COURT OF CHANCERY
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
ANDRE G. BOUCHARD LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
CHANCELLOR 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734
Date Submitted: March 13, 2018
Date Decided: June 7, 2018
Carmella P. Keener, Esquire Samuel A. Nolen, Esquire
P. Bradford deLeeuw, Esquire Elizabeth A. DeFelice, Esquire
Rosenthal, Monhait & Goddess, P.A. Ryan P. Durkin, Esquire
919 N. Market Street, Suite 1401 Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A.
Wilmington, DE 19801 920 North King Street
Wilmington, DE 19801
RE: Full Value Partners, L.P. v. Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc., et. al.
Civil Action No. 2017-0303-AGB
Dear Counsel:
This letter constitutes the court’s decision on plaintiff’s motion for an award
of attorneys’ fees and expenses. For the reasons explained below, the motion is
granted, and plaintiff will be awarded $300,000.
I. Background1
Plaintiff Full Value Partners, L.P. is a Delaware limited partnership and
stockholder of Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc. (“Swiss Helvetia” or the “Fund”).
Defendant Swiss Helvetia is an investment company that focuses on publicly
traded equity securities of Swiss companies. Swiss Helvetia is currently managed
1
The facts recited herein are taken from the Amended Complaint filed on April 20, 2017
(Dkt. 4) and the parties’ submissions in connection with the fee application.
Full Value Partners, L.P. v. Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc., et. al.
C.A. No. 2017-0303-AGB
June 7, 2018
by Schroder Investment Management North America Inc., which performs
investment advisory functions.
At the times relevant to this action, Swiss Helvetia had a classified board
consisting of three classes of directors serving three-year terms (the “Board”), and
had in place a bylaw requiring that Board nominees have certain “relevant
experience and country knowledge.”2 Specifically, Article II, Section 2 of the
Fund’s bylaws (the “Qualification Bylaw”) stated, in relevant part, as follows:
To be eligible for nomination as a Director a person must, at the time of
such person’s nomination, have Relevant Experience and Country
Knowledge (as defined below) and must not have any Conflict of Interest
(as defined below). Whether a proposed nominee satisfies the foregoing
qualifications shall be determined by the Board of Directors.
“Relevant Experience and Country Knowledge” means experience in
business, investment and economic matters in Europe, the United
States, or Switzerland or political matters of Switzerland through
service:
(a) for at least 5 years in one or more of the following principal
occupations:
(1) senior executive officer, including senior legal
officer, or partner of a financial or industrial business headquartered
in Europe that has annual revenues of at least the equivalent of US
2
On or about February 22, 2017, the Board amended the Fund’s Amended and Restated
By-Laws dated June 19, 2013. Am. Compl. ¶ 15. The Qualification Bylaw appears in
both the 2013 and 2017 bylaws and the bylaws dated September 24, 2014 that defendants
submitted with the Berris Affidavit. See Am. Compl. Ex. B Art. II. § 2, Defs.’ Opp’n Br.
Ex. B Art. II § 2, Berris Aff. Ex. A Art. II § 2.
2
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$500 million and whose responsibilities include or included
supervision of European business operations;
(2) senior executive officer, including senior legal
officer, or partner of a financial or industrial business headquartered
in the United States that has annual revenues of at least the equivalent
of US $500 million and whose responsibilities include or included
supervision of European business operations;
(3) senior executive officer, including senior legal
officer, or partner of an investment management business having at
least the equivalent of US $500 million under discretionary
management for others in securities of European companies or
securities principally traded in Europe;
(4) senior executive officer or partner (including a lawyer
appointed “of counsel”) (i) of a business consulting, accounting or law
firm having a substantial number of professionals, and (ii) one of
whose principal responsibilities includes or included providing
services involving European matters or clients for financial or
industrial businesses or investment businesses as described in (1) - (3)
above;
(5) senior official (including ambassador or minister or
elected member of the legislature) in the national or cantonal
government, a government agency or the central bank of Switzerland,
in a major supranational agency or organization of which Switzerland
is a member, in a leading international trade organization relating to
Switzerland, in each case in the area of finance, economics, trade or
foreign relations, or in a self-regulatory organization with direct or
indirect responsibility for investment or sales practices related to
registered investment companies;
(6) director of this Corporation at the time of nomination
for at least five years; or
(7) officer, director, partner, or employee of the
Corporation’s investment advisor or of an entity controlling,
3
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controlled by or under common control with the Corporation's
investment advisor; and
(b) for at least 10 years as a senior executive officer (including
senior legal officer), director, partner, or senior official (including
elected ambassador or minister or elected member of the legislature)
of one or more of the following: (1) a financial or industrial business;
(2) an investment management business; (3) a business, consulting,
accounting or law firm; (4) a national government, a government
agency or central bank, a major supranational agency or organization,
or a leading international trade organization, in each case in the area
of finance, economics, trade or foreign relations; or (5) a self-
regulatory organization with direct or indirect responsibility for
investment or sales practices related to registered investment
companies.3
On June 23, 2016, Swiss Helvetia’s stockholders elected one Class I director
at its annual meeting.4 That same day, after the annual meeting ended, the Board
issued a press release announcing that it had appointed Margaret Cannella as a
director of the Fund. The press release provided certain background information
about Cannella but did not explain how she satisfied the relevant experience and
country knowledge provision of the Qualification Bylaw and did not indicate that
the Board had made that determination.5
On December 6, 2016, the Board appointed Jay Calhoun, “a director serving
on the Board of the Schroder family of mutual funds,” to fill Cannella’s position as
3
Am. Compl. Ex. B. Art. II. § 2; Defs.’ Opp’n Br. Ex. B. Art. II. § 2.
