IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
AVANDE, INC., a Delaware
corporation,
Plaintiff,
v. C.A. No. 2018-0203-AGB
SHAWN EVANS and DC RISK
SOLUTIONS, INC.,
Defendants.
ACCOUNTING JUDGMENT ORDER
WHEREAS:
A. On August 13, 2019, the court issued a post-trial Memorandum Opinion
that adjudicated claims Avande, Inc. (“Avande” or the “Company”) asserted against
Shawn Evans (“Evans”) and DC Risk Solutions, Inc. (“DC Risk”), an entity wholly-
owned by Evans, (together, “Defendants”) concerning three categories of
transactions.1 The first two categories concerned (1) $4,691,097 of expenses that
Avande contended the Internal Revenue Service could disallow as deductible
business expenses (the “Challenged Amount”) and (2) $235,845.83 of payments
Avande made to DC Risk before Evans was terminated as Avande’s Chief Executive
Officer on February 15, 2018 (the “DC Risk Transactions”). For the reasons
1
Avande, Inc. v. Evans, 2019 WL 3800168, at *7 (Del. Ch. Aug. 13, 2019).
explained in the Memorandum Opinion, the court denied Avande’s request for an
accounting with respect to the first category, the Challenged Amount, but granted its
request for an accounting with respect to the second category, the DC Risk
Transactions.
B. On September 4, 2019, the court entered a Judgment Order, which it
amended on September 18, 2019, that, among things, awarded Avande an equitable
accounting with respect to the DC Risk Transactions (the “Accounting”).2 In
entering the Judgment Order, the court explained to the parties that the Accounting
would examine “all payments Avande made to DC Risk before Evans’ termination
as CEO (but only those amounts).”3
C. After entry of the Judgment Order, Avande and Defendants each
proposed two candidates to perform the Accounting.4
D. On September 27, 2019, the court entered an Order Governing
Accounting Procedure, which explained the procedure for the Accounting; selected
one of the candidates Avande proposed (Theodore F. Martens) to perform the
Accounting (the “Accountant”); and required the Accountant to file a report
“identifying, consistent with this Court’s Memorandum Opinion, any and all DC
2
Dkt. 196 (“Judgment Order”); Dkt. 198.
3
Dkt. 196 (cover letter accompanying Judgment Order) (emphasis added).
4
Dkt. 199; Dkt. 200.
2
Risk Transactions that were unfair under the standards of Delaware law for self-
interested transactions.”5
E. On February 7, 2020, the Accountant filed his report (the “Report”),
which found a total of $43,687.77 of unfair payments.6
F. In March and May 2020, Defendants and Avande filed their responses
to the Report.7
NOW, THEREFORE, the court having considered the parties’ submissions,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, this 14th day of September, 2020, as follows:
1. “The purpose of the Accounting [was] to determine to what extent, if
any, the DC Risk Transactions were unfair under the standards of Delaware law for
self-interested transactions.”8 Where, as here, the fiduciary’s (Evans’) “loyalty has
been called into question, the burden shifts to the fiduciar[y] to demonstrate the
‘entire fairness’ of the transaction.”9 As such, the Defendants had the burden of
establishing “that [each] transaction was the product of both fair dealing and fair
5
Dkt. 201 (“Accounting Order”) ¶ 7.
6
Dkt. 204 (“Report”) at 8.
7
Defs.’ Letter dated Mar. 6, 2020 (“Defs.’ Letter”) (Dkt. 205); Pl.’s Reply (Dkt. 210).
8
Judgment Order ¶ 3.
9
Oliver v. Boston Univ., 2006 WL 1064169, at *18 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2006) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
3
price.”10 “[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.”11
2. As detailed in the Report, the Accountant reviewed DC Risk
Transactions falling into four categories: (i) charges for bookkeeping services that
a DC Risk employee (Susan Omran) performed for Avande, (ii) commission
payments DC Risk received for brokering insurance for Avande, (iii) payments
Avande made to DC Risk concerning a $75,000 loan DC Risk made to Avande, and
(iv) expense reimbursements Avande paid to DC Risk.12 As noted below, the
Accountant also examined a few payments made to or for the benefit of Evans
individually that were not part of the DC Risk Transactions. The Accountant
determined that Avande made unfair payments to DC Risk totaling $43,687.77.13
The largest amount concerned bookkeeping charges. Specifically, the Accountant
10
In re Trados Inc. S’holder Litig., 73 A.3d 17, 44 (Del. Ch. 2013) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
11
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 457 A.2d 701, 711 (Del. 1983).
12
Report at 3-7.
