlement consideration disproportionately weak in comparison to the strength of the claims asserted; settlement with a plaintiff’s firm that typically does not litigate aggressively when other, more formidable, firms are involved in the litigation; and an agreement to pay attorneys’ fees significantly higher than are typical given the settlement consideration.  Report at 26-27.

The Report explains with detailed reasoning why there was no collusion based on the facts of this case. Advice on best practices is also provided for those involved in multi-jurisdictional deal litigation that is pending in the Delaware Court of Chancery and is courts of another state:

… all counsel should be aware that this Court will play some role, either in reviewing a potential settlement or in dismissing a case following a settlement approved by another court.  Therefore, best practice for counsel negotiating a settlement of such litigation in a jurisdiction outside of Delaware—recognizing this Court’s focus on representative settlements—would be to substantively involve Delaware counsel in the negotiations. 

The Report also discussed the public policy aspects of the role that state courts play in multi-jurisdiction settlements within our system of federalism. See, e.g., footnote 12 (citing several transcript rulings within the last few months in which the Court of Chancery addresses the public policy issues.)

The Role of the Non-Settlement Forum

At the request of the Court, the Special Counsel made the following suggestions for the role of the non-settlement forum in multi-jurisdiction deal litigation:

1). The non-settlement forum should ensure that all courts involved in the multi-jurisdictional case are operating on the same information. The Special Counsel is also the Chair of the Court of Chancery Rules Committee and will follow-up to determine if the Court of Chancery is amenable to a new rule that would require disclosure to the settlement forum where the Court of Chancery is the non-settlement forum.

2). The non-settlement forum could maintain an open line of communication with the settlement forum.

3). The non-settlement forum could require the common parties to provide it with copies of the settlement documents filed in the settlement forum.

Remedies for Collusive Behavior and Basis for Revocation of Pro Hac Vice Admissions

Because the Special Counsel did not find the need for any remedies or revocations in this case, I will merely commend the last section of the Report for future reference on the following topics, the second one being of wide applicability beyond the world of class action settlements:

1).  What penalties, if any, can or should courts impose upon a finding of collusive behavior; and

2).  What is the standard for the Court revoking the grant of a motion for admission pro hac vice.

Supplement: Though not related to this particular matter, conceptually relevant to the general topic is an article in Forbes here that discusses from a business columnist’s point of view, some of the merger litigation issues generally addressed in this post.

State Line Ventures, LLC v. RBS Citizens, No. 4705-VCL (Dec. 2, 2009), read letter decision here.

This letter decision of the Delaware Court of Chancery must be read by any Delaware lawyer serving as “local counsel”, and more importantly, should be required reading for any non-Delaware lawyer (or any out of state attorney)  who requests a Delaware lawyer to be his or her “local counsel”.

The Court, in a pithy and pointed summary of Delaware law, debunks any definition of “local counsel” in Delaware as being anything less than counsel of record fully responsible for every pleading filed, every discovery request or reply, and every argument made to the Court–regardless of the frequent and customary role of “forwarding counsel” being heavily involved in the prosecution of the case. This letter ruling is only two-pages long and to avoid this synopsis being longer than the Court’s ruling, I commend it for your careful review–and suggest that it be kept handy for future reference. Nonetheless, a excerpted quote from the decision follows:

Because the letter uses the phrase “local counsel,” I believe it important to make clear that the Court of Chancery does not recognize the role. I am certainly familiar with the term, and I know well that it is often used colloquially as if it were synonymous with “Delaware counsel.” It is not. Our rules make clear that the Delaware lawyer who appears in an action always remains responsible to the Court for the case and its presentation. See Ct. Ch. R. 170(b) (“The admission of an attorney pro hac vice shall not relieve the moving attorney from responsibility to comply with any Rule or order of the Court.”). So do the Principles of Professionalism for Delaware Lawyers.

It is of course true that Delaware counsel and forwarding counsel necessarily allocate responsibility for work, and that in some cases, the allocation may be heavily weighted towards forwarding counsel. It is also true that forwarding counsel may have primary responsibility for a matter from the client’s perspective, particularly if the Delaware litigation is one part of a larger picture. This is perfectly understandable, efficient, and appropriate. But it does not alter the Delaware lawyer’s fundamental responsibility for the Delaware proceeding. A Delaware lawyer always appears as an officer of the Court and is responsible for the positions taken, the presentation of the case, and the conduct of the litigation.

If a Delaware lawyer signs a pleading, submits a brief, or signs a discovery request or response, it is the Delaware lawyer that takes the positions set forth therein. This is true regardless of who prepared the initial draft or how the underlying work was allocated. When a particularly questionable argument was made in the briefing, I have not hesitated to ask the Delaware lawyer at the hearing how the argument possibly could be advanced, regardless of whether forwarding counsel was designated to make the argument. (Emphasis in original).

UPDATE: The AmLaw Daily highlights this post here with a headline that I paraphrase: “In Delaware, There is No Such Thing as “Local Counsel”.

The Delaware Supreme Court, in two opinions published this month, addressed issues of attorney conduct that should be of broad interest.

In the case of In Re Abbott, read opinion here, the Delaware Supreme Court addressed the propriety of rhetorical extremes contained in a brief, that the trial court had stricken sua sponte, after concluding that the arguments crossed the line of acceptable conduct.  The Supreme Court affirmed. Delaware’s high court quoted verbatim from some of the language it found objectionable and reasoned that certain conduct is so unprofessional that it becomes unethical as well, in this case violating Rule 8.4(d) which prohibits professional misconduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice. (An issue not addressed by the court, but which most lawyers should ask, is whether such conduct  among lawyers as occurred in this case, outside the context of litigation, could also violate the ethical rules.)

 The  high court found that the arguments in the brief went beyond “merely” unprofessional, and that the rules were violated because the pleadings filed with the court contained “unnecessary invective and rhetoric, and were obnoxious [as well as] unnecessarily sarcastic and strident in tone.” The court noted that the duty to the tribunal takes precedence over the interests of a client. Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor was quoted in the opinion saying that “incivility disserves the client because it wastes time and energy – – time that is billed to the client at hundreds of dollars an hour, and energy that is better spent working on the case than working over the opponent.” The Supreme Court cited a prior opinion of 15 years ago when it stated that “simply put, insulting conduct toward opposing counsel, and disparaging a court’s integrity are unacceptable by any standard.” The court further reasoned that “zealous advocacy never requires disruptive, disrespectful, degrading or disparaging rhetoric. The use of such rhetoric crosses the line from acceptable forceful advocacy into unethical conduct that violates the Delaware Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct.” Thus, the Delaware Supreme Court is now on record as ruling that disrespectful, degrading or disparaging rhetoric  violates the ethical rules that apply to lawyers. Although beyond the scope of the opinion, I mention as an aside, the truism incorporated in the rules that the assistants of lawyers are not permitted to violate the rules that the lawyers themselves are required to uphold.

Separately, this month the Delaware Supreme Court found that a Pennsylvania lawyer who did not have an office in Delaware, was still improperly "practicing law in Delaware" when she provided advice to Delaware clients and  engaged in other patterns of behavior that  "established a systematic and continuous presence in Delaware for the practice of law in violation of Rule 5.5(b)". In Re Tonwe, read opinion here. The court’s penalties included a permanent prohibition against being admitted pro hac vice in any Delaware proceeding.

Christine Hurt refers in her Conglomerate blog post to the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in Paramount from 1994, that included an extensive addendum which set forth the standard of conduct that will be enforced in depositions conducted in Delaware cases–even if the depositions are taken out of state by attorneys only admitted pro hac vice. Her post also includes a video involving an updated deposition with the attorney who was the subject of the Delaware Supreme Court’s scorn in that opinion: Here is the link:
Conglomerate Blog: Business, Law, Economics & Society

By:  Francis G.X. Pileggi* and Sean M. Brennecke**

Courtesy of the Delaware Business Court Insider, which published this article in two parts (it’s 34-pages long), this is our annual review of key Delaware corporate and commercial decisions.

This year’s list focuses, with some exceptions, on the unsung heroes among the many decisions that have not already been widely discussed by the mainstream press or legal trade publications, such as many rulings involving Elon Musk, Tesla and Twitter.  Links are also provided below to the actual court decisions.

This is the 18th year that Francis Pileggi has published an annual list of key corporate and commercial decisions of the Delaware Supreme Court and the Delaware Court of Chancery, often with co-authors.  This list does not attempt to include all important decisions of those two courts that were rendered in 2022.  Instead, this list highlights notable decisions that should be of widespread interest to those who work in the corporate and commercial litigation field or who follow the latest developments in this area of Delaware law.  Prior annual reviews are available at this link.

DELAWARE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

Supreme Court Reverses Chancery and Finds that LP Manager Reasonably Relied in Good Faith on Opinion Letter

          The Delaware Supreme Court recently reversed a decision of the Delaware Court of Chancery, highlighted on these pages, that addressed whether the general partner of a limited partnership relied in good faith on the formal legal opinion of a law firm to support a going-private transaction.

