IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
)
McWANE, INC., McWANE )
TECHNOLOGY, LLC, AND SYNAPSE
WIRELESS, INC., )
)
Plaintiffs, ) C.A. No. 9488-VCP
)
v. )
)
MONRO B. LANIER III, as Stockholder )
Representative of each EFFECTIVE TIME )
STOCKHOLDER under that certain )
Agreement and Plan of Reorganization )
dated May 23, 2012 by and among McWane, )
Inc., McWane Technology, LLC, McWane )
Synapse, LLC, Synapse Wireless, Inc., and )
Monro B. Lanier III, as Stockholder )
Representative; and GARY SHELTON, an )
Effective Time Stockholder; BRAD )
FLOWERS, an Effective Time Stockholder; )
and SANDY MORRIS, an Effective Time )
Stockholder, )
)
Defendants. )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: October 14, 2014
Date Decided: January 30, 2015
Richard P. Rollo, Esq., Robert L. Burns, Esq., RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A.,
Wilmington, Delaware; Michael D. Mulvaney, Esq., J. Ethan McDaniel, Esq., James C.
Lester, Esq., MAYNARD COOPER & GALE P.C., Birmingham, Alabama; Attorneys for
Plaintiffs.
Paul D. Brown, Esq., CHIPMAN BROWN CICERO & COLE, LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
Norman M. Monhait, Esq., ROSENTHAL, MONHAIT & GODDESS, P.A., Wilmington,
Delaware; David J. Hodge, Esq., MORRIS, KING & HODGE, P.C., Huntsville,
Alabama; Attorneys for Defendants.
PARSONS, Vice Chancellor.
Before the Court is a motion by three individual defendants to dismiss or stay this
action. These defendants contend that the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over them. In
the alternative, the three defendants seek dismissal or a stay of this case in favor of an
allegedly first-filed action in Alabama based on the principles of McWane Cast Iron Pipe
Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Engineering Co.1 I conclude that the individual defendants
are bound by a forum selection clause in the merger agreement. This Court, therefore,
has personal jurisdiction over the individual defendants, and McWane is inapplicable.
Accordingly, for the reasons that follow, the motion to dismiss or stay is denied.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Parties
Plaintiff McWane, Inc. (“McWane”), is a Delaware corporation with its principal
place of business in Birmingham, Alabama. Plaintiff McWane Technology, LLC
(“McWane Technology,” and together with McWane, the “Buyers”), is a Delaware
limited liability company with a principal place of business in Birmingham, Alabama.
McWane Technology is the entity utilized by McWane to accomplish the acquisition of
Synapse Wireless, Inc. (“Synapse,” and together with the Buyers, “Plaintiffs”), a
Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Huntsville, Alabama.
Defendant Monro Lanier, III (the “Stockholder Representative”) is sued solely in
his capacity as the Stockholder Representative under the merger agreement. In that
capacity, Lanier is responsible for representing the interests of the Effective Time
1
263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970).
1
Stockholders,2 who are defined in the merger agreement as being the stockholders of
Synapse immediately prior to the merger transaction.
The complaint also names three other Effective Time Stockholders as Defendants:
Gary Shelton, Brad Flowers, and Sandy Morris. Shelton is a resident of Lincoln County,
Tennessee. Flowers and Morris reside in Madison County, Alabama. Together, Shelton,
Flowers, and Morris constitute the “Individual Defendants,” and they have moved to
dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and inadequate service of process, or to dismiss
or stay for improper venue.
B. Pertinent Facts3
McWane sought to acquire Synapse. To that end, McWane Synapse, LLC, a
wholly owned subsidiary of McWane Technology, executed a reverse-triangular merger
with Synapse in which Synapse was the surviving corporation (generally, the “Merger”).
The Merger was effectuated through a Merger Agreement, with Buyers, McWane
Synapse, LLC, Synapse, and the Stockholder Representative Lanier, as the five
signatories. The Merger involved a deal structure whereby the Buyers purchased a
majority of Synapse‟s shares and are to acquire the remaining shares over a number of
years, beginning in 2016, from the minority Continuing Stockholders through a series of
2
Unless otherwise specified, all capitalized terms have the same definition as in the
“Merger Agreement,” a copy of which was submitted as Exhibit A to the
Transmittal Affidavit of Richard Rollo (“Rollo Aff.”) filed with Plaintiffs‟ initial
complaint.
3
This factual background is highly abbreviated and focuses on only those facts
necessary to resolve the Individual Defendants‟ motion to dismiss or stay.
2
annual put and call options. The framework for those later acquisitions is specified in a
Stockholders Agreement.4 That scheme involves an elaborate system of annual
valuations, put and call formulas, and dispute resolution provisions applicable to the
period from 2016 through 2023. The Individual Defendants are signatories to the
Stockholders Agreement.
The crux of this dispute involves the interplay between the Stockholders
Agreement and the Merger Agreement. The Merger Agreement included a number of
representations and warranties and required the Effective Time Stockholders, under
certain circumstances, to indemnify the Buyers for breaches of those representations and
warranties. As partial security for any such claims the Buyers may have, the parties to
the Merger set aside $8,000,000 as an Escrow Amount. The Effective Time Stockholders
are not liable for any indemnity claims in excess of their pro rata portion of the Escrow
Amount, unless the Buyer asserts, and reduces to judgment, a claim for more than the
Escrow Amount resulting from fraud or an intentional or willful breach of the Merger
Agreement.5 Based on what they allege are fraudulent financial gimmicks employed by
Synapse‟s management before the consummation of the Merger, Plaintiffs are asserting
such an indemnity claim in this case.