4
Am. Compl. ¶ 25.
5
Berris Aff. Ex. B at 1-2; see also Am. Compl. ¶ 27.
4
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a director of the Fund after Cannella passed away in November 2016.6 The press
release provided certain background information about Calhoun but did not explain
how he satisfied the relevant experience and country knowledge provision of the
Qualification Bylaw and did not indicate that the Board had made that
determination.7
In March 2017, plaintiff informed the Board that it intended to nominate as
directors Phillip Goldstein, Andrew Dakos, Moritz Sell, and Thomas Mazarakis.8
In response, the Board informed plaintiff that “it appears that neither [Goldstein]
nor Mr. Dakos satisfy the Fund’s Director nominee qualification provisions” and if
that is the case, “they may not be properly considered for election at the 2017
Annual Meeting.”9
On April 17, 2017, Swiss Helvetia announced in a press release that Jean-
Marc Boillat had resigned from the Board and been replaced by Fred Ricciardi and
that Ricciardi would stand for election at the 2017 annual meeting.10 The press
release provided certain background information about Ricciardi but did not
explain how he satisfied the relevant experience and country knowledge provision
6
Am. Compl. ¶¶ 10, 29.
7
Berris Aff. Ex. C at 1; see also Am. Compl. ¶ 30.
8
Am. Compl. ¶ 39; Berris Aff. ¶¶ 18-19; Shahmoon Reply Aff. Ex. I at 1.
9
Shahmoon Aff. Ex. A at 1-2; Am. Compl. ¶ 40.
5
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of the Qualification Bylaw and did not indicate that the Board had made that
determination.11
The April 17 press release also announced David Bock’s plan to resign and
the Board’s nomination of Jean Hoysradt as his replacement.12 As was the case
with the Fund’s three prior Board appointments, the press release provided certain
background information about Hoysradt but did not explain how she satisfied the
relevant experience and country knowledge provision of the Qualification Bylaw
and did not indicate that the Board had made that determination.13
On April 19, 2017, plaintiff filed its initial complaint, which it amended on
April 20, 2017. The Amended Complaint contained four counts. The key claim
was Count III.14 It asserted that the members of the Board breached their fiduciary
duties by inequitably applying the Qualification Bylaw against two of plaintiff’s
nominees (Goldstein and Dakos) to preclude them from seeking election to the
Board at the Fund’s next annual stockholders meeting.
10
Am. Compl. ¶ 41; Berris Aff. Ex. D at 1.
11
Berris Aff. Ex. D at 1; see also Am. Compl. ¶ 45.
12
Am. Compl. ¶ 42; Berris Aff. Ex. D at 1.
13
Berris Aff. Ex. D at 1; see also Am. Compl. ¶ 46.
14
Count I challenged the Board’s decision in June 2016 to appoint Cannella to fill a
vacancy on the Board; Count II challenged certain disclosures in the Fund’s proxy
statement relating to the 2016 election; and Count IV concerned a proposal plaintiff
intended to present at the 2017 annual stockholders’ meeting to terminate the Fund’s
contract with its current investment advisor.