13
Id. at 8.
4
found that $39,384.02 out of a total of $104,844.50 that Avande paid DC Risk for
bookkeeping services provided from 2013 to 2018 was unfair.14
3. In their response to the Report, Defendants pointed out purported
“structural deficiencies” in the Report but elected to “not contest the conclusions”
of the Report.15
4. In its response to the Report, Avande asserted two objections for which
it seeks to “be awarded additional damages of $471,196.37.”16 First, with respect
to bookkeeping services, Avande asks the court to reject the Accountant’s findings
and award it the full amount ($104,844.50) Avande paid DC Risk for bookkeeping
services over a five-year period.17 Second, Avande requests that it be awarded
$366,321.92 for “expenses charged on Evans’ credit cards and paid by Avande” that
the Accountant did not examine in the Report.18 Avande also seeks an order
requiring “Defendants to reimburse Avande its fees and costs incurred in connection
with the Accounting.”19 The court addresses these three issues, in turn, below.
14
Id. at 2-5, 10-12 (Schedule 1). Avande received 44 invoices for bookkeeping charges
totaling $107,224.03 but it did not pay one of those invoices for $2,379.53, for which the
Accountant provided a credit. Id. at 4 & n.3, 11.
15
Defs.’ Letter at 4.
16
Pl.’s Reply at 22.
17
Id.
18
Id.
19
Id. at 29.
5
Bookkeeping Charges
5. The Accountant concluded that $39,384.02 or approximately 38% of a
total of $104,844.50 of payments Avande made to DC Risk for bookkeeping services
from January 1, 2013 to February 15, 2018 was unfair.20 In performing his analysis,
the Accountant examined the trial record (documents and testimony), obtained
additional documents from the parties outside the trial record, and received written
responses to questions propounded to the parties as well as rebuttals to those
responses.21 Although the Accountant did not receive backup documentation for
each of the charges on the 44 invoices that DC Risk issued for bookkeeping services
during the relevant period, the Accountant methodically examined the charges
month-by-month and made adjustments he deemed appropriate based on the
information available to him.22 More specifically, the Accountant (i) reduced the
number of hours appropriate for payment for the months he did not have satisfactory
backup documentation and (ii) reduced the hourly rates DC Risk charged (ranging
from $35 to $40 per hour) to rates that ranged from $30.50 to $33.07 per hour.23
6. Avande does not question any of the specific adjustments the
Accountant made. Avande asserts instead that “all of the sums Evans caused Avande
20
Report at 8.
21
Id. at 3-4.
22
See id. at 4-5.
23
Id. at 3-4, 13 (Schedule 2).
6
to pay to DC Risk for Omran’s bookkeeping services should be held to be unfair and
repaid to the Company as damages” because the Accountant “drew inferences in
Defendants’ favor when Defendants’ inability to produce relevant evidence should
have been deemed a failure to carry their burden of proving entire fairness.”24
7. The court declines to award damages in such an all-or-nothing manner.
In my view, it would be inequitable to award Avande damages for all of the
bookkeeping charges it paid DC Risk over a five-year period when it is indisputable
that DC Risk provided substantial bookkeeping services to the Company during this
period.
8. Avande submitted a Declaration from Rick Evans of the firm Serotta
Maddocks Evans & Co., CPAs, attesting that the “most objective evidence of Ms.
Omran’s bookkeeping time for Avande” is garnered from Avande’s QuickBooks
accounting system because “QuickBooks kept an electronic record of the times when
Ms. Omran logged in and out of Avande’s accounting system and her activities while
logged in.”25 Focusing on three of the five years at issue, Rick Evans calculated that
“Ms. Omran was logged in the QuickBooks accounting system for a total of
24
Pl.’s Reply at 26-27 (emphasis added).
25
Id. Ex. K (“Evans Decl.”) ¶ 4 (citing Evans Decl., Ex. 2).
7
approximately 1,059 hours.”26 Thus, Avande itself acknowledges that DC Risk
performed substantial bookkeeping services for the Company.
9. The independence and competence of the Accountant, who Avande
recommended to the court, is unquestioned. Although the Accountant did not have
backup documentation for every bookkeeping charge, his methodology was
thorough, the assumptions he made were reasonable, and the ultimate conclusion he
reached to apply a reduction of approximately 38% to the bookkeeping charges
incurred is fair in my view. Accordingly, the court overrules Avande’s first
objection and will adopt the Accountant’s findings concerning the DC Risk charges
for bookkeeping services.