4
The Stockholders Agreement was Exhibit H to the Merger Agreement. A copy of
the Stockholders Agreement was submitted as Exhibit A to the Transmittal
Affidavit of David Hodge (“Hodge Aff.”) filed with the Individual Defendants‟
Opening Brief on this motion.
5
Merger Agreement (“MA”) § 8.3(b).
3
Under the Stockholders Agreement, the price for the annual put and call options is
established by a formula pursuant to which the Continuing Stockholders can redeem a
portion of their shares pro rata based on the greater of: (1) Synapse‟s annual valuation; or
(2) $76,300,000, an amount defined in the Stockholders Agreement as the “Valuation
Floor.”6 If Synapse struggles in future years, the Valuation Floor becomes the more
important number. The Valuation Floor can be reduced only if the Buyers suffer a loss
arising from a breach of certain intellectual property representations in the Merger
Agreement or fraud or a willful or intentional breach in connection with the Merger
Agreement‟s representations, warranties, or covenants, among other things, as described
in Section 8.2(f) of the Merger Agreement. Thus, Plaintiffs could lower the Valuation
Floor if they assert a claim that meets the description in Section 8.2(f) of the Merger
Agreement and win damages exceeding the Escrow Amount, among other conditions.7
Plaintiffs are alleging such claims in this action, and seek damages greater than
$8,000,000.
Plaintiffs began to pursue their claims, however, not with a lawsuit, but by
initiating the dispute resolution process outlined in the Merger Agreement.8 Plaintiffs
6
Stockholders Agreement (“SHA”) § 4.2(c).
7
The Merger Agreement contemplates that the Effective Time Stockholders could
pay the damages award or that the party found to have committed the fraudulent or
willful breach could pay, in which case the Valuation Floor would not be affected.
Additionally, while Plaintiffs have the right to reduce the Valuation Floor in
specified circumstances, they do not have an obligation to do so.
8
MA § 8.4(a).
4
submitted a Claim Certificate to the Stockholder Representative on December 13, 2013.
The Stockholder Representative responded that the certificate was defective and did not
comply with the Merger Agreement‟s requirements. Nevertheless, the Stockholder
Representative lodged his Objection Notice to Plaintiffs‟ Claim Certificate on February
13, 2014. At that point, the Merger Agreement required a 30-business-day period of
good faith negotiations. Thirty business days after Plaintiffs received the Objection
Notice and with no resolution having been reached, Plaintiffs became entitled to file suit
to pursue their claims.9 As detailed infra, the Merger Agreement includes a mandatory
and exclusive forum selection clause that requires any suit “arising out of or relating to”
the Merger Agreement to be filed in Delaware.10 The Stockholders Agreement, on the
other hand, includes a “Consent to Jurisdiction and Venue” clause that permits “any
action or proceeding against the parties relating in any way to” the Stockholders
Agreement to be brought in Huntsville, Alabama.11 Competing lawsuits here and in
Alabama underlie the present motion to dismiss or stay.
C. Procedural History
1. The Alabama lawsuit
On March 6, 2014, before the 30-day negotiation period expired, the Stockholder
Representative filed suit against Plaintiffs seeking a declaratory judgment regarding
9
Id. § 8.4(a)(iii).
10
Id. § 10.9.
11
SHA § 7.3.
5
Plaintiffs‟ indemnification claims in the Circuit Court of Madison County, Alabama (the
“Alabama Action”). The Individual Defendants in this Delaware action intervened in the
Alabama Action on March 27, 2014, by filing a Complaint in Intervention. That
complaint was amended on June 12, 2014 (the “Alabama Complaint”).12 As amended,
the Alabama Complaint asserts the following three claims: (1) Count I seeks a
declaratory judgment that Plaintiffs13 are not entitled to any devaluation of the put rights
or call options; (2) Count II alleges minority stockholder oppression, based on purported
self-dealing by Plaintiffs and their efforts to retain the Escrow Amount and devalue the
put and call options; and (3) Count III asserts a claim for breach of fiduciary duty based
on Plaintiffs‟ conduct.
2. The Court of Chancery lawsuit
Plaintiffs filed suit here on March 31, 2014. According to Plaintiffs, the 30-day
cooling-off period ended on Friday, March 28, 2014, and Plaintiffs filed their initial
complaint the next business day. Early on, Plaintiffs filed two separate motions for a
temporary restraining order (“TRO”) to cause the Stockholder Representative to comply
with the mandatory forum selection clause in the Merger Agreement and cease his efforts
to litigate in Alabama. Those motions resulted in a Consent Order that was approved by
this Court on May 20, 2014. In that Consent Order, the Stockholder Representative
12
A copy of the Alabama Complaint, as amended, was submitted as Exhibit B to the
Hodge Affidavit.
13
Unless otherwise noted, all references to Plaintiffs in this Memorandum Opinion
refer to the plaintiffs in this Delaware action.
