IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
THE FREDERICK HSU LIVING TRUST, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) C.A. No. 12108-VCL
)
OAK HILL CAPITAL PARTNERS III, L.P., )
OAK HILL CAPITAL MANAGEMENT )
PARTNERS III, L.P., OHCP GENPAR III, )
L.P., OHCP MGP PARTNERS III, L.P., OHCP )
MGP III, LTD., ROBERT MORSE, WILLIAM )
PADE, DAVID SCOTT, DEBRA DOMEYER, )
JEFFREY KUPIETZKY, ALLEN MORGAN, )
LAWRENCE NG, SCOTT JARUS, )
ELIZABETH MURRAY, TODD H. GREENE, )
and SCOTT MORROW, )
)
Defendants, )
)
and )
)
ODN HOLDING CORPORATION, a Delaware )
Corporation, )
)
Nominal Defendant. )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: February 4, 2020
Date Decided: May 4, 2020
P. Clarkson Collins, Jr., Lewis H. Lazarus, Matthew F. Lintner, K. Tyler O’Connell,
Kirsten A. Zeberkiewicz, Kathleen A. Murphy, MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware; Steven Kaufhold, KAUFHOLD GASKIN LLP, San Francisco, California;
Counsel for The Frederick Hsu Living Trust.
William M. Lafferty, Kevin M. Cohen, Alexandra M. Cummings, MORRIS, NICHOLS,
ARSHT & TUNNELL, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; John F. Baughman, Andrew J.
Ehrlich, Alexia D. Korberg, PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON LLP,
New York, New York; Counsel for Oak Hill Capital Partners III, L.P., Oak Hill Capital
Management Partners III, L.P., OHCP GenPar III, L.P., OHCP MGP Partners III, L.P.,
OHCP MGP III, Ltd., Robert Morse, William Pade, and David Scott.
Jody C. Barillare, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
Stephen D. Alexander, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP, Los Angeles, California;
Marc J. Sonnenfeld, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;,
Counsel for Debra Domeyer, Allen Morgan, Scott Jarus, Elizabeth Murray, Todd H.
Greene, and Scott Morrow.
Kurt M. Heyman, Samuel T. Hirzel, II, HEYMAN ENERIO GATTUSO & HIRZEL, LLP,
Wilmington, Delaware; Douglas Fuchs, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER, LLP, Los
Angeles, California, Counsel for Lawrence Ng.
A. Thompson Bayliss, April M. Ferraro, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware, Counsel for ODN Holding Corporation.
LASTER, Vice Chancellor
Oak Hill Capital Partners is a private equity firm. One of Oak Hill’s portfolio
companies is ODN Holding Corporation, a holding company for Oversee.net. 1 Through
Oak Hill Capital Partners Fund III,2 Oak Hill owns a majority of the Company’s common
stock and all of its Series A Preferred Stock (the “Preferred Stock”). Oak Hill’s holdings
give it control over the Company at both the stockholder and board levels.
In 2010, Oak Hill was looking ahead to raising its next fund, Oak Hill Capital
Partners Fund IV. The Oak Hill partners reached a consensus that the deal team assigned
to Oversee should focus on monetizing the investment and achieving a return of capital.
The Oak Hill deal team set out to change the status quo at the Company. Oak Hill
spent the last months of 2010 and the first months of 2011 trying to merge the Company
with a competitor in a transaction that would support a leveraged dividend. When that deal
fell apart, Oak Hill focused on its right to compel the Company to redeem its Preferred
Stock at its liquidation preference of $150 million (the “Redemption Right”).
The Redemption Right would not ripen until February 2013, but that was an
advantage for Oak Hill. The Company was only obligated to redeem Oak Hill’s shares of
Preferred Stock out of legally available funds, so if the Company did not have funds, or if
The parties refer to the entities interchangeably as “ODN,” “Oversee,” or the
1
“Company.” This decision follows their lead.
2
Fund III consists of two entities: defendants Oak Hill Capital Partners III, L.P. and
Oak Hill Capital Management Partners III, L.P., both of which are Cayman Islands exempt
limited partnerships. Defendant OHCP GenPar III, L.P. is the general partner of the two
limited partnerships. Defendant OHCP MGP Partners III, L.P. is the general partner of
OHCP GenPar. For simplicity, this decision refers generally to Fund III.
1
the funds were not legally available, then the Company could not redeem Oak Hill’s shares.
If the Company had cash on its balance sheet that it did not need to run the business, then
the Company would be required to use the money to redeem shares of Preferred Stock.
The delay before the Redemption Right ripened gave Oak Hill time to ensure that
the Company would have as much cash as possible that it could use to redeem the Preferred
Stock. Historically, the Company had invested its profits in organic growth or used it to
make acquisitions. The Company’s business plan for 2011 contemplated using cash for
both purposes. In mid-2011, Oak Hill terminated the Company’s CEO and instructed
management to cut expenses to improve profitability. The Company had suffered reversals
during the first half of 2011, and some degree of cost cutting was necessary to stabilize the
business. With that task accomplished, however, Oak Hill kept the focus on the cash
generation. When the Company sold two of its four business units in January 2012, it did
not reinvest the proceeds. Throughout 2012, the Company continued to accumulate cash.
Management projected that by year-end, the Company would have $55 million on its
balance sheet.
With the exercise of the Redemption Right on the horizon, the Company’s board of
directors (the “Board”) formed a special committee to negotiate with Oak Hill. In February
2013, Oak Hill told the committee that it was critically important for Oak Hill to receive
$45 million by March. The committee agreed to that amount.
After the redemption, the Company continued to accumulate cash. The major source
of the Company’s net income was its Domain Monetization business. Although profitable,
that business was in steady decline. In April 2014, the Company sold the Domain
2
Monetization business for $40 million. A second special committee approved the fairness
of the price. A third special committee agreed to use all $40 million to redeem shares of
Preferred Stock from Oak Hill.
The sale of the Domain Monetization business left the Company with only its
Vertical Markets business. Over the next three years, the Company sold off that business
in pieces. The Company persists as a shell with approximately $10 million in cash and a
single, developmental-stage, travel-oriented website. But for this litigation, the Company
would have been liquidated years ago.
Frederick Hsu co-founded the Company and is the second largest holder of its
common stock after Oak Hill.3 In this action, Hsu maintains that Oak Hill and its
representatives on the Board breached their fiduciary duties by causing the Company to
accumulate cash in anticipation of a redemption, rather than investing it in the Company’s
business to promote long-term growth. He asserts that senior officers of the Company and
other members of the Board breached their fiduciary duties by going along with Oak Hill’s
cash-accumulation strategy.
Hsu proved that the cash-accumulation strategy conferred a unique benefit on Oak
Hill by creating a pool of funds that the Company would be required to use to redeem Oak
Hill’s shares of Preferred Stock as soon as the Redemption Right ripened. Because the
strategy conferred a unique benefit on the Company’s controlling stockholder, the
3
The actual plaintiff is The Frederick Hsu Living Trust, through which Hsu owns
his shares of common stock in the Company. For simplicity, this decision refers to Hsu.
3
defendants had the burden at trial of proving that the pursuit of the cash-accumulation
strategy was entirely fair.
The defendants proved at trial that the cash-accumulation strategy was entirely fair.
The defendants proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the Company declined not
because of the cash-accumulation strategy, but rather because of industry headwinds and
relentless competition, most notably from Google, Inc. The defendants also proved by a
preponderance of the evidence that if the Company had reinvested its net income, it could
not have generated a return sufficient to create value for the holders of common stock. The
record also showed that although Oak Hill had an interest in achieving a return of capital,
Oak Hill’s overall ownership position in the Company, including its ownership of a
majority of the common stock, gave Oak Hill an incentive to create value for the common.
Oak Hill wanted a return of capital, but Oak Hill also wanted to grow the Company, which
it tried to do.
There is necessarily some lottery-like possibility that if the Company had reinvested
its cash, then it might have achieved outsized success and created value for the common.
As the largest holder of equity, Oak Hill would have benefited from that outcome more
than anyone. Oak Hill, the Board, and the management team were not obligated to take a
long-shot bet. They proved by a preponderance of the evidence that it was value-
maximizing to accumulate cash and use it for redemptions.
Judgment will be entered for the defendants.
4
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Trial took place over ten days. The parties introduced 2,593 exhibits. Fifteen fact
witnesses and three experts testified in person. Defendant Lawrence Ng testified remotely
by video from Taiwan. The parties lodged forty-four depositions. The pre-trial and post-
trial briefs collectively totaled 416 pages.4
The parties were able to agree on only eighty-nine stipulations of fact, and the
voluminous evidence conflicted on many issues. Determining the historical facts, including
the parties’ motivations, is thus an imprecise exercise.
Recognizing that finding facts inherently involves uncertainty, courts evaluate
evidence using a standard of proof with the burden of clearing that hurdle (and the
consequence of losing if the burden is not met) assigned to a given party. For this case, the
standard of proof was a preponderance of the evidence. See Estate of Osborn ex rel. Osborn
v. Kemp, 2009 WL 2586783, at *4 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 2009), aff’d, 991 A.2d 1153 (Del.
2010). The burden of proof was assigned to the defendants under the entire fairness
standard of review. See Ams. Mining Corp. v. Theriault, 51 A.3d 1213, 1239 (Del. 2012).5
4
Citations in the form “[Name] Tr. [#]” refer to witness testimony from the trial
transcript. Citations in the form “[Name] Dep. [#]” refer to witness testimony from a
deposition. Citations in the form “JX [#]” refer to joint exhibits from the trial record.
Citations in the form “PDX [#]” or “DDX [#]” refer, respectively, to the plaintiff’s
demonstrative exhibits and the defendants’ demonstrative exhibits.
5
The plaintiff originally asserted a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, a claim for
aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, and a claim for unjust enrichment. The
plaintiff would have born the burden of proof on the latter two claims. See In re Rural
Metro Corp. S’holders Litig., 88 A.3d 54, 85 (Del. Ch. 2014) (holding that plaintiff bore
the burden of proof on a claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty), aff’d sub
nom. RBC Capital Mkts., LLC v. Jervis, 129 A.3d 816 (Del. 2015); Otto v. Gore, 45 A.3d
5
The allocation of the burden of proof ultimately did not play a major role in the case.
The Delaware Supreme Court has explained that the real-world benefit of burden-shifting
is “modest” and only outcome-determinative in “very few cases” where the “evidence is in
equipoise.” Ams. Mining, 51 A.3d at 1242 (internal quotation marks omitted). In this case,
there was uncertainty about what in fact occurred and what would have happened if the
defendants had pursued a different business strategy. The evidence, however, was not in
equipoise.
A. The Company’s Business
Ng and Hsu co-founded Oversee in 2000. Ng served as CEO and became the public
face of the business. Hsu initially served as Chief Technology Officer, then later took on
other roles with the Company. In 2006, Hsu stepped back from his managerial role,
although he remained a director. See JX 45 at 5.
For its first seven years, Oversee enjoyed dramatic success. See JX 13. By 2007, the
Company had expanded to 180 employees. Its annual revenue exceeded $200 million, and
its net income exceeded $19 million. See JX 53 at 5. It had four lines of businesses.
The cornerstone of Oversee’s success was the Domain Monetization business,
which operated under the name “DomainSponsor.” It generated approximately 80% of the
Company’s revenue. See Kupietzky Tr. 8.
120, 138 (Del. 2012) (holding that plaintiff bore the burden of proof on a claim for unjust
enrichment). During post-trial briefing and argument, the plaintiff only pursued his claim
for breach of fiduciary duty.
6
The Domain Monetization business capitalized on inefficiencies in the early
Internet. To navigate to websites, users of the early Internet typed URLs directly into the
address bar. Typographical errors, misspellings, and near misses were common. Early
search algorithms were similarly primitive and gave priority to terms that appeared in the
URL. If a user typed “seeking career” into an early search engine, the engine would give a
higher priority in the search results to a URL with a name like “careerseeker.com.” See id.
at 8-10
Oversee developed technology that enabled the Domain Monetization business to
cheaply amass a portfolio of domain names, most of which were multi-word strings,
misspellings, or random assortments of characters that a user might enter. These domains
led to “parked” websites that displayed automatically generated, minimalist content
consisting of links to advertisers or key word searches, both provided by Google. If a user
started at a parked domain and ended up clicking on an ad, then Google would collect
advertising revenue from the owner of the link, and Google would share a portion of the
revenue with Oversee.
Here is an example of the Company’s sites:
7
If a visitor reached the site by misspelling “restaurant,” and if the visitor then clicked on a
link, such as “Gift Certificates,” then the site would query Google using key words related
to that subject. If a user clicked on one of the ads, then Google would collect advertising
revenue from the owner of the link and share it with Oversee.
The Domain Monetization business was highly profitable. The Company benefitted
from a favorable contract with Google under which the Company received preferred access
to Google’s search feed, and Google shared 74.4% of any advertising revenue with the
Company. See JX 20 at 7. The cost of registering a URL was only around $10 per year,
and a parked domain might generate, on average, $100 per year. See Kupietzky Tr. 10–13.
To maintain the profitability and scale of the Domain Monetization business,
Oversee had to constantly acquire new domains. Until 2008, the organization that oversaw
8
domain name registrations allowed prospective buyers to try out a website for five days.
The Company used this window to engage in a practice called “tasting,” in which it
evaluated URLs for their profitability before acquiring them. The Company was thus able
to largely avoid losses on unprofitable URLs. See id at 15.
By 2007, Oversee’s Domain Monetization business owned and operated a portfolio
of approximately one million URLs. The Company had also expanded into managing
URLs for other owners. Under its standard arrangement, Oversee would keep
approximately 30% of the revenue it received from Google for a managed URL and hand
over the rest to the domain name’s owner. Id. at 16. By 2007, Oversee was managing a
portfolio of approximately nine million URLs for other owners. Id. at 13.
Starting in 2005, Oversee sought to move up the domain-name value chain by
establishing a lead-generation business, which came to be known as Vertical Markets. See
JX 13 at 15. Lead-generation websites offer branded, consumer-focused content about a
particular subject, such as mortgage loans, credit cards, or insurance. The sites gather
information about their visitors and generate revenue by selling the information to
companies that pay for sales leads. Current examples of lead-generation websites are
Hotels.com, TripAdvisor, and Kayak. See Kupietzky Tr. 19; Morrow Tr. 158–60.
Creating a vertical markets business requires identifying an idea that can become
the foundation for a website, then building a site that provides content and services for the
targeted user. Ideally, the site and its brand are sufficiently different and become
sufficiently well known to attract organic traffic. To gain traffic, however, a site typically
must spend money on search-engine marketing (“SEM”), a practice in which the site pays
9
a search engine to appear on the search-results page in a location where the user is likely
to click on a link to the site. Buying ad-words from Google is an example of SEM. A site
also typically must invest in search-engine optimization (“SEO”), which means tailoring
its site to rank highly in the search engine’s organic search results. To establish and
maintain a vertical markets site can easily cost at least one million dollars per year. See
Kupietzky Tr. 22–23.
The Company developed its original lead-generation sites internally. Its first site
was low.com, which allowed users to compare mortgages. The Company also developed a
site that helped users find ringtones. Id. at 25. The Company purchased high-value domain
names that could be used to build sites, such compare.com and information.com.
In 2007, the Company tried to expand into two lines of business that it hoped would
complement the Domain Monetization business. The Company established its Aftermarket
business by purchasing SnapNames, a firm that operated a secondary market for domain
names. The Company established its Registrar business by purchasing Moniker, a firm that
operated a domain registrar. Both businesses had higher expense profiles and lower
margins than the core Domain Monetization business. Both businesses operated in
competitive market segments and were relatively small. See Kupietzky Tr. 19–20, 26–27.
B. Oak Hill Invests $150 Million.
By late 2006, Ng and Hsu wanted to monetize some of Oversee’s success. They
hired Bank of America Securities to explore a private placement of Oversee’s securities,
targeting a closing in mid-2007 and an investment in the range of $75–$100 million. PTO
¶ 31; see JX 11; JX 13 at 2; see also JX 20 at 9.
10
William Pade, a partner at Oak Hill, was one of the potential investors that Bank of
America contacted. See JX 16. Pade was excited about the opportunity, and Pade and the
Oak Hill team explored making a bigger investment than what Oversee had been seeking.
See JX 17; JX 19. The talks initially did not lead to much, but later in the year, Oak Hill
suggested partnering with Oversee on a potential acquisition. See Pade Tr. 357. Oak Hill’s
approach reignited discussions. See JX 24; JX 38; JX 39; JX 45. In December 2007, Oak
Hill and the Company reached agreement on a transaction in which Oak Hill would invest
$150 million in the Company in exchange for shares of preferred stock. PTO ¶ 36; JX 49.
That same month, Oak Hill offered Ng “the opportunity to be a side fund investor” in Fund
III, which he took. JX 47; JX 55.
To facilitate the investment, Oversee formed the Company and restructured itself as
a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company. On February 12, 2008, the Oak Hill investment
closed. See JX 64. Fund III paid $150 million to purchase 53,380,783 shares of Preferred
Stock, reflecting an effective purchase price of $2.81 per share and post-money equity
value for the Company of $403 million. JX 45 at 3, 5; JX 49 at 6. Fund III has always been
and remains the only holder of the Preferred Stock. The Company has not authorized or
issued any other class or series of preferred stock.
The shares of Preferred Stock carried a liquidation preference equal to their
purchase price and were convertible into an equal number of shares of common stock at
$2.81 per share. JX 49 at 59. On a fully diluted basis, the Preferred Stock represented a
34% ownership stake in Oversee. The shares did not pay any type of dividend and would
only have upside if the Company’s value exceeded the conversion price. See JX 201 at 4.
11
When Oak Hill invested, Oak Hill anticipated an initial public offering in two to three
years. See JX 45 at 21.
The terms of the Preferred Stock included the Redemption Right, which Oak Hill
could exercise after five years. See JX 68 art. V § 6. The pertinent language stated:
At any time after February 12, 2013, upon the written request of the holders
of at least a majority of the then outstanding shares of [Preferred Stock], the
[Company] shall redeem, out of funds legally available therefor, all of the
outstanding shares of [Preferred Stock] which have not been converted into
Common Stock pursuant to Section 4 hereof (the “Redemption Date”). The
Redemption Date shall be determined in good faith by the Board and such
Redemption Date shall be at least thirty (30) days, but not more than sixty
(60) days, after the receipt by the [Company] of such written request. The
[Company] shall redeem the shares of [Preferred Stock] by paying in cash an
amount per share equal to the Original Issue Price for such [Preferred Stock],
plus an amount equal to all declared and unpaid dividends thereon (as
adjusted for stock splits, stock dividends and the like, the “Redemption
Price”). If the funds legally available for redemption of the [Preferred Stock]
shall be insufficient to permit the payment to such holders of the full
respective Redemption Prices, the [Company] shall effect such redemption
pro rata among the holders of the [Preferred Stock] . . . .
Id. § 6(a).