          In Boardwalk Pipeline Partners, LP v. Bandera Master Funds LP, Del. Supr., No. 1, 2022 (Dec. 19, 2022), the majority of Delaware’s High Court determined, without reconsidering the finding by the Court of Chancery that one of the formal legal opinion letters involved was not done in good faith, that:  (1) the proper decision maker accepted the opinion of counsel of one of the law firms involved to exercise a call right, contrary to the Chancery opinion; and (2) that party relied in good faith on the formal opinion letter of the Skadden law firm. The court found it unnecessary to address the Chancery’s holding that the formal opinion letter of another firm was not issued in good faith. (The Chancery opinion weighed in at 194-pages long, and the Supreme Court’s opinion, including the concurrence, in total was just under 100-pages long.)

Basic Background Facts

          This case involved an intricate and extensive network of entities including Delaware Master Limited Partnerships (“MLPs”).  Under Delaware law, an MLP can be structured to eliminate fiduciary duties.  The Boardwalk Limited Partnership Agreement (“Partnership Agreement”) disclaimed the fiduciary duties of the general partner and included a conclusive presumption of good faith when relying on advice of counsel.  It also exculpated the general partner from damages under certain conditions.

          Under the Partnership Agreement, the general partner could exercise a call right for the public units if it received an opinion of counsel acceptable to the general partner that certain regulations would have a particular impact.  The Boardwalk MLP general partner received an opinion of counsel from the Baker Botts law firm that the condition to exercising the call right had been satisfied.

In addition, the Skadden law firm advised that (i) it would be reasonable for the sole member, an entity in the boardwalk MLP structure, to determine the acceptability of the opinion of counsel for the general partner; and (ii) it would be reasonable for the sole member, on behalf of the general partner, to accept the Baker Botts opinion.  The sole member followed the advice of Skadden and caused the Boardwalk MLP general partner to exercise the call right and acquire all the public units pursuant to a formula in the Partnership Agreement.

Procedural History

          The Boardwalk MLP public unitholders filed suit and claimed that the general partner improperly exercised the call right. The Court of Chancery, in a post-trial opinion, held that the opinion by the Baker Botts firm had not been issued in good faith, and also held that the wrong entity in the MLP structure determined the acceptability of the opinion, and that the general partner was not exculpated from damages.

Issues Addressed

          The Supreme Court did not address all of the issues included in the Court of Chancery’s opinion, but determined that: (1) the sole member of the MLP was the correct entity to determine the acceptability of the opinion of counsel; (2) the sole member, as the ultimate decision maker who caused the general partner to exercise the call right, reasonably relied on a formal opinion letter of the Skadden law firm; and (3) the sole member and general partner, based on the applicable agreement, are conclusively presumed to have acted in good faith in exercising the call right.  The other arguments on appeal were not reconsidered in the majority opinion.

Highlights of Key Legal Analysis

          The Supreme Court only focused on the proper decision maker and the exculpation arguments.

          The Supreme Court disagreed with the interpretation of the Partnership Agreement by the Court of Chancery and initially focused on the need to read both the Partnership Agreement and the related LLC Agreement together because both agreements described how the general partner managed Boardwalk.  See footnote 232 (citation to Delaware Supreme Court decision about reading separate agreements together when there is evidence “that might imply an intent to treat them as a unitary transaction.”)

          The Supreme Court engages in a thorough contract interpretation analysis in their review of several key provisions in the Partnership Agreement.  See generally footnote 252 (citing cases that incorporate defined terms into contractual provisions to make them a part of the contract.)

Determination of Proper Entity as Decision Maker

          Unlike the Court of Chancery, the Supreme Court found both the Partnership Agreement and the LLC Agreement, when read together, to be unambiguous, reasoning that words are not surplusage if there is a reasonable construction which will give them meaning, and noting the truism that simply because the parties disagree on the meaning of a term does not render that term ambiguous.  See Slip op. at 50-60 and footnotes 263 and 264.  The Supreme Court held that the Sole Member Board and not the board of the general partner was the appropriate entity to make the acceptability determination and had the ultimate authority to cause the call right to be exercised.

Reasonable Reliance on the Skadden Opinion

          Delaware’s High Court disagreed with the Court of Chancery regarding agency theory and explained that the decision in Dieckman v. Regency GP LP, 2021 WL 537325, at *36 (Del. Ch. Feb. 15, 2021), did not support extending the agency theory to an exculpation inquiry of an agreement beyond those persons who govern a partnership or limited liability company.  Slip op. at 62.  Specifically, the court observed that:  “an entity, such as [the entity involved in the Gerber case,] Enterprise Products GP, can only make decisions or take actions through the individuals who govern or manage it.”  Slip op. at 62 (quoting from Gerber v. EPE Holdings, LLP, 2013 WL 209658, at *13 (Del. Ch. Jan. 18, 2013)).  See also footnote 282 (noting that notice given to a retained lawyer-agent may be viewed as notice to the client principal, but the cases do not support imputing scienter from a lawyer to a client).

          Unlike the Court of Chancery, the Supreme Court found nothing disqualifying about the Skadden firm giving “an opinion about an opinion,” but rather found it unobjectionable for Skadden to conclude that it would be reasonable for the Sole Member Board to accept the Baker Botts Opinion.  See Slip op. at 66-67.  The court held that implicit in the acceptability opinion is Skadden’s conclusion that the Baker Botts opinion was not contrived and that it was rendered in good faith.  Slip op. at 67.

          The court also discussed the provisions in the agreement that provided for a conclusive good faith presumption which the court distinguished from a rebuttable presumption.  The court opined that a conclusive presumption of good faith is “validly triggered through reliance on expert advice . . . and no longer subject to challenge.”  Slip op. at 68-69 (footnotes omitted).

Conclusion

          The court concluded that: “having reasonably relied on Skadden’s advice, the General Partner through the Sole Member, is conclusively presumed to have acted in good faith and is exculpated from damages.”

Concurring Opinion

          Justice Valihura wrote a concurrence that would have reversed the decision of the Chancery Court that the formal legal opinion of the Baker Botts firm was not rendered in good faith.  The concurrence also noted that because the majority left the findings regarding the Baker Botts opinion in place, the Baker Botts opinion did not satisfy Section 15.1(b)(ii) of the Partnership Agreement which was a necessary precondition to the exercise of the call right.

Supreme Court Offers New Guidance on DGCL Section 220

          The Delaware Supreme Court recently provided guidance to corporate litigators regarding the nuances of DGCL Section 220, which most readers recognize as the statute that allows stockholders to demand certain corporate records if the prerequisites in the statute–and those imposed by countless court decisions–have been satisfied. In NVIDIA Corp. v. City of Westmoreland Policy and Fire Retirement System, Del. Supr., No. 259, 2021 (July 19, 2022), a divided en banc bench of Delaware’s High Court explained in a 54-page decision why the “credible basis” requirement may be satisfied in some circumstances by “reliable hearsay”.

          Regular readers of these pages will be forgiven if their reaction might be: what more can be said about the relatively simple right of stockholders to demand corporate records, in some circumstances, pursuant to DGCL Section 220–that hasn’t already been covered by the hundred or more Section 220 cases highlighted on these pages over the last 17 years, as well as the thousands of court decisions on the topic over the many decades preceding this publication? In short, when the Delaware Supreme Court speaks, those who labor in its vineyard need to listen. And one indication that this topic is not as simple as the statute might suggest, is that those with the final word on Delaware corporate law–the members of the Delaware Supreme Court–were not in complete unanimity in their decision in this case. A concurrence was not in 100% agreement with the majority opinion.

Key Takeaway

          Prior to this decision, it was not well-settled whether a stockholder could satisfy the “proper purpose” requirement under DGCL Section 220 with hearsay–instead of live testimony, for example. The Delaware Supreme Court ruled that: “The Court of Chancery did not err in holding that sufficiently reliably hearsay may be used to show proper purpose in a Section 220 litigation, but did err in allowing the stockholders in this case to rely on hearsay evidence because the stockholders’ actions deprived NVIDIA of the opportunity to test the stockholders’ stated purpose.” Slip op. at 4. (emphasis added).

Overview of Background

          After finding post-trial both a proper purpose and a credible basis for the requests, the trial court ordered the production of documents to investigate: possible wrongdoing and mismanagement; the ability of the board to consider a pre-suit demand; and to determine if the board members were fit to serve on the board. The trial court rejected the defenses that: the requests were overbroad and not tailored with rifled precision to what is necessary and essential for the stated purpose; no proper purpose was shown; no credible basis was demonstrated to infer wrongdoing; and the stockholder failed to follow the “form and manner” requirements–in part by changing the list of requested documents during the litigation.