6
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On May 2, 2017, the court denied plaintiff’s motion for an expedited trial to
be held before the Fund’s 2017 annual stockholders meeting, which was scheduled
for June 27, 2017. With respect to Count III, the court found that expedition was
not necessary because—in a change of position—Swiss Helvetia decided that it
would count the votes for all of plaintiff’s nominees. This meant that the court
could provide relief after the meeting (if necessary) and obviated the need to
adjudicate the claim on an expedited basis before the meeting.15
At the June 27, 2017 annual meeting, the Board and plaintiff each ran three
candidates. The Fund’s stockholders elected one of plaintiff’s nominees (Sell) and
one of the Board’s nominees (Hoysradt) as Class I and Class III directors,
respectively.16 Dakos, another of plaintiff’s nominees, received a majority of votes
for the Class II position but was not seated because the Board determined that he
did not satisfy the Qualification Bylaw.17 On August 18, 2017, the Board
announced that it was seating Dakos notwithstanding its belief that he did not
satisfy the Qualification Bylaw.18
15
Tr. 6-9 (May 2, 2017) (Dkt. 25).
16
Berris Aff. ¶ 32, Ex. I at 1.
17
Berris Aff. ¶¶ 31-32, Ex. I at 1.
18
Berris Aff. ¶ 33.
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On September 15, 2017, plaintiff filed an unopposed motion to dismiss this
action as moot with the court retaining jurisdiction to consider a fee application.
The court granted the motion that day. On November 1, 2017, plaintiff filed the
pending motion for an award of attorneys’ fees and expenses. On or about
December 4, 2017, Swiss Helvetia amended its Bylaws to eliminate the country
knowledge provision (i.e., subsections 2(a)(1)-(7)) of the Qualification Bylaw.19
II. Analysis
Plaintiff seeks a fee award of $400,000 under the corporate benefit doctrine
for essentially two alleged benefits: (1) vindicating the franchise rights of the
Fund’s stockholders by facilitating the election and seating of a director (Dakos)
who the Fund had opposed before this litigation was filed for failing to satisfy the
Qualification Bylaw and (2) effectively preventing the Board from using the
Qualification Bylaw to preclude future stockholder nominees.20
To obtain an award under the corporate benefit doctrine, plaintiff must show
“(1) the suit was meritorious when filed; (2) the action producing [a] benefit to the
corporation was taken by the defendants before a judicial resolution was achieved;
and (3) the resulting corporate benefit was causally related to the lawsuit.”21
19
Shahmoon Reply Aff. Ex. J at 3-4.
20
Mot. for Attorneys’ Fees at 1, 7.
21
United Vanguard Fund, Inc. v. TakeCare, Inc., 693 A.2d 1076, 1079 (Del. 1997).
8
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Defendants do not dispute the second element (causation) for purposes of this
motion but contend that this action was not meritorious when filed and did not
produce a corporate benefit.22 I address these two issues in turn.
A. This Action was Meritorious When Filed
A claim is meritorious when filed “if it can withstand a motion to dismiss on
the pleadings [and] plaintiff possesses knowledge of provable facts which hold out
some reasonable likelihood of ultimate success. It is not necessary that factually
there be absolute assurance of ultimate success, but only that there be some
reasonable hope.”23
Here, plaintiff’s primary claim (Count III) was based on the doctrine
enunciated in Schnell v. Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.24 There, our Supreme Court
held that a board could not take action, even if that action was “legally possible,”
for the “inequitable purposes” of “perpetuating itself in office” and “obstructing
the legitimate efforts of dissident stockholders in the exercise of their rights to
undertake a proxy contest against management.”25 Based on this venerable
principle, the Amended Complaint contends that the Board did not apply the
22
Tr. 37 (Mar. 13, 2018) (Dkt. 56).
23
Chrysler Corp. v. Dann, 223 A.2d 384, 387 (Del. 1966).
24
285 A.2d 437, 439 (Del. 1971).
25
Id.
