COURT OF CHANCERY
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
MORGAN T. ZURN LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
VICE CHANCELLOR 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734
June 27, 2022
Andrew H. Sauder, Esquire Sean A. Meluney, Esquire
Dailey LLP Benesch, Friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff LLP
1201 North Orange Street, Suite 7300 222 Delaware Avenue, Suite 801
Wilmington, Delaware 19808 Wilmington, Delaware 19801
David B. Anthony, Esquire
Berger Harris LLP
1105 North Market Street, Suite 1100
Wilmington, Delaware 19801
RE: DG BF, LLC, et al. v. Michael Ray, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2020-0459-MTZ
Dear Counsel,
I write to address the defendants’ pending Motion to Recover Damages
Resulting from Plaintiffs’ Improperly Issued Injunction (the “Motion”).1 As the
Motion is substantially independent of the merits of this action, I refer any readers
seeking context to the many decisions that have preceded this one.2 The Motion is
denied for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
1
Docket Item (“D.I.”) 93. Citations in the form “Mot. —” refer to the Motion. Citations
in the form “AB —” refer to plaintiffs’ answering brief in opposition to the Motion,
available at D.I. 112.
2
E.g., DG BF, LLC v. Ray (Series E Letter), 2020 WL 3867123, (Del. Ch. July 9, 2020);
DG BF, LLC v. Ray (Motion to Dismiss Opinion), 2021 WL 776742 (Del. Ch. Mar. 1,
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2020-0459-MTZ
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I. BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs initiated this action on June 11, 2020, claiming the defendants
had fraudulently induced the plaintiffs’ investment in the defendant company and
denied plaintiffs certain governance rights under the company’s operating agreement
in connection with a pending financing round. The plaintiffs enjoyed some initial
success at the pleading stage, when the Court was required to take their allegations
as true. The plaintiffs’ complaint was accompanied by a request to enjoin the
pending financing round.3 That request was heard on July 26, 2020.4
Applying the standard for a temporary restraining order, I granted a
TRO enjoining the closing, but not the shopping, of the Series E
financing, pending a decision on [plaintiffs’] Count VII regarding what
the Operating Agreement requires for approving Series E financing
with a liquidation preference above Series D unitholders. I expedited
Count VII in view of the timeline [the company] estimated for closing
the Series E financing.5
Based on the parties’ positions at argument, and applying Court of Chancery
Rule 65(c), I determined an appropriate bond for the TRO would be $100,000. But
the parties were unable to agree on a form of order or the type of bond, and required
2021); DG BF, LLC v. Ray (Dismissal Order), 2021 WL 5436868 (Del. Ch. Nov. 19,
2021); DG BF, LLC v. Ray (Fee Letter), 2022 WL 1618799 (Del. Ch. May 23, 2022).
3
D.I. 2 (styled as a motion for status quo order); D.I. 6 (same).
4
D.I. 28.
5
Series E Letter, 2020 WL 3867123, at *1.
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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June 27, 2022
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additional guidance from the Court.6 The parties also briefed their positions on
Count VII, and I heard argument on July 6, 2020.7
That same day, I entered an order implementing the TRO.8 That order
observed:
Section 17.1 of the AGR Sixth Amended and Restated Limited
Liability Agreement (“Operating Agreement”) states that “Each
Member hereby waives any requirement for security or the posting of
any bond or other surety and proof of damages in connection with any
temporary or permanent award of injunctive, mandatory or other
equitable relief and further agrees to waive the defense in any action for
specific performance that a remedy at law would be adequate.” Neither
party has raised this provision of the Operating Agreement, but given
the dispute surrounding the bond and the unambiguous nature of the
provision I determine a bond is not required to effectuate this Order.9
On July 9, I concluded that the Company’s Operating Agreement did not require the
Company to seek approval from the Series D Manager in order to issue the Series E
financing, denied the plaintiffs’ request for a declaratory judgment on their
6
D.I. 26; D.I. 27.
7
D.I. 34.
8
D.I. 32.
9
Id.; D.I. 33; see D.I. 1, Ex. A. My order misquoted Section 17.1; I have replicated the
full provision here.
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2020-0459-MTZ
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Count VII, and terminated the TRO.10 The defendants filed their Motion seeking
damages from the TRO on October 8, 2020.11
From there, the plaintiffs’ claims were substantially narrowed on the
defendants’ motion to dismiss.12 In particular, the parties agreed that the counts
pertaining to the Series E financing were moot; other claims were dismissed for
failure to state a claim.13 The surviving claims were eventually dismissed due to the
plaintiffs’ litigation misconduct, and the defendants’ fees were shifted to the
plaintiffs under the bad faith exception.14 While the litigation was bogged down in
contentious and contumacious discovery, the defendants’ Motion sat to the side.