          Several stockholders consolidated their demands prior to suit, and 530,000 pages were produced prior to the litigation. Suit was filed in February 2020 based in part on public statements made during an earnings call. Prior to trial, the stockholders were less than forthcoming about whether they would call any witnesses, or which witnesses they would call at trial to establish their proper purpose. The Supreme Court held that the lack of pre-trial transparency by the stockholders deprived the company of the option to depose witnesses to explore the proper purpose issue prior to trial.

The Basics

          Most readers are familiar with the basic Section 220 requirements, but the Court’s review provides a helpful reminder. Some of the prerequisites include:

  • Stockholders must demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence a credible basis from which the court may “infer possible mismanagement that would warrant further investigation.” Slip op. at 18.
  • The requested documents must be “essential to the accomplishment of the stockholder’s articulated purpose of inspection.” Id.

Key Highlights and Takeaways

  • The Court of Chancery has discretion to trim overly broad requests to craft a production order circumscribed with rifled precision.
  • Although a stockholder may not broaden the scope of their requests throughout the litigation, a Section 220 plaintiff may narrow their requests if they do so in good faith and such narrowing does not prejudice the company.
  • The Court observed that Section 220 cases are “summary proceedings” and such trials do not always include live testimony. Thus, the court reasoned that: “hearsay is admissible in a Section 220 proceeding when the hearsay is sufficiently reliable.” Slip op. at 38.
  • The Court cautioned that Section 220 plaintiffs should not abuse the hearsay exception, and “must be up front about their plans regarding witnesses” in the pre-trial phase of a case. Slip op. at 41. In this case the Court held that the company was deprived of the “ability to test the stockholders’ purpose”, such as through a deposition or otherwise, because the stockholders did not give the company sufficient notice about what they would rely on at trial to establish a proper purpose. Slip op. at 42-43.
  • In dicta, the Court upheld the trial court’s inference made by “connecting the dots” that the credible basis requirement was satisfied based on a combination of: insider stock sales, public statements that may have been false, and concurrent securities litigation supported by ample research. Slip op. at 45.
  • The Court restated the law that the “credible basis threshold may be satisfied by a credible showing, through documents, logic, testimony, or otherwise, that there are legitimate issues of wrongdoing.” Slip op. at 46.

          The concurring opinion of one member of the High Court observed that Section 220 cases often involve the issue of whether the “stated purpose” is the “actual purpose”, which makes the truth of the stockholder’s statements on that point a key issue.  The concurrence also emphasized the importance of the distinction between a proper purpose and the threshold requirement of credible basis–and that a stockholder who is neither an employee nor an officer of a company will rarely have first-had knowledge of wrongdoing, but a typical stockholder “will always have knowledge of her purpose because it is, after all, her purpose.” Slip op. at 54. (emphasis in original).

In Sum

          Although this decision may make it easier in some ways for a stockholder to prove its case in a Section 220 lawsuit, companies still have several tools at their disposal to test the basis for a stockholder’s assertion of a proper purpose and other statutory and court-made prerequisites for a Section 220 demand.

The Standard for Individual Contempt for Corporate Actions

          The Delaware Supreme Court recently had occasion to address the standard to determine when a person who controls an entity—for example, through ownership of all or most of the stock of a corporation—can be personally responsible for contempt of court penalties when the corporation’s actions are in violation of a court order.

          In the matter styled TransPerfect Global Inc. v. Pincus, Del. Supr., No. 154, 2021 (June 1, 2022), Delaware’s highest court reviewed the latest appeal in a long-running bitter battle that entered the Delaware court system in 2014 with a petition under Delaware General Corporation Law Section 226 to appoint a custodian to resolve a deadlock between two co-owners who were formerly engaged to be married and who each held 50% ownership of a translation and litigation-support company. They continued to co-manage their company, in a contentious manner, despite calling off their nuptials.

Procedural Background

          For purposes of this short summary, instead of reviewing the four prior Supreme Court decisions concerning this case, and about a dozen rulings of the Delaware Court of Chancery over almost a decade, as well as several cases filed in a few other states, suffice it to say that the limited aspect of the appeal that this column focuses on is a suit filed by TransPerfect in Nevada that was in violation of an order by the Delaware Court of Chancery requiring all disputes related to this matter to be filed in the Court of Chancery.

          After the appointment of a custodian to break the deadlock, one of the 50% owners bought the other half of the company to become essentially the 100% owner (the “controller”). The controller was not a named plaintiff in the Nevada lawsuit. But the Court of Chancery found the controller in contempt for the company’s filing of that lawsuit, which the trial court held to be a violation of a prior order, as explained in a 135-page opinion by the Court of Chancery.

Key Standards of Contempt Clarified

          Delaware’s High Court began its careful analysis with a recitation of the fundamentals on which a finding of civil contempt is based, with copious footnotes to authorities that describe the prerequisites and the nuances involved in such a “weighty sanction.” Slip op. at 22–23 and footnotes 99–101 and 127.

     A trial court must explain how an individual personally violated a court order to satisfy the standard to hold a person in contempt of a court order. Specifically, there must be evidence in the record that a person who controls a company personally violated a court order, for example by directing a company he or she controls to violate that court order. In this particular appeal, there was no such evidence in the record.

          For clarification and guidance, the Delaware Supreme Court explained that “to find a corporate officer or shareholder in civil contempt of a court order, the trial court must specifically determine that the officer or shareholder bore personal responsibility for the contemptuous conduct.” Slip op. at 33. The court observed that this requirement is consistent with the prerequisite that “when an asserted violation of a court order is the basis for contempt, the party to be sanctioned must be bound by the order, have clear notice of it, and nevertheless violate it in a meaningful way.” Id. at 33–34.

          Although the sanctions for contempt were properly applied to the company, the criteria for imposing penalties for contempt on the controller were not satisfied, based on the appellate record. Therefore, the penalties imposed on the controller for contempt were vacated.

          This decision will be helpful for anyone who needs to determine if a person who controls a company may also be personally liable for actions taken by the company that may violate a court order.

Supreme Court Decides Deadline for Notice of Indemnification Claim

          A recent Delaware Supreme Court decision provides a lesson for drafters of agreements for the sale of a business by providing an example of the problems caused by a lack of clarity in describing a deadline to send notices of claims for indemnification post-closing. To paraphrase a former member of the U.S. Supreme Court, the Delaware Supreme Court is always right when it comes to deciding Delaware law not because the members of the Court are infallible, but rather because they always have the last word.  The reader can decide how that aphorism applies to the decision of a divided court in the matter of North American Leasing v. NASDI HoldingsDel. Supr., No. 192, 2020 (April 11, 2022).

          The court decided three issues in this case. First, whether the Delaware Court of Chancery erred in interpreting an agreement of sale according to the principles of Delaware contract law in connection with determining what the deadline was in the agreement for giving notices of indemnification claims. Second, the court decided whether an affirmative defense of set-off and recoupment was waived. Lastly, the court decided whether it was appropriate for the Court of Chancery not to consider evidence that the total amount of the claims should have been reduced. Three members of the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Court of Chancery, and two dissented from the majority opinion.

Key Background Facts

          This case involved the sale of a company that, among other things, was involved in the construction of bridges. One of the bridge projects underway at the time of the closing on the sale of the business had a bond in place that the seller posted in the approximate amount of $20 million. After the closing, because the buyer decided to discontinue work on the bridge project, the letter of credit was drawn down in the full amount of the bond. The seller sued the buyer setting forth three causes of action: breach of contract regarding an indemnity obligation; equitable subrogation; and a claim for declaratory judgment that the defendants breached their indemnity obligation.

          The Court of Chancery granted summary judgment in favor of the seller and also denied a motion for reargument. In connection with the motion for the entry of the final judgment, the Court of Chancery determined that the affirmative defense of set-off/recoupment was waived because it was not raised in response to the motion for summary judgment, or in the motion for reargument.

Legal Analysis

          The majority decision acknowledged that questions of contract interpretation on appeal are reviewed de novo. Delaware’s high court observed that Delaware law adheres to an objective theory of contracts, which means that the construction of a contract should be “that which would be understood by an objective, reasonable third party.” That theory gives priority to the intentions of the parties reflected in the four corners of the agreement, “construing the agreement as a whole and giving effect to all its provisions.”

          The majority opinion carefully considered the various provisions of the agreement at issue and examined the reasoning of the Court of Chancery which rejected the buyer’s arguments that Section 9.3(a) provided for a deadline which ended before the indemnification claim of the seller arose, which would have rendered the indemnification notice untimely.

          The decision turned in large measure on the reading of one phrase. The majority explained its reasoning for the interpretation of the phrase “but in any event” as introducing an exception to the sentence that followed—not a limitation of the phrase that followed.

          The majority also agreed with the Court of Chancery’s conclusion that the set-off/recoupment defense was waived.  The buyer argued that set-off/recoupment was a defense that pertained to damages, and damages did not need to be briefed in the motion for summary judgment.  Not so, according to those with the last word on the topic, because damages were central to the relief requested in the motion.