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Qualification Bylaw “equally and in the same way to its own nominees and
appointees as it [did] to the director nominees selected by shareholders” and
instead held “the nominees selected by shareholders to a much higher standard and
[precluded] those nominees from seeking election to or serving on the Board.”26
Insofar as the merits of Count III are concerned, the gravamen of
defendants’ opposition is that plaintiff “has failed to demonstrate that it possessed
‘knowledge of provable facts’ that held out some reasonable likelihood of success”
under this theory.27 In particular, defendants challenge as conclusory plaintiff’s
allegations concerning the four Board nominees identified in the Amended
Complaint (Cannella, Calhoun, Ricciardi, and Hoysradt) because plaintiff alleged
only that each of them did not “appear” to satisfy the relevant experience and
country knowledge provision of the Qualification Bylaw.28 Defendants further
contend that plaintiff’s lack of “knowledge of provable facts” is made evident by
an affidavit of Brian Berris, Chairman of the Fund’s Board, which was submitted
with their opposition. Berris attests in his affidavit that each of the Board’s four
26
Am. Compl. ¶ 80.
27
Defs.’ Opp’n Br. at 15.
28
Id. at 14-15 (citing Am. Compl. ¶¶ 27, 30, 80, 81).
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nominees in fact satisfied subsection 2(a)(3) of the Qualification Bylaw.29 I
disagree with defendants’ position on the merits for essentially three reasons.
First, defendants elevate form over substance in focusing on plaintiff’s use
of the qualifier “appear” in the Amended Complaint when challenging the
qualifications of the Board’s nominees.30 Fairly read, the allegations in question
make the point that the Board’s nominees did not satisfy the Qualification Bylaw
based on information the Company provided in press releases it issued
contemporaneously with their nominations. Use of the qualifier “appear” in
making those allegations simply left open the possibility that this conclusion might
be disproven based on other (undisclosed) information.
Second, defendants’ reliance on an affidavit prepared well after this action
was filed for the purpose of showing that plaintiff did not possess “knowledge of
provable facts” is misplaced. The “pertinent time” to determine whether “plaintiff
had pleaded provable facts which showed that his action had reasonable hope of
success . . . is the time of filing:”31
The question of merit for the purposes of compensation is properly
determined as of the commencement of the lawsuit and not by
29
Berris Aff. ¶¶ 9, 12, 24, 25. Berris asserts that Ricciardi also satisfied subsection
2(a)(2) of the Qualification Bylaw. Id. ¶ 24 n. 4.
30
See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 27, 30, 44, 81.
31
Allied Artists Pictures Corp. v. Baron, 413 A.2d 876, 879 (Del. 1980).
11
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developments thereafter which could not have been known in the
exercise of reasonable diligence at the time of filing.32
Plaintiff based the allegations in the Amended Complaint largely on the Fund’s
own press releases, none of which explained how Cannella, Calhoun, Ricciardi,
and Hoysradt satisfied the Qualification Bylaw. Indeed, when pressed at oral
argument, defendants could not identify any public information that was available
when the Amended Complaint was filed that explained whether (much less how)
the Board had determined that those individuals satisfied the Qualification
Bylaw.33
Third, and more substantively, the Amended Complaint pled sufficient
provable facts in my view to establish that plaintiff had at least a reasonable hope
of succeeding on Count III when the Amended Complaint was filed. As discussed
below, this is due in significant part to the fact that, although the Qualification
Bylaw is very specific in certain respects, it uses undefined terms that are vague
and susceptible to multiple interpretations. Consider, for example, plaintiff’s
allegations concerning Cannella, who defendants contend satisfied subsection
2(a)(3) of the Qualification Bylaw. In relevant part, that provision states:
“Relevant Experience and Country Knowledge” means experience in
business, investment and economic matters in Europe, the United
32
Id.
33
See Tr. 55-61 (Mar. 13, 2018).
12
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States, or Switzerland or political matters of Switzerland through
service:
(a) for at least 5 years in one or more of the following principal
occupations:
*****
(3) senior executive officer, including senior legal
officer, or partner of an investment management business having at
least the equivalent of US $500 million under discretionary
management for others in securities of European companies or
securities principally traded in Europe . . .34
With respect to Cannella, the Amended Complaint summarized the Fund’s
press release describing her background when she was nominated to the Board as
follows:
Ms. Cannella was described in a press release as an adjunct professor
at Columbia Business School; on the Board of Advance Pierre Foods,
Watford Reinsurance, and the Schroder family of mutual funds; a
retired Managing Director and Head of Global Credit Research and
Head of North American Equity and Credit Research from JP
Morgan.35
34
Am. Compl. Ex. B. Art. II. § 2.