6
agreed to dismiss his complaint in the Alabama Action and litigate Plaintiffs‟
indemnification claims here. Also on May 20, the Individual Defendants moved to
dismiss this action for lack of personal jurisdiction or to stay it. At the same time, the
Individual Defendants continued to press their claims in Alabama. After Plaintiffs filed a
third TRO motion to enjoin the Individual Defendants from pursuing the Alabama
Action, the parties stipulated on July 9, 2014, that the Individual Defendants would not
prosecute their claims in Alabama pending resolution of their motion to dismiss or stay
this action.
Plaintiffs filed the operative Amended Verified Complaint (the “Complaint”) in
this Court on June 11, 2014. The Stockholder Representative answered and
counterclaimed on June 19. Plaintiffs responded to the counterclaim on July 9.
Thereafter, the parties briefed the Individual Defendants‟ motion to dismiss,14 and I heard
argument on that motion on October 14.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On a motion to dismiss under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(2), the plaintiff has
the burden of showing a basis for the Court‟s jurisdiction over the nonresident
defendant.15 In the usual case, Delaware Courts resolve the issue of personal jurisdiction
14
Briefing on the motion to dismiss or stay consisted of: the Individual Defendants‟
Opening Brief (“IDOB”); Plaintiffs‟ Brief in Opposition (“PAB”); and the
Individual Defendants‟ Reply Brief (“IDRB”).
15
AeroGlobal Capital Mgmt., LLC v. Cirrus Indus., Inc., 871 A.2d 428, 437 (Del.
2005); Albert v. Alex. Brown Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 2005 WL 2130607, at *14 (Del.
Ch. Aug. 26, 2005).
7
over a nonresident by applying a two-step analysis, which involves determining: (1)
whether a statute authorizes service of process on that defendant, and (2) whether
subjecting the nonresident defendant to jurisdiction in Delaware comports with the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.16 In conducting this analysis, the Court
may consider the pleadings, affidavits, and any discovery of record.17 The minimum
contacts theory, however, is not the only way to obtain personal jurisdiction over a party.
A party also may expressly consent to jurisdiction by contract, in which case a minimum
contacts analysis would not be required.18
III. ANALYSIS
A. Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction
In their briefing, the Individual Defendants emphasized that they have no relevant
contacts to Delaware, denied having consented to litigate here, and argued repeatedly that
a finding of personal jurisdiction over them would violate due process. Plaintiffs do not
aver that the Individual Defendants have any relevant contacts to Delaware that would
implicate our long-arm statute.19 Instead, Plaintiffs contend that personal jurisdiction is
16
Hercules Inc. v. Leu Trust & Banking (Bahamas) Ltd., 611 A.2d 476, 480 (Del.
1992).
17
Ryan v. Gifford, 935 A.2d 258, 265 (Del. Ch. 2007).
18
Capital Gp. Cos. v. Armour, 2004 WL 2521295, at *2 (Del. Ch. Nov. 3, 2014)
(citing, inter alia, Sternberg v. O’Neil, 550 A.2d 1105, 1109 n.4 (Del. 1988),
Hornberger Mgmt. Co. v. Haws & Tingle Gen. Contrs., 768 A.2d 983, 987 (Del.
Super. 2000), and USH Ventures v. Global Telesystems Gp., Inc., 1998 WL
281250, at *8 (Del. Super. May 21, 1998)).
19
10 Del. C. § 3104.
8
appropriate here under each of the following three theories: (1) the Individual Defendants
are “Parties” to the Merger Agreement and therefore directly bound by the Delaware
forum selection clause; (2) the Individual Defendants are third-party beneficiaries of the
Merger Agreement; and (3) the Individual Defendants are equitably estopped from
challenging the forum selection clause in the Merger Agreement. Because I find the third
theory compelling, I concentrate on it and address the other two theories only briefly.
Before turning to the equitable estoppel argument, however, it is useful to examine the
connection between the Merger Agreement and the Stockholders Agreement.
1. The Relationship of the Merger Agreement to the Stockholders Agreement
The Merger Agreement and the Stockholders Agreement, although two separate
contracts, ultimately are just two parts of a larger transaction. The Individual Defendants
seek to have the Stockholders Agreement considered in isolation, focus almost
exclusively on its terms, and contend that adopting Plaintiffs‟ position would result in the
Stockholders Agreement being “rendered meaningless and construed away.” 20 This is
incorrect. The Stockholders Agreement and the Merger Agreement interrelate, were
designed to work together, and constitute parts of the package of documents and
agreements designed to effectuate the Merger.
a. The forum selection clauses
Both the Merger Agreement and the Stockholders Agreement include clauses
concerning the forum in which a lawsuit can be brought. As the clauses themselves
20
IDRB 7.
9
show, however, the Merger Agreement requires lawsuits arising out of or relating to it to
be brought in Delaware, while the Stockholders Agreement includes only a consent to
jurisdiction in Alabama.
Section 10.9 of the Merger Agreement states:
This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware . . . . In
any action among or between any of the parties arising out of
or relating to this Agreement, each of the parties (a)
irrevocably and unconditionally consents and submits to the
exclusive jurisdiction and venue of the Court of Chancery of
the State of Delaware or, to the extent such court does not
have subject matter jurisdiction, the Superior Court of the
State of Delaware or the United States District Court for the
District of Delaware; [and] (b) agrees that all claims in
respect of such action or proceeding shall be heard and
determined exclusively in accordance with clause (a) of this
Section 10.9 . . . . Each party agrees not to commence any
legal proceedings related hereto except in such courts.21
In addition, Section 10.9 also provides that each party: (c) waives any objection to venue;
(d) waives any objection that the Delaware courts lack personal jurisdiction; and (e)
allows service of process in accordance with Section 10.1.22
The Stockholders Agreement in Section 7.3 provides for a more limited consent to
jurisdiction:
This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware . . . . Any
action or proceeding against the parties relating in any way to
this Agreement may be brought and enforced in the state or
21
MA § 10.9.
