EFiled: Jul 26 2017 09:39AM EDT
Transaction ID 60897524
Case No. 11138-VCS
COURT OF CHANCERY
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
417 S. State Street
JOSEPH R. SLIGHTS III Dover, Delaware 19901
VICE CHANCELLOR Telephone: (302) 739-4397
Facsimile: (302) 739-6179
Date Submitted: June 30, 2017
Date Decided: July 26, 2017
Theodore A. Kittila, Esquire R. Judson Scaggs, Jr., Esquire
Greenhill Law Group, LLC Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP
1000 North Market Street, #1200 1201 North Market Street
Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801
Re: Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
Dear Counsel:
In the fall of 2009, Defendant, View, Inc., pursued a round of Series B
preferred stock financing. In connection with that financing, View sought the
consent of Plaintiff, Paul Nguyen, then-owner of a majority of View’s common
stock. Nguyen initially consented to the Series B Financing as consideration for
settling various claims he had brought against View. The Settlement Agreement
allowed Nguyen a seven-day revocation period pursuant to which he reserved the
right to withdraw his consent to the Settlement Agreement, including to the Series B
Financing. Nguyen exercised that right and timely revoked his consent.
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 2
Unbeknownst to him, however, View had already closed the Series B Financing.
Thereafter, View contested Nguyen’s right to revoke his consent and argued that it
had validly closed the Series B Financing during the seven-day revocation period.
The parties submitted the dispute regarding the validity of Nguyen’s alleged
revocation of consent to binding arbitration and agreed that the arbitrator would also
decide the related issue of whether the Series B Financing was valid. While the
arbitration was pending, View proceeded to close additional rounds of financing
totaling approximately $500 million. On December 18, 2015, the arbitrator ruled
that Nguyen’s revocation of his consent to the Settlement Agreement was valid and,
therefore, that the closing of the Series B Financing was “void and invalid.” In early
2016, View attempted to right its capital structure through a series of ratifications of
various charter amendments and other corporate acts, including the now-void
Series B Financing, pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 204.
The operative Amended Verified Complaint filed by Nguyen alleges that
View’s attempts to ratify the various rounds of financing are improper and seeks a
declaration of invalidity under 8 Del. C. § 205. View moved to dismiss the
Complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. The Court denied the motion to dismiss by opinion and
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 3
order dated June 6, 2017 (the “Opinion”), upon concluding that Nguyen had pled
facts that supported a reasonable inference that the Series B Financing was void and
that the attempts to repair the void acts under Section 204 were invalid.1 View has
moved for reargument under Court of Chancery Rule 59(f). For the reasons that
follow, that motion is denied.
As noted in the Opinion, Defendant’s motion to dismiss raised the “gating
issue” of whether the corporate acts that View purportedly ratified in early 2016
were eligible for ratification under Section 204.2 Specifically, the threshold
question, which was a matter of first impression, was whether a corporate act that
the majority of shareholders entitled to vote thereon deliberately declined to
authorize could retroactively be authorized.3 To answer this question, I turned to the
plain language of the statute as well as relevant legislative history.4 Due to Nguyen’s
revocation of his consent, View did not have the power to take the defective
1
2017 WL 2439074, at *11 (Del. Ch. June 6, 2017).
2
Id. at *6.
3
Id.
4
See id. at *7.
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 4
corporate act “at the time such act was purportedly taken,” as required by the statute.5
I determined that Nguyen’s deliberate decision as majority stockholder to revoke his
consent to the Series B Financing was not the type of “failure of authorization” that
Section 204 contemplates as subject to later ratification. Nguyen’s deliberate
revocation was, instead, a classic example of a majority stockholder exercising its
franchise to vote “no” on a corporate proposal.6 Under these circumstances,
I determined that Nguyen had pled facts supporting his claims for declaratory
judgment that the 2016 ratifications were not a valid deployment of Section 204, and
denied the motion to dismiss.7
The Court will deny a motion for reargument “unless the Court has overlooked
a decision or principle of law that would have a controlling effect or the Court has
misapprehended the law or the facts so that the outcome of the decision would be
affected.”8 Where a motion for reargument “merely rehashes arguments already
5
Id. at *8.