If the Company did not have sufficient funds to redeem the Preferred Stock, then
the Redemption Right contemplated ongoing redemptions as funds became available. The
pertinent language stated:
If the funds of the [Company] legally available for redemption of shares of
[Preferred Stock] on any Redemption Date are insufficient to redeem the total
number of shares of [Preferred Stock] to be redeemed on such date, those
funds which are legally available will be used to redeem the maximum
possible number of such shares ratably among the holders of such shares to
be redeemed based upon their holdings of [Preferred Stock]. The shares of
[Preferred Stock] not redeemed shall remain outstanding and entitled to all
the rights and preferences provided herein. At any time thereafter when
additional funds of the [Company] are legally available for the redemption
of shares of [Preferred Stock] such funds will immediately be used to redeem
12
the balance of the shares which the [Company] has become obliged to redeem
on any Redemption Date, but which it has not redeemed.
Id. § 6(d).
Oak Hill, Ng, and Hsu entered into a stockholders agreement in which they agreed
that the Board would have seven members: three designated by the holders of a majority
of the common stock (the “Common Directors”), two designated by Oak Hill (the “Series
A Directors”), and two remaining directors be selected by unanimous agreement of the
other five (the “Additional Directors”). See JX 67 at 13–14 (the “Stockholders
Agreement”). The two Oak Hill partners responsible for the investment—Pade and Robert
Morse—joined the Board as the Series A Directors.
Under the Stockholders Agreement, Oak Hill received a drag-along right that it
could exercise if the Company did not complete a Qualified Initial Public Offering before
February 12, 2013. See id. at 15–16 (the “Drag-Along Right”). Generally speaking, and
subject to various caveats, the Drag-Along Right obligated the Company and Oak Hill to
negotiate for thirty days on terms for the Company to repurchase Oak Hill’s shares. If the
parties could not agree, then Oak Hill could cause the Company to engage in a “Change in
Control Transaction.” See id.
The Company used $73 million of the proceeds to pay down its line of credit. The
Company paid out another $67.5 million to its founders, with $37.125 million going to Ng
and $30.375 million to Hsu. PTO ¶ 41.
13
C. The Oak Hill Settlement
When Oak Hill invested, the goal was to grow Oversee into a billion dollar
company. See JX 54; JX 56 at 2, 3. The first half of the year saw the Company performing
well, albeit below its targets. See JX 81 at 2; JX 86 at 22. Part of the problem was Google,
which began a multi-year effort to consolidate the online advertising market. The
Company’s early relationship with Google had been symbiotic, because Oversee’s parked
domains generated traffic for Google. By 2008, however, Internet users had shifted away
from direct navigation and predominantly were using search engines, where Google
dominated. In May 2008, Google told the Company that it wanted to renegotiate its contract
to give the Company a lower share of revenue and eliminate the Company’s preferred
access to Google’s search feed. See Kupietzky Tr. 14–15, 16–17. Google achieved both
outcomes, and under the Company’s new agreement, its share of advertising revenue from
Google declined from 74.4% to 66.3%. JX 523 at 2.
The organization overseeing the registration of domain names also changed the
dynamics of the Domain Monetization business for the worse by eliminating the five-day
“tasting” window. This meant that the Company no longer had the ability to evaluate a
domain name before buying it. The Company now had to take the risk of spending $10 on
a domain name that might not generate any money. See Kupietzky Tr. 15.
With the Company’s business deteriorating, Oak Hill pushed Ng to step aside in
favor of a professional CEO. See JX 241 at 2, 12. During the second half of the year, Oak
Hill led a search for an outside CEO, but after the chosen candidate was lured away, the
14
Board promoted Jeff Kupietzky from Executive Vice President to President. See Kupietzky
Tr. 32; JX 155; JX 156; see also JX 241 at 2, 12; JX 523 at 2.
The latter half of 2008 also witnessed the onset of the Great Recession, which
affected online advertising. See JX 138; JX 145. The Domain Monetization and Vertical
Markets businesses depended on online advertising, and when Oak Hill invested, online
advertising was expected to grow by 15–20% per year. JX 523 at 2. Instead, spending on
online advertising only grew by 10.6% in 2008 and declined by 3.4% in 2009. Id. The
Great Recession also led to structural changes in the market for subprime loans, which
devastated low.com, Oversee’s principal Vertical Markets business. See JX 523 at 2.
Oak Hill used the events of 2008 to re-negotiate the terms of its investment. See JX
201 at 2. In November 2008, Oak Hill presented Ng with an “Issues List” and threatened
to sue. See JX 163. On December 31, 2008, Oak Hill, Ng, Hsu, and the Company entered
into a settlement agreement. JX 195. No funds were returned to Oak Hill. Instead, Ng and
Hsu granted Oak Hill options to purchase large blocks of their common stock at an exercise
price lower than the price at which Oak Hill invested. PTO ¶ 45. The parties amended the
Drag-Along Right so that it would ripen on February 12, 2013, but could only be exercised
if Oak Hill had made a redemption request that was not honored; otherwise, Oak Hill could
not exercise the Drag-Along Right until February 12, 2015. PTO ¶ 46. The settlement
consideration also included an amendment to the Redemption Right which provided that if
the Company lacked sufficient funds legally available to redeem the Preferred Stock in full,
then the Company would
15
take all reasonable actions (as determined by the [Board] in good faith and
consistent with its fiduciary duties) to generate, as promptly as practicable,
sufficient legally available funds to redeem all outstanding shares of [the
Preferred Stock], including by way of incurrence of indebtedness, issuance
of equity, sale of assets, effecting a Deemed Liquidation Event or otherwise.
JX 203 at 11.
After the settlement, Ng resigned as CEO. Ng nominally remained Chairman of the
Board, but he relocated to China, reduced his involvement in the Company’s affairs, and
focused on other projects. Hsu Tr. 2206; Ng Tr. 627–28, 639; Kupietzky Dep. 33–34; see
JX 201 at 2; JX 354 at 3.
Under Oak Hill’s guidance, Kupietzky took significant actions to restore the
Company’s profitability, including a significant reduction in force. See Kupietzky Tr. 33–
34; JX 241 at 2, 12. From April 2009 onward, the Company performed “ahead of budget.”
JX 354 at 8. Oak Hill was again optimistic about the Company. See id. at 11.
D. Oak Hill Becomes The Company’s Controlling Stockholder.
In August 2009, Ng and Hsu approached Oak Hill about buying the rest of their
shares. See JX 288 at 2. Ownership of a majority of the common stock would give Oak
Hill the right to appoint the three Common Directors in addition to the two Series A
Directors, conferring full control at the board level. In late October and early November,
Oak Hill paid $32 million to buy 41,788,257 shares of common stock from Ng and Hsu,
comprising 53.7% of the common stock and reflecting a purchase price of $0.77 per share.6
6
See JX 395; JX 396; JX 409; JX 412; JX 523 at 2. The events leading to Oak Hill’s
purchase were complicated, contentious, and ultimately not particularly relevant to the
merits of this case. In short, after Oak Hill made an offer for Ng and Hsu’s shares, Hsu
changed his mind and sought to purchase Ng’s shares so that he would have control over a
16
Oak Hill’s purchase of a majority of the common stock increased Oak Hill’s equity
ownership on an as-converted basis from 41% to 73%. JX 347 at 1. While solely a holder
of the Preferred Stock, Oak Hill could not receive more than $150 million at valuations
below $403 million, when it became economically rational to exercise its conversion right.
As an owner of common stock, Oak Hill would share in any value creation at prices above
its purchase price of $0.77 per share. When seeking approval for the investment from Oak
Hill’s Investment Committee, the deal team presented a chart showing how the purchase
affected Oak Hill’s return profile, with the return from the common stock (green) layered
above the return from the preferred (blue) and the additional wedge of value from the
majority of the common stock and be able to appoint the three Common Directors. See JX
305; JX 315. For a time, Ng seemed to have agreed to sell to Hsu. See JX 319. That outcome
was unacceptable to Oak Hill, see JX 317 at 1–2, and Pade and Morse threatened to take
hostile actions against the Company if Hsu acquired Ng’s shares, see JX 318 at 1–2; JX
320. Ng then reneged on his agreement with Hsu and agreed to sell to Oak Hill at a higher
price. See JX 332; JX 333; JX 337; JX 338; JX 341. Once Hsu had lost the deal, he
exercised a co-sale right that enabled him to sell a portion of his shares to Oak Hill in place
of a portion of Ng’s shares. See JX 340. The transaction left Hsu embittered towards both
Ng and Oak Hill. See, e.g., JX 342; JX 348 at 1–2; JX 460; JX 469. He filed a lawsuit
challenging the transaction, but was forced to dismiss it with prejudice to complete the sale
of his shares under his co-sale right. See JX 385; JX 413.
17
options that Oak Hill obtained on Ng and Hsu’s shares as part of the 2008 settlement
(orange). See JX 354 at 5.
Equally important, the purchase of common stock gave Oak Hill control over the
Board. As the deal team explained to Oak Hill’s Investment Committee, “[t]he Preferred
and common stock holders begin to have aligned economic incentives when the value of
Oversee exceeds the Preferred conversion price, but these interests diverge below the
conversion price.” JX 354 at 7. The deal team stressed that “[i]n scenarios where the
company struggles, the value of control to Oak Hill is significant.” Id. Buying the common
stock gave Oak Hill “the ability to control the timing and manner of our ultimate exit.” Id.;
see JX 347 at 1 (noting that the purchase gave Oak Hill “complete control of the Board”
and that moving into a control position had “a lot of benefits to our existing $150mm
preferred position, as we can decide when and how we exit”); JX 357 (“[W]e are investing
in control in order to protect our investment from Fred’s control . . . .”); JX 450 (“OHCP
III will clearly benefit from majority control of the Board.”).
Oak Hill’s purchase of common stock left Ng with approximately 14 million shares
and Hsu with approximately 20 million shares. JX 431. After Oak Hill acquired full control,
Hsu resigned from the Board. JX 424.
E. Oak Hill Wants A Return Of Capital.
Oak Hill’s partners regularly review their portfolio companies. During a meeting in
May 2010, the Oak Hill deal team reported that the Company’s business had performed
well in 2009 and first quarter of 2010, with results slightly ahead of its budget. See JX 523
at 2, 6. The deal team recommended “continuing to hold this investment, while actively
18
evaluating opportunistic M&A and sale opportunities,” with an anticipated exit in late 2012
or early 2013. Id. at 2, 3, 12. The other Oak Hill partners, however, focused on “exit timing”
and “monetization strategy.” JX 524. The “consensus” was for the deal team “to take action
to realize value sooner rather than later.” Id. One option was “a merger with a strategic that
would allow us to take some of our preferred off of the table and roll some into common
with a better go-forward return profile than our status-quo.” Id. The other option was to
“[t]ry to sell now to get back at least our $150 million.” Id. Oak Hill’s managing partner,
J. Taylor Crandall, “urged [the deal team] to crank up the focus on our monetization
strategy.” Id.
During the same month, Kupietzky entered into a new agreement with the
Company. JX 532. Kupietzky had complained to Pade and Morse that his shares of
common stock only would have value after Oak Hill had received $150 million. Kupietzky
Tr. 38–39. To align Kupietzky’s interests with Oak Hill, Pade and Morse agreed to a bonus
arrangement based on the amount of proceeds received by both the preferred and the
common, thereby entitling Kupietzky to share from dollar one with Oak Hill. See, e.g., JX
478, JX 483, JX 487. Kupietzky’s intention was to make sure that “if Oak Hill took money,
[he] would get paid.” Kupietzky Tr. 138.
In September 2010, Oak Hill’s Portfolio Performance Management Committee
reinforced the need for the various deal teams to focus on realizations, liquidity, and exits.
See JX 569. Under a heading titled “Next 18 months liquidity opportunities,” the committee
noted that Oak Hill would likely be starting the process of raising Fund IV during spring
2012, and “a necessary condition” for successful fundraising “will be that we return more
19
than the $160 million predicted in the portfolio reviews over the coming year and a half.”
Id. at 2.
In October 2010, Oak Hill filled Hsu’s long-vacant Board seat with a third Oak Hill
representative, David Scott. Then a principal of Oak Hill and member of the Oversee deal
team, Scott later became a partner with the firm. See PTO ¶¶ 15, 58; JX 586.
Also in October 2010, Kupietzky presented Oak Hill with his vision for growing the
Company. See JX 2541. He set an aggressive goal of converting the Company’s 300
million monthly visitors into 10 million repeat customers. Id. at 9. He hoped to achieve this
by creating a “Membership Mall” of lead-generation businesses spanning at least five
vertical markets and supported by shared infrastructure. Id. at 10–13. To carry out this plan,
he needed:
“[D]edicated resources for R&D [to] improve company ability to build new
products”
“[S]trong leadership for management of [vertical markets] unit”
“[D]edicated resources for M&A”
“Changes in existing org structure and individuals to support new plan”
“Sufficient capital for acquisitions”
Id. at 16; see Kupietzky Tr. 77–83. Kupietzky provided Oak Hill with a chart depicting the
likely trajectory for the Domain Monetization business depending on whether the Company
sought to (i) “maintain” the business by investing in alternative monetization strategies,
new efforts at optimization, and efforts to respond to Google or (ii) “harvest” the business
by limiting investment in these areas. JX 2541 at 25. In both scenarios, the business would
20
decay, but Kupietzky anticipated the drop in the first scenario would be 35% less than the
more rapid falloff in the second scenario. Id.
By December 2010, Kupietzky perceived Oak Hill’s desire for a return of capital as
a potential constraint. He expressed concern that if he did not “grow the business quickly
through acquisition then Oak Hill will do a dividend recap.” JX 615. He identified the most
important objective for the Company as “[d]iversify from parking business to growing lead
[generation] business.” JX 2546 at 1. He regarded the “Board’s desire for dividend” as his
biggest personal challenge for 2011. Id. at 2; see Kupietzky Tr. 91.
F. The Company At The Beginning of 2011
When 2011 began, the Company still had four lines of business: Domain
Monetization, Vertical Markets, Aftermarket, and Registrar. The Aftermarket and
Registrar businesses were subscale and needed to be sold. No one disputes that selling these
businesses was the right course of action to take. The debate concerns whether the
Company did the right thing by not reinvesting the proceeds in its business.
Domain Monetization continued to be the Company’s financial cornerstone. JX 642
at 10; see JX 753 at 14. During 2010, it generated $174 million in revenue and $25.1 million
in EBITDA. JX 753 at 14. But it was vulnerable to steady erosion by Google. See JX 642
at 3 (“Google concentration is declining . . . but still an overhang on franchise value and
must be further reduced.”). At the end of 2010, Company management projected 12%
annual decay in revenue over the next three years. See JX 616 at 7.
The Vertical Markets business operated sites in three categories:
21
“Travel: Provides metasearch for online airfare through www.lowfares.com as well
as airport parking reservation services through www.aboutairportparking.com.” JX
642 at 15.
“Finance: Provides credit card comparison and personal finance information
through websites including www.creditcard321.com and www.creditcards.org
(acquired at the end of 2009).” Id.
“Retail: Provides comparison shopping services for consumers and serves as a lead
generation provider to online retailers through www.shopwiki.com and other
international websites (ShopWiki was acquired in Nov. 2010).” Id.
The Vertical Markets business was profitable, generating $30 million in revenue and $10
million in gross profit in 2010. See id. at 9.
If the Company was to grow, then Vertical Markets would be the vehicle. In
December 2010, the Company hired Scott Morrow as a Senior Vice President and General
Manager of the Vertical Markets business with the expectation that it would be the
Company’s “high growth division.” JX 595 at 1; see JX 621; JX 636; JX 653; see also JX
880 (“Vertical markets is the high growth business . . . .”). Acquisitions would likely be a
key driver of growth, because as Oak Hill’s deal team observed in January 2011, “Oversee
has sourced lead generation acquisitions at reasonable multiples and then grown them post-
acquisition by using Oversee’s insights into monetization trends. It has not been successful
at organically creating these verticals.” JX 642 at 10.
At the end of 2010, the management team at the Company consisted of Kupietzky
as CEO, Elizabeth Murray as Chief Financial Officer, Debra Domeyer as Chief
Technology Officer, and Todd Greene as General Counsel. The Board consisted of eight
directors. Pade, Morse, and Scott represented Oak Hill. Kupietzky held a seat as CEO. Ng
22
continued to serve as Chairman. The remaining three directors were not affiliated with Oak
Hill or management: Allen Morgan, Scott Jarus, and Kamran Pourzanjani. See JX 737.
Overall, 2010 had been solid year for the Company. JX 642 at 3; JX 723 at 2.
Revenue in 2010 grew by 9.4% to $174 million, and EBITDA grew by 1.1% to $25.1
million. The Company met its budget. JX 723 at 2; see id. at 8. The main disappointment
was revenue from acquisitions, where Oversee anticipated incremental revenue of $20
million and only achieved $3 million. JX 657 at 8.
On January 19, 2011, the Board approved the Company’s business plan for 2011
(the “2011 Plan”). JX 661 at 3. It called for (i) divesting the Aftermarket and Registrar
businesses; (ii) supporting Domain Monetization through domain name acquisitions,
optimization, and international growth; and (iii) growing Vertical Markets internally and
through acquisitions. JX 658 at 8. To achieve these goals, the 2011 Plan budgeted $42
million for acquisitions in 2011. Id. at 22; see Kupietzky Tr. At 53–55.
Kupietzky did not have specific acquisition targets in mind; he anticipated finding
accretive acquisitions. In accordance with the Company’s normal practice at the time, the
Board received an M&A pipeline update from Ryan Berryman, the Company’s head of
Corporate Development. The plan identified twenty potential targets for the Vertical
Markets business. See JX 657 at 33; JX 725; JX 725.1 (describing management 2011
“goals” for Kupietzky, Berryman, Nelson and others, all focused on growth). The 2011
Plan contemplated hiring twenty-four new employees. JX 658 at 23.
Kupietzky regarded the 2011 Plan as contemplating “moderate” growth. Kupietzky
Tr. 101. Kupietzky explained at trial that there were always three basic paths for Oversee:
23
(i) a harvest strategy, in which management maximized profitability without investing in
new initiatives, (ii) a modest investment strategy, in which management looked for
opportunities to support the core business and to invest where the Company had a
competitive advantage, and (iii) an aggressive investment strategy that contemplated a
venture-capital approach to growth without regard to near-term profitability. Id. Kupietzky
believed that the 2011 Plan pursued the middle route. Id.
G. Oak Hill Decides To Change The Status Quo.
In a January 2011 presentation to the firm’s partners, the Oak Hill deal team
explained that the team’s focus had shifted “to an overall review of Oversee’s strategic
direction” that included pursuing “either larger M&A or a shareholder dividend.” JX 642
at 3. The deal team also advised the Oak Hill partners that “[o]ptimal outcomes will require
changes to the senior management team.” Id. Elaborating on both points, the Oak Hill deal
term stated:
“We intend to either utilize available debt capacity to fund a larger acquisition in
2011 or seek a dividend recap that could return $35-$40 million to Oak Hill.” Id. at
10; accord id. at 16.