22
Id.
10
federal courts sitting in Huntsville, Alabama . . . and the
parties irrevocably submit to the jurisdiction of such Courts in
respect of any such action or proceeding.23
Section 7.3 also provides that each of the parties waives any objection to venue or the
convenience of the forum.
A comparison of these two clauses shows that the Merger Agreement requires
litigation in this Court for any disputes relating to the Merger Agreement, whereas the
Stockholders Agreement permits, but does not require, litigation in Alabama of any
disputes relating to the Stockholders Agreement. Conceivably, there could be a claim
relating to both the Merger Agreement and the Stockholders Agreement. In such a
situation, the mandatory language of the Merger Agreement would trump the permissive
language of the Stockholders Agreement. Furthermore, as demonstrated infra, the
Alabama Complaint fundamentally relates to the Merger Agreement, even if—in some
expansive sense of the term—it also may “relate” to the Stockholders Agreement.
b. The stock valuation process
The Individual Defendants emphasize that the Merger Agreement and the
Stockholders Agreement contain separate indemnification procedures. According to the
Individual Defendants, “Plaintiffs chose to segregate methods of indemnification between
separate agreements.”24 Through this reading, the Individual Defendants contend that the
indemnification provisions found in Article VIII of the Merger Agreement apply only to
23
SHA § 7.3 (bolded capital emphasis removed).
24
IDRB 6.
11
the Escrow Amount and that the Stockholders Agreement‟s process for lowering the
Valuation Floor is a separate form of indemnification. The apparent textual hook for this
argument is that the Merger Agreement provides that “nothing in [this] Agreement shall
limit the right of [McWane Technology] or any other Indemnified Party to pursue
remedies under any Related Agreement against the parties thereto.”25 The Individual
Defendants also insist that any devaluation of the put and call rights relates solely to the
Stockholders Agreement and the Merger Agreement has nothing to do with that subject.
I find the Individual Defendants‟ argument untenable. The Merger Agreement and
the Stockholders Agreement interrelate and work together; they are two parts of a larger
transaction. Buttressing this conclusion is the fact that the Merger Agreement defines the
term “Related Agreements” as “the Stock Purchase Agreement, the Subscription
Agreement, the Escrow Agreement, the Stockholders’ Agreement, the Employment
Agreements and the Indemnification Agreements.”26
The crux of the Alabama Complaint—despite being couched in terms of minority
stockholder oppression and breach of fiduciary duty—is that Plaintiffs should not be able
to “devalue” the put rights or call options described in the Stockholders Agreement.
Understanding how those rights can be devalued is important to comprehending the
relationship between the Stockholders Agreement and the Merger Agreement and to
resolving the Individual Defendants‟ motion to dismiss or stay this action.
25
MA § 8.2(d).
26
Id. § 1.1 (emphasis added).
12
As partially described in the facts section supra, Section 4.2 of the Stockholders
Agreement includes an elaborate system for valuing the put and call options. The value
of those options is based on the greater of the Annual Valuation of Synapse, as
determined in accordance with the procedures in Section 4.1, or the Valuation Floor.
Thus, even if the Valuation Floor is lowered, the Annual Valuation still must be lower
than the Valuation Floor for the reduction to have any practical effect on the Continuing
Stockholders. Assuming the Valuation Floor comes into play, a number of events must
occur before the Valuation Floor would be lowered. Those events include: (1) the Buyers
assert a qualifying claim, e.g., a breach of the intellectual property representations and
warranties in Section 3.12 of the Merger Agreement or a claim for fraud or willful or
intentional breach in connection with the Merger Agreement; (2) the Buyers win damages
in excess of the Escrow Amount; (3) a put or call option is exercised, which cannot occur
until 2016 at the earliest; (4) the Buyers‟ damages judgment remains unsatisfied; and (5)
McWane Technology chooses to reduce the Valuation Floor to the extent of the unpaid
damages.27
Accordingly, no fewer than five separate conditions must be satisfied before any
reduction in the Valuation Floor can occur. A claim challenging the reduction of the
Valuation Floor presumably would arise under the Stockholders Agreement. It is
27
There is an alternative method for reducing the Valuation Floor for claims still
pending in 2016. SHA § 4.2(c)(i). That process allows for a temporary reduction
of the Valuation Floor, and provides for a reconciliation of the amount of the
reduction with the final damages judgment ultimately awarded for the pending
claim, and for payments to Continuing Stockholders to be adjusted accordingly.