35
Am. Compl. ¶ 27. The Berris affidavit also references Cannella’s experience as a
managing director at Citicorp. Berris Aff. ¶ 9. This experience was not disclosed in the
Fund’s press release (see Berris Aff. Ex. B at 1-2) and does not change the analysis
concerning Cannella’s satisfaction of subsection 2(a)(3) in any event. As discussed
below, it is simply not clear that a managing director would constitute a “senior executive
officer” as that term is used in the Qualification Bylaw.
13
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The only qualification in this description conceivably relevant to subsection 2(a)(3)
is Cannella’s experience at JP Morgan.36 But one cannot determine if this
experience would satisfy subsection 2(a)(3) because that provision uses two terms
(i.e., “senior executive officer” and “investment management business”) that are
undefined and open to multiple interpretations.
In my view, JP Morgan fits more naturally within the term “financial
business” that is used in subsections 2(a)(1) and 2(a)(2) as opposed to an
“investment management business” as used in subsection 2(a)(3). Even assuming
for the sake of argument that the terms “financial business” and “investment
management business” were intended not to be mutually exclusive (a debatable
assumption)37 but were intended to overlap such that JP Morgan could be both, the
undefined term “senior executive officer” is vague and ambiguous.
36
Am. Compl. ¶ 27.
37
Subsections 2(a)(1) and 2(a)(2) require a nominee who is a senior executive officer of a
“financial or industrial business” to have responsibilities that “include or included
supervision of European business operations.” One reasonable interpretation of
subsection 2(a)(3) is that this provision was intended to require similar country
knowledge as required under subsections 2(a)(1) and 2(a)(2). This interpretation is
supported by subsection 2(a)(4), which suggests that persons satisfying any of the first
three subsections were to have such responsibilities. See Am. Comp. Ex. B Art. II. §
2(a)(4) (“. . . one of whose principal responsibilities includes or included providing
services involving European matters or clients for financial or industrial businesses or
investment businesses as described in (1) – (3) above”). In that case, it would stand to
reason that, to satisfy subsection 2(a)(3), the nominee had to be a senior executive officer
of a business specifically or directly managing investments for others in European
securities, i.e., a business that has “at least the equivalent of US $500 million under
14
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For example, the term “senior executive officer” reasonably could be
construed to mean the five most highly compensated executives (i.e., those
disclosed in its public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission) of a
corporation, in which case Cannella undoubtedly would not have satisfied
subsection 2(a)(3). On the other hand, the term also reasonably could be construed
to encompass a broader group of officers. The problem is that the term “officer”
itself is susceptible to numerous interpretations. It is impossible to know without
more information whether or not a “managing director” or the “head” of a research
department at a firm like JP Morgan constitutes an “officer,” much less whether
such a person falls within the ambit of the term “senior executive officer” as used
in the Qualification Bylaw.38 Simply put, the use of the term “senior executive
officer” in the Qualification Bylaw made the provision inherently ambiguous and
left enormous interpretative discretion to the Fund’s Board in its application.
Given the lack of objective clarity in key terms of the Qualification Bylaw,
the Amended Complaint pled in my opinion, as the allegations concerning
discretionary management for others in securities of European companies or securities
principally traded in Europe.”
38
See, e.g. Aleynikov v. The Goldman Sachs Gp., Inc., 2016 WL 3763246, at *4-8 (Del.
Ch. July 13, 2016), aff’d, 155 A.3d 370 (Del. 2017) (discussing various methods of
defining the term “officer” and holding that a Vice President in the Equities Division of
Goldman, Sachs & Co. failed to prove that he was an officer of that entity and was not
entitled to advancement).
15
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Cannella show, sufficient provable facts to demonstrate that plaintiff had a
reasonable hope of succeeding on its claim that the Fund had not applied the
Qualification Bylaw uniformly and was attempting to frustrate in an inequitable
manner plaintiff’s ability to run a proxy contest. Accordingly, with respect to
Count III of the Amended Complaint, plaintiff has satisfied the meritorious when
filed requirement for obtaining an award under the corporate benefit doctrine.
B. This Action Conferred a Corporate Benefit
Plaintiff’s application identifies two potential corporate benefits its litigation
caused: (1) vindicating the franchise rights of the Fund’s stockholders and (2)
effectively preventing the Board from using the Qualification Bylaw to preclude
future stockholder nominees.