“CEO Jeff Kupietzky and his team have stabilized Oversee and established good
operational controls and processes over the past two years. However, we believe an
optimal outcome for Oak Hill will require future changes to the senior team.” Id. at
10.
After speaking with Morse, the Company’s investment banker at Jefferies & Company
noted that “[e]xit options are really weighing on him.” JX 667.
In a March 2011 update to the firm’s partners, the Oak Hill deal team confirmed
that although “Oversee met its EBITDA budget and has returned to growth,” the deal team
24
was “unsatisfied overall with Company performance” and “engaged in a series of actions
to improve our expected outcomes.” JX 723 at 2. Later in the presentation, after describing
the returns under the existing business plan, the deal team recommended against
maintaining the “status quo” at Oversee. Id. at 11. The team elaborated:
“EBITDA growth of 10-12% builds value primarily for the common equity (of
which [Fund III] owns approximately half).” Id.
“Oak Hill’s preferred does not participate in value creation until equity values above
$403 million, and with a net cash position, there is not leverage between enterprise
value and equity value creation for the preferred.” Id.
“A transformative M&A transaction, a change to the capital structure, or a change
to the growth profile would be necessary to support an extended hold period.” Id.
Rather than accepting the status quo, the deal team embarked on a “staged action
plan” that involved (i) selling the Registrar business, (ii) “engag[ing] in transformative
M&A discussions with three industry players,” and (iii) evaluating changes in senior
management. Id. at 2. The team again identified a “dividend recap transaction” as a possible
means of returning capital, “but best sequenced as a late-2011 event, possibly tied to the
preferred maturity, absent a strategic transaction.” Id.
Oak Hill spent much of its energy during the five months of 2011 pursuing a
transformative M&A transaction with NameMedia, which Oak Hill regarded as “an
excellent strategic fit” with Oversee. Id. at 12. The Oak Hill team believed that the
combined company could support “additional leverage, funding a distribution to
shareholders.” Id. Oak Hill worked with Summit Partners, the private equity sponsor of
NameMedia, to develop a transaction. See, e.g., JX 757.
25
Because of Oak Hill’s desire to receive a return of capital from the NameMedia
deal, the Board formed a special committee comprising the three non-Oak Hill directors:
Jarus, Morgan, and Pourzanjani. See JX 790 at 3–4. As originally constituted, the
resolutions gave the committee the exclusive power and authority to determine whether a
recapitalization would take place and on what terms. JX 822 at 3–4; see JX 809 at 2.
Morgan objected to the full delegation of authority. He believed that “in general, the
Special Committee should closely ‘ride shotgun’ to the majority shareholder of Oversee as
they work out a deal that is acceptable to them.” JX 809 at 2. At that point, the committee
would “make a recommendation to the Board” and “[i]f the Board wants to recommend
the Potential Transaction over the objection of the Special Committee, I think that’s fine.”
Id.; see Morgan Tr. 1627–28. The final resolutions gave the committee a reduced role: A
recapitalization would require the committee’s approval, but the committee did not have
the power to set the terms of the deal. See JX 822 at 3–5.
In early May 2011, the NameMedia deal fell apart. The banks would not provide a
financing package that contemplated a dividend. See JX 830; JX 831. Without bank
financing, the combined business could not generate enough distributable cash to satisfy
NameMedia’s owners. See JX 837 at 1; JX 840 at 4–5; JX 844 at 1.
As the prospects for the NameMedia deal receded, Oak Hill examined whether the
Redemption Right could provide a means of obtaining a return of capital. See JX 720.
Under this court’s decision in SV Investment Partners, LLC v. ThoughtWorks, Inc., 7 A.3d
973 (Del. Ch. 2010), the Company would only be able to redeem the Preferred Stock to the
extent it had legally available funds. In March 2011, Greene sent a summary of the
26
ThoughtWorks case to the Company’s outside counsel at Hogan Lovells and scheduled a
call to discuss it. See JX 747; Greene Tr. 1967–69. In April, Oak Hill’s lawyers at Wilson
Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C. delivered a twelve-page memorandum analyzing Oak
Hill’s rights under the Preferred Stock. See JX 770; JX 801; see also JX 850.
Oak Hill also remained interested in changing the leadership team at the Company.
In March 2011, Oak Hill had asked Jarus to meet with the management team to understand
“the senior management team dynamics.” JX 723 at 6. At the end of April, he delivered his
report. In his introduction, he cautioned that
by the very nature of my conversations with the [executive team], most of
what I heard were negative observations or complaints. This was a venting
process with an “outsider” who was willing to listen. The reader of this report
should not assume that “the sky is falling.” . . . Without exception, everyone
believes that ODN is a valuable company with tremendous assets at its
disposal.
JX 800 at 2. That said, the report contained blunt commentary:
“There is a keen recognition within the [executive team] that ODN’s business must
change. The company’s current business model is broken and unsustainable.
External influences and the lack of control over its own destiny have become
overwhelming.” Id.
“[T]there is concern about ODN’s ability to execute successfully on the acquisitions
which have been made (i.e., grow the businesses/vertical market), and on whether
there really is any synergy between ODN’s core business (particularly the [owned
and operated] traffic) and its acquired vertical markets business.” Id. at 4.
“There was a general theme that the goals of the organization, particularly its
financial goals (i.e. budget), were set to meet Oak Hill’s expectations, as opposed
to being a realistic reflection of the current markets, external influences, and/or
ODN’s execution capabilities.” Id.
“[T]here is a sense that many decisions need to be brought up to Oak Hill Capital
before they are executed (i.e. the CEO does not have the authority to be making
these decisions without Oak Hill’s consent).” Id. at 5.
27
“The biggest challenge to the success (and survival) of ODN is the lack of a clear,
articulated, well-communicated and decisive strategic direction for the company.”
Id. at 7.
H. The Company’s Performance Suffers.
While Oak Hill was pursuing the NameMedia deal, the Company’s performance
suffered. In February 2011, Google released the first of a series of updates to its search
algorithm, later known as “Panda.” PTO ¶ 61; JX 2566 ¶ 28; Jerath Tr. 2458. The updates
were designed to assign lower search rankings to domains that lacked original content or
carried other indicia of being lower quality sites. See JX 710; JX 712 at 1; JX 714; JX 769.
Panda affected all of Oversee’s businesses, and it caused ShopWiki’s traffic to decline by
30–40% during the first quarter. JX 782A at 36.
The Google updates did not immediately have a major impact on the Company’s
results: its gross revenue of $45.6 million for the first quarter fell just short of budget at
$46 million, and its EBITDA of $5.4 million also fell just short of budget of $5.6 million.
Id. at 4. But the negative effects continued into April and May. See JX 824 at 4–5; JX 825.
Google made matters worse by providing its search feed to other domain monetization
companies, who competed aggressively with the Company. See Kupietzky Tr. 56; JX 825.
Oak Hill decided it was time to remove Kupietzky. See JX 723 at 2. In February
2011, Morse had told Pade and Scott that they needed to “change the CEO.” JX 693. At
the end of May, Morse proposed to the rest of the Board that they fire Kupietzky and
establish an “Office of the CEO” comprising the balance of the senior management team.
JX 840 at 4–6.
28
On June 7, 2012, Pade and Morse met with Kupietzky and told him he was relieved
of operational responsibility. See JX 855. Kupietzky would leave the Company on
September 2. In his place, Pade and Morse established an “Operating Committee”
comprising the remaining members of senior management: Morrow, Domeyer, Murray,
and Greene. See id.; JX 856. Morrow and Domeyer received the titles of Co-President. See
JX 866. At its next meeting, the Board signed off on the changes. See JX 869.
Pade and Morse also made other changes in the executive team. After they had
explained to Kupietzky the “change in approach to operating the business,” Kupietzky
agreed that “several other members of the management team were no longer in productive
roles.” JX 856 at 1; see Kupietzky Tr. 62–63, 129–30; Pade Tr. 483–86. The surplus
executives included Berryman, the Vice President for Corporate Development, and Jack
Nelson, the Head of Human Resources. JX 856 at 1. From Kupietzky’s standpoint, it made
sense to let Berryman go in light of Oak Hill’s new “cost-cutting strategy.” Kupietzky Tr.
127–30; see also JX 846 at 1 (Jarus noting in June 2011 that Berryman’s
“job/responsibilities seem to have bled away”).
For help in reorienting the Company, Oak Hill turned to Jefferies, which had been
advising the Company and Oak Hill on the NameMedia transaction. Oak Hill asked
Jefferies and management to analyze a sale of the Domain Monetization business,7 which
7
See JX 840 at 4 (Morse reporting that Oak Hill had “spoken with David Liu at
Jefferies about helping do a market check to understand what the market for the core
domain monetization asset might be”); JX 844 at 1 (Kupietzky reporting that Jefferies had
been engaged with a “primary focus” on marketing “the Monetization business on a stand-
alone basis”); JX 2471 (Greene reporting that NameMedia deal “is off” and “[w]e are
29
could generate cash for a redemption while preserving the Vertical Markets business to be
managed for possible upside. See JX 840 at 6; cf. JX 819 (Ng suggesting similar strategy).
Oak Hill also asked Jefferies about other options that would generate liquidity, including
selling the Company as a whole and adding debt to support a leveraged dividend. See JX
820. Oak Hill even asked Jefferies to explore splitting the Company in two, with the
Preferred Stock remaining with the Domain Monetization business so that its cash flows
could be used to pay it down, and with Vertical Markets spun off as a second company that
could seek venture financing. See JX 828; Kupietzky Tr. 117–19.
On June 30, 2011, Jefferies gave a presentation to the Board. See JX 887. The
materials noted that “[m]anagement and the Board are evaluating potential changes to the
Company’s long-term strategy, investment opportunities and underlying expense
structure.” JX 885 at 4. The Company’s strengths included its portfolio of domain names,
its high number of monthly unique visitors, its profitable business model, and its
relationship with Google. Id. at 6. The Company’s weakness included its dependence on
the Google relationship, the erosion of its Domain Monetization business, and the fact that
its Vertical Markets business remained “subscale and concentrated in travel.” Id. After
discussing the segments in greater detail, Jefferies outlined four non-exclusive alternatives:
(i) invest in growth, (ii) optimize for profitability, (iii) segment sales, and (iv) a whole-
company sale. Id. at 13. The presentation warned that while optimizing for profitability
working on retaining Jefferies to conduct a market check for sale of our monetization
business”); see also JX 855 at 30; JX 874 at 1–2.
30
could “increase cash flow in the short to medium term,” it could “limit near term potential
for value creation through organic growth and inorganic growth.” Id. The segment sales
offered the opportunity for a “[p]artial liquidity event for shareholders” and had the
potential to “maximize valuation” through a sum-of-the-parts approach, but the remaining
segments could be subscale and have limited profitability. Id.
After the meeting, Pade and Scott gave the Operating Committee a series of
questions to answer. They included determining whether the Domain Monetization
business could be stabilized and evaluating whether its traffic could be used to support the
Vertical Markets’ business “for valuation advantage.” JX 888 at 1. Pade and Scott also
wanted to know if (i) the Company could grow the Vertical Markets business organically
and (ii) if there were acquisitions that would “move the needle and incorporate synergies.”
Id. Pade and Scott indicated that they had been “unimpressed” with the Company’s
acquisitions so far. Id.
Based on the discussion during and after the Board meeting, the Operating
Committee understood that Oak Hill and the Board were not focused on selling the
Company in the near term. See JX 894 at 2. The primary goal was to optimize for
profitability by making “bold” cuts to SG&A.8 In terms of longer term strategy, the
8
JX 906; see JX 894 at 4 (indicating that Pade said to cut “millions in SG&A”); id.
(observing that “[t]here will be some things we do that we cut that we’ll regret”); see also
JX 925 at 2 (Jefferies call report stating Murray reported that “[the Operating Committee
is] presenting to the board on 8/17 a plan for 2012 . . . will likely include substantial cost
cuts.”); JX 954 at 2 (“[T]here is full expectation by Oakhill [sic] and the Board that we will
be reducing our SGA.”).
31
Operating Committee analyzed options for selling either Domain Monetization or Vertical
Markets. See JX 894.
In July 2011, the Operating Committee met again with Oak Hill. See JX 898; JX
900; JX 901; JX 902. Domeyer presented possible scenarios for Domain Monetization. See
JX 901. Morrow presented a plan for Vertical Markets. See JX 900; JX 901; JX 902. After
describing the attractive features of the Vertical Markets business, Morrow explained that
Oversee’s business model was “overwhelmingly search engine focused” with 79% of visits
coming from search engines. JX 902 at 20. He then explained how Google favored its own
vertical markets sites and those of its paid advertisers on the results page. See id. at 21–27.
This meant that Google could dramatically affect the performance and profitability of the
Company’s sites. See JX 902 at 30.
After the meeting, Pade and Scott pushed Murray to implement significant expense
cuts, including a reduction in force. JX 906. Oak Hill also asked the Operating Committee
to meet with Jefferies to refine their strategic thinking. JX 923. A significant point of debate
in selecting the Company’s strategy was whether the Domain Monetization traffic could
be used to support growth in the Vertical Markets business, or whether the Company
needed to invest directly in building up Vertical Markets. Domeyer favored the former.
Morrow favored the latter. During the call with Jefferies, Morrow gave a ballpark estimate
that “to execute on the vertical markets strategy he would need $15 - $20M.” JX 923; see
Morrow Tr. 257–59; see also JX 889 (Morrow writing on June 30, 2011 “there are
opportunities to grow. However, the investment for growth is not complete. We need to
32
invest aggressively in infrastructure/marketing services . . . ” and that “an M&A deal” could
quickly help build out capabilities).
The Operating Committee met again with the Oak Hill team in August. JX 944. The
Operating Committee recommended Domeyer’s approach: Oversee would attempt to pivot
from “‘Domain Parking’ to ‘Traffic Marketing’” by using its Domain Monetization traffic
to support growth in its Vertical Markets business. Id. at 6, 16. Consistent with Oak Hill’s
focus on optimizing for profitability, the team proposed significant cuts, including a
reduction of thirty-four employees. See id. at 39–45. The cuts would reduce the SG&A
expense from $3 million per month in 2011 to a projected SG&A expense of $1.8 million
per month in 2012. Id. at 44. The Board signed off on the initiatives at its August 30
meeting. See JX 948; JX 952.
In September 2011, the Operating Committee implemented the layoff. JX 980. That
same month, Pade approved new bonus agreements for the members of the Operating
Committee that aligned their personal economic interests with Oak Hill’s interests in
achieving a redemption. The members of the Operating Committee asked for the same deal
Kupietzky had, which paid him a bonus for every dollar received by Oak Hill. See Greene
Tr. 1917–18. Oak Hill refused, agreeing only to pay a bonus once Oak Hill received at least
$75 million. Greene Tr. 1922, 1980–81. In September, Pade informed each member of the
Operating Committee that “Oak Hill has decided” to grant them bonuses approximating
1% to 2.5% “ownership of the Preferred Shares if and when the aggregate value of the
Preferred Shares exceeds $75MM.” See JX 970; JX 971; JX 972; JX 973. See generally JX
1582 (describing terms).
33
By October 2011, the Oak Hill deal team was focused on building up cash at the
Company in anticipation of the Preferred Stock maturing in February 2013. In a
presentation to the Oak Hill partners, the deal team reported that the Company’s business
had stabilized and begun to show improvement. See JX 1009 at 2. The team then explained:
“As a reminder, our $150mm preferred stock matures in February 2013.” Id.
“The Company has an obligation to make every reasonable effort to redeem the
security at maturity and our drag right kicks in after 9 months if we are not redeemed
in part (50%) or 18 months if we are not redeemed in full.” Id.
“Our ability to retire or partially repay the preferred in advance of maturity is limited
given current shareholder dynamics.” Id.
“With this timetable in mind, the Company has engaged Jefferies to explore
strategic alternatives.” Id.
“We would expect to selectively approach strategic buyers about the monetization
business as well as the whole company.” Id.
“[W]e are likely to wait until early 2012 to make formal approaches to interested
parties.” Id.
“A sale of the monetization assets would likely result in the Company having a cash
position that would come close to paying down the preferred and a retained vertical
market asset with ~$5mm of post corporate EBITDA and a positive growth profile.”
Id.
In his self-evaluation for Oak Hill’s managing partners, Morse confirmed the plan for
Oversee: “We have repaid all debt and are building up a cash balance, with an end-game
of paying back our preferred when it matures in February 2013.” JX 1032 at 3.
In November 2011, Oak Hill’s partners divided the firm’s portfolio companies into
four categories, each with a different targeted outcome:
“Turn Around – Maximize capital return in 12–18 months,”
“Turn Around – Build for larger value creation,”
34
“Maximize monetization in the next 12–18 months,” and
“Max ROI over 18–60 months.” JX 1026 at 2.
The partners assigned the Company to the category of “Maximize capital return in 12–18
months.” Id.; see Pade Tr. 498–502.
After making these assignments, the Oak Hill partners tasked a team with reporting
back in December 2011 on how the firm could achieve these outcomes. See JX 1029 at 1–
2. The December presentation confirmed Oversee as a target for a near-term return of
capital, with “a full or partial 2012–13 exit.” JX 1038 at 9, 11. Oversee was also placed on
a newly created “Focus List,” which identified portfolio companies “deemed to be
meaningfully underperforming.” See id. at 8, 13. The deal teams for those companies were
required to present the partners with a detailed roadmap identifying “how we intend to fix
the situation and ultimately maximize the realized value from our investment.” Id. at 8.
The December 2011 presentation explained why Oak Hill needed to achieve near-
term realizations: the firm was planning on raising its next fund, and it wanted its
distributions to paid in capital to look good.
“While determining the sufficient conditions for the launch of a successful OCHP
IV is an art, not science, the IR team did provide us with the consensus view of LPs,
GPs and Placement Agents that a necessary condition is a significant return of
capital to investors.” Id. at 9.
“The consensus view is that a DPI of 1.00 for OHCP II and 0.35 for OHCP III are
necessary conditions for a successful fundraise.” Id.
Later in December, Morse reported to Oak Hill’s managing partner that the Company’s
performance and the anticipated sale of the Aftermarket and Registrar businesses “will put
35
us in a position to work through our liquidity options when we return in the new year . . .
.” JX 1049.
In December 2011, Pourzanjani resigned from the Board. JX 1046 at 2. Oak Hill
decided to promote Morrow and Domeyer to the positions of co-CEOs, effective at year-
end. JX 1049.
I. Oak Hill Directs Management To Maximize Cash.
By year-end 2011, Oversee’s cash reserves had increased to $23 million, spurred by
the Operating Committee’s deep cuts in expenses. JX 1647 at 6. In late January 2012, the
Company completed the sale of its Aftermarket and Registrar businesses, yielding more
than $15 million in proceeds. JX 1126 at 7.
On January 9, 2012, Pade told Jefferies that the Company soon would have $40
million cash and that it was “[i]mperative that they return some capital before $150m
preferred matures 13 months from now; top priority.” JX 1066. Pade therefore wanted
“to restart conversations with [Jefferies] in early February on how best to monetize the
asset.” Id.