Regarding the last issue of damages, the Supreme Court concluded that the Court of Chancery did not err when it did not consider the evidence regarding the reduction of damages because the set-off/recoupment defense was waived.

Dissent

          Notably, both the majority and the dissent agreed on the basic contract principles of Delaware law that applied to this case, although they disagreed on the result after applying those principles to the facts.

          A substantial focus of the dissent was its different interpretation of the phrase “ in any event,” and whether: it applied to all indemnification claims; or it only applied to the “representations and warranties” claims. The majority held that the phrase created an exception, but the dissent explained why in its view the phrase introduced a limiting or qualifying clause. The dissent referred to a dictionary definition for the adjective “any” as meaning “without limitation.” The phrase “in any event” means “no matter when [an event] happens.”

          The dissenters explained that the drafters of the agreement could have used the verb “the” instead of the word “any”—if the drafters wanted to establish an exception to the deadline for sending a notice of claim.

          Moreover, the dissent noted that even if the deadline for the notice of a claim were missed, the seller could still rely on equitable subrogation as a basis for a claim. The dissent added that the availability of that remedy supports the view that an earlier notice deadline would make an indefinite period for indemnification claims unnecessary.

          The dissent included the following memorable quote: “The majority sacrifices the plain meaning of Section 9.3 on the altar of the context of the provision and the contract as a whole.” The dissent concluded by explaining that its view demonstrated more than one reasonable interpretation of the agreement, which is one definition of an ambiguous contract. Therefore, the trial court should not have granted summary judgment and, in the view of the dissenting opinion, should have considered extrinsic evidence.

Supreme Court Splits on Contract Interpretation Issue

          A majority of the Delaware Supreme Court recently ruled that a settlement agreement contained an enforceable obligation to negotiate in good faith with the goal of reaching a separate definitive contract within the parameters outlined in the settlement agreement–although the court recognized that such a contractual obligation did not assume that a definitive agreement would necessarily be reached.

          In Cox Communications, Inc. v. T-Mobile, Inc., Del. Supr., No. 340, 2021 (March 3, 2022), Delaware’s High Court explained both basic principles and sophisticated nuances of Delaware contract law that should be required reading for anyone who needs the know the latest iteration of Delaware law on this topic, especially in the context of preliminary or transitional agreements that contemplate a more comprehensive second-stage agreement.

Why This Decision Is Noteworthy:

          A common situation where familiarity with this decision will be required is when a lawsuit is settled after a long day of mediation and basic terms are signed while all the parties are present, or otherwise available, to confirm the terms of a settlement–but a more complete, formal agreement is contemplated. One lesson that this decision teaches is to make certain that the abbreviated memorialization of essential terms is expressly stated to be enforceable, in the event a more formal, comprehensive agreement is never finalized. This, of course, applies beyond settlement agreements–for example, in the context of any deal where essential terms are agreed upon before a more comprehensive, formal agreement is completed (assuming the parties may want to enforce those essential terms, which may not always be the case.)

Key issue:

          The expedited appeal in this case turned on the interpretation of a single provision in a settlement agreement and whether it should be construed as either: (i) an unenforceable “agreement to agree”, or (ii) an enforceable “Type II preliminary agreement” requiring the parties to negotiate in good faith.

Basic Background Facts

          Cox and Sprint signed a settlement agreement in 2017 that resolved litigation between the parties. T-Mobile later purchased Sprint. Section 9(e) of that settlement agreement contained a sentence that was the crux of the dispute over contract interpretation that the Court decided. The disputed provision provided that:

          “Before Cox or one of its Affiliates (the “Cox Wireless Affiliate”), begins providing Wireless Mobile Service (as defined below), the Cox Wireless Affiliate will enter into a definitive MVNO agreement with a Sprint Affiliate (the “Sprint MVNO Affiliate”) identifying the Sprint MVNO Affiliate as a “Preferred Provider” of the Wireless Mobile Service for the Cox Wireless Affiliate, on terms to be mutually agreed upon           between the parties for an initial period of 36 months (the “Initial Term”).”

          T-Mobile, as the successor to Sprint’s rights in the settlement agreement, argued that the above language required Cox to enter into an agreement with it for a term of 36 months before it could provide wireless services with any other carrier. On the other hand, Cox read the above provision to merely require it to negotiate in good faith to “try” to reach an agreement. The Court of Chancery agreed with T-Mobile’s view of the provision. The Supreme Court did not.

Basic Principles and Nuances of Delaware Contract Law Underscored

  • Delaware adheres to an objective theory of contracts. See footnotes 47-48.
  • Extrinsic evidence is only considered if the text is ambiguous. n.49.
  • A contract provision is “not rendered ambiguous simply because the parties in litigation differ as to the proper interpretation.” n.51.
  • When a provision “leaves material terms open to future negotiations” as the High Court found Section 9(e) did, it is “a paradigmatic Type II agreement” of the kind we recognized in SIGA v. PharmAthene. n.52. (That Supreme Court decision and related decisions were highlighted on these pages.)
  • Unlike the old, superseded view that an incomplete agreement was not enforceable, Delaware recognizes that “parties may make an agreement to make a contract…if the agreement specifies all the material and essential terms including those to be incorporated in the future contracts.” n.53.
  • Delaware recognizes two types of enforceable preliminary agreements: Type I and Type II.
  • Type I agreements reflect a “consensus on all the points that require negotiation” but indicate the mutual desire to memorialize the pact in a more formal document. n.55. Type I agreements are fully binding.
  • Type II agreements exist when the parties “agree on certain major terms, but leave other terms open for future negotiation.” n.56 Type II agreements “do not commit the parties to their ultimate contractual objective but rather to the obligation to negotiate the open issues in good faith.” n.57.

Selected Excerpts of Court’s Reasoning

  • The Supreme Court read Section 9(e) to leave open a number of essential terms, such as price, which barred it from being categorized as a Type I agreement. n.60. That is, it specifically contemplates a future “definitive” agreement and provides that open terms will be “mutually agreed upon between the parties”–though it is not completely open-ended. 
  • Practice note:  If the parties want a settlement agreement to be a Type I binding agreement–as compared to an agreement to negotiate in good faith–a fair observation based on the Court’s decision in this case is to avoid the reference to a future “definitive” agreement, and make sure to include essential terms such as price.
  • Type II agreements do not guarantee the parties will reach agreement on a final contract because “good faith differences in the negotiation of the open issues may preclude final agreement.” n.63
  • The provision at issue in this case did not include a promise to do anything other than negotiate in good faith–which is where the Supreme Court parted ways with the Court of Chancery’s post-trial ruling. See also n.71 (explanation of why the majority  parted ways with the dissenting justices in this case, and did not think it was necessary to address extrinsic evidence.)
  • The Court’s reasoning including diagramming of the sentence in the disputed provision to parse the syntax and structure of the language at issue, by identifying the single subject, single verb, and singled object–as well as which clause modified the predicate and which clause modified the object.
  • The quality or quantify of consideration in a contract should not be second-guessed. n.86. Moreover: “obligations to negotiate in good faith” are recognized in Delaware as “not worthless”. n.81.

Postscript: A candid observation that reasonable people can differ on these contract issues is buttressed by the fact that the brightest legal minds in Delaware who decide what the law is in Delaware were not unanimous in their view of the law as applied to the facts of this case. That is, three members of the Delaware Supreme Court saw it one way, two members of that High Court saw it another way, and a member of the Court of Chancery arguably viewed the law as applied to the facts of this case in a third way.

Supreme Court Decides Important Contract Dispute in Sale of Business

          The recent Delaware Supreme Court decision in AB Stable VIII LLC v. MAPS Hotels and Resorts One LLC, Del. Supr., No. 71, 2021 (Dec. 8, 2021), has already been the subject of many articles in the few days since it was released because it is the first definitive pronouncement by Delaware’s High Court on the breach of what is known as an “ordinary course covenant” in connection with how a business is managed between the date an agreement of sale is signed and the date of closing. The Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s decision, 2020 WL 7024929 (Del. Ch., Nov. 30, 2020), that the Seller breached its covenant that it would not deviate from how the business was typically run–without the Buyer’s consent–notwithstanding the intervening worldwide pandemic.

          Although I typically eschew highlights of decisions such as this one that have already been the focus of widespread analysis in legal publications, this decision has such widespread applicability to basic contract disputes, in addition to the sale of businesses, that I decided to provide a few pithy observations. I encourage readers to also read the copious commentary published by many others on this case that provides more detailed background facts and thorough insights.

Basic Facts

          The basic facts involved the sale of 15 hotel properties for $5.8 billion. In response to the pandemic and without the Buyer’s consent, the Seller made drastic changes to its hotel operations. The transaction also featured fraudulent deeds for some of the hotel properties. The lengthy Court of Chancery opinion provided extensive details about what the court regarded as active concealment or failure to disclose that fraud by the Seller’s law firm. The Supreme Court’s opinion references the failure to disclose the fraud, and repeats the Court of Chancery’s findings on that aspect of the case–that could be the topic for a separate article–but the High Court’s decision focuses on the impact of the violation of the ordinary course covenant as a sufficient basis to uphold Chancery’s decision. Among the changes made by the Seller without the Buyer’s approval (which could not have been unreasonably withheld) were the closure of two hotels, thirteen hotels “closed but open”, and the layoff or furlough of over 5,200 full-time-equivalent employees.