After dismissing the plaintiffs’ claims and shifting fees, I gave the parties the
opportunity to supplement their positions on the Motion, which they exercised by
June 8, 2022.15
10
See D.I. 39, Series E Letter.
11
See generally Mot.
12
Motion to Dismiss Opinion, 2021 WL 776742.
13
Id. at *27.
14
Dismissal Order, 2021 WL 5436868; Fee Letter, 2022 WL 1618799.
15
D.I. 274; D.I. 276.
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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II. ANALYSIS
The Motion seeks $10,528 in salary costs for the time Company executives
spent addressing the request to enjoin the Series E Financing between the June 26
hearing and the July 9 termination of the TRO.16 I begin with the plaintiffs’
argument that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to award damages for an
improvidently granted injunction when the parties had contractually agreed to waive
the bond requirement.17
Until the enactment of Court of Chancery Rule 65.1, the Court of Chancery
lacked subject matter jurisdiction to award damages even on a Rule 65 injunction
16
Mot. at 10.
17
The defendants’ Motion headed that argument off at the pass, asserting recovery is
possible even where a bond was waived. Mot. at 8 n.1 (citing and quoting Concord Steel,
Inc. v. Wilm. Steel Processing Co., 2008 WL 902406, at *12 & n.92 (Del. Ch.
Apr. 3, 2008)). The plaintiffs did not make that argument in their November 3, 2020,
opposition brief, and instead waited until June 8, 2022, to argue in a letter that the Court
lacks subject matter jurisdiction to award damages because no bond was ever filed.
D.I. 276. While the Court gave the parties the opportunity to supply additional submissions
on the Motion given the passage of time and fortunes in this matter, the plaintiffs could and
should have made their gating jurisdictional argument in their opposition brief. As the
defendants point out, an argument that was not briefed is waived. D.I. 274 at 3 (citing
Emerald P’rs v. Berlin, 2003 WL 21003437, at *43 (Del. Ch. Apr. 28, 2003), aff’d, 840
A.2d 641 (Del. 2003)). “While it is unfortunate the jurisdictional question has been raised
so late in this litigation, I note that the question of whether Chancery has subject matter
jurisdiction over an action cannot be waived and may be raised by the parties or the Court
at any time.” Perlman v. Vox Media, Inc., 2019 WL 2647520, at *2 n.5 (Del. Ch. June 27,
2019).
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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bond.18 In Morris v. Whaley, this Court noted, “[I]t has generally been held that in
the absence of statute a court of equity has no power to assess damages upon an
injunction bond as an incident of the original cause. In such case the party aggrieved
is put to his action at law on the bond.”19 MacFarlane v. Garrett provides an early
example of a claim at law for wrongfully obtaining an unwarranted restraining order,
which the Superior Court concluded must meet the elements for malicious
prosecution.20 Morris also noted that there is not a “warrant sustaining such a
procedure in the practice of the English High Court of Chancery.”21 While the
federal rules at the time included language providing the pursuit of surety liability
without an independent action, Chancery’s rules at the time did not.22 Rule 65.1
followed, which “provides for proceedings against sureties in the Court of Chancery
without need to resort to an independent action” including where security is given
in the form of a bond, stipulation, or other undertaking.23
18
Morris v. Whaley, 203 A.2d 618 (Del. Ch. 1964).
19
Id. at 619 (collecting authorities).
20
49 A. 175 (Del. Super. 1900).
21
Morris, 2013 A.2d at 619.
22
Id. at 619–20.
23
Ct. Ch. R. 65.1; Donald J. Wolfe, Jr. & Michael A. Pittenger, Corporate and Commercial
Practice in the Delaware Court of Chancery § 4.07 (2021).
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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Against that backdrop, I turn to whether this Court can award damages for an
improvident injunction where the parties contractually agreed to waive the bond
requirement. In my view, Delaware jurisprudence does not plainly answer that
question. In 2008 in Concord Steel, this Court specified that a bond waiver was not
a liability waiver.24 Two years later, in Guzzetta v. Service Corporation of Westover
Hills, the Delaware Supreme Court considered, as “the only issue on appeal,”
“whether the trial court abused its discretion in setting the amount of the injunction
bond.”25 In considering that issue, the Court stated: “[A] wrongfully enjoined party
has no recourse other than . . . the security,” and “[a] party that is wrongfully
enjoined may recover damages resulting from the injunction, but that recovery is
limited to the amount of the bond.”26 In my view, Guzzetta did not address on all
fours whether the Court of Chancery could grant damages if no bond was posted,
although it supports the conclusion that it cannot.