Pade said the same thing on January 16, 2012, when he met with the members of
the Operating Committee. Pade told Morrow and Murray that “it’s about the cash right now
and the goal for Oak Hill at this point is get the $150MM investment back.” JX 1079;
Morrow Tr. 260–67. He also indicated that the Company “should sell the monetization
business in 2012 given that here’s no clear connection between the business units and it’s
a ‘melting ice cream cone.’” JX 1079. For the Company as a whole, Pade wanted to “get
the EBITDA plan for 2012 to $20MM.” Id. For Vertical Markets, he wanted to grow the
36
business “to around $12MM in EBITDA” so it could be sold for around $100 million. Id.
Morrow thought it was “clear” that Oak Hill “wants to collect the cash vs go for a bigger
growth strategy.” Id.; see Morrow 260–67; see also JX 1069 (Pade commenting that “we
[Oak Hill] have had our fill and then some of ‘internet performance (or lack thereof)
marketing’ plays”). Pade gave a softer message about the Domain Monetization business
to Domeyer, who was in charge of it and wanted to invest in it, and Domeyer told Morrow
that she did not think Oak Hill had ruled that out. See JX 1079. Privately, however, she
recognized that Oak Hill was “fully intending to sell the biz area I’m responsible for.” JX
1083.
Inside Oak Hill, the message was the same. On January 24, 2012, Morse sent Oak
Hill’s managing partner a “one-pager” on Oversee identifying the “must-do” list for 2012.
JX 1090 at 1. The first goal for 2012 was to “[s]ell the aftermarket / registrar business.” Id.
at 6. The second was “[p]artial or complete asset sales to raise cash to repay the Oak Hill
preferred stock prior to maturity in Feb 2013.” Id.
On February 3, 2012, Morse explained to Morrow why Oak Hill was focused on
cash. Morse told Morrow that Oak Hill was “[s]tarting fund raising in one year” and that
“[s]elling monetization business and get some cash would be helpful to portfolio/fund.” JX
1107; see Morrow Tr. 271–77. Morse believed that “[i]f we can’t get the Monetization
business to grow then we should sell it.” JX 1107. Morse thought a buyer would pay around
$80 million, which would give Oversee “around $120MM in cash plus a growth story with
[Vertical Markets].” Id. Morse thought Domeyer needed to understand that if they sold
Domain Monetization, it did not mean that she would be fired. Id.
37
On February 6, 2012, the Operating Committee provided Oak Hill with a proposed
business plan for 2012 (the “2012 Plan”). It contemplated retaining all $38 million in cash
plus all projected 2012 earnings to amass $55 million by year end. JX 1111 at 3. Realizing
how this might look to Oversee’s employees, Morrow suggested that Murray should
explain our relationship with Oak Hill. I think some staff see that we made
$23MM in EBITDA and we have $20MM+ in cash on the balance sheet and
they don’t understand why we need to cut SG&A or run lean. They obviously
don’t understand the dynamic between our investors and our cash/EBITDA
and expectation for ROI.
JX 1089. Although Morrow told her, “I know it’s basic,” Murray claimed at trial not to
understand what he meant. Id.; see Murray Tr. 1037–38.
On February 22, 2012, Greene recognized that Oak Hill’s insistence on
accumulating cash for an upcoming redemption could create a conflict of interest, and he
contacted Hogan Lovells and Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP to discuss forming a
“liquidity special committee.” JX 1124; see Greene Tr. 1970. The next day, management
presented the 2012 Plan to the Board. JX 1126. Immediately before the meeting, Oak Hill
General Counsel reminded Morse and Scott about what “[y]ou guys know” by re-
circulating Wilson Sonsini’s 2011 memorandum about the Preferred Stock. JX 1134.
In charting a path to a year-end cash balance of $55 million, the 2012 Plan was
unlike any prior plan. See, e.g., JX 658 (2011 Plan); JX 472 (2010 Plan). The Company
had always used its earnings for investment and acquisitions. It rarely had a cash balance
greater than $15 million. JX 472 at 18; see also JX 53 at 4; JX 187 at 4; JX 465 at 4; JX
626 at 4; JX 1058 at 4. Where the 2011 Plan earmarked $42 million for acquisitions, the
2012 Plan did not include any budget for acquisitions. Compare JX 658 at 22, with JX 1126
38
at 38. Where the 2011 Plan contained three-year forward-looking projections, the 2012
Plan did not contain any projections. Compare JX 658 at 3–6, with JX 1126; see also Ng
Tr. 697. The Board approved the 2012 Plan. The Board did not establish a “liquidity special
committee.” JX 1126. The defendants claimed not to recall any discussion about how to
spend the Company’s large and growing cash balance. See Scott Tr. 879–82; Greene Tr.
1972; Morrow Tr. 282–83; Morgan Tr. 1633–35; Jarus Tr. 1824; Pade Tr. 510; Ng Tr. 696.
At the end of February meeting, the Board made Domeyer the Company’s sole
CEO. JX 1130 at 3. The Board terminated Morrow, who had been the biggest champion of
investing in the Vertical Markets business and whose joint promotion with Domeyer to co-
CEO had been announced just one month earlier. See JX 1096. Given Oversee’s status as
a “Focus List” company, Morse promptly reported on the development to Oak Hill’s
managing partner. See JX 1132.
J. Oak Hill Pushes Alternatives To Generate More Liquidity.
In March 2012, the management team and Oak Hill met with Jefferies. When
briefing Jefferies on management’s plans in advance of the meeting, Domeyer
recommended that the team “talk about both [Vertical Markets] and [Domain
Monetization] equally” because Oak Hill “seems to have a preference here to sell one to
raise cash for a redemption and then take a flyer on the other as potential upside.” JX 1122.
Jefferies recommended conducting a broad market canvas if a decision was made to sell
either business. See JX 1150 at 12. At the beginning of April, Greene provided Pade with
a waterfall analysis showing the amounts payable to stockholders and other claimants
39
“upon a sale of the company.” JX 1161. Management quietly met with Sedo, the most
likely buyer of the Domain Monetization business. See JX 1164.
At its meeting in May 2012, the Board directed management to “explore whether
there would be any potential financing from such lenders to pay for a portion of the
redemption amount.” JX 1185 at 3; see Murray Tr. 1038. On May 2, Pade and Ng, acting
as the Compensation Committee, officially approved the bonus agreements for Domeyer,
Murray, and Greene. JX 1284; JX 1187.
In its May 2012 presentation to the firm’s partners, the Oak Hill deal team reported
that “[o]ur goal is to return capital on the preferred investment as soon as feasible without
impairing the value potential to the common stock (of which we hold 54%).” JX 1191 at
2. The deal team noted that “[t]he company must use ‘legally available funds’ at that time
to make a partial redemption of our security,” and that “[c]ash on hand, plus potential
borrowings at 1.0x-2.0x EBITDA could result in ~$75-$100 mm of proceeds for [Fund III]
in early 2013.” Id. The deal team reported that Jefferies did not believe that there was a
likely buyer for the whole company; instead, both Jefferies and the deal team believed “that
value would be maximized by seeking the best individual buyer of the individual assets of
the company.” Id. The deal team reported that Oversee was “in preliminary discussions
with Sedo” regarding the Domain Monetization business. Id.
The May 2012 presentation to the Oak Hill partners outlined some of the steps that
the deal team already had taken to prepare for a redemption.
“Current and former management have incentive plans that would generate
proceeds to them (from the company) in the event of full or some partial repayments
of the preferred.” Id. at 12.
40
“Management and the independent directors (Allen Morgan and Scott Jarus)
recognize the legal rights of the preferred, and this topic was discussed at the most
recent Board meeting.” Id.
“Additional divestitures over the course of the year could increase the amount
available to redeem the preferred in 2013.” Id.
The deal team cautioned that it was “not simply selling assets in order to increase cash for
redemption,” but only when the value of the sale exceeded the value to the business. Id.
The deal team reported that the Company planned to invest in its travel and retail verticals,
evaluate its finance vertical, and manage the Domain Monetization business for cash while
attempting to sell the third-party business. Id. at 11. The deal team explained that Oak Hill’s
ability to achieve “a full exit of our common stock position will depend on the ability to
realize fair/full value for each business line.” Id. at 15.
The Oak Hill deal team also warned the firm’s partners about possible litigation
over the redemption:
Co-founder Fred Hsu continues to own 26% of the common stock and is
already suing the company and the Board for a perceived failure to maximize
value for his common shares. Despite proper procedures, he may choose to
take issue with any payment to the Preferred. . . . [W]e and the company will
be certain to take all appropriate steps (and document them) as this
progresses.
Id. at 12.
On August 1, 2012, Murray and Domeyer met at Oak Hill’s offices with the three
Oak Hill directors (Pade, Morse, and Scott), another Oak Hill Partner (Stratton Heath), and
representatives of Bank of America. JX 1219. During the meeting, they discussed whether
Bank of America would provide financing that could support a redemption in the amount
of $80 million. JX 1248 at 13; Murray Tr. 1042–43.
41
K. The First Committee
During its meeting on August 21, 2012, the Board established a special committee
“to address certain issues relating to the potential redemption of the Corporation’s Series
A Preferred Stock.” JX 1270 at 2 (the “First Committee”). The members of the First
Committee were Morgan and Jarus, with Morgan serving as chair. This was the first of
three occasions on which Morgan and Jarus were empowered as a special committee.
Morgan was the consummate Silicon Valley insider. He started as a corporate
lawyer at Wilson Sonsini, Oak Hill’s long-time counsel. Morgan Dep. 14–15. In 1999, he
transformed himself into a “Start-up Sherpa,” a role in which he regularly works with
Silicon Valley startups, serves as a director, and helps navigate the fundraising process.
Morgan Tr. 1536–37, 1610; see JX 2480; see also JX 2209 at 56–61.
Pade recruited Morgan to the Board. Morgan Tr. 1614. Over the years, Morgan and
Oak Hill had exchanged favors and shared business opportunities. Morgan Tr. 1612–13,
1618–20, 1667–68; JX 1387. Morgan and Pade also had longstanding personal and
professional connections. See Pade Tr. 364; Morgan Tr. 1613–14; JX 1387. Their families
had vacationed together at Pade’s vacation home in Montana, and their children had
attended the same school. Morgan Tr. 1615–16; JX 1747. Before this litigation, they
socialized regularly. Morgan Tr. 1616; Morgan Dep. 305.
As counsel, the First Committee hired longtime Company counsel Hogan Lovells
and Potter Anderson. As its financial advisor, the First Committee hired David Weir, who
did business through a sole proprietorship called Spring Creek Advisors. Morgan Tr. 1652.
The First Committee hired Weir based on Morgan’s recommendation and without
42
considering other firms. Morgan and Weir had invested together in various companies, and
they had pitched Oak Hill on one of their companies. JX 504; Morgan Tr. 1653–54.
The form of the resolution creating the First Committee gave it the “exclusive power
and authority” over all aspects of the redemption process, including whether to sell any of
the Company’s businesses and whether to use any of the Company’s cash for a redemption.
JX 1270 at 6. Contrary to this broad mandate, Morgan and Jarus understood their job to be
limited to determining the amount of funds that could be paid out to Oak Hill; they did not
understand their role to be consider alternative uses of the Company’s cash. Jarus Tr. 1830–
31; Jarus Dep. 177–79. Morgan and Jarus did not perceive Oak Hill’s interests in
maximizing the size of its redemption payment as adverse to the interests of the Company
and its common stockholders. Morgan Tr. 1668–69, 1672–73, 1703; Jarus Tr. 1830–31.
1. The Planned Redemption Of $75 Million
The First Committee charged Domeyer, Murray, and Greene with creating a
redemption proposal for Oak Hill. On September 10, 2012, Greene provided Morgan and
Jarus with copies of their bonus agreements, noting that they would provide for cash
payments “to the extent that proceeds received [by Oak Hill] from a change of control or
liquidity event are in excess of $75 million.” JX 1286. Domeyer would receive 2% of any
proceeds above $75 million, Murray would receive 1.5%, and Greene would receive 1%.
Id. Before receiving Greene’s email, Morgan and Jarus did not know about the agreements.
Morgan Tr. 1666–67; Jarus Tr. 1833.
Morgan and Jarus saw nothing wrong with letting the conflicted management team
take the lead in creating a proposal for Oak Hill. Throughout the resulting process,
43
management and representatives of Oak Hill worked hand-in-glove on redemption-related
issues. See, e.g., JX 2519; JX 1838; JX 1839; Murray Tr. 1047–51, 1056–60, 1069–70.
Management and Oak Hill communicated about the amount of funds legally available for
redemption. Morgan Tr. 1672, 1675–76; JX 1519. Management even provided Oak Hill in
advance with sensitive documents prepared at the First Committee’s request, including
financial projections prepared at the First Committee’s request and ranges of possible
redemption amounts developed for negotiation purposes. Morgan Tr. 1680–82; Jarus Tr.
1825–37, 1841–44; JX 1518; JX 2525.
The management team’s opening proposal called for paying $75 million to Oak Hill,
with $40 million from the Company and another $35 million in financing. JX 1285; JX
1287 at 3. A redemption of that size would mean that any additional proceeds for Oak Hill
would trigger management’s bonus payouts. The opening proposal hit the low-end of the
range of $75 to $100 million that Oak Hill had targeted in its internal presentations, and it
was just $5 million below the $80 million figure discussed before the First Committee was
formed.
After receiving management’s proposal, the First Committee and its advisors
gathered extensive information about the Company, its financial position, its business plan,
and its ability to raise debt. During this same period, management was developing a set of
four-year forecasts to provide to the Company’s lenders in connection with the extension
of its credit agreement. The forecasts contemplated significant growth in the Vertical
Markets business as a result of a series of new website initiatives. See JX 1333; JX 1335 at
44
2; JX 1336. After receiving indicative terms from the Company’s lenders, management
reaffirmed its proposed redemption in the amount of $75 million. See JX 1349.
On October 29, 2012, the First Committee made its opening proposal to Oak Hill.
Following management’s recommendation, the Company would redeem shares of
Preferred Stock in the amount of $75 million, with $40 million from the Company’s
balance sheet and $35 million from an anticipated credit agreement. In return, Oak Hill
would agree (i) to defer the date for any further redemption until 180 days after the
expiration of the Company’s three-year credit agreement (approximately May 2016) and
(ii) defer the exercise of the Drag-Along Right until February 12, 2018. See JX 1372 at 5.
On November 5, 2012, the First Committee held a negotiating session with Oak
Hill. On the Friday before the meeting, Morgan had a backchannel conversation with Pade.
See JX 1378. During the call, Pade previewed with Morgan certain additional demands that
Oak Hill planned to make, including (i) a commitment to redeem additional shares if the
Company sold its Domain Monetization business, (ii) a payment-in-kind (“PIK”) dividend
of 12%, and (iii) the ability to exercise the Drag-Along Right beginning in August 2014.
See JX 1385. The Company’s commitment to make additional redemptions was important
to Oak Hill, because in mid-October, Rook Media had made a non-binding offer to acquire
the Domain Monetization business for $70–$100 million. See JX 1393. During the
negotiation session, Pade made the demands that he had previewed. See JX 1386 at 2.
On the morning of the November 5 negotiation session, Morgan asked Pade to do
him a favor by meeting with a colleague. See JX 1387 (Morgan describing Pade as “an old
45
friend”). Two days later, Pade agreed and had another backchannel call with Morgan “re
the [November 5] meeting on Monday”. JX 1392.
The First Committee analyzed Oak Hill’s proposal with the assistance of Weir and
Company management. See JX 1394; JX 1395; JX 1403. While the First Committee was
formulating its counterproposal, Pade contacted Morgan about having another backchannel
discussion. See JX 1406; JX 1412.
On November 21, 2012, the First Committee agreed to Oak Hill’s request that all
proceeds of any additional sales of assets would be used for further redemptions. The First
Committee also offered Oak Hill a 2% PIK dividend. See JX 1422 at 5, 6. Oak Hill
countered by increasing its ask. In addition to a PIK dividend of 4–5%, Oak Hill asked the
Company to commit to future redemptions if its free cash flow exceeded an agreed-upon
threshold. See JX 1429 at 2. During a board meeting on November 29, the Oak Hill
directors and the First Committee reached a tentative deal on Oak Hill’s terms. See JX
1431; JX 1432; JX 1434; JX 1435; JX 1440. Management was tasked with identifying the
threshold for future redemptions. See JX 1439. The deal fell apart when the Company’s
banks would not provide financing for a redemption because of concern that Hsu might
prevail in his pending litigation with the Company. See JX 1445; JX 1446; JX 1448.
In December 2012, while the redemption discussions were proceeding, Domeyer
reported to the Board that “Oak Hill has approved the [2013] operating plan[,]” which the
Board would “formally approve for minute purposes” at its next meeting. JX 1458. The
2013 Plan would play a major role in determining how much additional funds were legally
available for future redemptions. See Domeyer Tr. 1379–80; JX 1458.
46
2. The Planned Redemption Of $50 Million
In January 2013, the banks indicated a willingness to a $15 million credit facility.
See JX 1478. The Company had approximately $51.5 million in cash at year end, and
management proposed using $50 million to redeem Preferred Stock from Oak Hill. JX
1485. During a meeting on January 25, 2013, the First Committee asked Murray to prepare
a set of projections that would include a redemption of $50 million to determine how it
would affect the Company’s working capital needs. JX 1498 at 3. Murray ran the cash
analysis by Oak Hill before providing it to the First Committee. See JX 1518. This was
consistent with her general practice of clearing all materials through Oak Hill. See JX 2519;
JX 2520; JX 2521; JX 2522; JX 2523; JX 2524; JX 2525.
After spending a full day with management and discussing a variety of topics
including the redemption, Pade told Morgan and Jarus on February 1, 2013, that Oak Hill
would exercise the Redemption Right in full on February 13. JX 1514. Pade proposed that
in return for a $50 million redemption, Oak Hill would forebear from seeking any further
redemptions before year-end 2013, terminable in Oak Hill’s sole discretion with thirty-
days’ notice. Id. The First Committee and its advisors developed a limited counterproposal,
but management shared it with Scott, who indicated that it “was not likely to be received
well” by Oak Hill. JX 1529. Potter Anderson advised that if Oak Hill did not receive the
counteroffer well, then Oak Hill might deliver a redemption without offering any
forbearance, at which point “the Company likely would have to use at least all the cash on
its books for the redemption and probably would also need to take at least some steps to
generate additional legally available funds from other sources.” JX 1531.
47
3. The Actual Redemption Of $45 Million
The banks were not comfortable with Oak Hill’s terminable forbearance proposal;
they wanted some form of side letter that would restrain Oak Hill or otherwise protect their
interests. Rather than negotiating further with the banks, Oak Hill proposed a redemption
using only the Company’s cash.
On February 11, 2013, Oak Hill’s counsel told the First Committee’s counsel that
“it was critically important to [Oak Hill] that it receive a redemption of $45 million” by
March 15. JX 1543. Oak Hill’s counsel indicated that Oak Hill wanted to proceed with a
redemption without a bank loan, would accept a redemption of $45 million, and would
grant its proposed forbearance. Id.