Credit Card Charges
10. Avande’s second objection concerns, as Avande puts it, “$366,321.92
in payments for credit card charges made by Evans on [Avande’s] cards assigned
exclusively to him,” which “Defendants refused to produce [supporting
documentation for] on the improper ground that Avande’s credit cards ‘do not fall
under the scope of the mandate of the accounting.’”27 The court overrules this
objection because it agrees with Defendants that Evans’ credit card expenditures
were outside the scope of the Accounting.
26
Id. ¶ 5.
27
Pl.’s Reply at 23, 28 (citations omitted).
8
11. As explained in the Memorandum Opinion, the court denied Avande’s
request for an accounting of the Challenged Amount—consisting of $4,691,097 of
expenses—“because Avande failed to make a prima facie showing based on
substantial evidence [as required under this court’s precedents] that the expenditures
within the Challenged Amount constitute self-interested transactions involving
Evans.”28 Critically, as further explained in the Memorandum Opinion, the
Challenged Amount included “approximately $700,000” of charges on American
Express and Chase Card Services credit cards for which, unlike in cases where this
court has ordered an accounting, “Avande made no effort to isolate charges
attributable to Evans, or to determine from the face of the credit card statements
whether the charges appeared to be business-related or personal in nature.”29
Accordingly, the court concluded in the Memorandum Opinion that “it would be
inappropriate to shift to Evans the burden of demonstrating the fairness of each of
those expenditures or to order an accounting of them.”30
12. The transactions for which Avande did make the prima facie showing
necessary to obtain the remedy of an accounting and that fall within the scope of the
28
Avande, 2019 WL 3800168, at *14.
29
Id. at *13 & n.144.
30
Id. at *14 (emphasis added).
9
Accounting that was ordered consist of payments Avande made to DC Risk. As
explained in the Memorandum Opinion:
Avande’s second category of alleged damages consists of $235,845.83
of payments that Avande made to DC Risk, which is wholly-owned by
Evans. According to Avande, this amount falls outside of the
Challenged Amount and includes expenses for “Bookkeeping, Travel
reimbursement, Microsoft office & adobe reimbursement.”
Evans does not contest that Avande paid $235,845.83 to DC Risk, and
both parties focus on two types of expenditures when discussing the
payments Avande made to DC Risk: charges for (i) bookkeeping
services that DC Risk employee Susan Omran performed for Avande
and (ii) brokerage commissions for insurance policies DC Risk placed
for Avande. DC Risk billed Omran’s services to Avande on an hourly
basis at $35 or $40 per hour, which Evans claims was below the market
rate in the San Francisco. According to invoices in the record, DC Risk
charged Avande a total of $89,947.50 for bookkeeping services
provided from December 2013 to February 2018, although some
invoices appear to be missing. The record also contains DC Risk
invoices for insurance policies ($28,587.11) and travel reimbursement
($1,510.34). Kato knew that DC Risk purchased insurance policies for
Avande, but claims he was unaware that DC Risk was earning
brokerage commissions for doing so. The total amount of DC Risk
invoices in the record appears to be approximately $120,000.31
After issuance of the Memorandum Opinion, in a cover letter to counsel
accompanying the Judgment Order, the court clarified that it did not intend to limit
the Accountant’s review to “$235,845.83” in alleged payments to DC Risk if there
31
Avande, 2019 WL 3800168, at *16-17 (citations omitted).
10
were more of those payments, but made clear that the Accounting only would
involve payments Avande made to DC Risk—not to or for Evans individually.32
13. In its response to the Report, Avande submitted a spreadsheet listing
approximately $645,000 of charges on the Company’s American Express and Chase
Card Services credit cards from 2013 to 2018 and isolating the amount of those
charges that were made by Evans.33 Critically, these are the same credit card charges
that were part of the Challenged Amount for which Avande failed to make the
showing necessary to obtain an accounting and are not part of the DC Risk
Transactions for which the Accounting was ordered.34
14. In requesting an award of $366,321.92 for credit card charges allegedly
incurred by Evans, Avande ask the court to consider evidence it failed to provide at
trial and to re-litigate an issue on which it lost at trial, i.e., its request for an
accounting of the Challenged Amount. This is completely improper. The scope of
the Accounting was limited to the DC Risk Transactions, which concern payments
Avande made to DC Risk and did not include charges Evans made in his own name
Dkt. 196 (“[T]he Accountant should be able to examine all payments Avande made to
32
DC Risk before Evans’ termination as CEO (but only those payments).”).
33
Pl.’s Reply at 23; id. Ex. J (spreadsheet listing credit card charges).
