IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
DG BF, LLC, a Delaware limited liability )
company, individually and derivatively on )
behalf of AMERICAN GENERAL )
RESOURCES LLC, a Delaware limited )
liability company; and JEFF A. MENASHE, )
individually and derivatively on behalf of )
AMERICAN GENERAL RESOURCES )
LLC, a Delaware limited liability )
company, )
)
Plaintiffs, )
)
v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0459-MTZ
)
MICHAEL RAY, an individual, and )
VLADIMIR EFROS, an individual, and )
AMERICAN GENERAL RESOURCES, )
LLC, a Delaware limited liability )
company, )
Defendants, )
)
and )
)
AMERICAN GENERAL RESOURCES )
LLC, a Delaware limited liability )
company, )
)
Nominal Defendant. )
ORDER OF DISMISSAL
WHEREAS, having considered and granted Defendants’ numerous
discovery motions against Plaintiffs;1 and having taken under advisement
1
Those motions include Docket Item (“D.I.”) 146, Defendants’ Motion to Compel, granted
at D.I. 183; D.I. 180, Defendants’ Motion to Compel Proper Deposition, granted at D.I.
1
Defendants’ penultimate Expedited Renewed Motion to Compel and for Sanctions
Against Plaintiffs,2 their final Motion for Sanctions for Spoliation of Evidence as
fully briefed,3 and their letter advising the Court of Plaintiffs’ failure to comply with
this Court’s August 23, 2021 ruling,4 it appears:
A. Plaintiffs Jeff A. Menashe and his investment vehicle, DG BF, LLC
(“DG BF”) brought this action claiming that in the spring of 2019, Defendants
Michael Ray and Vladimir Efros fraudulently induced Plaintiffs into investing in
nominal defendant American General Resources LLC (“AGR” or the “Company”);
that after Plaintiffs invested, Company executives ignored Plaintiffs’ governance
rights; and that after Plaintiffs sued, the Company retaliated against them,
improperly removing Menashe as the manager of DG BF’s investment series and
eliminating a profitable investment banking relationship Menashe’s affiliate had
with the Company. Plaintiffs filed their initial complaint on June 11, 2020, and
followed with an amended complaint on August 11.5
204; and D.I. 189, Defendants’ letter advising of Plaintiffs’ failure to comply with D.I. 183.
2
D.I. 212.
3
D.I. 225; D.I. 237; D.I. 242.
4
D.I. 231. Plaintiff DG BF, LLC’s affiliate, Demeter Group Holdings, LP, also filed a
motion to quash. D.I. 234.
5
D.I. 1; D.I. 49.
2
B. Plaintiffs had some initial success at the pleading stage. The matter was
expedited at Plaintiffs’ request, and on July 6, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion
for a temporary restraining order regarding a subsequent financing round.6 But on
July 9, the Court found for Defendants on Plaintiffs’ claim regarding that financing,
and terminated the temporary restraining order.7 Defendants moved to dismiss,8
Plaintiffs withdrew some claims,9 and the Court trimmed Plaintiffs’ claims further
on March 1, 2021.10
C. On March 30, the Court entered a stipulated scheduling order that
specified Plaintiffs’ document production would begin no later than thirty days after
receipt of discovery requests; substantial completion of document production by
June 11; expert identification by June 18; completion of fact, third party, and expert
discovery by August 25; and trial on September 15–17.11 Defendants served their
discovery requests that same day, beginning a volley of discovery requests countered
by responses and objections that lasted through May.12
6
D.I. 33.
7
D.I. 35.
8
D.I. 37.
9
D.I. 105.
10
DG BF, LLC v. Ray, 2021 WL 776742 (Del. Ch. Mar. 1, 2021).
11
D.I. 120.
12
D.I. 121.
3
D. Plaintiffs produced some documents on May 7.13 Plaintiffs did not
collect or image Menashe’s cell phone or laptop; any server on which DG BF stored
electronic documents; or laptops and email accounts used by Menashe’s colleagues
at his investment firm, Demeter Group (“Demeter”), who were involved in DG BF’s
investment in AGR. Plaintiffs were unwilling or unable to provide a comprehensible
hit report. Defendants began to ask about these issues in May, but the June 11
substantial completion deadline came and went without Plaintiffs producing any
more documents.