The First Committee and its counsel did not ask what was driving Oak Hill’s
request. See Morgan Tr. 1687–88; Jarus Dep. 310–13; Gilligan Dep. 374–75. Internal Oak
Hill documents show at the time, Oak Hill’s managing partner was planning a “Year-in-
Review” presentation for the firm’s annual meeting with the limited partners. JX 1580 at
2. The presentation included a section on the “Path to OHCP IV,” and Oak Hill’s investor
relations department thought that distributions from Oversee and two other portfolio
companies could be used to “round up” the ratio of distributions to paid in capital so that
Oak Hill could announce that “we have met our previously stated goal of 0.30x” for Fund
III.9
9
Id. at 1, 23; Crandall Dep. 165–66. The final presentation did not round up the
number, likely because as of April 15, the calculation from Fund III stood at .23x, not the
anticipated figure of .26x. JX 1615 at 36. Oak Hill’s December 2012 plan for achieving
48
The First Committee agreed to Oak Hill’s number. See JX 1545; JX 1546; JX 1547.
On February 13, 2012, Oak Hill sent a request for a full redemption of its Preferred Stock
and its proposed forbearance agreement. JX 1554. Greene proposed negotiating with Oak
Hill over its terms, but Jarus waived him off, telling him that the Company did not have
“much, if any, leverage in a negotiation with [Oak Hill].” JX 1555; accord JX 1556
(“Within the context of this matter, there is really no bargaining leverage that the Company
could employ.”). The First Committee recommended that the Board accept the redemption
and forbearance agreement. See JX 1558. On February 27, 2012, the Board approved both.
Domeyer, Morgan, Jarus, and Ng voted in favor. Pade abstained. Morse and Scott did not
attend. See JX 1575 at 1, 2. Management anticipated that Oak Hill planned to sell off the
rest of the Company in pieces. See JX 1576 at 1.
At the beginning of March 2012, the Oak Hill deal team reported to the Oak Hill
partners on the $45 million redemption and Oak Hill’s prospects going forward.
“Oversee remains in a state of modest EBITDA decline. Lower revenue and gross
profit from the Monetization business have not been offset by sufficient growth in
Vertical Markets to return to growing EBITDA.” JX 1577 at 2.
“While Monetization declined less quickly than expected in 2012, we see limited
strategic potential for the business going forward and continue to pursue
opportunities to sell the division.” Id.
“All three Vertical Markets businesses need to continue to develop their business
models to become more value-added players in their respective industries. Value
creation here will be a function of the differentiation and growth of each business
as much as or more than the growth in current EBITDA . . . .” Id.
realizations had also contemplated using a distribution from Oversee to meet Oak Hill’s
goal. See JX 1038 at 11.
49
“By year-end 2013 and after giving effect to the partial redemption in March,
Oversee’s forecast cash balance is $19.6 mm.” Id.
“We would recommend pursuing efforts to sell Monetization while allowing
Oversee to continue to invest modestly into the Vertical Markets businesses.” Id.;
see id. at 10.
The deal team expected that given the Company’s cash profile, “an additional $15 million
may be available for redemption at year-end.” Id. at 13.
On March 18, 2013, the Company paid Oak Hill $45 million to redeem shares of
Preferred Stock (the “First Redemption”).10 With the completion of the First Redemption,
the First Committee disbanded. See JX 1618.
The First Redemption left the Company with approximately $7 million to operate.
JX 1546 at 1. Domeyer feared that the Company’s lack of financial resources would limit
her ability to pursue acquisitions, and she wanted a line of credit that would give the
Company that flexibility. JX 1549 at 1. For accounting purposes, however, Oak Hill’s
exercise of the Redemption Right in full, combined with a forbearance agreement
terminable on thirty-days’ notice, caused the Preferred Stock to be classified as a current
liability, and the banks treated the Company as balance-sheet insolvent. See JX 1640; JX
1647 at 12–13; JX 1911 at 6. As a result, the Company would not be able to obtain a credit
line until the overhang from the Preferred Stock was addressed. Jarus told Domeyer to
10
Kupietzky’s employment agreement called for him to receive a bonus if shares of
Preferred Stock were redeemed. He received $632,813, or approximately 1.4% of the
redemption amount. Murray, Greene, and Domeyer did not receive a bonus, because their
agreements required a redemption of at least $75 million to trigger their payments.
50
continue to explore acquisitions, and that if management found one that was attractive, then
they could make an argument for the additional funding. See JX 1565; see also JX 1546.
Greene also believed that M&A for 2013 would be “constrained by our 2013
EBITDA Plan.” JX 1581 at 1. He acknowledged that management “can of course always
have a discussion with the Board if we see a great acquisition and say hey we need to
absorb say $250K of expense in 2013,” but he cautioned that “we shouldn’t give the rest
of the team the impression that we can absorb a bunch of cost.” Id.
Hsu learned of the March Redemption on May 23, 2013, when Greene emailed him
the Company’s audited financial statements for 2012. Hsu was shocked. He emailed
Greene:
Well this is a surprise. Our “growth company” emptying its coffers to Oak
Hill through redemption? How is this supposed to instill shareholder
confidence? On April 5th I asked you if there were any material corporate
transactions and to get this to me within a reasonable 5-7 days. How is it this
is the first time I’m hearing of this?
JX 1649. Greene replied: “I believe that you have been aware of the redemption right since
Oak [Hill] made their investment back in 2008 . . . . In February they provided a redemption
notice pursuant to the charter and the company complied with its obligation to redeem the
shares that it could.” Id. Greene’s reply obscured the lengthy engagement between the
Company and Oak Hill that led up to the formal exercise of the Redemption Right.
L. Events After The First Redemption
During the final stages of the discussions over the First Redemption, Rook Media
approached the Company about buying the Monetization Business. Platinum Equity also
had expressed interest. Consistent with the Oak Hill deal team’s intent to “[p]ursue all
51
possible avenues for a sale of the [Monetization] business,” senior management and Oak
Hill spent the next two months “pursuing these options aggressively.” JX 1577 at 10.
Senior management and Oak Hill also devoted considerable effort to convincing the
Company’s outside auditors that Oak Hill’s redemption notice and terminable forbearance
agreement did not warrant a going-concern qualification on the Company’s financial
statements. See, e.g., JX 1626; JX 1640.
Shortly after the First Redemption and at Morse’s suggestion, Domeyer spent a day
with Jeffrey Epstein, an outside advisor to Oak Hill, to identify strategies for Oversee. The
first option was “sell everything to Platinum.” JX 1591 at 2. The second was “sell
monetization to Platinum; keep verticals; grow slowly to become Internet Brands,” a leader
in the vertical markets space. Id. The third was to boost the second with “$50 million in
capital to grow faster.” Id. As things stood, Oversee lacked the “$50 million in capital to
grow faster” because of the large redemption payment to Oak Hill. The Company also
could not access debt capital because of Oak Hill’s exercise of the Redemption Right and
the terminable forbearance agreement. The Company did look at some acquisitions during
the first part of 2013, but not in an organized or serious way. See, e.g., JX 1630; JX 1636;
JX 1641.
The sentiment at Oak Hill changed in May 2013, when Platinum Equity indicated
that it would not buy the Domain Monetization business. See JX 1653. Needing a new
strategy, the Oak Hill deal team met with Domeyer and re-focused on possible acquisitions,
particularly for the Vertical Markets business. See JX 1655 at 2–3. Responding to Oak
Hill’s shift in emphasis, the senior executives at the Company began trying to ramp up the
52
Company’s acquisition pipeline. See JX 1671; see also JX 1657 at 25 (listing acquisitions
under consideration); JX 1662. The June 2013 board materials were the first time since
Kupietzky’s removal that the presentations included a page listing possible acquisitions;
nine of the eleven options were only in the “initial” phase. JX 1657 at 25; JX 1656 at 2.
The Oak Hill deal team also began reviewing more acquisition prospects and forwarding
them for management to review. See JX 1658; JX 1661; JX 1688. Oak Hill even considered
a whole-company merger between Oversee and CPX that Oak Hill believed could support
a leveraged dividend. See JX 1676 at 1 (Pade: “I told them that this would be a leveraged
deal [and] that Oak Hill would be looking to take some money out.”); JX 1681 at 1 (Oak
Hill email attaching analysis “focused on how much cash we would be able to take off the
table”). Oak Hill projected being able to pull out $30 million in cash. See JX 1686 at 1.
CPX would later decline to proceed. JX 1727.
In September 2013, Morse left Oak Hill and resigned from the Board. See JX 1701;
JX 1709. This left Pade and Scott as the Oak Hill representatives. Morse’s seat was left
vacant.
Management and Oak Hill continued to look at acquisitions, and the number of
opportunities that Oak Hill and management examined contrasted with the relative dearth
of opportunities they looked at in the second half of 2011 and during 2012. The process,
however, was haphazard. By September 2013, Jarus perceived that the management team
wanted direction from Oak Hill, and he told his fellow directors that they needed to meet
to “discuss and establish a strategic direction for the Company.” JX 1720 at 1–2. The
discussion never occurred. Jarus Dep. 328–32.
53
Instead, in September 2013, the Company received an expression of interest in the
Domain Monetization business at a price of $33 million. Oak Hill and Oversee
management reached out to other parties and received a second indication of interest. See
JX 1782 at 18 (summarizing contacts). The Oak Hill deal team reported to the partners that
“[w]hile these indications are at distressed pricing levels (3-4x forward EBITDA), they
may represent a premium to the NPV of the ‘status quo’ forecasts” given negative financial
trends. JX 1751 at 2. For the Vertical Markets business, the Oak Hill deal team reported
that “both the travel and retail lead generation businesses have missed [their budgets] by a
material amount.” Id. Despite looking at many acquisitions, the Company had not made
any, and the Oak Hill deal team projected that the Company would end the year with
approximately $18 million in cash. Id. The Oak Hill deal team reported that during 2014,
management planned to invest $1.5 million in a new travel website called WanderWe, but
that was “the only budgeted new initiative of size in 2014.” Id. at 5.
As with the 2013 Plan, Oak Hill reviewed and pre-approved management’s 2014
Plan before it was disseminated to the Board. JX 1744. The 2014 Plan proposed that the
Company pursue venture capital financing to fund WanderWe, rather than using Oversee’s
cash. See JX 1745 at 28. The plan reduced the Company’s airport parking sites to a
“Skeleton Team . . . in order to increase profitability . . . .” Id. at 45. The Company’s other
“new initiative,” a site called RebateCove, was “paused.” Id. at 70.
M. The Second Committee
In January 2014, the Company completed its first acquisition since Kupietzky’s
departure, buying the assets of Crash City Guides for $85,000 to provide content for
54
WanderWe. The non-Oak Hill directors were informed just before the press release was
issued. JX 1761. Domeyer also informed the non-Oak Hill directors that, “[w]ith Oak Hill’s
approval, we have . . . negotiated” a letter of intent to sell the Domain Monetization
business to Rook Media for $42.5 million. JX 1764.
Management focused on closing the sale of the Domain Monetization business. See
JX 1767 at 1. Domeyer, Murray, and Greene made a point of reviewing their bonus
agreements. JX 1768. As the deal progressed, Rook Media reduced its price to $40 million.
JX 1779. If the full $40 million went to Oak Hill, then Oak Hill’s total proceeds would
reach $85 million, clearing the $75 million hurdle for management to receive their bonuses.
As the sale of the Domain Monetization business approached fruition, the Board
formed a new special committee, again comprising Morgan and Jarus, but this time with
Jarus as chair (the “Second Committee”). See JX 1790. Its sole mandate was to consider
the fairness of the sale price. Morgan Tr. 1696–1700; JX 1790. The Second Committee
paid $20,000 for a fairness opinion from Cronkite & Kissell LLC, the firm that prepared
the Company’s Rule 409A valuations for issuing stock options. See JX 1803; JX 1810.
The Second Committee recommended that the Board approve the sale of the
Domain Monetization business. See JX 1852. Before doing so, management represented
that no one had spoken with Oak Hill about uses of the proceeds. JX 1836 at 3. That was
theater, because everyone knew that the proceeds would likely be swept out in another
redemption. Jarus Tr. 1848–49. Management had in fact informed both Cronkite & Kissell
and its auditors that “[t]he Company is expecting to sell off its various business units in
55
order to satisfy its redemption liability.” JX 1839; see Cronkite Dep. 175–76; see also JX
1838 at 1.
On April 14, 2014, the Board approved the sale. JX 1851. In an internal email,
Murray expressed her concern about the fate of Oversee, writing, “I am not sure absent
Monetization, the Company is a going concern.” JX 1853.
N. The Company After The Sale Of Domain Monetization
The sale of the Domain Monetization business left the Company with only its
Vertical Markets business. For April 2014, that business had generated $1.4 million in
revenue, $822,000 in gross profit, and negative $318,000 of EBITDA. JX 1869 at 6. Year
to date, it had generated $5.9 million in revenue, $3.2 million in gross profit, and negative
$1.5 million in EBITDA. Id. Revenue from the travel vertical had declined steadily over
the preceding two years. See id. at 8–9. Revenue from the consumer finance vertical had
fluctuated month-to-month while remaining basically flat. See id. at 11. Revenue from the
retail vertical had declined significantly. Id. at 16.
Since the First Redemption, Oversee had not made any significant acquisitions, nor
had it invested meaningfully in its business. With the sale of the Domain Monetization
business, the Company’s cash balance reached $53.7 million. Id. at 4.
In May 2014, the Board approved a reduction in force that included the anticipated
departures of Murray and Greene. See JX 1877 at 2–3. The Board also approved
management’s proposal to restructure Oversee’s three Vertical Markets businesses as
separate subsidiaries, with each to be run on an entrepreneurial basis with its own incentive
plan. See id.; JX 1876 at 11–13; JX 1886; JX 1889. The three senior managers created
56
spreadsheets calculating the bonuses they would seek from Oak Hill for closing the sale of
the Domain Monetization business and delivering further redemption proceeds to Oak Hill.
See JX 1872; JX 1878; JX 1884; JX 1888.
O. The Third Committee
In June 2014, the Board formed a third special committee, again comprising Morgan
and Jarus (the “Third Committee”). JX 1887. Its sole mandate was to determine how much
cash was legally available for a second redemption. Id. at 8. They again relied on Weir as
their financial advisor. JX 1908. Oak Hill was “anxious for [the Third Committee] to get
the redemption recommendation completed ASAP.” JX 1914.
Management had not made any plans to use the funds from the sale of the Domain
Monetization business, and identifying uses for the funds was not within the Third
Committee’s mandate. Morgan Tr. 1703; Jarus Tr. 1864. To assess the amount of funds
that would be legally available for redemption, the Third Committee focused on how much
money was needed to run the existing Vertical Markets business until it could generate
positive EBITDA and be self-supporting. JX 1913 at 2. The Third Committee also asked
the obvious question: whether the Company should just be liquidated. See JX 1925 at 1;
JX 1941 at 1.
The Third Committee relied on Domeyer and Murray to inform them about the
Company’s cash needs. Unbeknownst to the Third Committee, Murray ran all her
projections by Pade and Scott at Oak Hill. See JX 1929; JX 1944; JX 1945; JX 1948;
Murray Tr. 1069–71; see also JX 1939 (“Even with her leaving, she’s still updating them .
57
. . .”). And Domeyer followed Oak Hill’s directions when developing the Company’s
business plan. Compare JX 1941, with JX 1943 at 3.
Also during this period and unbeknownst to the Third Committee, Domeyer,
Greene, and Murray negotiated their bonus payments with Oak Hill for completing the sale
of Domain Monetization plus the projected amount that the “remaining liquidation” of
Oversee would yield. JX 1895; see JX 1884; JX 1888; JX 1915. Also unbeknownst to the
Third Committee, Murray and Greene discussed post-Oversee employment opportunities
with Oak Hill. See Murray Tr. 1074–76; Greene Tr. 1926–27; JX 1891. In the midst of the
Third Committee’s work, Murray accepted an offer to become CFO of Monsoon, another
Oak Hill portfolio company that later underwent a liquidation. Because the position
involved a pay cut, Pade proposed that Oversee compensate Murray with additional
severance to “make it adequately financially attractive for her to accept the position at
Monsoon at an overall lower total cash comp level.” JX 1865. On her last day at Oversee,
Murray tipped Oak Hill about the Third Committee’s forthcoming redemption proposal.
JX 1948. Both Murray and Greene left the Company in August 2014. JX 1921. Greene
continued as a consultant to assist the Third Committee. See JX 1963 at 1.
In mid-August 2014, management recommended a second redemption of $40
million. See JX 1952. Weir signed off with an analysis consisting of a two-sentence email
saying that he “concur[ed]” with management. JX 1954. In exchange for recommending a
redemption of $40 million, the Third Committee obtained Oak Hill’s commitment to
extend its forbearance agreement by six months, still terminable on thirty-days’ notice. JX
1969; JX 1978; JX 1982; JX 1986. The Board approved the second redemption in reliance
58
on the Third Committee’s recommendation. JX 1984. The redemption was completed on
September 2 (the “Second Redemption”). PTO ¶ 90; see JX 1985.
P. The Fate Of The Remaining Business
In October 2014, the Oak Hill deal team reported to the Oak Hill partners on the
sale of the Domain Monetization business, the Second Redemption, and the prospects for
the remaining business:
“Oversee has undergone a fundamental change in 2014 with the sale of the
Company’s Monetization business.” JX 2015 at 2.
“Monetization represented the majority of the Oversee business (82% of 2013
EBITDA contribution).” Id.
“The sale of Monetization provided Oversee with sufficient proceeds for a second
redemption of the Oak Hill preferred.” Id.
“Oversee’s remaining assets consist of their lead generation-oriented Vertical
Markets properties, as well as a modest portfolio of generic domain names. The
Vertical Markets businesses have continued to struggle in 2014.” Id.
“Oversee’s near-term focus is on the stabilization of the remaining Vertical Markets
properties at greater-than-break-even cash generation levels.” Id.
“Total company headcount is down from 97 at the start of the year to 26 today.” Id.
“Current annualized cash burn rate of ~$2M but expected to be zero by year end.”
Id.
“Given the de minimus [sic] value achievable for any of the Vertical Markets assets
today, we would recommend continuing to operate the Travel and Consumer
Finance verticals, while selling the very impaired Retail vertical before year-end.”
Id.
The deal team estimated a potential exit in 2015 to 2016. Id. at 3.
Also in October 2014, Oversee received an unsolicited inquiry for the domain name
“compare.com.” Since Kupietzky’s time, that domain name had been the foundation for a
59
planned expansion of the retail component of the Vertical Markets business, but it was
never meaningfully pursued. Oversee sold the domain name for $2 million. See JX 2015 at
7; JX 2027 at 6.
In December 2014, the Company sold ShopWiki. The business had been savaged
by Google, and the Company secured a price of just $600,000. JX 2035; JX 2134 at 23.
The Company closed the sale quickly to secure a tax loss. See JX 1953; JX 1956; JX 1991;
JX 2134 at 23.