Guzzetta was then applied to a bond waiver in Newell Rubbermaid v. Storm,
which required a bond to be posted notwithstanding a contractual waiver “in order
to assure [the enjoined party’s] ability to recover damages if it turns out that the TRO
24
Concord Steel, 2008 WL 902406, at *12 & n.92.
25
7 A.3d 467, 469 (Del. 2010).
26
Id. at 469–70.
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was improperly issued.”27 This Court has since frequently enforced contractual bond
waivers in entering injunctive relief, without comment on liability for an improperly
issued injunction.28
Last year, in Concerned Citizens of Estates of Fairway Village v. Fairway
Cap, LLC, the Delaware Supreme Court considered whether an enjoined party could
recover damages after the Court of Chancery released a bond, in the absence of any
objection from the still-enjoined party.29 A preliminary injunction had been granted
favoring two plaintiffs, one of which posted the requisite bond.30 That plaintiff
reached a settlement with the enjoined defendant, and upon that plaintiff’s motion,
27
2014 WL 1266827, at *12 n.72 (Del. Ch. Mar. 27, 2014) (citing Guzzetta v. Serv. Corp.
of Westover Hills, 7 A.3d 467, 469 (Del. 2010)).
28
E.g., Hologram, Inc. v. Caplan, 2022 WL 117807, at *1 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10, 2022)
(“Caplan knowingly and voluntarily agrees to waive the requirement in Rule 65(c) that
Hologram post a bond in connection with the preliminary injunction granted by the Court
herein. Therefore, no bond shall be required in connection with this Order.”); Premier
Dealer Hldg. Co., LLC v. Moore, 2019 WL 3936123, at *3 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 2019) (“Mr.
Moore waives the requirement of Court of Chancery Rule 65(c), and Premier is not
required to post a bond or give security in order for the preliminary injunction to issue.”);
see also PNEC, LLC v. Liberty Utilities (Pipeline & Transmission) Corp., 2018 WL
705704, at *1 (Del. Ch. Feb. 2, 2018) (ORDER) (“The bond requirement of Court of
Chancery Rule 65(c) is hereby waived.”); Cocam Int’l Enters. Ltd. v. Svensrud, 2020 WL
4547384, at *3 (Del. Ch. Aug. 05, 2020) (“It is also ORDERED that Plaintiff Cocam need
not post a bond.”).
29
256 A.3d 737 (Del. 2021).
30
Id. at 739.
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the Court terminated the bond.31 The remaining plaintiff and the defendant sparred
over the amount of a replacement bond, but the plaintiff never posted a replacement
bond, and the defendant did not move to lift the injunction.32 The Court of Chancery
noted the case was nearly over and did not require the second plaintiff to file a bond
for the injunction to remain in place.33 The trial court stated it did not intend to
prevent the defendant from recovering damages in the event it had been wrongfully
enjoined, and that the lack of a replacement bond did not bar the defendant’s
recovery.34 After trial, the Court of Chancery found in the defendant’s favor, and
awarded the defendant damages from the wrongful injunction, all of which accrued
after the bond was terminated.35
The plaintiff appealed. The Delaware Supreme Court began by pointing out
the two purposes of Rule 65(c)’s bond requirement.
31
Id. at 740–41.
32
Id. at 741–42.
33
Id. at 741.
34
Id. at 742.
35
Id. at 743.
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First, it assures the enjoined party that it may readily collect damages
from the funds posted or the surety provided in the event that it was
wrongfully enjoined, without further litigation and without possible
insolvency of the assured. Second, it provides the plaintiff with notice
of the maximum extent of its liability, since the amount of the bond is
the limit of the damages the defendant can obtain for a wrongful
injunction, provided the plaintiff was acting in good faith. This
limitation on damages is sometimes referred to as the “Injunction Bond
Rule.”36
The defendant below argued to the Delaware Supreme Court that federal
authority provides that when a trial court exercises its discretion to not require
security for a preliminary injunction, the lack of security does not bar the enjoined
party from later seeking damages.37 On the facts before it, the Delaware Supreme
Court concluded that the defendant “remained enjoined but could not recover
damages for a wrongful injunction” because the defendant failed to ask that the
injunction be lifted when the second plaintiff declined to post a replacement bond.38
The Court distinguished the facts before it from a situation where the trial court
issued an order granting a preliminary injunction without security, explaining that
36
Id. at 744 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
37
Id. at 745 (citing Atomic Oil Co. of Okla., Inc. v. Bardahl Oil Co., 419 F.2d 1097 (10th
Cir. 1969), and Factors, Etc., Inc. v. Pro Arts, 562 F. Supp. 304 (S.D.N.Y. 1983)).