34
See JX 396 (itemizing $235,845.83 of expenses for DC Risk Solutions separately from
$419,552.21 of expenses on American Express credit cards and $281,410.61 of expenses
on Chase Card Services credit cards).
11
on the Company’s credit cards. Accordingly, the court overrules Avande’s second
objection.35
Request for Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses
15. Avande asks the court to “order Defendants to reimburse Avande its
fees and costs incurred in connection with the Accounting” due to “Defendants’ bad
faith conduct and abusive litigation tactics.”36 Avande specifically points to
Defendants’ failure to produce before trial nine handwritten notebooks Omran
maintained that Defendants provided to the Accountant to support the amount DC
Risk charged Avande for bookkeeping services. As Avande explained in its brief:
During trial, in response to the Court’s direct questions about the
evidence of Omran’s time-keeping records, Defendants’ counsel did
not disclose the notebooks’ existence, even though Defendants’ counsel
knew about them days earlier and even instructed Omran to transport
them to Delaware. . . .
Instead, Defendants only decided to reveal Omran’s notebooks
after trial, in response to Martens’ inquiries, without affording Avande
an opportunity to test their reliability through discovery. Avande was
unaware of the notebooks’ existence until a November 7, 2019
telephone conference with Martens, when Defendants’ counsel
informed the Company’s counsel for the first time that they would be
produced in connection with the Accounting to support DC Risk’s fees
charged to Avande. Defendants then delivered nine original notebooks
to [the Accountant’s] New York City offices without providing copies
35
The court notes that the Accountant deemed unfair $1,845.10 in credit card expenses that
appeared “personal in nature” to Evans. Report at 8. Although these transactions fell
outside the scope of the Accounting, the court will not reduce the Accountant’s findings
by this amount given Defendants’ lack of objection to the Accountant’s conclusions.
36
Pl.’s Reply at 29.
12
to Avande, forcing the Company, at its own expense, to travel to [New
York City] for the purposes of inspecting the notebooks and making
copies.37
16. Avande submitted an email from Defendants’ counsel reflecting that
they were aware of the notebooks before trial began on February 20, 2019.38 The
Company also submitted emails reflecting that Defendants sent the notebooks to the
Accountant without providing copies to Avande.39
17. Defendants’ failure to produce Omran’s notebooks before trial is
without excuse and egregious. There is no place in our Bar for counsel to
intentionally conceal relevant evidence that has been sought in discovery. The relief
Avande seeks based on this incident, however, is not warranted in my view. Under
the Judgment Order, Defendants are required to pay “all the professional fees and
expenses charged by the Accountant.”40 Thus, Avande has not been impacted by
any additional time or effort the Accountant may have incurred to address this new
evidence. Avande itself, moreover, unduly complicated the Accounting by injecting
37
Id. at 32-33 (citations omitted).
38
Id. Ex. M, at 1 (Feb. 19, 2019 e-mail from Defendants’ counsel requesting Omran bring
the notebooks with her to Delaware because they “may want to produce them”).
39
Pl.’s Reply, Ex. D, at 1 (Nov. 14, 2019 e-mail from Defendants’ counsel to the
Accountant asking where to send the notebooks); id. Ex. F, at 1-2 (e-mail chain showing
Defendants’ counsel mailed the notebooks directly to the Accountant without providing
copies to Plaintiff’s counsel and Plaintiff’s counsel raising concerns about the notebooks,
requesting photocopies, and arranging a time with the Accountant to examine the
notebooks in New York City).
40
Judgment Order ¶ 3(c).
13
an issue into the process that was outside the scope of the Accounting. Accordingly,
the court denies Avande’s request for reimbursement of its fees and costs incurred
in connection with the Accounting. This denial is without prejudice to Avande’s
right to argue that Defendants’ misconduct should be considered in the context of
any request for indemnification with respect to the matters that were the subject of
this action.
*****
18. In sum, Defendants are jointly and severally liable to Avande for
damages in the amount determined by the Accountant ($43,687.77) plus pre- and
post-judgment interest at the Delaware legal rate, compounded quarterly.41 The
Report details the unfair amounts by year. Interest shall be calculated for the years
2014 through 2017 as if the total amount for each year was incurred on the last day
of each year.42 The parties are directed to confer and to submit an implementing
order within five business days of this order. The order should reflect that any claim
for indemnification related to this action must be sought in a separate action.
/s/ Andre G. Bouchard
Chancellor
41
See Avande, 2019 WL 380016, at *18.
42
The Accountant’s determinations for 2013 and 2018 provide small credits that should be
disregarded for purposes of the interest calculation. Report at 11-12.
14