The sale of ShopWiki left the Company with only its travel and consumer finance
verticals. By January 2015, Pade was already thinking ahead to the possible “sale of one
or both of the remaining businesses.” JX 2046. The Company implemented a change-of-
control bonus program to incentivize the employees, and Domeyer began talking to
potential purchasers. See JX 2049 at 5; JX 2050 at 2; JX 2051 at 2.
In 2015, the Company had generated $5.6 million in revenue and lost $1.2 million.
JX 2127 at 7, 14. ODN’s auditors opined that there was “substantial doubt about the
Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.” Id. at 5, 11.
In January 2016, the Company sold two of its three travel websites—Lowfares and
Farespotter—for $3.75 million. See JX 2098 at 4. These transactions left
Aboutairportparking.com as the lone remaining business in the travel vertical. During
2015, it had not met plan in any month. See JX 2083 at 2.
Q. This Litigation
On December 11, 2015, Hsu received the Company’s 2014 audited financial
statements and learned of the Second Redemption and the sale of ShopWiki. In January
60
2016, he sought books and record pursuant to Section 220 of the Delaware General
Corporation Law. The Company agreed to produce certain documents, including minutes
of Board and committee meetings. On March 15, 2016, Hsu filed this action.
With the litigation pending, Oversee continued to operate its existing businesses,
consisting of Aboutairportparking.com and the consumer finance vertical. Towards the end
of 2016, Oversee started a new site called “PlanMyTrip.com,” which was expected to
launch in 2017. The site was an updated version of WanderWe.
In March 2017, the Company sold the consumer finance business for $550,000. JX
2164. In May 2017, Jarus and Morgan resigned from the Board. JX 2172; JX 2173. Pade,
Scott, and Domeyer were its only directors. As of June 2017, Oversee had a cash balance
of $13.3 million. JX 2187. Without this litigation, Oak Hill would have wound down the
business and distributed the cash to pay down the Preferred Stock. See JX 2424 at 2.
In March 2018, Domeyer resigned from her positions with Oversee. JX 2230. In
August 2018, Oversee sold Aboutairportparking.com for $485,000. JX 2267 at 3. The
Company says that it continues to develop PlanMyTrip.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
By the time of post-trial briefing and argument, the plaintiff had narrowed his
theories to a claim for breach of fiduciary duty against Oak Hill, its representatives on the
Board (Pade, Morrow, and Scott), three of their fellow directors (Ng, Morgan, and Jarus),
and four senior officers who received bonuses tied to the redemptions of the Preferred
Stock (Domeyer, Murray, Greene, and Morrow). All other claims have been waived. See
61
Emerald P’rs v. Berlin, 726 A.2d 1215, 1224 (Del. 1999) (“Issues not briefed are deemed
waived.”).
A claim for breach of fiduciary duty is an equitable tort.11 The claim has only two
formal elements: (i) the existence of a fiduciary duty that the defendant owes to the plaintiff
and (ii) a breach of that duty.12
In this case, the existence of a fiduciary duty is undisputed. Each defendant was a
fiduciary who owed duties to the Company and all of its stockholders. Pade, Morse, Scott
Ng, Morgan, and Jarus were corporate directors who owed duties in that capacity.
Domeyer, Murray, Greene, and Morrow were officers whose duties parallel those of
directors. Oak Hill was a fiduciary because it controlled Oversee, including by exercising
a majority of its voting power.13
At the pleading stage, this court held that it would constitute self-interested conduct
for Oak Hill to cause the Company to pursue a strategy of accumulating cash to maximize
11
Hampshire Gp., Ltd. v. Kuttner, 2010 WL 2739995, at *54 (Del. Ch. July 12,
2010) (“A breach of fiduciary duty is easy to conceive of as an equitable tort.”); see also
Restatement (Second) Torts § 874 cmt. b (Am. L. Inst. 1979) (“A fiduciary who commits
a breach of his duty as a fiduciary is guilty of tortious conduct . . . .”). See generally J.
Travis Laster & Michelle D. Morris, Breaches of Fiduciary Duty and the Delaware
Uniform Contribution Act, 11 Del. L. Rev. 71 (2010).
12
See Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates, 8 A.3d 573, 601 (Del. Ch. 2010); accord Zrii,
LLC v. Wellness Acq. Gp., Inc., 2009 WL 2998169, at *11 (Del. Ch. Sept. 21, 2009) (citing
Heller v. Kiernan, 2002 WL 385545, at *3 (Del. Ch. Feb. 27, 2002)).
13
See Kahn v. Lynch Commc’n Sys., Inc., 638 A.2d 1110, 1113 (Del. 1994)
(observing that a stockholder becomes a fiduciary if it “‘owns a majority interest in . . . the
corporation.’”) (quoting Ivanhoe P’rs v. Newmont Mining Corp., 535 A.2d 1334, 1344
(Del. 1987)); In re PNB Hldg. Co. S’holders Litig., 2006 WL 2403999, at *9 (Del. Ch.
Aug. 18, 2006) (“Under our law, a controlling shareholder exists when a stockholder . . .
62
the near-term value of its Redemption Right rather than investing the cash productively for
the benefit of the Company and its common stockholders. See Frederick Hsu Living Tr. v.
ODN Hldg. Corp. (Pleading-Stage Decision), 2017 WL 1437308, at *36 (Del. Ch. Apr.
14, 2017). That ruling is law of the case. The first question is whether the plaintiff proved
that Oak Hill pursued that strategy. If so, the second question is whether Oak Hill’s self-
interested conduct constituted a fiduciary wrong under the applicable standard of review.
A. Self-Interested Conduct By Oak Hill
The plaintiff proved that Oak Hill caused the Company to accumulate cash so that
the funds would be legally available and could be swept up using its Redemption Right.
The actual redemption was not the critical step. The Company was obligated to use all of
its legally available funds for a redemption. Consequently, once the Redemption Right
ripened and Oak Hill exercised it, even a fully disinterested and independent board would
be constrained in its ability to withhold funds or otherwise limit the amount of cash that
Oak Hill could extract. See ThoughtWorks, 7 A.3d at 984, 989; Mueller v. Kraeuter & Co.,
25 A.2d 874, 877 (N.J. Ch. 1942). The critical step was building up the pool of funds that
would be available for redemption.
If disinterested and independent directors had decided how to deploy the Company’s
net income, then this would be an easy case. The business judgment rule would protect the
decision.
owns more than 50% of the voting power of a corporation . . . .”); Williamson v. Cox
Commc’ns, Inc., 2006 WL 1586375, at *4 (Del. Ch. June 5, 2006) (“A shareholder is a
‘controlling’ one if she owns more than 50% of the voting power in a corporation . . . .”).
63
In this case, the plaintiff proved that Oak Hill drove the decision. Oak Hill began
focusing on a near-term return of capital during a partners meeting in May 2010. The
“consensus” coming out of the meeting was for the deal team “to take action to realize
value sooner rather than later” and to focus on “exit timing” and “monetization strategy.”
JX 524. The Oak Hill partners stressed the need for portfolio exits again in September
2010. JX 569. One reason the partners wanted realizations was that the firm expected to
raise a new fund in 2012, and “a necessary condition” for successful fundraising “will be
that we return more than the $160 million predicted in the portfolio reviews over the
coming year and a half.” Id. at 2. Oak Hill did not in fact raise a fund in 2012, but that
eventuality did not retroactively change the factors that contributed to Oak Hill’s actions.
The Oak Hill deal team responded. In a January 2011 presentation to Oak Hill’s
partners, Pade, Morse, and Scott explained that they had initiated “an overall review of
Oversee’s strategic direction” that included “either larger M&A or a shareholder dividend.”
JX 642 at 3; see also JX 667. In a March 2011 update to Oak Hill’s partners, Pade, Morse,
and Scott reported that they were “engaged in a series of actions to improve our expected
outcomes,” and they recommended against maintaining the “status quo” at Oversee. JX
723 at 2, 11. Elaborating, they noted the following:
“EBITDA growth of 10-12% builds value primarily for the common equity (of
which [Fund III] owns approximately half).” Id. at 11.
“Oak Hill’s preferred does not participate in value creation until equity values above
$403 million, and with a net cash position, there is not leverage between enterprise
value and equity value creation for the preferred.” Id.
“A transformative M&A transaction, a change to the capital structure, or a change
to the growth profile would be necessary to support an extended hold period.” Id.
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To change the status quo, the deal team had embarked on a “staged action plan” that
involved (i) selling the Registrar business, (ii) engaging in transformative M&A, and (iii)
changing senior management. Id. at 2. The team identified “a dividend recap transaction”
as a means of returning capital, but noted it was “best sequenced as a late-2011 event,
possibly tied to the preferred maturity, absent a strategic transaction.” Id.
Consistent with their reports, Pade, Morse, and Scott attempted to achieve a near-
term return of capital by merging the Company with NameMedia and paying out a large
dividend. JX 723 at 12. In May 2011, the NameMedia deal fell apart. At this point, Oak
Hill looked more closely at managing the Company for profitability, generating additional
cash by selling assets, and using the cash to redeem shares of Preferred Stock.
During the same period when the prospect of a deal with NameMedia was receding,
the Company was suffering a second consecutive disappointing quarter. Although the
Company remained profitable and generated significant EBITDA, its results had fallen
short of budget and its profit margins had narrowed. Oak Hill took aggressive steps to
reverse the decline and restore the Company’s margins. In June 2012, Pade and Morse
relieved Kupietzky of all operational responsibility, replacing him with the Operating
Committee. Pade and Morse instructed the Operating Committee to make “bold” cuts in
the Company’s expenses to restore its gross margins.14
14
JX 906; see JX 894 at 4 (indicating that Pade said to cut “millions in SG&A”); id.
(observing that “[t]here will be some things we do that we cut that we’ll regret”); see also
JX 925 at 2 (Jefferies call report stating Murray reported that “[the Operating Committee
is] presenting to the board on 8/17 a plan for 2012 . . . will likely include substantial cost
65
The plaintiff asserts that when taking these steps, Oak Hill had already decided to
generate cash for redemptions. It is true that Oak Hill wanted to achieve a return of capital
and understood the potential use of its Redemption Right, but Oak Hill had not yet settled
on a specific strategy. Oak Hill worked with Jefferies to analyze different alternatives. Oak
Hill also had management examine different strategies. Morrow pushed the hardest for
investing in Vertical Markets to promote growth. See JX 889; JX 923.
Oak Hill continued to demand cuts in the Company’s expenses. In September 2011,
the Operating Committee implemented a layoff that terminated thirty-four employees. JX
980. In total, the cuts reduced the Company’s SG&A expense from $3 million per month
in 2011 to a projected SG&A expense of $1.8 million per month in 2012. JX 944 at 44.
It was sometime in the fall that the deal team decided to build up cash in anticipation
of the Preferred Stock maturing in February 2013. In an October 2011 presentation to the
Oak Hill partners, the deal team reported that the Company had stabilized and its business
was improving See JX 1009 at 2. The team then explained:
“As a reminder, our $150mm preferred stock matures in February 2013.” Id.
“Our ability to retire or partially repay the preferred in advance of maturity is limited
given current shareholder dynamics.” Id.
“With this timetable in mind, the Company has engaged Jefferies to explore
strategic alternatives.” Id.
“A sale of the monetization assets would likely result in the Company having a cash
position that would come close to paying down the preferred and a retained vertical
cuts.”); JX 954 at 2 (“[T]here is full expectation by Oakhill [sic] and the Board that we will
be reducing our SGA”).
66
market asset with ~$5mm of post corporate EBITDA and a positive growth profile.”
Id.
In his self-evaluation for Oak Hill’s managing partners in November 2011, Morse
confirmed the plan for Oversee: “We have repaid all debt and are building up a cash
balance, with an end-game of paying back our preferred when it matures in February 2013.”
JX 1032 at 3.
The deal team’s actions fit with Oak Hill’s larger strategy. Oak Hill categorized its
portfolio companies in November 2011, placing Oversee in the category of “[m]aximize
capital return in 12-18 months” and not in the category of “[b]uild for larger value
creation.” JX 1026 at 4. Oversee was the only portfolio company from Fund III to be placed
in the category of “[m]aximize capital return in 12-18 months.” Id. One of Oak Hill’s top
priorities remained to “[d]rive sufficient realizations and investor returns to facilitate the
formation of OHCP IV.” JX 1038 at 4.
The expense cuts did their job. The Company ended 2011 with a cash balance of
$25 million. In late January 2012, the Company sold both its Registrar and Aftermarket
businesses, yielding more than $15 million in proceeds. JX 1126 at 7. On January 9, Pade
told Jefferies that the Company soon would have $40 million cash and that it was
“[i]mperative that they return some capital before $150m preferred matures 13
months from now; top priority.” JX 1066. Pade said the same thing on January 16, when
he met with the members of the Operating Committee. Pade told Morrow and Murray that
“it’s about the cash right now and the goal for Oak Hill at this point is get the $150MM
investment back.” JX 1079; Morrow Tr. 260–67. Morrow thought it was “clear” that Oak
67
Hill “wants to collect the cash vs go for a bigger growth strategy.” JX 1079; see Morrow
Tr. 260–67; see also JX 1090 at 1, 6 (Morse providing Oak Hill’s managing partner with a
“must-do” list for 2012 identifying “[p]artial or complete asset sales to raise cash to repay
the Oak Hill preferred stock prior to maturity in Feb 2013”); JX 1107 (Morse telling
Morrow that Oak Hill was “[s]tarting fund raising in one year” and that “[s]elling
monetization business and get some cash would be helpful to portfolio/fund”).
The 2012 Plan called for keeping all $38 million in cash from the end of January,
adding $17 million in projected EBITDA, and finishing the year with $55 million in cash.
JX 1111 at 3. The Company in fact ended 2012 with approximately $51.5 million in cash.
JX 1485. At the same meeting that it adopted the 2012 Plan, the Board terminated Morrow,
who had been the main champion for investing in Vertical Markets. JX 1130 at 3.
The plaintiff again depicts Oak Hill’s strategy in extreme terms, contending that
after making the decision to build up a cash balance, Oak Hill no longer had any interest
in growing the Company. The defendants attack that cartoonish portrayal, observing that
the Board and management continued to explore strategies for growth. The defendants then
go to the opposite extreme, contending that there never was any plan to accumulate cash.
As is often the case, the truth lies in between. Oak Hill’s primary strategy was to
maintain the Company’s profit margins and generate cash. Oak Hill supported investment
in the Company to the extent that it would help to maintain the Company’s profit margins.
In Domain Monetization, for example, the Company had to invest in its platform and
acquire new domain names to maintain the cash-generating power of the business. Oak
Hill also would have supported acquisitions that were immediately accretive to EBITDA,
68
if any could have been found, because they would have improved the Company’s cash-
generating capacity. Oak Hill did not support large-dollar investments in growth projects
with significant up-front costs. Initiatives of that nature would increase the near-term cost
structure, reduce gross margins, and hurt the Company’s cash-generating capacity. See JX
1577 at 10; JX 1751 at 5. Murray, the CFO, acted as the enforcer of Oak Hill’s directive to
maintain profitability, and she watched the Company’s gross margins carefully.
The evidence shows that within this framework, the Company’s management team,
employees, directors and even Oak Hill tried to grow the Company. But Oak Hill’s
priorities had consequences. From mid-2011 until March 2013, the Company did not make
any significant acquisitions, nor did it make major investments in organic growth. Instead,
the Company accumulated cash that was used for the First Redemption.
Oak Hill’s priorities continued to have consequences after the First Redemption.
Domeyer feared that a lack of financial resources would limit her ability to pursue
acquisitions, and she wanted a line of credit that would give the Company that flexibility.
JX 1549 at 1. Greene believed that M&A would be “constrained.” JX 1581 at 1.
During mid-2013, Oak Hill and management looked at a number of possible
acquisitions. Oak Hill even considered a whole-company merger between Oversee and
CPX, which Oak Hill thought might support a leveraged dividend that would return $30
million to Oak Hill. See JX 1676; JX 1681; JX 1686. Oak Hill and management examined
these options after it appeared that the Company would not be able to sell its Domain
Monetization business. In September 2013, when sale talks resumed, Oak Hill and
Company management re-prioritized that divestiture. The Company did not make any
69
major investments in organic growth or any major acquisitions in 2013. The Domain
Monetization business was sold in April 2014 for $40 million. All of the proceeds were
used in the Second Redemption to redeem shares of Preferred Stock.
The plaintiff thus proved that Oak Hill caused the Company to accumulate cash so
that the funds would be legally available and could be swept up using its Redemption Right.
Oak Hill’s conduct was not so extreme that it ignored all opportunities for growth, but it
did involve adopting a more conservative approach than the Company had previously
followed, and that strategy reduced the extent of investment in the business.
B. The Possibility Of Shifting The Burden Of Proof
The plaintiff thus proved that Oak Hill engaged in self-interested conduct. When a
business decision confers a non-ratable benefit on a controlling stockholder, then the
standard of review for that decision is entire fairness, with the burden of proof resting on
the defendants. See Ams. Mining, 51 A.3d at 1239. The defendants argued that the plaintiff
should bear the burden of proving unfairness because of the three special committees.
There are multiple reasons why the burden of proof remained with the defendants.
The first reason is procedural. The Delaware Supreme Court held in Americas
Mining that if defendants believe the allocation of the burden of proof should shift to the
plaintiff, then they must seek and obtain a pretrial determination in their favor. Id. at 1243.
Otherwise, “the burden of persuasion will remain with the defendants throughout the trial
. . . .” Id. The defendants did not move for summary judgment on the standard of review or
allocation of burden, and so they bore the burden of proving entire fairness.
70
The second reason involves the distinction between the issues that the three special
committees addressed and the decision that the plaintiff challenges. The plaintiff attacks
the decision to re-orient the Company away from a strategy of reinvesting its net income
in growth opportunities and towards a strategy of accumulating cash on the balance sheet.
It was that strategy that created the $51.5 million in cash on the balance sheet in February
2013 and led to the First Redemption of $45 million. It was the continuation of that strategy
that created the $53.7 million in cash on the balance sheet in April 2014 and led to the
Second Redemption of $40 million. In each case, when it came time for the special
committee to negotiate with Oak Hill, the special committee had limited leverage, because
Oak Hill had a right to have its Preferred Stock redeemed out of funds legally available.
A special committee did not make the decision to re-orient the Company’s business
strategy. Greene spotted the issue in February 20120 and considered forming a “liquidity
special committee” to approve the 2012 Plan, but that idea went nowhere. The First
Committee was not formed until August 2012, long after the cash-accumulation plan was
underway. Its members viewed their job as determining the amount of funds that could be
used for a redemption from Oak Hill. They did not view the Company’s business strategy
as part of their job. The Second Committee’s charge was to determine whether the price
obtained for the Domain Monetization business was fair. The plaintiff does not challenge
the merits of that transaction, only its status as part of an overall strategy of raising funds
to support redemptions. The Third Committee’s charge was to determine how much of the
Company’s funds to use for the Second Redemption. As with the First Committee, it did
not decide on the business strategy that generated those funds.