6
Id. at *9.
7
Id. at *11.
8
Stein v. Orloff, 1985 WL 21136, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 26, 1985).
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 5
made by the parties and considered by the Court when reaching the decision from
which reargument is sought, the motion must be denied.”9
View moves for reargument on the grounds that: (1) the Opinion
misunderstood the nature of a corporation’s power to take and then correct a
defective corporate act under Section 204; and (2) the Opinion impermissibly carves
out “rejected” acts from ratification under Section 204.10 I address these arguments
in turn.
9
Wong v. USES Hldg. Corp., 2016 WL 1436594, at *1 (Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2016) (citing
Lewis v. Aronson, 1985 WL 21141, at *2 (Del. Ch. June 7, 1985)).
10
View also contends that the Court misapprehended the timeline of relevant facts based
on a statement in the introduction of the Opinion: “[p]rior to the closing of the [Series B
Financing] transaction, however, Nguyen purported to revoke his consent . . .” Def.’s Mot.
for Reargument (“Motion”) ¶ 11 (citing Opinion at *1). As View well knows, however,
the Court clearly understood the timeline––that Nguyen provided his consent to the
Series B Financing as part of his consent to the Settlement Agreement on September 18,
2009, View then closed the Series B Financing during the seven-day revocation period,
Nguyen then exercised his revocation right during the revocation period, and Nguyen’s
revocation of his consent was then deemed by the arbitrator to have rendered the Series B
Financing invalid and void. This timeline is clearly set forth in the Opinion. Opinion at
*4–5. View’s attempt on reargument to exploit a general statement in the introduction,
clearly not intended as a definitive statement of the background facts, by arguing that the
Opinion misapprehended critical facts, particularly when the background facts in the
Opinion clearly and accurately recite the timeline, comes with little grace. To be clear, I
am quite satisfied that View has failed to identify a fact the Court misapprehended such
that the “outcome of the decision would be affected.” Wong, 2016 WL 1436594, at *1.
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 6
First, View argues that the Opinion misapprehended Section 204 when it
determined that the “power to act” referenced in the statute means that the
corporation must have the ability to take an act sought to be ratified at the time of
the defective corporate act.11 Rather, Defendant argues, the defective corporate act
must be only a “type of act that corporations are authorized to take” and that
corporations need not have had the “actual ability to take the act.”12 View has made
this argument previously, notably in its supplemental briefing provided to the Court
on the “gating issue.”13 In that submission, View argued that each act that it
purported to ratify constituted a “defective corporate act” taken and then corrected
“within its power as a Delaware corporation.”14
View’s argument was acknowledged by the Court15 but then rejected because
“Section 204 makes clear that the defective corporate acts that a corporation purports
11
Motion ¶ 4.
12
Id.
13
See Letter from R. Judson Scaggs, Jr., dated Mar. 6, 2017, in response to Pl.’s Feb. 20,
2017 Letter regarding supplemental briefing on the “Gating Issue” (Transaction
ID 60296587) (“Mar. 6 Letter”) 3.
14
Id. (citing 8 Del. C. §§ 121, 151, 157).
15
See Opinion at *8 (noting that “View correctly points out that the Company had “the
power” to “issue one or more classes of stock” and to “issue . . . rights or options,” in
addition to the “powers and privileges . . . necessary or convenient to the conduct,
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 7
to ratify must be within the corporation’s power ‘at the time such act was
purportedly taken.’”16 The Court looked at the operative reality of the Company
when the Series B Financing purportedly closed, namely that the majority common
stockholder had not yet given his definitive and binding consent to the transaction.