13
unclear, however, how such a claim could be asserted currently, because only one of the
conditions for reducing the Valuation Floor has been satisfied—i.e., Plaintiffs have
asserted a qualifying claim. At present, Plaintiffs could not reduce the Valuation Floor,
even if they wanted to, because: (1) no one has exercised, nor could anyone have
exercised, a call or put option; and (2) there is no unpaid qualifying damages claim,
because McWane‟s indemnification claim is being litigated in this Court and no judgment
for damages has ever been entered. Thus, while the Alabama Complaint employs the
language of the Stockholders Agreement, it actually is challenging—and, at this point in
time, only could be challenging—Plaintiffs‟ indemnification claim under the Merger
Agreement.28 For example, the Alabama Complaint requests an order that Plaintiffs “are
not entitled to any devaluation of put right or call option values based on any allegation
raised in their December 13, 2013 communication.”29 The December 13 communication
is Plaintiffs‟ Claim Certificate initiating the indemnification procedures under the Merger
Agreement. The fact that the Alabama Complaint contests the merits of Plaintiffs‟
indemnification claims, which indisputably arise under the Merger Agreement,
demonstrates that the Alabama claims arise out of or relate to the Merger Agreement.
28
Consistent with this conclusion, the Alabama Complaint explicitly recognizes that
the “agreed-upon valuation floor can be reduced only for „unpaid subject losses‟
beyond the amount reserved in the Escrow Agreement if there has been a breach
of Section 3.12 (Intellectual Property) of the Merger Agreement or any loss that is
a result of fraud, willful or intentional breaches of warranties contained in the
Merger Agreement.” Ala. Compl. ¶ 13.
29
Id. Count I, Prayer for Relief.
14
In sum, any reduction of the Valuation Floor must begin with an indemnification
claim under the Merger Agreement. Plaintiffs asserted such a claim with their Claim
Certificate in December 2013. The Stockholder Representative, and later the Individual
Defendants, responded by preemptively filing a declaratory judgment action in Alabama.
The relationship between the Merger Agreement and the Stockholders Agreement is
such, however, that the Alabama Complaint, by its own allegations, actually challenges
Plaintiffs‟ indemnification claims, which are asserted pursuant to the Merger Agreement
and, therefore, must be litigated in this Court.
c. The “supersedes” clause of the Stockholders Agreement
The Individual Defendants rely heavily on language in the Stockholders
Agreement stating that it “supersedes all prior agreements and understandings with
respect to such subject matter.”30 It is not entirely clear how expansively the Individual
Defendants would read the “supersedes” clause of the Stockholders Agreement, but I am
convinced that, for purposes of the motion to dismiss, their interpretation is unreasonably
broad. The Individual Defendants seem to contend that the claims in the Alabama
Complaint relate only to the Stockholders Agreement and that the forum consent clause
in that agreement supersedes the forum selection clause in the Merger Agreement. This
argument raises numerous problems. The Alabama Action, as the previous section
showed, does not concern only the Stockholders Agreement; it also contests Plaintiffs‟
30
SHA § 7.11.
15
indemnification claims under the Merger Agreement.31 Additionally, the consent to
jurisdiction clause in the Stockholders Agreement is permissive, not mandatory as is the
analogous clause in the Merger Agreement.
Furthermore, in the context of this dispute, it is not even clear what the
Stockholders Agreement would be “superseding.”32 Besides referring to the Merger
Agreement in each of its first three recitals and drawing many of its defined terms from
the Merger Agreement, the Stockholders Agreement substantively references the Merger
Agreement in the very section upon which the Alabama Complaint is based: valuation of
the put and call options. Indeed, only by following the indemnification procedures in the
Merger Agreement could Plaintiffs arrive at a position to be able to lower the Valuation
Floor.
2. Equitable Estoppel
Having analyzed the interplay between the Stockholders Agreement and the
Merger Agreement, I turn to the issue of personal jurisdiction. The Individual
31
The Individual Defendants state in their brief: “The Merger Agreement does not
provide any mechanism for devaluing the shareholders‟ put or call rights; that is
only found in the Stockholder Agreement.” IDRB 7. While this statement
superficially may be true, the first step toward potentially devaluing the put or call
options is to assert an indemnification claim under the Merger Agreement. That is
the stage of the current dispute between the parties. Thus, the Individual
Defendants put the cart before the horse when they assert that their claims arise
only under the Stockholders Agreement.
32
In this regard, I note, for example, that the Stockholders Agreement evidently was
signed sometime after the Merger Agreement and is defined by it as a Related
Agreement. MA § 1.1.
16
Defendants assert that they are not subject to the Merger Agreement‟s Delaware forum
selection clause. That clause, by its terms, binds only the parties to the Merger
Agreement. Those parties were McWane, McWane Technology, McWane Synapse,
LLC, Synapse, and the Stockholder Representative. The Individual Defendants argue
that a “party cannot be bound to terms not contained in any document the party
executed.”33 As non-parties to the Merger Agreement, therefore, the Individual
Defendants contend that they are not bound by its Delaware forum selection clause.
“[T]he ordinary rule is that only the formal parties to a contract are bound by its
terms.”34 Delaware law, however, recognizes that in some instances parties should be
equitably estopped from challenging a forum selection clause. “The doctrine of equitable
estoppel prevents a non-signatory to a contract from embracing the contract, and then
turning her back on the portions of the contract, such as a forum selection clause, that she
finds distasteful.”35 The courts employ a three-part test to determine whether a
“nonsignatory to an agreement is bound by a forum selection clause in that agreement:
„First, is the forum selection clause valid? Second, are the [nonsignatories] third-party
beneficiaries, or closely related to, the contract? Third, does the claim arise from their
33
IDRB 4.