71
The third reason is substantive. The record gives rise to sufficient concerns about
the effectiveness of the special committees to prevent them from shifting the burden.
To shift the burden of proof, a special committee must be well-functioning. In re S.
Peru Copper Corp. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 52 A.3d 761, 789 (Del. Ch. 2011), aff’d sub
nom. Ams. Mining, 51 A.3d at 1213. “Particular consideration must be given to evidence
of whether the special committee was truly independent, fully informed, and had the
freedom to negotiate . . . .” Lynch, 638 A.2d at 1120–21. In other words, it must “function
in a manner which indicates that the controlling shareholder did not dictate the terms of the
transaction and that the committee exercised real bargaining power at an arms-length.”
Kahn v. Tremont Corp. (Tremont II), 694 A.2d 422, 429 (Del. 1997) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
Determining whether a committee is well-functioning is a “fact-intensive inquiry
that varies from case to case.” Krasner v. Moffett, 826 A.2d 277, 286 (Del. 2003). A
Delaware court not only examines “how the committee was set up” but also “how the
special committee actually negotiated the deal.” S. Peru, 52 A.3d at 789. “[T]he actual
effectiveness of the special committee” matters just as much as “the independence of the
committee and the adequacy of its mandates.” Id. at 791, 793; accord Frank v. Elgamal,
2014 WL 957550, at *28 (Del. Ch. Mar. 10, 2014).
72
Sometimes a committee process suffers from glaring flaws, such as a lack of
disinterested and independent members15 or the use of conflicted advisors.16 Or the
controller undermines the committee by engaging in “threats, coercion, or fraud”17 or by
15
Lynch, 638 A.2d at 1120 (“Particular consideration must be given to evidence of
whether the special committee was truly independent . . . .”); accord Kahn v. M & F
Worldwide Corp., 88 A.3d 635, 642 (Del. 2014) (“[I]n ‘entire fairness’ cases, the
defendants may shift the burden of persuasion to the plaintiff if . . . they show that the
transaction was approved by a well-functioning committee of independent directors . . . .”),
overruled on other grounds, Flood v. Synutra Int’l, Inc., 195 A.3d 754 (Del. 2018); see
FrontFour Capital Gp. LLC v. Taube, 2019 WL 1313408, at *25 (Del. Ch. Mar. 11, 2019)
(finding committee ineffective where “majority of the members . . . lacked independence
from [the controller]”); In re Loral Space & Commc’ns Inc. Consol. Litig., 2008 WL
4293781, at *8 (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 2008) (finding committee ineffective where one of two
committee members had “a close personal relationship with [the controller]” and
“maintained important business ties to [the controller]”).
16
See Gesoff v. IIC Indus., Inc., 902 A.2d 1130, 1151 (Del. Ch. 2006) (finding
committee ineffective where it relied on financial counsel that was effectively retained by
the controller and legal counsel that “was beholden for [its] job to a board entirely
dominated by [the controller], and had indeed been advising [the controller] on its approach
to the tender offer from the beginning”); In re Tele-Commc’ns, Inc. S’holders Litig., 2005
WL 3642727, at *10 (Del. Ch. Dec. 21, 2005, revised Jan. 10, 2006) (finding dispute of
material fact as to whether committee was effective where committee “chose to use the
legal and financial advisors already advising [the controller]”); see also id. (commenting
that “[t]he effectiveness of a Special Committee often lies in the quality of the advice its
members receive from their legal and financial advisors”); T. Rowe Price Recovery Fund,
L.P. v. Rubin, 770 A.2d 536, 553 (Del. Ch. 2000) (granting preliminary injunction and
refusing to shift burden of proving fairness where management “abandoned the Special
Committee and its independent legal and financial advisors . . . and took legal advice from
the same law firm that represents [the controller]”); cf. William T. Allen, Independent
Directors in MBO Transactions: Are They Fact or Fantasy?, 45 Bus. Law. 2055, 2062
(1990) (“[T]o implement the substance of an arm’s-length process . . . the lawyers and the
bankers [for the special committee] must be independent of management.”).
17
In re John Q. Hammons Hotels Inc. S’holder Litig., 2009 WL 3165613, at *12
n.38 (Del. Ch. Oct. 2, 2009); see Lynch, 638 A.2d at 1120 (holding that “the ability of the
Committee effectively to negotiate at arm’s length was compromised by Alcatel’s threats
to proceed with a hostile tender offer if the $15.50 price was not approved by the
Committee and the Lynch board”); In re Dole Food Co., Inc. S’holder Litig., 2015 WL
73
depriving the committee of material information.18 But a committee can also be ineffective
because of more subtle influences, such as a network of relationships with the controller
5052214, at *13, *28 n.15 (Del. Ch. Aug. 27, 2015) (explaining that part of the court’s pre-
trial “conclusion that triable issues of fact existed regarding the Committee’s
independence” existed was based on the controller’s response to the outside directors’
decision opposing a controller-proposed transaction where the controller “did everything
he could to pressure both of them into changing their views,” including leaving “a
threatening [voicemail] message” with one director, demanding the resignation of another
director, and nullifying certain actions taken by the board).
18
See In re Emerging Commc’ns, Inc. S’holders Litig., 2004 WL 1305745, at *35
(Del. Ch. May 3, 2004, revised June 4, 2004) (finding committee uninformed where
controller withheld material financial projections); Kahn v. Tremont Corp. (Tremont I),
1996 WL 145452, at *15 (Del. Ch. Mar. 21, 1996) (“Generally in order to make a special
committee structure work it is necessary that a controlling shareholder disclose fully al the
material facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction.” (internal quotation marks
omitted)), rev’d on other grounds, Tremont II, 694 A.2d at 422; see also Elgamal, 2014
WL 957550, at *29 (finding material dispute of fact on application for summary judgment
over whether committee was effective when it failed to stay informed “about the fair value
of the corporation and the minority stock” or about the “material developments in the
negotiations”); Loral, 2008 WL 4293781, at *8 (finding committee uninformed where none
of its members “had any particular expertise or experience in the [relevant] industry”);
Tele-Commc’ns, 2005 WL 3642727, at *10 (finding material dispute of fact on application
for summary judgment over whether committee was effective where it “lacked complete
information with respect to both the premium at which the [one of the company’s tracking
stock] shares historically traded, and precedent transactions involving high-vote stock
premiums”).
74
which, in the aggregate, raises doubts.19 Or a committee may proceed in a manner that calls
into question whether it has acted independently and negotiated at arms’ length. 20
Morgan’s service on each of the special committees provides cause for concern.
Morgan was enmeshed in the web of business and personal relationships that characterizes
19
See Tremont II, 694 A.2d at 426–27, 430 (questioning committee’s effectiveness
where one member was a lawyer “affiliated with the law firm which represented [the
controller] on several of his corporate takeovers” and relied on the controller for “a
consulting position” after his own business “had all but dried up,” another member was
employed by one of the controller’s companies in connection with a proxy contest, the third
member was named to the controller’s “slate of directors in connection with the . . . proxy
contest,” the committee’s financial advisor earned “significant fee income from [controller]
related companies,” and the committee’s legal advisor “had previously represented a
Special Committee of [one of the controller’s companies] in connection with a proposed
merger” as well as the “underwriter in connection with a proposed convertible debt offering
by [one of the controller’s companies]”); S. Peru, 52 A.3d at 790 (explaining that in
Tremont II the high court “found problematic the supposedly outside directors’ previous
business relationships with the controlling stockholder that resulted in significant financial
compensation or influential board positions and their selection of advisors who were in
some capacity affiliated with the controlling stockholder” (footnote omitted)); In re Trados
Inc. S’holder Litig. (Trados II), 73 A.3d 17, 54–55 (Del. Ch. 2013) (finding member of
committee exhibited “a sense of ‘owingness’ that compromised his independence for
purposes of determining the applicable standard of review” where member “had a long
history with” the controller,” the member had served previously as President and COO of
another of the controller’s portfolio companies, the member was asked “to work with [the
controller] on other companies,” the member “invest[ed] about $300,000 in three
[controller] funds,” the member was concurrently the CEO at another company “backed
by [the controller],” and the controller designated the member to the company’s board of
directors).
20
See S. Peru, 52 A.3d at 798 (explaining that the committee fell “victim to a
controlled mindset”); Loral, 2008 WL 4293781, at *9 (finding committee ineffective where
it “allowed itself to go down the most dangerous path for anyone dealing with a controlling
stockholder[—]that of believing that its only option was to do a deal with the controller”);
Bomarko, Inc. v. Int’l Telecharge, Inc., 794 A.2d 1161, 1179 (Del. Ch. 1999) (finding
committee ineffective where there were no “extraordinary negotiations” and committee
falsely believed that proposed transaction was “the only viable alternative [to] a
bankruptcy” (internal quotation marks omitted)), aff’d, 766 A.2d 437 (Del. 2000).
75
Silicon Valley. Oak Hill was a major player in the Silicon Valley ecosystem. Morgan had
longstanding personal connections with Pade as well as close ties to Oak Hill and its outside
counsel, Wilson Sonsini. As a “Startup Sherpa” who regularly shepherded emerging
companies through the fundraising process, Morgan had ample reason to remain on good
terms with Oak Hill, a $10.4 billion private equity firm that was active in the technology
space. Morgan was one of just two members on the special committee, and he chaired the
First and Third Committee.
The interactions between the special committees and Oak Hill, and especially
between Morgan and Pade, provide additional cause for concern. In May 2012, months
before the First Committee was formed, Pade and Morse reported to Oak Hill that they had
discussed the Redemption Right with Morgan and Jarus, who “recognize[d] the legal rights
of the preferred.” JX 1191 at 12. During the First Committee’s negotiations, Morgan and
Pade engaged in back-channel communications. See JX 1378; JX 1392; JX 1411. Morgan
even asked Pade for a favor fifty minutes before the first negotiation session with Oak Hill.
See JX 1387.
The special committees’ reliance on conflicted management was a significant
defect. The committees relied on Domeyer, Murray, and Greene to develop redemption
proposals, yet all three executives had bonus agreements that incentivized them to
maximize the amount of proceeds that Oak Hill would receive. During the Third
Committee’s work, management negotiated a total bonus amount with Oak Hill based on
the sale of Domain Monetization and what the “remaining liquidation” of the Company
might yield. See JX 1878 at 1; JX 1884 at 1; JX 1915 at 1. Also during the Third
76
Committee’s work, Pade discussed post-Oversee employment opportunities with both
Murray and Greene, and he found Murray a job at another Oak Hill portfolio company. He
even had Oversee provide Murray with a more generous severance package to make taking
the Monsoon job sufficiently attractive to her. JX 1865.
Equally troubling was the extent to which the senior managers interacted with and
took direction from Oak Hill on matters affecting the special committees’ work. On August
1, 2012, weeks before the First Committee was formed, Murray and Domeyer met with the
Oak Hill deal team and targeted a redemption of $80 million. See JX 1219; JX 1248 at 13.
Management continued to work closely with Oak Hill throughout all three committee
processes. See, supra, Parts I.K, M, & O. Murray was especially beholden to Oak Hill. She
updated Pade, Morse, and Scott regularly about the committee and its activities, and she
consistently reviewed materials with Scott and others at Oak Hill before providing them to
the committee. See Murray Tr. 1029–31, 1046-54, 1069-71; Domeyer Tr. 1379–80; Greene
Tr. 1935; JX 1089; JX 1458; JX 1948; compare JX 1278 at 2 with JX 2518 at 1, and JX
1287 at 3 with JX 2519 at 1, 2.
Perhaps as a result of these connections, the special committees seemed less intent
on negotiating with Oak Hill and more interested in achieving the result that Oak Hill
wanted, with lots of process and a few victories on small points along the way to create
good optics for the litigation record. The overall pattern of the committees’ tended too
much towards facilitation.
To cite these concerns is not to intimate that the special committees were a sham,
nor to suggest that Morgan and Jarus acted in bad faith. In each of the committee’s
77
iterations, Morgan, Jarus, and their advisors took their jobs seriously, and they did many
things well. Ultimately, a combination of factors raises sufficient doubts about the
effectiveness of the committees to prevent them from having burden-shifting effect.
C. Entire Fairness
“The concept of fairness has two basic aspects: fair dealing and fair price.”
Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 711. Although the two aspects may be examined separately, they
are not separate elements of a two-part test. “[T]he test for fairness is not a bifurcated one
as between fair dealing and price. All aspects of the issue must be examined as a whole
since the question is one of entire fairness.” Id.
1. The Fairness Of The Process
The fair process dimension of the entire fairness inquiry examines the procedural
fairness of the decision, transaction, or result being challenged. It considers the manner in
which the challenged decision, transaction, or result came about. The defendants fell short
on this dimension of the analysis.
The fair process inquiry examines how the decision under challenge was initiated.
This includes examining the source of the idea and who was the driving force behind it.
See, e.g., Dole, 2015 WL 5052214, at *26; Trados II, 73 A.3d at 56. In this case, Oak Hill
initiated the cash-accumulation strategy. Oak Hill relieved Kupietzky of his duties and told
the Operating Committee to make deep cuts. After the business stabilized, Oak Hill pushed
management to make further cuts and maintain the Company’s margins. Oak Hill also used
bonus agreements to align management’s incentives with Oak Hill’s.
78
Fair dealing also examines how the challenged events unfolded, typically by
exploring how a transaction was negotiated and structured. See Weinberger, 457 A.2d at
711; Trados II, 73 A.3d at 58. Oak Hill drove the cash accumulation strategy. It is
undisputed that Oak Hill had bi-weekly calls with the CEO, communicated regularly with
management, met informally with management, and exchanged thousands of emails with
the senior management team. See Dkt. 558 at 56. Management reviewed monthly board
presentations with Oak Hill before distributing them to the full Board. Management also
reviewed the Company’s annual business plans with Oak Hill and obtained Oak Hill’s
approval before circulating them to the full Board. Oak Hill controlled the Company and
made sure that management knew where Oak Hill wanted to end up.
Fair dealing also considers how director approval is obtained. See Weinberger, 457
A.2d at 711; Trados II, 73 A.3d at 58. None of the outside directors could recall a
discussion about how to spend the Company’s cash balance between mid-2011 and the
First Redemption. See Morgan Tr. 1637–39; Jarus Tr. 1824; Ng Tr. 696. Morgan and Jarus
could not recall any discussions after the sale of the Domain Monetization business about
whether the cash should be reinvested in the Company’s Vertical Markets business.
Morgan Tr. 1698–99; Jarus Tr. 1848–49.
The traditional indicators of fair dealing were thus lacking in this case, but that is
largely because the plaintiff attacked the decision to accumulate cash. The plaintiff did not
directly challenge the Board’s decisions to redeem Oak Hill’s shares, and the plaintiff
abandoned its challenges to the transaction prices that the Company obtained for its
79
businesses. Had the plaintiff challenged those decisions, then the analysis of the fair
process dimension would have unfolded differently.
2. The Fairness Of The Price
The fair price dimension of the entire fairness inquiry examines the substantive
fairness of the decision, transaction, or result being challenged. In the traditional
formulation, it “relates to the economic and financial considerations” of the transaction
under challenge, “including all relevant factors: assets, market value, earnings, future
prospects, and any other elements that affect the intrinsic or inherent value of a company’s
stock.” Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 711. The defendants proved that the cash accumulation
strategy was substantively fair.
a. The Root Cause Of Oversee’s Decline
The basic inquiry for fair price is whether “the common stockholders received in
the [transaction] the substantial equivalent in value of what they had before.” Trados II, 73
A.3d at 78. Here, Oversee’s common stock would have ended up worthless with or without
the cash-accumulation strategy.
The defendants proved that the root cause of Oversee’s decline was not self-
interested conduct by Oak Hill, but rather intense industry headwinds and competitive
pressures that began almost immediately after Oak Hill’s first investment in 2008. The
weight of the evidence demonstrates that there was no acquisition or growth opportunity
that the Company’s former executives and directors could have pursued that would have
changed the outcome. See Domeyer Tr. 1356; Pade Tr. 441–42, Morse Tr. 1203–04; Scott
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Tr. 843–45. Had the Company invested the cash instead of using it to redeem the Preferred
Stock, then it is more likely than not that the value would have been destroyed.
Obviously this analysis involves envisioning a counterfactual scenario, and it is
impossible to know with certainty what would have happened. The standard of proof,
however, is a preponderance of the evidence, and the defendants proved by a
preponderance of the evidence that the common stockholders would not have benefited if
the Company had invested its cash in what were seen at the time as growth projects.
1. The Factual Record
Kupietzky testified convincingly that the Domain Monetization business, which was
the cornerstone of Oversee’s success, peaked in 2007. Kupietzky Tr. 17. The next year
witnessed the start of Google’s relentless and ultimately successful campaign to dominate
search and end direct navigation, resulting in the search function being incorporated into
the URL bar. Id. at 29–30 Google also began its successful effort to eliminate the
Company’s priority access to its search feed and began renegotiating the Company’s
revenue-sharing agreement steadily downward. The arrival of 2008 also saw the
organization that oversaw domain registrations put an end to the Company’s ability to try
out a URL before buying it, which reduced the Company’s profitability. Two years later,
in 2010, Google began a steady series of refinements to its search algorithm that were
designed to favor high-quality domain names and reduce the traffic to parked domains, like
the ones the Company owned and operated. With the benefit of hindsight, it is clear that
the Domain Monetization was doomed, an Internet-age counterpart to the buggy-whip
makers and video-rental stores of earlier eras. What is impressive, again with the benefit
81
of hindsight, is how Oversee was able to continue to make money from this declining
business and eventually sell it for $40 million in 2014. That arms’ length price was fair,
and no one argues otherwise.
The critical question for Oversee, therefore, was how to use the cash that its Domain
Monetization business generated. The plaintiff contends that the answer to this question is
obvious: use the cash to invest heavily in Vertical Markets and achieve long-term growth.
For common stockholders, who in retrospect lost the entire value of their investment, the
decision understandably seems easy. But the evidence demonstrates that choosing among
the available options was quite hard.
Investing in Vertical Markets was far from a sure thing. The Company had enjoyed
some success with its early sites, but they had tended to be “easy up, easy down.”
Kupietzky Tr. 25. The Company built a mortgage-lead-generation site that grew to several
million dollars in revenue, but after the financial crisis of 2008, it quickly fell to zero and
was shut down. Id. The Company had a similar experience with its site for ringtones. Id.
The Company’s other efforts to establish verticals organically had not been successful. Oak
Hill’s deal team observed in January 2011 that “Oversee has sourced lead generation
acquisitions at reasonable multiples and then grown them post-acquisition by using
Oversee’s insights into monetization trends. It has not been successful at organically
creating these verticals.” JX 642 at 10.
Shortly after the Oak Hill deal team made this statement, the Company had an object
lesson about the risks of acquisitions. The Company had made a big bet on a retail vertical
by paying $17 million to purchase Shopwiki.com. In early 2011, Google cut its traffic by
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almost 50% with its initial Panda update. See Kupietzky Tr. 145–47; Morrow Tr. 168–69.