38
Id. at 746.
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“[w]hether damages would have been recoverable . . . had the court issued a
preliminary injunction without security[] is . . . irrelevant.”39
My review of Delaware law on damages claims in the presence or absence of
an injunction bond did not reveal an explicit answer as to whether this Court may
award damages to a defendant who was improperly enjoined by an order that waived
the bond requirement, for any reason or because the parties contracted for a bond
waiver. I therefore turn to other sources.
The weight of authority from other jurisdictions provides: “In the absence of
the elements of an action for malicious prosecution, it is established by the great
weight of authority that no action will lie by defendant in an injunction suit,
independently of bond or undertaking, for damages for the wrongful suing out of the
injunction.”40 In the absence of malice or a bond, harm from an improvidently
entered injunction is “an instance of damnum absque injuria [(“loss without
remedy”)], and is like any ordinary suit which leaves the defendant heir to much
inconvenience and pecuniary loss, notwithstanding a final judgment in his favor.”41
39
Id. at 745.
40
45 A.L.R. 1517 (1926) (collecting cases).
41
Id. (quoting St. Louis v. St. Louis Gaslight Co., 82 Mo. 349 (Mo. 1884)); see also
Robinson v. Kellum, 6 Cal. 399 (Cal. 1856); Manlove v. Vick, 55 Miss. 567 (Miss. 1878);
Hussey v. Neal, 49 Ga. 160 (Ga. 1873); Steller v. Thomas, 45 N.W.2d 537 (Minn. 1950);
Gaume v. N.M. Interstate Stream Comm’n, 450 P.3d 476, 482–83 (Ct. App. N.M.) (“[I]n
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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Allowing recovery in the absence of malice or a bond would be “tantamount to
permitting a malicious [] prosecution action against a plaintiff without allowing him
the usual common [] law shields of good faith and probable cause.”42 The injunction
bond was an equitable innovation designed to provide relief for an improvidently
entered injunction in the absence of malice.43
Federal jurisprudence is persuasive on this topic: Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure Rule 65(c) similarly requires a bond to secure preliminary injunctive
relief, and Rule 65.1 specifies an action on that bond can be brought in the equitable
proceeding that birthed the injunction.44 Federal law has consistently held a court in
equity lacks subject matter jurisdiction to award damages from an injunction in the
absence of a bond. In 1881, the United States Supreme Court concluded in Russell
cases where the trial court did not require the plaintiff to post security, courts continued to
adhere to the historical practice of denying damages to the wrongfully enjoined. . . . This
appears to remain the general rule today in every jurisdiction that has addressed the
question.”) (collecting cases and citing 45 A.L.R. 1517); Jamaica Lodge 2188 of Broth. of
Ry. and S.S. Clerks, Freight Handlers, Exp. And Station Emp. v. Ry. Exp. Agency, Inc., 200
F.Supp. 253 (E.D.N.Y. 1961); Greenwood Cty. v. Duke Power Co., 107 F.2d 484 (4th Cir.
1939); In re UAL Corp., 412 F.3d 775 (7th Cir. 2005).
42
Interlocutory Injunctions and the Injunction Bond, 73 HARV. L. REV. 333, 343–44
(1959).
43
Gaume, 450 P.3d at 481 (collecting authorities).
44
See Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 542 A.2d 1182, 1191 n.11 (Del. 1988).