34
Alliance Data Sys. Corp. v. Blackstone Capital P’rs V L.P., 963 A.2d 746, 760
(Del. Ch.), aff’d, 976 A.2d 170 (Del. 2009) (Table).
35
Capital Gp. Cos. v. Armour, 2004 WL 2521295, at *6 (Del. Ch. Nov. 3, 2004).
17
standing relating to the . . . agreement?‟”36 An affirmative answer to all three questions
will result in the nonsignatories, here the Individual Defendants, being bound by the
Merger Agreement‟s forum selection clause.
a. Validity of the forum selection clause
“Forum selection clauses are presumptively valid and have been regularly
enforced.”37 Although the Individual Defendants repeatedly assert that subjecting them
to jurisdiction in this Court would violate their constitutional rights of due process, it is
not clear whether they dispute the validity of the forum selection clause. In general, such
a clause will be enforced unless the challenging party can establish that: “(i) it is a result
of fraud or overreaching; (ii) enforcement would violate a strong public policy of the
forum; or (iii) enforcement would, in the particular circumstances of the case, result in
litigation in a jurisdiction so seriously inconvenient as to be unreasonable.”38
The Individual Defendants bear a heavy burden to overcome the presumptive
validity of a forum selection clause, and they have failed to satisfy that burden. There is
no evidence in this case of fraud or overreaching, and the Individual Defendants mostly
restrict their arguments to challenging the constitutionality of subjecting them to personal
jurisdiction in this Court. These arguments related more to the latter two prongs of the
nonsignatory analysis, and I address them in those contexts. As to the first prong of that
36
Baker v. Impact Hldg., Inc., 2010 WL 1931032, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 13, 2010)
(quoting Capital Gp. Cos., 2004 WL 2521295, at *5).
37
Capital Gp. Cos., 2004 WL 2521295, at *6.
38
Baker, 2010 WL 1931032, at *3 (internal quotations omitted).
18
analysis, I find that the Individual Defendants have not rebutted the presumptive validity
of the Merger Agreement‟s forum selection clause.
b. The degree to which the Individual Defendants are closely related to the
Merger Agreement
“The cases suggest two ways a party can be closely related to an agreement: 1) she
receives a direct benefit from the agreement; or 2) it was foreseeable that she would be
bound by the agreement.”39 Contrary to the Individual Defendants‟ apparent position, the
preceding sentence is deliberately disjunctive. Moreover, under at least the direct benefit
route, the Individual Defendants are closely related to the Merger Agreement.
i. Direct Benefit
Upon the Merger‟s consummation, the Buyers purchased some 60% of Synapse‟s
outstanding stock for $53,000,000 in cash, with $8,000,000 of that amount placed in
escrow.40 The Individual Defendants collectively received $5,383,108.63 from the sale
of their stock, a not insignificant fraction of the total initial purchase price.41
Additionally, the Individual Defendants have a contingent interest of $817,276.97 in the
Escrow Amount, which, if paid in full, would increase the Individual Defendants‟
proceeds from the Merger by roughly 15%. Based on these facts, I conclude that the
39
Weygandt v. Weco, LLC, 2009 WL 1351808, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 14, 2009)
(footnotes omitted).
40
Ala. Compl. ¶¶ 8-9.
41
Transmittal Aff. of Robert L. Burns (“Burns Aff.”) in Supp. of PAB, Ex. C.
19
Individual Defendants did receive a direct benefit from the Merger Agreement such that
they would be considered closely related to that agreement.42
ii. Foreseeability
The Individual Defendants assert “that a party cannot be bound to a forum
selection clause unless it was foreseeable at the time the agreement was entered that such
a clause might be enforced against it.”43 To the extent the Individual Defendants mean to
suggest that such foreseeability is required to show they are closely related to the Merger
Agreement, they have misstated the law, because it would suffice to show either
foreseeability or a direct benefit to demonstrate that a party is closely related to the
agreement. In any event, I find that it was foreseeable that the Individual Defendants
would be bound by the Merger Agreement‟s forum selection clause based on the facts
that: (1) collectively they received over $5 million from the Merger Agreement and a
contingent claim for nearly a million dollars more from the Escrow Amount; and (2)
despite their protestations to the contrary, they are asserting claims arising under the
Merger Agreement in the Alabama Action.
42
See, e.g., Baker, 2010 WL 1931032, at *4 (concluding that non-pecuniary benefit
of having a seat on the board was a direct benefit); Weygandt, 2009 WL 1351808,
at *4-5 (finding that entering into a related and lucrative lease agreement as a
lessor was a direct benefit); Capital Gp. Cos., 2004 WL 2521295, at *7 (holding
that acquiring a direct beneficial interest in stock, as opposed to merely having a
community property interest, was a direct benefit).
43
IDRB 15.
20
The Individual Defendants contest this conclusion, arguing that it was not
foreseeable that they would be bound by the Merger Agreement‟s forum selection clause
when they were not signatories to that agreement, but were signatories to the subsequent
Stockholders Agreement, which contained its own forum selection clause. As discussed
in Section III.A.1.b supra and reiterated in the next section, however, the claims asserted
in the Alabama Action arise out of and relate to the Merger Agreement and thereby
trigger its forum selection clause. Additionally, as previously discussed, the Stockholders
Agreement contains a consent to jurisdiction clause only, not a forum selection clause.
c. Claims relating to the Merger Agreement
Despite the Individual Defendants‟ vigorous denials, I find that the Alabama
Complaint does assert claims that arise out of or relate to the Merger Agreement. For
instance, the Individual Defendants characterize the Alabama Action in the following
terms: “[It claims] no rights directly flowing from the Merger Agreement. The Alabama
Action does not invoke the benefit of the Merger Agreement; instead, it invokes the
Stockholders Agreement and seek[s] a declaration concerning a provision in the
Stockholders Agreement.”44 I disagree.