E. Plaintiffs’ repositories of electronic documents proved elusive.
Menashe testified he did not know what a litigation hold was, and did not advise his
Demeter colleagues to preserve documents or collect their data when they left
Demeter.14 The Demeter laptops used when negotiating DG BF’s investment in
AGR were particularly confounding. Plaintiffs’ counsel repeatedly disclosed that
those laptops had been wiped and donated, but eventually the laptops were found
and given to Plaintiffs’ counsel.15
13
See D.I. 146, Ex. 19 (describing how “Menashe’s IT team” applied search terms to his
email and conducted a search for “AGR” or “Bloom”); D.I. 212, Ex. 2 at 28–30 (explaining
that Menashe is the only person at Demeter and that Menashe personally supervised the
collection).
14
D.I. 225, Ex. 1 at 32–33, 44–50. But Plaintiffs issued a detailed litigation hold to
Defendants, and Defendants issued one to Plaintiffs. D.I. 225, Exs. 18, 19.
15
D.I. 146, Ex. 18 (disclosing on May 25, 2021, that the Demeter laptops were donated
when the custodians left Demeter in January 2020 and December 2020; also disclosing
Menashe’s laptop is “less than two years old” and updated every two years, and that his
4
F. As for Menashe, he obtained a new laptop in or about February 2020,
and donated the one he had used during due diligence on his Company investment.16
Menashe used text messaging to conduct AGR business, but continued his practice
of actively deleting his text messages through the pendency of this litigation.17
Menashe testified that he did not text about business matters, but that testimony was
undermined by texts Defendants produced; when confronted, Menashe then testified
he deleted all such messages.18
G. In seeking to avoid reviewing laptops and Menashe’s text messages,
Plaintiffs insisted that “the relevant data is primarily stored on Demeter Group
servers.” 19 There was a folder on that server named after AGR’s operating entity,
“Bloom Farms.”20 But Plaintiffs did not search that folder or server.
H. Plaintiffs’ written discovery responses fared no better. They refused to
answer several core questions, including to identify the due diligence they performed
personal devices have not been collected and that he “does not retain text message
communications on his cell phone”); id. Ex. 19 (disclosing on June 9 that one Demeter
laptop was donated in February 2020, and the other was donated in January or February
2021); D.I. 225, Ex. 1 at 42–43 (Menashe on July 27 testifying that he wiped and donated
his own work laptop, but that one of his Demeter colleagues had both Demeter laptops).
16
D.I. 146, Exs. 18, 19; D.I. 225, Ex. 1 at 42–43.
17
D.I. 146, Exs. 18, 19; D.I. 225, Ex. 2 at 223.
18
D.I. 225, Ex. 11; id. Ex. 2 at 222–24.
19
D.I. 146, Ex. 18; accord Ex. 19 (noting “[a]ll of [Menashe’s] files are stored on the
Demeter Group servers and would be available there instead”).
20
D.I. 225, Ex. 2 at 155–57; D.I. 212, Exs. 4, 5.
5
relating to DG BF’s investment in AGR, and to identify the material omissions
Plaintiffs contend were concealed and the financial statements or projections that
Plaintiffs believed included misrepresentations.21
I. Plaintiffs also struggled to produce a complete and adequate privilege
log. Their first privilege log, produced on June 11, was wholly deficient; after
motion practice and at the Court’s insistence, Delaware counsel oversaw the
production of a compliant privilege log.22 But the log would never be updated
beyond Plaintiffs’ initial production.
J. Rather than focusing on discovery, Plaintiffs engaged in motion
practice, filing a motion to appoint a receiver over AGR (which Plaintiffs withdrew
after Defendants moved to strike it)23 and two motions to extend the scheduling order
(which Defendants briefed and which were denied for failure to establish excusable
neglect).24 Plaintiffs also took time to amend their nearly identical complaint in a
parallel action pending before the Supreme Court of the State of New York.25
21
See D.I. 183.
22
See D.I. 206.
23
D.I. 147; D.I. 152; D.I. 184.
24
D.I. 158; D.I. 166; D.I. 182; D.I. 195; D.I. 202.