Although the ShopWiki team was able to respond to Panda by restructuring and improving
the website, ShopWiki could not compete with the combined onslaught of Google
Shopping and Amazon.com. After Oak Hill removed Kupietzky in June 2011, Morrow
explained in detail how the Vertical Markets businesses were vulnerable to Google. See JX
902. Although Morrow supported investing in Vertical Markets and attempting to grow
that business, he also believed that Oversee’s existing Vertical Markets businesses were
low-value sites that had to buy traffic from Google and could not provide the foundation
for meaningful expansion. See Morrow Tr. 161–62, 191–92.
During the second half of 2011, when the plaintiff contends that Oversee should
have been continuing to invest rather than cutting expenses, the available opportunities
were “damaged goods.” JX 942 at 1. Kupietzky believed that it was “pretty impossible” in
2011 “to find a business that didn’t have some dependency on Google, whether that was
because you had to buy traffic from them or you needed them to monetize or you got your
traffic for free through their search engine optimization.” Kupietzky Tr. 148; see id. at 151–
52. Morrow did not believe that the existing Vertical Markets platform could support a
viable M&A program. See Morrow Tr. 184, 196. Another reality of the Vertical Markets
business was that Google could launch a direct competitor and dominate the space by
giving its own site priority placement on the search results page. Id. at 192–93. Investing
in Vertical Markets, whether organically or by acquisition, thus carried the inherent risk
that Google could wipe out its value overnight. Id. at 195, 220.
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By the end of 2011, the Company’s businesses had stabilized. By the end of January
2012, the Company had $38 million in cash on its balance sheet, and management projected
finishing the year with $55 million in cash. JX 1111 at 3. There does not seem to have been
as much effort to look for acquisitions in 2012 as there was in earlier years or during mid-
2013. There is also documentary evidence suggesting that the Company could have
invested more in the Vertical Markets business. See, e.g., JX 1222 at 1; JX 1279 at 1; JX
1469 at 1; JX 1548 at 4; JX 1684 at 1; JX 2356 at 2; JX 2533 at 68; JX 2539 at 4-7.
Intuitively, it seems like the Company should have been able to do something more
productive with its cash than having it build up on the balance sheet.
By a preponderance of the evidence, the defendants overcame these doubts. Scott
testified credibly that he did not think that “results would have been better if we made better
bets,” nor did he believe there was “a ‘one that got away.’” Scott Tr. 844–45; see id. at
783–86, 791. As discussed below, Oak Hill’s ownership of a majority of the common stock
gave it an incentive to continue to try to create value at the Company rather than simply
extracting the liquidation value of the Preferred Stock. See JX 1191 at 2; Scott Tr. 776–77,
782–83. Because Google soon entered and dominated each of the lines of business where
Vertical Markets operated, it is likely that any additional investment in these businesses
would have been lost. See, e.g., Scott Tr. 826 (discussing fate of Nextag).
Ironically, Hsu personally experienced the same market pressures that doomed
Oversee. After leaving the Company, he invested in a domain monetization company called
Black Forest Data and a vertical markets business called King Street. Hsu Dep. 705–08;
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750–51. Both failed, even though King Street’s CEO tried many of the same strategies as
Oversee. See JX 1756.
2. The Expert Testimony
The defendants presented expert testimony from Kelly Conlin. For almost a decade,
he served as CEO of NameMedia, a close competitor of Oversee, and he gained deep
insight into the monetization and vertical markets industries. Conlin Tr. 2511–12, 2530–
31. Under his direction, NameMedia tried the strategy that the plaintiff contends that the
defendants should have pursued: an acquisition-fueled attempt to pivot from monetizing
parked domains to providing content. It did not work, and NameMedia ultimately stopped
pursuing acquisitions and divested its vertical markets businesses. Conlin Tr. 2525–26.
The plaintiff’s expert, Professor Kinshuk Jerath, effectively agreed that domain
monetization was not a viable platform for growth. He opined that by 2011, the domain
monetization industry was declining by 15–20% annually, “moving out as a business,” and
“going down.” Jerath Tr. 2491, 2476–77.
Conlin explained that pursuing acquisitions had been a viable strategy for a
company like Oversee during the period before the Great Recession, but that by 2011–12,
“the bloom was off the rose” as “the domain monetization industry started going through
its death by a thousand cuts of Google.” Conlin Tr. 2525–26. He pointed to Internet Brands,
which had grown almost exclusively by acquisition; it made only one acquisition in 2012
and none in 2013. Conlin Tr. 2593–94. He pointed out that Demand Media, which the
plaintiff identified as Oversee’s closest comparable, also attempted an acquisition-based
85
strategy of pivoting away from monetization. Between 2011 and 2018, Demand Media lost
over 90% of its value. Conlin Tr. 2534–36; JX 2325 at 24–27.
Jerath, the plaintiff’s expert, attempted to show that an acquisition strategy remained
viable by presenting a list of acquisitions that other Internet companies completed between
2010 and 2018. Only three occurred in 2012, the critical year for the plaintiff’s theory. JX
2566 at 52–54. Conlin explained credibly that none of the three—Ziff Davis Enterprises,
Pooxi.com, and Forum Runner—was a valuable property. Conlin Tr. 2527–29. The record
contains no evidence that Oversee missed an accretive opportunity.
Conlin also explained that the “pivot” strategy of using monetization traffic to
support vertical markets business was a “fallacy.” Conlin Tr. 2523–25; 2529–30. Many
domain monetization companies tried it; none succeeded in doing it. Conlin reviewed a
2007 industry analyst report that identified twenty monetization services companies; he
explained that the vast majority went out of business or transformed themselves into
different types of companies. Conlin Tr. 2519–23. Conlin also reviewed a 2009 survey in
Domain Name Wire of “companies that were best using domain parking technology”; none
exist today. JX 2325 at 17.
Without any ability to use Oversee’s domain monetization traffic to support its
Vertical Markets websites, Oversee lacked any competitive advantage in building or
operating Vertical Markets businesses. Moreover, its existing businesses were early-stage,
low-value ventures. Jerath, the plaintiff’s expert, described them as nascent, like startups.
He further testified that overall, the success rate for new initiatives like Oversee’s Vertical
86
Markets sites was just 5–10%. Jerath Tr. 2485–87, 2503. Put differently, money invested
in these sites would have had a 90–95% chance of being lost.
The data prepared by the plaintiff’s damages expert, David Clarke, also indicated
that Oversee would have destroyed value by reinvesting its cash. Clarke prepared an index
of comparable publicly traded companies and tracked their performance. Starting in mid-
2011, when the plaintiff contends that Oversee should have been investing its cash,
Clarke’s index lost money, and it continued to decline in value through May 2017. See
DDX 8.21. When confronted with his own data, Clarke agreed that it would have been
value maximizing to hold cash rather than investing in his set of comparables until after
the complaint was filed in 2016. Clarke Tr. 2715–16. Four years before the index turned
positive, in February 2013, Oak Hill could have exercised its Redemption Right, and nine
months later, in December 2013, Oak Hill could have sold the Company using its Drag-
Right.
The companies in Clarke’s index that survived and eventually generated positive
results did so by transforming themselves into entirely different types of businesses.
Between June 2011 and April 2019, Blucora was the runaway winner among Clarke’s set
of comparable companies, growing its market capitalization by some 400% and driving
60.2% of Clarke’s index. JX 2589 at 2, 26. Blucora did not remain a vertical markets
company. In March 2016, it underwent a “strategic transformation,” divested the
businesses that were comparable to Oversee’s, and became “[a] Wealth Management
business and an online Tax Preparation business.” Clarke Tr. 2725–28; see JX 2495 at 55–
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58. The other companies in Clarke’s index either disappeared, lost value (TravelZoo,
Marchex), or remained relatively flat (QuinStreet). DDX 6.2.
The companies that other sources in the record deemed comparable to Oversee
followed a similar arc.
Cronkite & Kissell used a set of comparables that became dominated by Blucora
and Tucows, a company that by 2016 derived 98–99% of its revenues from
businesses in which Oversee never operated. DDX 6.6; Clarke Tr. 2732–33; Jerath
Tr. 2504.
Jefferies used a set of comparables that became dominated by IAC, a conglomerate
ten times the size of Oversee (at its height), whose businesses include dating site
Match.com, apparel retailers, and the news website the Daily Beast. DDX 6.9;
Clarke Tr. 2733–38; JX 1153 at 27.
Oak Hill used a set of comparables that became dominated by LendingTree, a
mortgage company. DDX 6.8; Clarke Tr. 2739–41; JX 2489 at 4.
For Oversee to succeed by reinvesting its cash would have required a speculative move
into a new line of business. Based on the expert testimony, it is more likely than not that
this effort would have failed.
b. The Counterfactual Analysis
Defendants’ damages expert, Professor David Smith, prepared a counterfactual
analysis that tested whether Oversee could have created value for the common stock if it
had invested its cash in its business rather than using it for redemptions. Smith’s analysis
showed that investing in Oversee’s business would not have generated value for the
common stock.
Smith conducted his analysis by assuming that (i) the Company reinvested all of its
cash flow immediately, (ii) the Company did not make any redemptions or pay any
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bonuses, and (iii) Oak Hill sold the Company using its Drag-Along Right on December 31,
2013. He started with the highest contemporaneous value of Oversee’s non-cash assets as
of December 31, 2013, which was $52.7 million. He subtracted that from the Preferred
Stock’s liquidation preference of $150 million, which was the hurdle that the Company
would have to clear for value to accrue to the common stockholders. This left a difference
of $97.3 million.
Smith calculated that Oversee’s cash flows would have had to generate an annual
return of 83% between June 30, 2011 to December 31, 2013, to bridge the $97.3 million
gap. He then compared this required rate of return to the returns that comparable companies
generated using the index that Clarke prepared and other indices in the record, treating
them as proxies for the results that Oversee could have obtained by investing its cash. None
of the comparable indices generated anywhere close to the required 83% return. The returns
for vertical markets businesses ranged from just 4% to negative 31%.
Based on his analysis, Smith opined that the common stockholders could not have
been harmed by Oversee’s failure to invest its cash. Regardless of the defendants’ actions,
the common stockholders would have received the same value: nothing. His analysis also
did not change if Oversee had more time. Smith Tr. 2800–01. Using Clarke’s index, any
dollar invested on the breach date would have lost almost half its value (-44.95%) by the
filing of the Complaint in 2016. JX 2583 at 16.
c. The Fairness Of The Asset Sales
A third factor supporting the financial fairness of the defendants’ course of conduct
is that they obtained full value when selling the Company’s assets. For purposes of the
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Pleading-Stage Decision, the complaint’s allegations supported an inference that the
defendants had engaged in hasty sales and sold assets at less than fair value to create
proceeds that could be used for redemption. The factual record at trial did not support that
assertion. There was no showing of any deficiency in the process, timing, or price of any
divestiture. The plaintiff correctly points out that businesses were sold for less than their
purchase price and below earlier estimates of their value, but that was not because of any
pressure to raise cash. It was because of the declining value of the businesses in the face of
industry competition.
The Company accumulated cash, but the defendants did not sacrifice value when
selling assets. The price in an arms’ length transaction is typically the best indicator of the
value of that business. The fact that the Company sold its assets for full value undermines
the contention that the Company could have created greater value by retaining its
businesses and investing in them.
d. Oak Hill’s Incentives
Oak Hill’s economic incentives are a final contextual factor that supports the
economic fairness of the cash-accumulation strategy. Although Oak Hill wanted a return
of capital and had an incentive to enhance the value of its Redemption Right, Oak Hill also
owned a majority of the Company’s common stock. Oak Hill’s large position in the
common stock meant that Oak Hill had a counterbalancing incentive not to harm the value
of the common stock. Indeed, because Oak Hill wanted a return on its investment, Oak Hill
had an incentive to enhance the value of the common stock.
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In 2011, when the plaintiff claims that Oak Hill began to enhance the value of its
Redemption Right at the expense of the common stock, Oak Hill valued the Company at
$215 million. See JX 907; Scott Tr. 736–39. At that valuation, Oak Hill believed that its
Preferred Stock was worth its full liquidation preference of $150 million, and Oak Hill
regarded its common stock as having an additional value of approximately $34 million.
Unless Oak Hill had some pressing need for cash, it would not have been rational for Oak
Hill to sacrifice the overall value of its investment to achieve a near-term return of capital.
Oak Hill did not face any financial pressure. Oak Hill also could not reinvest the money it
returned from Oversee towards some higher use; it could only return it at a loss to Fund
III’s investors. See JX 599 at 1; Scott Tr. 789–91.
The plaintiff proved that one reason that Oak Hill wanted its portfolio companies to
generate liquidity in 2011, 2012, and 2013 was to improve Fund III’s level of distributions
to paid-in capital. To look good for Fund III’s limited partners, and to attract investors
when raising Fund IV, Oak Hill wanted to be able to show that it had achieved a DPI of
0.30x. That was an interest unique to Oak Hill, and it played a role in Oak Hill’s actions,
but it was not sufficiently pressing to overcome Oak Hill’s financial interest in trying to
make the investment in Oversee a success.
The Oak Hill deal team did not behave like people who were happy to build up a
cash balance, redeem part of their Preferred Stock, and then write off the rest of Oak Hill’s
investment. Pade, Morse, Scott, and their colleagues spent countless hours working with
the Company to enhance the value of Oak Hill’s investment. See Dkt. 558 at 56, 72. On
the one hand, those interactions illustrate Oak Hill’s control over the Company. On the
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other hand, they show that Oak Hill wanted both a return of capital and to make the
Company a success.
Oak Hill’s contemporaneous documents show that even as the firm sought to
achieve a return of capital, it remained focused on growth. In March 2011, the Oak Hill
deal team described the Preferred Stock as “money good” and observed that “[t]he near-
term upside to our investment is in the common stock acquired from the founders in 2009.”
JX 723 at 13. In May 2012, the Oak Hill deal team explained that they were seeking
to focus on the best growth opportunities and to divest non-growth assets in
the ordinary course only if the proceeds to the Company are in excess of what
the board believes the value to holding the assets are (i.e., we are not simply
selling assets in order to increase cash for redemption).
JX 1191 at 12. The presentation emphasized that because of Oak Hill’s ownership of the
common stock, the firm was “not incented to truncate [the] value to the common stock
simply in order to accelerate repayment on the preferred.” Id. Instead, Oak Hill’s common
stock “was in a very levered position,” meaning that the returns on the common stock were
sensitive to any fluctuation in enterprise value. Scott Tr. 776–77. For Oak Hill, therefore,
the greatest upside came from increasing the value of its common stock. See JX 1191 at
14. The Oak Hill deal team also wanted to show a return on the common stock to
demonstrate that Oak Hill had not “throw[n] good money after bad” by making a second
investment in the Company in 2009. Morse Tr. 1129. The Oak Hill deal team had been
telling their partners and Fund III’s investors that they would make money on the common
stock, and they wanted to achieve that goal. See Scott Tr. 796.
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In its internal valuations, Oak Hill did not treat the redemptions as affecting the
value of Oak Hill’s common shares. See JX 1573A; JX 2482; Scott Tr. 754. As late as June
30, 2013, Oak Hill’s internal forecasts projected that the common stock would increase in
value and generate a return for Oak Hill. See JX 2482 at 3; Scott Tr. 754–55.
Finally, the Drag-Along Right gave Oak Hill an incentive to support accretive
investments at Oversee, because Oak Hill could realize the value of those investments by
selling the Company in a stockholder-level transaction. See Morse Tr. 1141–42. The
Preferred Stock would take the first $150 million, and Oak Hill would realize upside
through its ownership of common stock. Oak Hill could exercise the Drag-Along Right if
the Company failed to redeem at least half of the Preferred Stock by December 2013. Oak
Hill thus did not face a situation, as in ThoughtWorks, where a board of directors could
reinvest the Company’s cash flow in the business and only determine that a relatively small
amount was available for redemptions. If Oversee’s directors had somehow tried that
strategy, Oak Hill could have exercised the Drag-Along Right to realize the full value of
its investment. Morse Tr. 1141–42; Scott Tr. 879–84.
3. The Unitary Determination of Fairness
“The concept of fairness is of course not a technical concept. No litmus paper can
be found or [G]eiger-counter invented that will make determinations of fairness . . . .”
Tremont I, 1996 WL 145452, at *15. “This judgment concerning ‘fairness’ will inevitably
constitute a judicial judgment that in some respects is reflective of subjective reactions to
the facts of a case.” Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 663 A.2d 1134, 1140 (Del. Ch.
1994) (Allen, C.), aff’d, 663 A2d 1156 (Del. 1995). The economic dimension of the
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analysis can be “the predominant consideration in the unitary entire fairness inquiry.” Dole,
2015 WL 5052214, at *34.
The defendants proved that it was not a fiduciary wrong to accumulate cash so it
would be available to redeem the Preferred Stock when Oak Hill exercised the Redemption
Right. With the benefit of hindsight, the defendants proved that this was the best use of the
Company’s cash. It is more likely than not that other alternatives would have been value
destroying. It is highly unlikely that any other uses could have generated enough value to
exceed the Preferred Stock’s liquidation preference. The strategy thus inflicted no harm on
the common stockholders, who are in at least as good a position now as they would have
been if the Company had followed a different course.21 In other words, the defendants’
actions were entirely fair.
D. Other Issues
The parties have raised a number of other issues, including (i) whether any
individual defendant could be held personally liable in light of the exculpation clause in
21
Because this lawsuit is framed as a derivative action, the question technically is
whether the strategy was fair to the Company. However, as discussed in the Pleading-Stage
Decision, Delaware law contemplates that fiduciaries will manage the corporation for the
benefit of the holders of its undifferentiated equity, which generally means the holders of
common stock. 2017 WL 1437308, at *22. The plaintiff recognizes that this case is really
about the common stock and requested a stockholder-level remedy. From a theoretical
standpoint, Oak Hill’s cash accumulation strategy might have harmed Oak Hill derivatively
as the sole owner of the Preferred Stock, but it would be illogical to hold that the strategy
was unfair to the Company on that basis. Oak Hill is not pursuing any claims or seeking
any remedy. Oak Hill accepts that it suffered a loss on its investment. Perhaps in some
other case there might be different holders of preferred stock who could claim derivative
harm in a similar situation such that they would benefit from a derivative remedy, but not
here.
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the Company’s certificate of incorporation, (ii) whether the plaintiff proved any damages
to the Company, (iii) whether the plaintiff proved that any damages to the Company were
proximately caused by the defendants’ actions, (iv) whether the plaintiff could obtain a
stockholder-level remedy, (v) whether a stockholder-level remedy could include a damages
award for option holders, and (vi) whether the plaintiff’s claims are barred by laches.
Because this decision has found that the defendants’ actions were entirely fair, there was
no fiduciary breach, and there is no need to reach any of these additional issues. The court
intimates no opinion regarding them.
III. CONCLUSION
The defendants proved that their conduct was entirely fair. Judgment will be entered
in their favor on the plaintiff’s claims. The parties shall confer and identify any additional
issues that need to be resolved to bring this matter to a conclusion at the trial level.
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