First and foremost, and as recognized in the Alabama Complaint itself,45 the
Valuation Floor only can be lowered because of losses resulting from certain breaches of
the Merger Agreement. Count I seeks a declaration that Plaintiffs cannot devalue the put
44
IDRB 16.
45
Ala. Compl. ¶ 13.
21
or call options on the basis of anything in the Claim Certificate. The Claim Certificate
constitutes Plaintiffs‟ initiation of the Merger Agreement‟s indemnification procedure. In
seeking a declaratory judgment that the Claim Certificate does not provide grounds to
devalue the put or call options, the Individual Defendants effectively are challenging
Plaintiffs‟ indemnification claims—claims that must be brought in this Court.
Second, because no put or call option can be exercised until 2016, it is difficult to
see how the Individual Defendants can assert a ripe and justiciable claim under the
Stockholders Agreement. For one thing, four of the five conditions necessary to lower
the Valuation Floor have not been met at this time. The only condition that has been
met—Plaintiffs asserting a qualifying claim—clearly is governed by the Merger
Agreement and must be challenged, if at all, in this Court. As such, Plaintiffs must be
asserting claims under the Merger Agreement.
Third, the very provision of the Stockholders Agreement under which the
Individual Defendants purportedly seek a declaratory judgment—Section 4.2(c)
concerning the Valuation Floor—is inextricably intertwined with the indemnification
provisions of the Merger Agreement. Indeed, that provision of the Stockholders
Agreement explicitly recognizes that a reduction of the Valuation Floor represents a
remedy for breaches of the Merger Agreement.46 A fair reading of the Stockholders
46
For example, the Stockholders Agreement states: “After the application of the
limitations in Section 8.3 of the Merger Agreement or the expiration of the
Survival Date, the granting of the option to reduce the Valuation Floor provided
for herein shall, except for fraud or any willful or intentional breach, constitute the
sole remedy of the Indemnified Parties . . . .” SHA § 4.2(c).
22
Agreement indicates that it contemplates that the indemnification provisions of the
Merger Agreement would have to be invoked and pursued at least to some extent before
there possibly could be a reduction of the Valuation Floor specified in the Stockholders
Agreement.
Considering all of the evidence, I conclude that the Alabama Complaint arises out
of and relates to the Merger Agreement.
3. The “Parties” and “Third-Party Beneficiary” Arguments
In the preceding section, I concluded that this Court has personal jurisdiction over
the Individual Defendants by virtue of the fact that, having accepted significant benefits
under the Merger Agreement and now having filed suit asserting claims relating to that
contract, they are equitably estopped from challenging the application of the Merger
Agreement‟s forum selection clause. Plaintiffs also advanced two alternative theories
under which they assert this Court has jurisdiction. First, Plaintiffs contend that the
Individual Defendants in fact are “parties” to the Merger Agreement by virtue of the
appointment of the Stockholder Representative. And, second, they argue that the
Individual Defendants are third-party beneficiaries of the Merger Agreement.
The “parties” argument relies on the facts that the stockholders appointed the
Stockholder Representative and that the Stockholder Representative: (a) is a party to the
Merger Agreement and therefore the forum selection clause; and (b) consented to
jurisdiction here by dismissing his Alabama Action. This theory is more persuasive as to
the two Individual Defendants who submitted stockholder consents to effectuate the
23
Merger.47 Those consents included a specific authorization for the Stockholder
Representative to act for the signing stockholders as their agent and attorney-in-fact with
respect to claims for indemnification under Article VIII of the Merger Agreement. As to
the third Individual Defendant, however, the link to the Stockholder Representative is
more tenuous.
The “third-party beneficiary” argument presents a closer question. At least some
of my analysis of the equitable estoppel issue overlaps and would support the existence of
personal jurisdiction under this theory. It is also true, however, that the Merger
Agreement includes a clause disclaiming third-party beneficiaries,48 and the parties
dispute the effect of that provision.
In any event, I find it unnecessary to consider Plaintiffs‟ alternative jurisdictional
arguments further. The equitable estoppel theory discussed supra provides a sound basis
for personal jurisdiction over each of the Individual Defendants. That is, the Individual
Defendants are equitably estopped from asserting that this Court lacks jurisdiction over
them.49 Thus, personal jurisdiction over the Individual Defendants is proper and their
motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(2) will be denied.50
47
Burns Aff., Ex. A. Those Defendants are Gary Shelton and Brad Flowers.
48
MA § 10.4
49
See Weygandt, 2009 WL 1351808, at *6.
50
The Individual Defendants also rather weakly challenged service of process.