With respect to the first benefit, defendants argue that plaintiff is not entitled
to a fee because its “principal motivation was to benefit itself by gaining control of
the Board.”39 A similar argument was made and rejected in EMAK Worldwide,
Inc. v. Kurz.40 In that case, plaintiffs ran a dissident slate in a proxy contest and
later sought a fee award under the corporate benefit doctrine for vindicating the
stockholders’ franchise rights. This court rejected the argument that plaintiffs were
39
Defs.’ Opp’n Br. at 17.
40
Kurz v. Holbrook, C.A. No. 5019, at 17-18 (Del. Ch. July 19, 2010) (TRANSCRIPT),
aff’d sub nom. EMAK Worldwide, Inc. v. Kurz, 50 A.3d 429 (Del. 2012).
16
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not entitled to a fee award on the theory that they “initiated [the] litigation purely
for personal reasons and did not provide any benefit to EMAK and all of its
stockholders.”41 Our Supreme Court affirmed, explaining that “[p]reserving
shareholder voting rights produces a fundamental corporate benefit.”42 Based on
the reasoning adopted in EMAK, I find that plaintiff here similarly conferred a
corporate benefit by enabling the Fund’s stockholders to vote for and ultimately
elect Dakos to the Board despite the Fund’s initial opposition.
Defendants did not address in their brief the second alleged benefit, i.e., that
this litigation effectively nullified the country knowledge requirement of the
Qualification Bylaw. The existence of this benefit is borne out by the fact that
Swiss Helvetia amended its bylaws to eliminate that requirement shortly after
seating Dakos as a director of the Fund. This benefit has value because it prevents
the Board from using provisions of the Qualification Bylaw that were ambiguous
(as discussed above) as a means to deter or preclude future stockholder nominees.
41
EMAK’s Opp’n Br. at 24 (C.A. No. 5019, Dkt. 250); Kurz, C.A. No. 5019, at 21-22,
26-27.
42
EMAK, 50 A.3d at 433.
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C. Amount of the Fee Award
Plaintiff seeks a fee award of $400,000, which defendants contend is a
“windfall.”43 This court relies on the Sugarland factors to determine the
appropriate size of a fee award. They are:
(i) the amount of time and effort applied to the case by counsel for the
plaintiffs; (ii) the relative complexities of the litigation; (iii) the
standing and ability of the petition counsel; (iv) the contingent nature
of the litigation; (v) the stage at which the litigation ended; (vi)
whether the plaintiff can rightly receive all the credit for the benefit
conferred or only a portion thereof; and (vii) the size of the benefit
conferred.44
“The size of the benefit conferred and the portion of this benefit attributable to
plaintiffs are often considered the two most important elements, while the time
expended by counsel is considered as a cross-check to guard against windfalls,
particularly in therapeutic benefit cases.”45
On one side of the ledger, this litigation produced the corporate benefits
discussed above, which are valuable in my opinion although the value is difficult
to quantify. Additionally, the standing and ability of counsel are not questioned,
and counsel handled this case on an entirely contingent basis.
43
Defs.’ Opp’n Br. at 3.
44
In re Plains Res. Inc. S’holders Litig., 2005 WL 332811, at *3 (Del. Ch. Feb 4, 2005)
(citing Sugarland Indus., Inc. v. Thomas, 420 A.2d 142, 149 (Del. 1980)).
45
In re Quest Software, Inc. S’holders Litig., 2013 WL 5978900, at *6 (Del. Ch. Nov. 12,
2013).
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On the other side of the ledger, counsel’s litigation efforts were modest.
Their most significant work involved preparing a viable complaint and briefing and
arguing a contested motion to expedite. Plaintiff’s counsel did not take any
depositions or engage in document discovery, and the litigation spanned a mere
four months from its initiation. This case, the core of which emanated from well-
established precedent, also did not involve any particularly complex legal issues.
Taking into account all of these factors, the court awards plaintiff $300,000
in attorneys’ fees and expenses. As a cross-check, counsel’s expenditure of 204.35
attorney hours (net of approximately $3,830 in expenses) equates to an hourly rate
of approximately $1,449, which is in line with the most analogous precedent.46
*****
For the reasons explained above, the motion for an award of attorneys’ fees
and expenses is granted. The parties are directed to confer and submit a form of
order in accordance with this ruling within five business days.
Sincerely,
/s/ Andre G. Bouchard
Chancellor
AGB/gm
46
Kurz, C.A. No. 5019, at 3, 31 (granting a fee award equating to an hourly rate of
$1,575 in a corporate benefit case vindicating stockholders’ franchise rights).
19