DG BF, LLC v. Michael Ray, et al.,
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v. Farley45 that federal courts sitting in equity “can, in order to give complete relief,
enter judgment on an injunction bond.”46 Russell goes on: “Where no bond or
undertaking has been required, it is clear that the court has no power to award
damages sustained by either party in consequence of the litigation, except by making
such a decree in reference to the costs of suit as it may deem equitable and just.”47
A few years later, in Meyers v. Block, the United States Supreme Court reiterated:
Without a bond, no damages can be recovered at all. Without a bond
for the payment of damages or other obligation of like effect, a party
against whom an injunction wrongfully issues can recover nothing but
costs, unless he can make out a case of malicious prosecution.48
More recently, the United States Supreme Court has cited Russell for the
succinct proposition that “[o]beying injunctions often is a costly affair. . . . A party
injured by the issuance of an injunction later determined to be erroneous has no
action for damages in the absence of a bond.”49 As the Ninth Circuit has explained,
45
105 U.S. 433 (1881).
46
U.S. Steel Corp. v. United Mine Workers of Am., 456 F.2d 483, 491 (3d Cir. 1972)
(discussing Russell, 105 U.S. 433).
47
Russell, 105 U.S. at 437.
48
120 U.S. 206, 211 (1887).
49
W.R. Grace and Co. v. Local Union 759, Int’l Union of United Rubber, Cork, Linoleum
and Plastic Workers of Am., 461 U.S. 757, 770 & n.14 (1983) (citing Russell, 105 U.S. at
437 , and Buddy Sys., Inc. v. Exer-Genie, Inc., 545 F.2d 1164, 1167–68 (9th Cir. 1976),
cert. denied, 431 U.S. 903 (1977)).
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“the rule which prevails in the federal courts . . . . is that in the absence of . . . a bond,
there may be no recovery of damages for the issuance of a temporary injunction even
although it may have been granted without just cause.”50
More locally, the Third Circuit has concluded Russell was intended “to
suggest that such an award was not within the jurisdiction of a court of equity.”51 It
has also explained that a bond represents the plaintiff’s consent to liability up to that
amount as the price for an injunction; “[o]therwise, plaintiff could be found liable
for damages only on the theory of malicious prosecution, an action at law.” 52 The
Third Circuit has stated: “There is no such thing as a cause of action incurred as a
result of compliance with an injunction. The only recourse seems to be a suit on a
bond given by the party procuring the injunction.”53 Where no bond was entered to
support an injunction, no suit will lie.54
50
Benz v. Compania Naviera Hidalgo, S.A., 205 F.2d 944, 948 (9th Cir. 1953) (collecting
authorities).
51
U.S. Steel, 456 F.2d at 491.
52
Com. Tankers Corp. v. Nat’l Maritime Union of Am., 553 F.2d 793, 800 (3d Cir. 1977)
(citing Benz, 205 F.2d at 948, and 7 JAMES WM. MOORE ET AL., MOORE’S FEDERAL
PRACTICE ¶ 65.10(1) at 65.98-99)).
53
Campbell Soup Co. v. Martin, 202 F.2d 398, 399 n.1 (3d Cir. 1953) (citing Meyers v.
Block, 120 U.S. 206 (1887)).
54
Id. at 400. I do not believe the two cases the appellee in Concerned Citizens presented
to the Delaware Supreme Court dislodge this weight of authority. See supra note 37. Both
address jurisdiction to award damages from an improvident injunction where a bond
secured a preliminary injunction, but was decreased or discharged upon entry of a
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The federal explanation that a court of equity lacks subject matter jurisdiction
to award damages for an improvident injunction in the absence of a bond is tidily
consistent with the Delaware law with which we began. This court of equity lacks
subject matter jurisdiction to award damages for an improvidently entered
injunction, because that claim must be brought as a claim for malicious prosecution
in a court of law; the exception is when a bond is ordered and entered, which brings
the claim within the Chancery proceeding due to Court of Chancery Rule 65.1.55
I conclude that because a bond was not entered to secure an injunction due to
the parties’ contractual waiver of that bond, this Court lacks subject matter
jurisdiction to award damages for an improvidently entered injunction.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants’ Motion is DENIED. To the extent
an order is required to effectuate this decision, IT IS SO ORDERED. I believe that
all outstanding matters in this case has been resolved; I ask counsel to please notify
me if this is not the case within twenty days.
permanent injunction that was then reversed on appeal. Atomic Oil, 419 F.2d at 1100–01;
Factors Etc., 562 F. Supp. at 305. Neither case addresses jurisdiction to award damages
in the absence of a bond, and Factors Etc. actually reinforces that under the “injunction
bond rule,” “[a]bsent a claim of malicious prosecution, damages for wrongful injunction
are limited to the amount of a bond.” 562 F. Supp. at 308.
55
See Morris, 203 A.2d at 619–20; Ct. Ch. R. 65.1.
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Sincerely,
/s/ Morgan T. Zurn
Vice Chancellor
MTZ/ms
cc: All Counsel of Record, via File & ServeXpress