25
D.I. 212, Ex. 9.
6
K. On July 2, Defendants moved to compel.26 Plaintiffs opposed the
motion without offering any substantive grounds for their opposition.27 Plaintiffs
explained that staffing or supervisory issues at Plaintiffs’ forwarding counsel had
impeded compliance with the scheduling order and their discovery obligations.
L. On August 3, I ordered Plaintiffs to specify a deadline by which they
would collect and image Menashe’s cell phone and laptop; the electronic repositories
for his Demeter colleagues; and any server on which DG BF stored electronic files
(the “Key Repositories”).28 Plaintiffs were ordered to provide hit reports to aid in
finalizing search terms, and to produce all hit documents to Defendants to review at
Plaintiffs’ cost. Plaintiffs were also ordered to respond to specific written discovery
requests, and to provide a compliant privilege log. The Court specified that self-
collection was strictly prohibited, and encouraged greater participation by Delaware
counsel.
M. Plaintiffs did not comply. The Court was required to give Plaintiffs
more guidance on August 12. At that hearing, Plaintiffs’ counsel stated that
Menashe’s cellphone was being imaged “right now.”29 With Delaware counsel
taking a more active role and promising improvements, the Court worked with
26
D.I. 146.
27
D.I. 172.
28
D.I. 183; D.I. 201 at 36–42.
29
D.I. 239 at 15.
7
Plaintiffs and ordered them to file a stipulation by the end of the day with concrete
deadlines for getting the Key Repositories to Defendants’ vendor so that discovery
could be complete in advance of looming depositions.30 Plaintiffs did not file any
such stipulation, and related a series of delays and technical problems in imaging the
Key Repositories. On August 16, Plaintiffs’ counsel stated that hits in the Bloom
Farms folder on the Demeter server would be produced, declining to image and
search the entire server as ordered.31 On August 17, Plaintiffs’ counsel told
Defendants’ counsel that “the vendor was unable to successfully image Mr.
Menashe’s cell phone and laptop,” and that new equipment was on its way to the
vendor.32
N. On August 18, Defendants moved to compel Plaintiffs’ deficient
written and document discovery by a deadline, with dismissal on the line if the
deadline was missed, and for sanctions for Plaintiffs’ failure to comply with this
Court’s August 3 and August 12 directives.33 The parties briefed that motion and
the Court heard it on August 23.34 At this point, the depositions of Menashe, his
colleagues, and key players at AGR were noticed for the coming days, and trial was
30
Id. at 18–21.
31
D.I. 212, Ex. 5.
32
Id.
33
D.I. 212; D.I. 214.
34
D.I. 217; D.I. 221; D.I. 227.
8
three weeks away. Plaintiffs had produced documents from the Demeter laptops,
but had not completed imaging the Demeter server or Menashe’s laptop, and—
remarkably—had not yet even begun imaging Menashe’s cell phone, as Menashe
himself had been unable to identify a business in his locale of Helena, Montana that
could perform the task.35
O. On August 23, the Court held Plaintiffs in contempt.36 The Court
ordered the images of the Demeter server and Menashe’s laptop be produced to
Defendants’ vendor for Defendants’ attorneys-eyes-only review until a deadline
passed for Plaintiffs to claw back privileged documents by properly logging them,
and for Menashe’s cell phone to be provided for Defendants’ remote imaging or
overnighted to Defendants, at Defendants’ election, subject to the same clawback
procedure. The Court also ordered all documents withheld on the basis of privilege,
but not yet logged, to be produced to Defendants on an attorneys-eyes-only basis
until that same clawback-by-log period passed. Finally, as to written discovery, the
Court deemed a request for admission admitted, and ordered that Plaintiffs were
precluded from offering at trial any financial statement or projection that Plaintiffs
believed misleading that was not explicitly identified in Plaintiffs’ discovery
35
D.I. 247 at 16–17.
36
Id. at 29–34.
9
responses. The Court indicated an adverse inference was warranted, and took the
scope of that inference, and the potential for dismissal, under advisement.
P. Plaintiffs’ discovery failures were not limited to written discovery and
document production. Plaintiffs’ forwarding counsel was extremely obstructive at
the Court of Chancery Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of Menashe as DG BF’s
representative on document retention.37 Defendants were again forced to resort to
motion practice, and were awarded a second deposition on August 17.38 Defendants
were also awarded fees for their motion practice.