Highlights of Court’s Analysis 

  • The Court explained that an ordinary course covenant “in general prevents sellers from taking any actions that materially change the nature or quality of the business that is being purchased, whether or not those changes were related to misconduct.” See Slip op. at 25 and n. 42.
  • The agreement did not refer to what was ordinary in the industry in which the Seller operated. Rather, the ordinary course language referred only to the Seller’s operation in the ordinary course–and consistent with past practice in all material respects measured by its own operational history. Slip op. at 27 and n. 55-56.
  • The covenant did not have a reasonable efforts qualifier–although other parts of the agreement did. If the agreement referred to industry standards, it would be more akin to a commercially reasonable efforts provision, which it was not. Slip op. at 28 and n. 58
  • The High Court rejected the Seller’s reliance on FleetBoston Financial Corp. v. Advanta Corp., 2003 WL 240885 (Del. Ch. Jan. 22, 2003), as inapposite, but instead the Court relied on a Chancery decision interpreting an ordinary course covenant in Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. v. Apollo (Mauritius) Holdings Pvt. Ltd., 2014 WL 5654305 (Del. Ch. Oct. 31, 2014).
  • The Supreme Court affirmed Chancery’s reasoning that the drastic actions taken in response to the pandemic were both inconsistent with past practices and far from ordinary. Although the Seller could have timely sought the Buyer’s approval before making drastic changes in response to the pandemic, it did not. Having failed to do so, the Seller breached the ordinary course covenant and excused the Buyer from closing. Slip op. at 33.
  • The MAE provision in the agreement was written differently and had to be interpreted differently, and independently, from the ordinary course covenant, because, for example, it did not restrict a breach of the ordinary course covenant to events that would qualify as an MAE. The parties knew how to provide for such a limitation, as they did elsewhere, but they did not do so in the ordinary course covenant. Slip op. at 34.

SELECTED CHANCERY COURT DECISIONS

Chancery Examines Equitable Defenses and Restrictions on Transfer of LLC Interests

          The Delaware Court of Chancery’s recent opinion in XRI Investment Holdings LLC v. Holifield, No. 2021-0619-JTL (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 2022), should be included in the pantheon of consequential Delaware Chancery opinions and will remain noteworthy for many reasons that deserve to be the subject of a law review article, but for purposes of this short review, I only intend to highlight a few of the many gems in this 154-page magnum opus with the most widespread applicability to those engaged in Delaware corporate and commercial litigation.

Brief Background

          The background facts are described in the first 50 pages or so of the opinion, but for purposes of this high-level short overview, this case involved a disputed transfer of interests in an LLC that were alleged to be in violation of the transfer restrictions in the LLC Agreement.  The membership interests were used as security for a loan, and upon default the membership interests were foreclosed upon in an inequitable manner.

Key Points

          This opinion engages in a deep and comprehensive analysis regarding the historical foundation of equitable defenses and their applicability to claims that are not the type of traditional claims pursued in a court of equity, as well as other key aspects of Delaware Law, including a discussion of:

  • The Step-Transaction Doctrine and when a series of transactions will be treated as a unitary whole.
  • Void and voidable transactions–and when an act will be treated as void ab initio, in which event it generally cannot be cured or defended against.
  • Equitable Defenses: Some, such as laches, can only be asserted as defenses to equitable claims–but other equitable defenses, such as acquiescence, are available to defend against both equitable and legal claims. This holding by the Court is contrary to a “smattering of recent decisions” in Chancery that did not fully address “nuances that permeate this area of the law”.
  • This decision attempts to bring more harmony and cohesiveness to that “smattering of recent decisions”.
  • The Court examines in extensive depth the somewhat ancient historical origins of the courts of equity, and the claims and defenses permitted in those courts.
  • The always useful fundamentals of contract interpretation are reviewed as well. See pages 45-47
  • The Court addresses the distinction between: (i) a “right tied to an ownership interest in an entity” and (ii) “the right to whatever cash that interest might generate once it reaches a particular person’s pocket”. See footnote 25. Also cited in the footnote is the recent Supreme Court opinion in Protech Minerals Inc. v. Dugout Team LLC, 288, 2021 (Del. Sept 2, 2022), and the important need to distinguish between the above two concepts.
  • Although the Court of Chancery faithfully (but maybe reluctantly) follows the Supreme Court’s precedent in CompoSecure LLC v. Card UX, LLC, No. 177, 2018 (Del. Nov 7, 2018), regarding void transactions, in dictum the opinion encourages the Supreme Court to reconsider its decision in CompoSecure. A polite list of reasons is offered for why Delaware’s high court should reconsider that precedent, in part because it prevented the trial court in this case from avoiding an inequitable result–and because there is a need to harmonize several areas of Delaware law at issue in this case. See page 111.
  • For example, current Supreme Court precedent allows parties to an agreement to declare certain acts as void–not voidable–and this current ability to “contract out” of equitable review and prevent a court of equity from applying its traditional equitable powers and remedies, deserves (reasoned this opinion respectfully), to be revisited.
  • Among the multi-faceted aspects of the opinion’s rationale for encouraging the  Delaware Supreme Court to reconsider its CompoSecure opinion, this opinion cites to basic contract principles under the common law that considered some contracts as void ab initio if they were violative of public policy. See footnotes 58 to 62 and related text. See also footnotes 65 to 68 regarding the aspects of corporate charters and bylaws that are subject to the limitations of the DGCL because corporations are creatures of the state.
  • This Court of Chancery decision importantly notes that the Delaware LLC Act recognizes that principles of equity apply in the LLC context. See footnote 96. (Cue: the “maxims of equity”.)
  • Even though the Court of Chancery held that its holding was “contrary to the equities of the case”, it held that the result was controlled by precedent–that should be revisited.

Chancery Addresses Fiduciary Duties of Corporate Officer

          The Delaware Court of Chancery recently published a post-trial decision involving the officer of a company who breached his fiduciary duties by, among other things, competing against the company for which he served as president. Metro Stores International LLC v. Harron, C.A. No. 2018-0937-JTL (Del. Ch. May 4, 2022), is a 128-page opinion that warrants a plenary review, but for purposes of this short review I am only highlighting a few gems of Delaware corporate and commercial law that every Delaware litigator should know.

Brief Overview

          The first 34 pages or so of the opinion describe in extensive detail the factual background. A basic outline of the facts includes an existing U.S. company that was a large player in the self-storage facility business.  They brought on a person who was assigned the job of growing the business in Brazil.  The court’s decision goes into great detail about how this person, in his capacity as president of the LLC that was responsible for the business in Brazil, in violation of his contractual and fiduciary duties, competed against the company and took confidential information from the company when he left.

Selected Key Principles of Delaware Law

  • The Court reviewed the elements that must be established in order to successfully pursue a breach of fiduciary duty claim, with a special emphasis on such a claim against the officer of a company, as compared to a director. Slip op. at 36-39.
  • The opinion describes the three potential levels of review that the court uses to determine if a fiduciary duty was breached. In this case, the court determined that the “entire fairness standard” applied.
  • The court explained that the state of the law in Delaware regarding the analysis of the duty of care of an officer applies the “Director Model”. Slip op. at 40–47.
  • The court highlighted the important difference between the provisions in an LLC Agreement that:

                     (i)  waive or limit the scope of fiduciary duties – – as compared                       with;

                     (ii)  an exculpation cause which merely limits liability for certain                             actions.  Slip op. at 47–48.

  • Notably, a clause limiting liability for certain actions does not limit fiduciary duties–and would merely bar money damages but not other potential remedies.
  • In an extensive footnote, the court explains that an officer is an agent of the company, and like all agents is a fiduciary–but not all fiduciaries are agents. See footnote 18.
  • The court expounded on the duty of loyalty and its various nuances. Slip op. at 40.
  • The court also described in great detail the duty of disclosure that an agent has. Slip op. at 55–57.
  • The court explained the very useful distinction between behavior that could be either a breach of contract and/or a breach of fiduciary duty – – and when both claims may proceed in the same case to the extent that they are not overlapping.
  • The court found that the unauthorized access to the former employer’s computer system, without authority, was not only a breach of confidentiality obligations but also a breach of a federal statute called the Stored Communications Act.  Slip op. at 120–122.
  • In particular, the court found that the federal statute involved, the Stored Communications Act, was violated because the former officer accessed an electronic communication while it was being stored, by either intentionally accessing the computer system without authorization or exceeding his authorization.  See 18 U. S. C. §2701.