When Nguyen withdrew his consent, as was his right, and the arbitrator then
determined that the properly withdrawn consent rendered the Series B Financing
void, the ruling confirmed that View did not have the “power” to undertake the
Series B Financing at the time it closed.17 View’s rehash of previously advanced
arguments has done nothing to change that result.
View cites to In re Xencor, Inc.,18 for the proposition that this court has
previously sanctioned ratification of the same sort of failure of authorization that
occurred here.19 In Xencor, this court approved a settlement agreement involving
ratification of a certificate of incorporation under Section 205 where the certificate
promotion or attainment of the business or purposes set forth in its certificate of
incorporation.”) (internal citations omitted).
16
Id. at *9 (citing 8 Del. C. § 204)
17
Id.
18
C.A. No. 10742-CB (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2015) (TRANSCRIPT).
19
Motion ¶ 5.
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 8
was filed without a required class vote.20 That scenario, however, is patently distinct
from this case, where Nguyen, the majority common stockholder, considered and
then deliberately rejected the Series B Financing.21
The argument that View possessed the “power” under Section 204 to ratify
the void Series B Financing was previously advanced, considered and rejected. That
View disagrees with that decision is not a valid ground for reargument.22
Second, View argues that the Court inappropriately carved out “rejected” acts
from acts that are invalid due to a “failure of authorization.”23 According to View,
“rejected” acts are properly included within acts that a corporation failed to authorize
“in compliance with the DGCL.”24 Again, View has already, and repeatedly, made
20
Id.
21
See Opinion at *9 (“The plain meaning of ‘failure’ in this context is distinct from a ‘no’
vote or outright rejection of the proposal by the majority of stockholders entitled to vote.”).
22
Jutrau v. Jansing, 2014 WL 6901461, at *2 (Del. Ch. Dec. 8, 2014), aff’d, 123 A.3d 938
(Del. 2015) (TABLE) (“Mere disagreement with the Court’s resolution of a matter is not
sufficient, and the Court will deny a motion for reargument that does no more than restate
a party’s prior arguments.”).
23
Motion ¶ 7.
24
Motion ¶ 9.
Nguyen v. View, Inc.
C.A. No. 11138-VCS
July 26, 2017
Page 9
this argument.25 And it was addressed explicitly in the Opinion.26 It is not, therefore,
a proper ground for reargument.27
View has failed to identify any law or facts that the Court misapprehended or
failed to consider. Accordingly, the Motion for Reargument must be DENIED.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Joseph R. Slights III
25
See Mar. 6 Letter at 7–8 (“The definition of ‘failure of authorization’ in Section 204 does
not differentiate between different kinds of failures of authorization, let alone between
different ways in which a required vote is not validly obtained.”); Def. View, Inc.’s
Opening Br. in Supp. of its Mot. to Dismiss the Am. Verified Compl. 48 n.24 (“An action
is either consented to, or it is not, and a decision by the stockholders not to consent to an
action is not a ‘rejection’ of the act that precludes the Company from later taking action to
certify it.”); Tr. of Oral Arg. on Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss 112:18–116:23.
26
Opinion at *9 (“View’s interpretation of Nguyen’s revocation of his consent to the
Series B Financing is contrary to the plain meaning of the words ‘failure’ and ‘rejection.’
It also diminishes the import of the stockholders’ right to vote ‘no.’ As View’s counsel
conceded at oral argument, View’s construction of Section 204 would allow a corporation
to ratify an act that stockholders years earlier had expressly voted not to take and to certify
that act as effective on the date the stockholders rejected it. Nothing in the text of the
statute or its legislative history suggests that the General Assembly intended to facilitate
such a result.”) (internal citations omitted).
27
See MetCap Secs. LLC v. Pearl Senior Care, Inc., 2007 WL 195442, at *3 (Del. Ch.
June 29, 2007) (“[The movant] may not now attempt to relitigate a claim that has already
been considered-and rejected-by this Court.”).