IDOB 16 n.9. Service of process was effectuated pursuant to the procedures in the
Merger Agreement. MA §§ 10.1, 10.9. The concept behind equitable estoppel is
24
B. The McWane Motion to Dismiss or Stay
In the alternative, the Individual Defendants request that I stay this action. “It has
long been held in Delaware that, „as a general rule, litigation should be confined to the
forum in which it is first commenced, and a defendant should not be permitted to defeat
the plaintiff‟s choice of forum in a pending suit by commencing litigation involving the
same cause of action in another jurisdiction of its own choosing.‟”51 Thus, “[u]nder the
[McWane] first-filed rule, this Court freely exercises its broad discretion to grant a stay
„when there is [1] a prior action pending elsewhere, [2] in a court capable of doing
prompt and complete justice, [3] involving the same parties and the same issues.‟”52
McWane, however, is merely the default rule and is not controlling in every situation
involving competing lawsuits.
In certain situations, for example, the Delaware courts will consider two lawsuits
to be contemporaneously filed, notwithstanding the fact that one of them technically was
that a party should not be able to receive the benefits of a contract while
simultaneously avoiding the burdens. Having concluded that equitable estoppel
binds the Individual Defendants to the Merger Agreement‟s forum selection
clause, I also conclude that the same line of reasoning allows service of process
pursuant to the procedures in the Merger Agreement.
51
Transamerica Corp. v. Reliance Ins. Co. of Ill., 1995 WL 1312656, at *3 (Del.
Super. Aug. 30, 1995) (citing McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-
Wellman Eng’g Co., 263 A.2d 281, 283 (Del. 1970)).
52
In re Bear Stearns Cos. S’holder Litig., 2008 WL 959992, at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 9,
2008) (quoting McWane, 263 A.2d at 283).
25
filed first.53 In the case of such contemporaneous filings, Delaware courts usually
evaluate a motion to stay using forum non conveniens principles, rather than the McWane
factors.54
Another situation in which the McWane doctrine is not controlling is when the
parties displace it by contract.55 “Forum selection clauses are presumptively valid in
Delaware and [Ingres Corp. v. CA, Inc.] holds that such a clause displaces the traditional
default presumptions under McWane.”56 But, the Individual Defendants deny that
McWane has been displaced here. Instead, they argue that there are “two competing
53
See, e.g., Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh v. Crosstex Energy Servs., L.P.,
2013 WL 6598736, at *4 & n.29 (Del. Super. Dec. 13, 2013) (finding complaints
filed three days apart contemporaneous and collecting cases); In re Citigroup Inc.
S’holder Deriv. Litig., 964 A.2d 106, 116 (Del. Ch. 2009) (finding actions filed a
few days apart to be contemporaneous and citing cases).
54
Citigroup, 964 A.2d at 117. Neither party briefed this issue. I note, however, that
the Merger Agreement contractually prohibited Plaintiffs from filing suit until
March 28, 2014. The earliest relevant lawsuit for purposes of the motion to stay
was the Stockholder Representative‟s Alabama Action. The Stockholder
Representative arguably had no right to file that suit, because it appears to have
violated the Merger Agreement‟s forum selection clause. The Individual
Defendants intervened in the Alabama Action on March 27, 2014, a day before the
30-day cooling off period specified in the Merger Agreement expired. Plaintiffs
filed this action in Delaware two business days later, in accordance with the forum
selection clause in the Merger Agreement. Ultimately, there is no need to reach
the issue, but Plaintiffs would have at least a colorable argument that the Alabama
and Delaware lawsuits were filed contemporaneously and that the more stringent
forum non conveniens analysis, rather than McWane, should apply.
55
See Ingres Corp. v. CA, Inc., 8 A.3d 1143, 1146 (Del. 2010) (“The reason is that
the McWane principle is a default rule of common law, which the parties to the
litigation are free to displace by a valid contractual agreement.”).
56
ASDC Hldgs., LLC v. The Richard J. Malouf 2008 All Smiles Grantor Retained
Annuity Trust, 2011 WL 4552508, at *6 (Del. Ch. Sept. 14, 2011).
26
forum selection clauses” and that “different contracts send certain disputes under each
respective contract to different forums.”57 I do not read the two forum selection clauses
that way.58 Any disputes relating to the Stockholders Agreement may be brought in
Alabama.59 Any disputes “arising out of or relating to” the Merger Agreement must be
brought in Delaware.60 Having explained at length that these two agreements are
complementary and not conflicting, I conclude that the only reasonable way to interpret
these clauses is that the mandatory trumps the permissive. Thus, in a situation—such as
the one before me—where a dispute relates to both contracts, the mandatory Delaware
forum selection clause controls.61
Having previously concluded that the Individual Defendants are bound by a valid
forum selection clause in the Merger Agreement, I find that that clause governs the
parties‟ relationship and displaces McWane‟s default first-filed rule. Accordingly, I deny
the Individual Defendants‟ motion to stay.
57
IDRB 19.
58
See supra Section III.A.1.a.
59
SHA § 7.3.
60
MA § 10.9.
61
The claims asserted in this case and those in the Alabama Action relate to the
Merger Agreement, even if some also might relate to the Stockholders Agreement.
The Alabama Complaint emphasizes the Stockholders Agreement, but ultimately
challenges the merits of Plaintiffs‟ indemnification claims, which arise under the
Merger Agreement. See discussions in Sections III.A.1 and III.A.2.c, supra.
27
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated in this Memorandum Opinion, the Individual Defendants‟
motion to dismiss or stay this action is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
28