Chancery Addresses Claims of Excessive Executive Compensation

          In the Delaware Court of Chancery opinion styled: Knight v. Miller, C.A. No. 2021-0581-SG (Del. Ch. April 27, 2022), the court described this case as “. . . another bloom on the hardy perennial of director compensation litigation.”  Slip op. at 2.

          The court granted some parts of a motion to dismiss, but allowed other claims to proceed based on the application of the entire fairness standard and the difficulty in securing a dismissal of claims at the initial pleadings stage when that fact-intensive standard applies, for example, when, as here, stock option awards are challenged.

Another Memorable Quote

          The opinion begins with the following eminently quotable truisms of Delaware corporate law that aptly describe how the court reviewed the allegations in this case:

          “The oft-noted fact that corporate actions are ‘twice-tested’–first in light of compliance with the DGCL, second for compliance with fiduciary duties–is neatly illustrated by directors’ actions to set their  own compensation.  Those actions are clearly authorized by statute, and just as clearly an act of self-dealing, subject to entire fairness review.”

          Slip op. at 2.

Highlights

          This case involved a challenge to the award of stock options to members of the board of directors, some of whom are considered to be controllers and insiders.

          The court noted that Section 141(h) of the Delaware General Corporation Law authorized the board to “fix the compensation of directors.”  The board in this case was implementing a stock incentive plan that vested the compensation committee with authority to award stock options in its discretion.

          The court began its consideration of the claims by describing the causes of action as requiring a “somewhat convoluted analysis” as the challenge to the stock awards implicates different standards of review for different grants.  Slip op. at 16.  Thus, the court reviewed the claims in three categories:

          (i) whether the Compensation Committee acted in bad faith as an        independent breach of fiduciary duty for granting the awards;

          (ii) alleged breach of the duty of loyalty for granting the awards generally; and

          (iii) alleged breach of the duty of loyalty for accepting the awarded stock      options.

          The court rejected the bad faith claims, and instructed that: “Bad faith is one of the hardest corporate claims to maintain.” Slip op. at 18. This version of a breach of the duty of loyalty claim typically is made when a plaintiff cannot establish lack of independence or lack of disinterestedness.

          Notably, the court observed that because the stock options were granted to individuals in “varying factual postures”:  “. . . different standards of review will apply to the Compensation Committee Defendants’ choices in making the grants.  As in nearly all pleadings stage challenges to the viability of a breach of fiduciary duty claim in the corporate context, deciding the standard of review will be outcome determinative.”  Slip op. at 20-21.

When Entire Fairness Standard of Review Applies–Absent an Exception

          Because the decision by directors to determine their own compensation is necessarily self-interested, even when done pursuant to a pre-existing equity incentive plan, such decisions are subject to the entire fairness standard of review, “unless a fully informed, uncoerced, and disinterested majority of stockholders has approved the compensation decisions and therefore ratified them.” Slip op. at 21 (citing In re Investors Bank Corp., Inc. S’holder Litig., 177 A.3d 1208).

Standard for Awards to Controllers

          The court explained that even if a controller of a company, such as a majority stockholder, is not actually a member of the compensation committee, the entire fairness standard still applies to compensation granted to a controller: “Because the underlying factors which raise the specter of impropriety can never be completely eradicated and still require careful judicial scrutiny.  The underlying risk is that the independent committee members who pass upon a transaction in question- -here the granting of equity awards- -might perceive that disapproval may result in retaliation by the controlling stockholder.”  Slip op. at 20-21.  This principle applies equally to outside directors as decisionmakers, given the controlling stockholder’s ability to elect directors.  Slip op. at 26-27.

Nascent Standard of Review–When Accepting Compensation is Allegedly “Clearly Improper”

          The court acknowledged that the standard of review for breach of fiduciary duty claims in connection with accepting compensation is “nascent in its development.”  Slip op. at 32.  With over 200 years of decisions in the Delaware Court of Chancery about fiduciary duty, it’s surprising that any aspect of caselaw about fiduciary duties is “nascent,” but so it is.

          The court discussed this aspect of the case by beginning with the definition of the duty of loyalty.  Slip op. at 29-30. The plaintiff conceded that there is a relative lack of caselaw defining what might constitute “clearly improper” to the extent that it might be a breach of fiduciary duty to accept compensation that is clearly improper.  The court found that even though the caselaw is not well developed on this issue, courts have found actions for breach of fiduciary duty for accepting compensation to survive a motion to dismiss when two factors are present:  (1) the compensation award was ultra vires, and the recipients knew it, or (2) where compensation was repriced advantageously in light of confidential and sensitive business information which the recipients knew, and which they accordingly used to the company’s detriment.

Standard for Accepting “Clearly Improper” Compensation

          The court  acknowledged that : “The ‘clearly improper’ standard, if standard it is, is nascent in its development”. Then the court asked the question: “What is the standard that must be applied to the facts when considering whether such a breach of duty has been plead?”  The court concluded that:

What is required is defendant’s knowingly wrongful acceptance of compensation, and the standard must be bad faith.  That is, there must be sufficient pleading of scienter to support a bad faith claim, which serves as a claim based on breach of the duty of loyalty.  But, as discussed above, there is an insufficient record to sustain even a claim that the Compensation Committee Defendants making the awards acted in bad faith, much less that the recipients’ acceptance violated that standard. 

          All that is alleged is that option awards were made at what proved to be      the bottom of the market.

Slip op. at 32

          Therefore, the court granted the motion to dismiss with respect to the cause of action alleging breach of fiduciary duty by all defendants for accepting the March 2020 awards.  The court distinguished Howlan v. Kumar, 2019 WL 2479738 (Del. Ch. June 13, 2019) and Pfeiffer v. Leedle, 2013 WL 5988416 (Del. Ch. Nov. 8, 2013).  Unlike the Howlan case, the instant case does not plead nonpublic facts known to the company and the defendants that give rise to an inference of “clearly improper” compensation.  Unlike Pfeiffer, there is no allegation that the awards violate the stock incentive plan, let alone that the defendants were aware of the same.

          The court also noted that the claim against the Compensation Committee Defendants for accepting the self-dealing awards merged with the breach of duty claim against the Compensation Committee Defendants for making the awards.

Waste Claims Dismissed

          The court dismissed the corporate waste claims because in order to constitute waste, the grants must have been “without business purpose” but that cause of action was insufficiently plead.

Stock Incentive Plan Not Self-Executing

          Regarding the grant of stock options to outside director defendants, the court explained that there are other cases such as Kerbs v. California Eastern Airwaves, 90 A.2d 653 (Del. 1952), which involved a self-executing stockholder-approved plan where the equity incentive plan listed grants of unissued stock in specific amounts to named executives based on the mathematical formula which left no room for discretionary decisions by the directors.  No such formula constrained the directors in this case.

Key Point–Difficult to Win Motion to Dismiss When Entire Fairness Standard Applies

          The court instructed that when entire fairness is the applicable standard of review, dismissal of a complaint under a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is usually precluded because:  “A determination of whether the defendant has met its burden will normally be impossible by examining only the documents the court is free to consider on a motion to dismiss.”

          Although the court listed at footnote 102 the many other cases that have followed this approach–it also acknowledged at footnote 103 a few cases that have granted motions to dismiss, but “generally where a plan has failed to allege any evidence of unfair process or price.”

          The court found that the facts in this case were sufficient to raise a reasonably conceivable inference of an unfair transaction–but the finding does not preclude the Compensation Committee Defendants from establishing that the awards were entirely fair.

          The court observed that it would allow the claims against the outside directors to proceed even though it found that: the facts alleged in this case were “not overwhelming.”  Slip op. at 21-25.

Standard Applicable to Officer Defendants

          The third standard applied was to officer defendants and the court determined that the standard of review applicable to officer defendants was the business judgment rule unless the plaintiff pleads:  (1) Facts from which it may be reasonably inferred that the board or compensation committee lacked independence (for example, if they were dominated or controlled by the individual receiving the compensation); or (2) Facts from which it may be reasonably inferred that the board or compensation committee, while independent, nevertheless lacked good faith in making the award.

          The court found that the Compensation Committee Defendants did not act in bad faith in making the awards, and plaintiff did not plead facts relating to the lack of independence by the Compensation Committee for purposes of making the compensation awards.  Although the business judgment rule can be dislodged by the successful pleading of corporate waste, the court explained why that was not successfully plead here.  Therefore the motion to dismiss this claim with respect to the officer defendants was granted.

The author of this overview was co-counsel for all the defendants–and the intent of this short discussion was to provide objective highlights without any advocacy of any party’s position.

Irrevocable Proxy Too Ambiguous to Enforce

          In the Chancery decision of Hawkins v. Daniel, C.A. No. 2021-0453-JTL (Del. Ch. April 4, 2022), the court found that an irrevocable proxy was ambiguous and it did not state that it would “run with the shares” based on the “special principles of contract interpretation” applicable to proxy agreements.  This 85-page opinion needs to be read by anyone who wants to know the latest Delaware law on enforceability of proxies.