Q. On August 25, Defendants wrote the Court to relate that their vendor
had yet to receive the server image, the laptop image, or Menashe’s cell phone, and
that they had not been shipped within the Court-ordered timeframe.39 That same
day, Demeter filed a motion to quash production of the server image.40 And again,
37
D.I. 180, Ex. 1.
38
D.I. 180; D.I. 196; D.I. 197; D.I. 204 (noting forwarding counsel, like the counsel at
issue in Paramount Communications Inc. v. QVC Network Inc., 637 A.2d 34, 53 (Del.
1994) “(a) improperly directed the witness not to answer certain questions; (b) was
extraordinarily rude [and] uncivil . . . ; and (c) obstructed the ability of the questioner to
elicit testimony to assist the Court in this matter”; and noting Delaware counsel was
expected to put an end to the misconduct, but did not). Forwarding counsel was ordered
to submit a certification that he had reviewed, or re-reviewed, the Statement of Principles
of Lawyer Conduct, and the Court’s 2021 Guidelines To Help Lawyers Practice In The
Court Of Chancery. Id. Forwarding counsel failed to submit that certification as requested;
the Court only received a letter from Delaware counsel representing that forwarding
counsel had completed that task. D.I. 211.
39
D.I. 231.
40
D.I. 234. Demeter’s August 25 motion relates that imaging was still in process and
would take another “day or two,” id., even though Plaintiffs’ counsel told the Court on
10
rather than attending to their own obligations, Plaintiffs took countermeasures,
demanding on August 24 that Plaintiffs image AGR’s server “for all financial records
going back to when Jeff invested in the company.”41
R. Defendants ultimately sent Menashe’s cell phone to Defendants’
vendor, and provided them the image of his current laptop.42 But when Menashe
shipped his phone to Defendants’ vendor, he included a letter instructing the vendor
not to provide Defendants’ counsel with any correspondence between Menashe and
thirty-four individuals, or Menashe’s photos or videos.43
S. On August 27, I informed the parties that the matter would be
dismissed, that judgment would be entered in favor of Defendants, and that the trial
scheduled for September 15 to 17 was cancelled.44 I advised that a formal
explanation of my decision would follow. This order provides that explanation.
T. “Trial courts should be diligent in the imposition of sanctions upon a
party who refuses to comply with discovery orders, not just to penalize those whose
August 23 that the imaging would be complete “before the close of business today or
certainly by tomorrow.” D.I. 247 at 16.
41
D.I. 231, Ex. 9 (“Our IP company wants to image your client’s server for all financial
records going back to when Jeff invested in the company. Let us know before close of
business tomorrow when our IP company can come in and image that server. Thank you.”).
42
D.I. 237.
43
D.I. 244.
44
D.I. 243.
11
conduct warrants such sanctions, but to deter those who may be tempted to abuse
the legal system by their irresponsible conduct.”45
Rule 37(b)(2) identifies potential sanctions that a trial court can impose for
violating a discovery order, including but not limited to:
(A) An order that the matters regarding which the order was made or
any other designated facts shall be taken to be established for the
purposes of the action in accordance with the claim of the party
obtaining the order;
(B) An order refusing to allow the disobedient party to support or
oppose designated claims or defenses, or prohibiting that party
from introducing designated matters in evidence; [or]
(C) An order striking out pleadings or parts thereof, or staying further
proceedings until the order is obeyed, or dismissing the action or
proceeding or any part thereof, or rendering a judgment by default
against the disobedient party[.]46
U. Spoliation may also warrant dispositive sanctions, including dismissal
of claims or imposition of an adverse inference,
where a party acts to intentionally or recklessly destroy evidence, when
it knows that the item in question is relevant to a legal dispute or it was
otherwise under a legal duty to preserve the item. Delaware courts have
defined recklessness in the spoliation context as a conscious awareness
of the risk that one’s action or inaction may cause evidence to be
despoiled. Intentional destruction simply means that the spoliator acted
with purpose.47
45
Hoag v. Amex Assurance Co., 953 A.2d 713, 717 (Del. 2008) (quoting Holt v. Holt, 472
A.2d 820, 824 (Del. 1984)).