Court Allows Claims to Proceed Against Buyer Whose Payment to Seller for the Purchase of Company Stock Was Hacked–and Never Received

          In the case styled:  Sorenson Impact Foundation v. Continental Stock Transfer & Trust Co., C.A. No. 2021-0413-SG (Del. Ch. April 1, 2022), the Delaware Court of Chancery denied a motion to dismiss filed by former stockholders of an acquired company who did not receive the proceeds from the sale of their shares in their company because the wire transfer from the buyer to them for the purchase of their shares was hacked.  An intermediary transfer agent was used to disburse the funds and transfer the stock.

          This, of course, is a nightmarish situation that anyone who expects to receive wired funds wants to avoid. For a graphic display of the various parties involved and at what point the hacking occurred, a chart appears as an exhibit attached to the last page of the opinion linked above.

Chancery Declares Delaware a “Pro-Sandbagging” State

          In a recent Delaware Court of Chancery decision that addressed claims of breach of contract and fraud in connection with the sale of a business, the Court announced that Delaware law allows for sandbagging, which can be described as allowing a buyer of a business to sue for breach of a representation made in an agreement for the sale of a business even if the buyer knew that the representation was false–before closing–and when the agreement was signed.

          In Arwood v. AW Site Services, LLC, C.A. No. 2019-0904-JRS (Del. Ch. Mar. 9, 2022), while acknowledging that the Delaware Supreme Court has not definitively ruled on this issue, the Court of Chancery expressed confidence in stating that Delaware is a “pro-sandbagging state” for purposes of allowing a buyer to bring claims for breach of contractual representations in an agreement against a seller of a business even if the buyer were aware of the claim prior to closing–and at the time that the buyer signed the agreement of sale.

          This decision is consequential and noteworthy for the foregoing highlights alone, but there are also other notable aspects of this 113-page opinion that make it worth reading in its entirety.  For purposes of this short blog post, I will only provide a few bullet points.

Additional Selected Highlights

  • The Court defined sandbagging as referring colloquially to “the practice of asserting a claim based on a representation despite having had reason to suspect it was inaccurate.” See footnote 267 and related text.  The Court also explained sandbagging as “generally understood to mean to misrepresent or conceal one’s true intent, position, or potential in order to take advantage of an opponent.”  See Slip op. at 71.  See also footnotes 270-274 and accompanying text describing the etymology of the word and public policy issues implicated by the Court’s position.
  • The Court also observed that the parties are free to draft contract provisions to avoid sandbagging claims. See footnote 290 and accompanying text.
  • This ruling also instructed that a fraud claim in Delaware is the same as a claim for fraudulent inducement. Slip op. at 50.
  • In this lengthy opinion the Court chronicles in much detail the history of the deal from the first meeting of the buyer and seller through various iterations of the letter of intent, as well as through the extraordinary and unfettered access given to the buyer during the due diligence period (that helped to defeat a fraud claim), and that may serve as a cautionary tale for drafters of agreements of sale.
  • This decision also features extensive analysis and commentary regarding the competing expert reports on damages, and why the Court relied more on one expert as compared to the other.

Chancery Decision Addresses Advancement Issues

            The Delaware Court of Chancery decision in Krauss v. 180 Life Sciences Corp., C.A. No. 2021-0714-LWW (Del. Ch. Mar. 7, 2022), addressed nuances of advancement law that will be useful to those who labor in the field of corporate litigation dealing with these issues that are crucial to officers and directors.

          The key points of law that makes this decision blogworthy are twofold: (i) it serves as a reminder that some compulsory counterclaims may be eligible for advancement; and (ii) it reinforces the longstanding interpretation in Delaware of the phrase that serves as a prerequisite to providing advancement, with an origin in § 145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, and which was used in the provision of the Bylaws at issue in this case–namely, whether the person seeking advancement was sued “by reason of the fact” that she was an officer.

          Advancement has been a frequent topic of commentary on these pages over the last 17 years, and has been the subject of many articles and book chapters published by this writer.

Background:

          Unlike the corporate charter involved in this case, the advancement provision in the Bylaws of the company involved did not require board approval for advancement to be given for certain types of proceedings.

Highlights:

          Perennially, one of the more common defenses to a claim for advancement, and often the least successful argument–as in this case–is whether the prerequisite to the provision for advancement in the Bylaws was triggered to the extent that the litigation for which advancement was sought was prosecuted: “by reason of the fact that . . . [the plaintiff] is or was a director or officer of the company.”  See Slip op. at 8-9 and n.32.

          As the Court explained, the foregoing phrase is broadly interpreted by Delaware courts, and many published decisions have explained in many different ways why it is very easy to satisfy that condition of advancement, despite may failed attempts by companies to use it as a defense.  See Id. at 9-10.  See also footnotes 32-37.

          Also noteworthy in this case is the reminder that the court will not typically make a determination at the advancement stage about an allocation between legal fees that must be advanced–and intertwined claims in the same case that are not subject to advancement.  But rather, the parties should follow the procedure in the Danenberg v. Fitracks  decision to make advancement payments based on the good faith allocation of the parties, and a final allocation will be made at the end of the case.  See Slip op. at 12 and footnotes 44-45.

          Another noteworthy aspect of this case is the reminder that compulsory counterclaims are covered by the right to advancement when asserted to defeat or offset an underlying claim that is subject to advancement.  See Slip op. at 20 and footnote 74-81.

Chancery Ruling Underscores Basics of Stockholder Right to Demand Corporate Records under DGCL Section 220

          A Delaware Court of Chancery ruling in Wagner v. Tesla, Inc., C.A. No. 2021-1090-JTL, transcript ruling (Del. Ch. Jan. 19, 2022), has sharpened the “tools at hand” that the Delaware courts have long exhorted corporate litigators to use before filing a plenary lawsuit–namely, DGCL § 220, which is the basis for the right of stockholders to sue for corporate records.

          Readers of these pages since the 2005 launch of this blog will be forgiven if they have grown weary of the multitude of Delaware decisions on DGCL § 220 highlighted on these pages, chronicling the often long-suffering stockholders who attempt to use the frequently blunt tools at hand.

          But the recent Chancery ruling in Wagner v. Tesla, Inc. provides hope to those who would like § 220 to be a sharper tool for seeking corporate records than it sometimes seems to be.

          There are four especially noteworthy takeaways in this gem of a transcript ruling, in the context of a decision on a motion to expedite:

  • A reminder that § 220 complaints should be given a trial date within 90 days of the complaint being filed. The court eschews dispositive motions and other procedural obstacles to a quick trial date.  A trial date in this case was provided in about 90 days or so from the filing of the complaint, despite protestations by the company, addressed below. 
  • The court explained that it was a mistake for companies to defend § 220 cases on the merits of a potential underlying claim for several reasons, including that a stockholder does not need to demonstrate an “actionable claim”–but rather only needs to demonstrate a credible basis. See generally AmerisourceBergen Supreme Court decision highlighted on these pages. 
  • Because a stockholder only needs to show a credible basis and does not need to prove that it has an actionable claim, if a company does not want to “air dirty laundry” then they should not defend § 220 cases by addressing the merits of a potential underlying claim that might be brought in a later plenary action. Likewise, it was no defense in this case to seeking a trial in 90 days that the company had a federal securities trial scheduled across the country during a similar time period because a § 220 case should not be viewed as having any material impact on a plenary trial on actionable claims.[1] 
  • A defense that the court did not squarely address, but did not allow to be used as a bar to holding a prompt § 220 trial, was that the plaintiff in this case only held “fractional shares,” although the court did provide some dicta on that issue. See generally In re Camping World Holdings, IncStockholder Derivative Litigation, C.A. No. 2019-0179 (consol.), memo op. (Del. Ch. Jan. 31, 2022)(An unrelated § 220 case also considering a motion to expedite, but deferring ruling on the argument that the plaintiff lacks standing because he only owned a fractional share of stock.)

[1] The court noted that at the time of the hearing on the motion to expedite in this case, Tesla had the largest market cap in the world and had capable lawyers to handle litigation of both cases with trials in close proximity to each other.

On the same day I completed the highlights for the above case, I received in the mail a law review article that discussed the consequential Section 220 decision in Woods v. Sahara Enterprises, Inc., highlighted on these pages, and the author of that article kindly quoted from my blog post on that Sahara case. See Clifford R. Wood, Jr., Note, Knowing your Rights: Stockholder Demands to Inspect Corporate Books and Records Following Woods v. Sahara Enterprises, Inc., 46 Del. J. Corp L. 45, 52. (2021)The same article also cited to a law review article I co-wrote on Section 220. Id. at 46.

POSTSCRIPT:

Professor Stephen Bainbridge, a nationally-prominent corporate law professor whose voluminous scholarship is often cited in Delaware corporate law decisions, was kind enough to share this annual review via Twitter with the following high praise while referring to a subscription-only publication called The Chancery Daily which reports on decisions from Delaware’s Court of Chancery and Supreme Court:

@PrawfBainbridge

With all due deference to @chancery_daily, which is considerable, this is the single most indispensable event of the corporate law year. A must read.

Annual Review of Key Delaware Corporate Decisions https://delawarelitigation.com/2023/01/articles/annual-review-of-key-delaware-cases/18th-annual-review-of-key-delaware-corporate-and-commercial-decisions/

————————————————————————————

*Francis G.X. Pileggi is the managing partner of the Delaware office of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP. His email address is Francis.Pileggi@LewisBrisbois.com. He comments on key corporate and commercial decisions, and legal ethics topics, at www.delawarelitigation.com

**Sean M. Brennecke is a partner in the Delaware office of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP. His email address is Sean.Brennecke@Le

This post was prepared by Frank Reynolds, who has been following Delaware law and writing about it in various publications for over 30 years.

The Delaware Chancery Court recently threw out a shareholder’s oversight claim against SolarWinds Corporation’s directors because it failed to show they were unfit to review plaintiffs’ negligent supervision suit over a costly Russian hacker cybercrime — even though under the milestone Marchand opinion, cybersecurity was a “mission critical” area for the online software provider’s business, in Construction Industry Laborers Pension Fund et al. v. Bingle et al., C.A. No. 2021-0940-SG opinion issued  (Del. Ch. Sept. 6, 2022).

In his September 6 opinion, Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock said he granted the directors’ motion to dismiss the so-called Caremark negligent supervision charge because the Delaware Supreme Court’s Marchand v. Barnhill opinion required more than the plaintiffs’ allegation that SolarWinds’ board of directors negligently received no cybersecurity reports in more than two years.  Marchand v. Barnhill 212.3d 805, 822 (Del. 2019).  He said according to Marchand, the complaint lacked particularized pleadings to support a scienter claim that the SolarWinds directors demonstrated bad faith in fulfilling their fiduciary duty of oversight, commonly called a Caremark claim.

Chancellor William Allen’s pioneering 1996 opinion in Caremark first set the standards for a claim of breach of duty to supervise. In re Caremark Derivative Litigation, 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996).

Importantly for corporate law specialists, Vice Chancellor Glasscock’s Sept. 6 opinion said “to plead potential liability sufficient to cause directors to be unable to consider a demand and thus justify a derivative claim under Rule 23.1, the lack of oversight pled must be so extreme that it represents a breach of the duty of loyalty. This in turn requires a pleading of scienter demonstrating bad faith—in then-Chief Justice (Leo) Strine’s piquant formulation, a failure to fulfill the duty of care in good faith.”

The Vice Chancellor said additionally, the plaintiffs, led by the Construction Industry Laborers and Central Laborers pension funds, were dismissed because, “only utter failures by directors to impose a system for reporting risk, or failure to act in the face of “red flags” disclosed to them so vibrant the lack of action implicates bad faith, in connection with the corporation’s violation of positive law, have led to viable claims under Caremark.”

Background

SolarWinds, a Delaware corporation that went public in 2018, provided information technology infrastructure management software for clients ranging from the Fortune 500 to United States government agencies and was entirely dependent on the sale of its management software – which requires access to clients’ information technology systems.  Plaintiffs said that made the system highly vulnerable to attack by a malware called Sunburst, which was very injurious for SolarWinds and its clients.

Consolidated shareholder suits filed December 2020 in the wake of costly Sunburst damage, charged that the SolarWinds board created two director committees to split the job of advising and updating the board on cybersecurity issues but neither did the job and neither made any report to the board during a 26-month period in which the board negligently neglected its duty to monitor the mission critical area of cybersecurity.  That failure to monitor allowed Russian hackers to use SolarWinds own program as a Trojan horse that infected client software during updates, the complaints said.

As federal agencies investigated the alleged theft of government data through an infected SolarWinds Orin software, the director defendants filed motions to dismiss the now-consolidated complaints in January 2022, focusing on whether the derivative suit properly alleged that a majority of the board of directors could not impartially review the charges because of the likelihood of their liability.

What standard applies?

Plaintiffs alleged both that:

  1. A majority of the demand Board utterly failed “to implement and monitor a system of corporate controls and reporting mechanisms” regarding cybersecurity, and that
  2. Even if a monitoring system was in place, the directors failed to “oversee” such system of oversight in breach of their fiduciary duties because they overlooked “red flags” signaling corporate risk.

But the vice chancellor ruled that:

Plaintiffs in Caremark cases must “plead with particularity ‘a sufficient connection between the corporate trauma and the [actions or inactions of] the board,’” and “a stockholder cannot displace the board’s authority simply by describing the calamity and alleging that it occurred on the directors’ watch.”  He said a meritorious Caremark claim demonstrates a breach of the duty of loyalty, by way of a failure by the directors to act in good faith

Carelessness absent scienter not bad faith.

Marchand means that “the lack of a system of controls with respect to a particular incarnation of risk does not itself demonstrate bad faith; the lack of such system must be the result of action or inaction taken in bad faith,” the Vice Chancellor said.   “This distinction is heightened, I believe, in consideration of risk outside the realm of positive law.”

“Without a satisfactorily particularized pleading allowing reasonably conceivable inference of scienter, a bad faith claim cannot survive a motion to dismiss,” the vice chancellor said in summarizing reasons for dismissal – and the reason why so many Caremark claims are short-lived.  Therefore, he said, “to plead potential liability sufficient to cause directors to be unable to consider a demand and thus justify a derivative claim under Rule 23.1, the lack of oversight pled must be so extreme that it represents a breach of the duty of loyalty.”

Dandelions

And, he said, that explains why Caremark claims have recently “bloomed like dandelions after a warm spring rain” but “remain, however, one of the most difficult claims to cause to clear a motion to dismiss.”

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The Sequoia Presidential Yacht Group LLC v. FE Partners LLC, C.A. No. 8270-VCG (Del. Ch. July 15, 2013).

This ruling amplifies the relative paucity of judicial interpretation of the rather new Court of Chancery Rule 5.1 that defines the standard that must be met before filings with the court will be kept confidential or redacted from what would otherwise be public access. This decision denied an attempt to keep confidential the allegations of attorney misconduct referred to in a prior decision in this case highlighted on these pages.

In essence, mere embarrassment from allegations, even if proven false, is not sufficient to warrant confidential treatment under Court of Chancery Rule 5.1 The court reasoned that:

Sequoia seeks to keep confidential allegations that it forged or altered communications, and evidence of Sequoia’s alleged destruction of evidence and witness intimidation.  None of this information falls under, or is similar to, the prescribed categories of trade secrets; sensitive proprietary information; sensitive financial, business, or personnel information; or personal information such as medical records, social security numbers, financial account numbers, and the names of minor children.29  Rather, it appears that Sequoia merely wishes to avoid the embarrassment it would face if I were to unseal the record, mostly due to its alleged conduct in the course of the litigation itself.

Peter Mahler on his New York Business Divorce Blog, here, discusses a New York case that involves a claim by an LLC member against the accountant of a Delaware LLC that was the subject of a dissolution proceeding in the Delaware Chancery Court. The Chancery Court case settled but one member later claimed that the LLC’s accountant impermissibly help the other member in the dissolution proceeding. Excerpts from the excellent blog post follow:

…  until Anda Management, LLC v. Needlemen & Schacter, LLP, 2008 NY Slip Op 31534(U) (Sup Ct Nassau County May 20, 2008), I’d never heard of spin-off litigation involving charges against a professional for improperly taking sides in the underlying dissolution case.

 

Here’s what happened: Anda Management and Wilmington Paper Corp. formed a Delaware LLC called Worldwide Fibers to market paper products overseas. Worldwide retained the defendant accounting firm as its accountant without a written agreement. Three years later, Worldwide’s principals had a falling out, prompting Wilmington to file a proceeding for judicial dissolution of Worldwide in Delaware Chancery Court. Wilmington accused Anda’s principals of impermissibly withdrawing funds from Worldwide for personal reasons and then falsely booking them as legitimate business expenses.

The Delaware proceeding ultimately settled when Anda acquired Wilmington’s interest in Worldwide.

Anda and its principals subsequently brought a New York action against the accountant for breach of fiduciary duty and malpractice arising from its conduct in the Delaware case. The plaintiffs alleged that the accountant consulted with and assisted Wilmington’s trial counsel by reviewing a proposed complaint, participating in conference calls with Wilmington’s counsel, and submitting affidavits supportive of Worldwide’s claims in which the accountant allegedly made false and contradictory statements concerning accounting advice previously given by the accountant to the plaintiffs prior to the dissolution. The plaintiffs also alleged that the accountant was aware that the expenses challenged by Wilmington were proper, and that the accountant had affirmatively counseled the plaintiffs to take some of the disbursements challenged by Wilmington. The plaintiffs further alleged that one of the accountant’s employees gave the social security numbers of Anda’s principals to Wilmington’s counsel in order to perform credit searches on them.