46
James v. Nat’l Fin. LLC, 2014 WL 6845560, at *8 (Del. Ch. Dec. 5, 2014) (quoting Ct.
Ch. R. 37(b)(2)).
47
TR Invs., LLC v. Genger, 2009 WL 4696062, at *17 (Del. Ch. Dec. 9, 2009) (internal
citations and quotation marks omitted), aff’d, 26 A.3d 180 (Del. 2011).
12
...
The remedial inquiries relevant to the contempt and spoliation claims
are similar. A court has inherent power to fashion a remedy for
contempt that is proportionate to the level of harm committed so long
as the court exercises restraint. In determining what remedy to award
for spoliation, the court should consider: (1) the culpability of the
spoliating party; (2) the degree of prejudice suffered by the aggrieved
party; and (3) the availability of lesser sanctions that could both avoid
unfairness to the aggrieved party and serve as an adequate penalty to
deter such future conduct.48
V. The ultimate sanction for contempt, which must be used sparingly, is
the entry of a default judgment against the contumacious party.49 “[A] default
judgment should be granted if no other sanction would be more appropriate under
the circumstances.”50 “[T]here must be an element of willfulness or conscious
disregard of a court order before entry of judgment is warranted.”51
W. When evaluating whether to enter or vacate a default judgment, this
Court generally considers the following factors:
48
Id. at *18 (internal citations omitted).
49
Minna v. Energy Coal S.p.A., 984 A.2d 1210, 1215–16 (Del. 2009); Lehman Cap. v.
Lofland, 906 A.2d 122, 131 (Del. 2006).
50
Hoag, 953 A.2d at 717.
51
Gallagher v. Long, 940 A.2d 945, 2007 WL 3262150, at *2 (Del. 2007) (TABLE);
accord Sundor Elec., Inc. v. E.J.T. Constr. Co., 337 A.2d 651, 652 (Del. 1975).
13
(1) the extent of the party’s personal responsibility; (2) the
prejudice to the adversary caused by the failure [to comply]; (3) a
history of dilatoriness; (4) whether the conduct of the party or the
attorney was willful or in bad faith; (5) the effectiveness of
sanctions other than dismissal, which entails an analysis of
alternative sanctions; and (6) the meritoriousness of the claim or
defense.52
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, this 19th day of November, 2021:
1. Plaintiffs are in contempt of this Court’s August 3, August 12, and
August 23 discovery orders. They undisputedly were bound by the orders, had
notice of them, and nevertheless violated them. They did not set a deadline to collect
and image the Key Repositories or respond to written discovery as ordered on
August 3. They did not stipulate to a deadline for submitting the Key Repositories
to a vendor as ordered on August 12. They did not provide the image of the Demeter
server to Defendants. And they were prejudicially late in providing the image of
Menashe’s laptop and Menashe’s cell phone, in violation of the August 23 order.
After this pattern of contumacious behavior, Menashe then attempted to thwart the
Court’s order to turn his cell phone over to Defendants’ vendor, directing the vendor
to restrict the material given to Defendants’ counsel.
2. Plaintiffs, and specifically Menashe, spoliated evidence in Menashe’s
text messages and on the laptop he used during due diligence. Plaintiffs were under
52
Connection, Inc. v. Synygy Ltd., 2021 WL 1943350, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 11, 2021)
(quoting Hoag, 953 A.2d at 718, and citing Minna, 984 A.2d at 1215).
14
a legal duty to preserve relevant evidence from at least the date they filed this suit,
and received a litigation hold notice from Defendants. Their spoliation was not
negligent; Menashe’s destruction of his text messages, which persisted through two
depositions about DG BF’s recordkeeping, was intentional.
3. Plaintiffs’ contempt and spoliation caused Defendants incredible
prejudice. The only way Defendants would obtain Plaintiffs’ discovery material in
advance of trial was to review it themselves in the final days before trial, while
preparing for depositions without the benefit of that discovery material.
4. Each Minna factor supports entering a default judgment as a sanction.
a. Party Responsibility for Failure to Comply. Plaintiffs have
nobody to blame but themselves. Plaintiffs’ failure to meet their discovery
obligations began with their early partial collection and failure to preserve Demeter
repositories, and ended with Menashe’s spoliation of his text messages and attempt
to thwart this Court’s orders regarding his cell phone.
b. Prejudice to Defendants. As mentioned, Defendants have
suffered significant prejudice as a result of Plaintiffs’ contempt and spoliation, and
would have suffered incredible prejudice had the matter not been halted days before
trial.
c. History of Dilatoriness. While Plaintiffs bombarded Defendants
with discovery requests and motion practice, they completely ignored their
15
obligations to even image the Key Repositories until after the substantial completion
deadline passed, and provided some of those images only after the Court thrice
ordered them to do so. Even the simple order to overnight Menashe’s cell phone to
Defendants’ vendor was not timely followed. Plaintiffs did nothing to tend to their
affirmative obligations in this matter until after the deadlines passed, and could not
demonstrate any excusable neglect; their delays were of their own making. After
the Court got involved, Plaintiffs refused to comply with this Court’s orders to set
their own deadlines for their overdue discovery. Plaintiffs’ dilatoriness has plagued
this case.
d. Willfulness and Bad Faith. Plaintiffs have knowingly ignored
the Court’s clear and accommodating orders. Plaintiffs ignored their discovery
obligations in bad faith, while heaping trouble and expense upon Defendants.
e. Effectiveness of Sanctions Short of Dismissal. The Court has
been patient with Plaintiffs to a fault. The Court accommodated Plaintiffs when
Defendants sought hard deadlines and Plaintiffs asked for flexibility. The Court
gave Plaintiffs some grace and gave Delaware counsel the opportunity to lead
Plaintiffs out of their morass of noncompliance. The Court entered nearly
dispositive discovery sanctions, and noted it was considering an adverse inference
and dismissal, but Plaintiffs continued to ignore their obligations and this Court’s
orders. Repeated fee-shifting for motion practice and DG BF’s second 30(b)(6)
16
deposition, and allowing Defendants’ counsel to review Plaintiffs’ repositories at
Plaintiffs’ expense, had no effect. While Defendants have generously characterized
this state of affairs as “a Menashe problem,”53 I believe his counsel’s approach of
prioritizing bluster over substance has compounded the problem. It is clear that no
sanction short of dismissal has been or would be meaningful.
f. Meritoriousness of Plaintiffs’ Claims. Plaintiffs’ primary claim
is for fraud. Plaintiffs’ failure to answer written discovery substantially weakened
that claim, as they declined to identify any omissions or misrepresentations in
written discovery and so were precluded from offering any at trial. And even if
Plaintiffs could still prevail on that claim here, Plaintiffs have filed a claim for
fraudulent inducement in New York State based on these same facts, telling that
court that New York state and federal courts “ha[ve] exclusive jurisdiction over any
disputes ‘arising out of, or relating to’ the Purchase Agreement, including, without
limitation, Plaintiff’s claims that Defendants fraudulently induced it to enter into
the Purchase Agreement” by which it invested in AGR.54 Plaintiffs withdrew all
claims relating to that Purchase Agreement from this case.55 Plaintiffs’ remaining
claims for breach of AGR’s operating agreement due to AGR’s corporate
53
D.I. 247 at 25.
54
D.I. 212, Ex. 9 ¶ 7 (emphasis added).
55
D.I. 105.
17
governance practices offer only nominal damages, and do not support or seek any
injunctive relief.
5. All fees associated with discovery motions, with Defendants’ review of
Plaintiffs’ repositories, and Defendants’ counsel’s exemplary attempts to meet and
confer about discovery, are shifted to Plaintiffs.56 The parties shall submit a briefing
schedule to address the rest of Defendants’ fees, as requested in their October 28
motion.57 That fee motion shall be heard together with Defendants’ fully briefed
Motion to Recover Damages Resulting from Plaintiffs’ Unlawfully Issued
Injunction.58
/s/ Morgan T. Zurn
Vice Chancellor Morgan T. Zurn
56
Genger, 2009 WL 4696062, at *19; Ct. Ch. R. 37(b)(2).
57
D.I. 250.
58
D.I. 93.
18