IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
HAUPPAUGE DIGITAL, INC., §
§ No. 442, 2022
§
Defendant-Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below—Court of Chancery
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ C.A. No. 2019-0848
JAMES RIVEST, §
§
Plaintiff-Below, §
Appellee. §
Argued: May 3, 2023
Decided: July 10, 2023
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.
ORDER
This 10th day of July, 2023, after consideration of the argument of counsel, the
parties’ briefs and the record on appeal, it appears to the Court that:
(1) This appeal concerns the extent to which a Delaware corporation’s
production of books and records under Section 220 of the Delaware General
Corporation Law should be subject to confidentiality restrictions.
(2) The corporation—a “long dark” publicly traded company known as
Hauppauge Digital, Inc. (“Hauppauge” or the “Company”)—develops,
manufactures, and sells consumer electronics. Hauppauge experienced financial
difficulties in 2010, eventually disclosing a going-concern risk in its Form 10-K for
fiscal year ending September 30, 2013 (the “2013 Form 10-K”). Its audited
financial statements for the same period also contained a going-concern
qualification. The Company “went dark” after involuntarily delisting from the
Nasdaq stock exchange in 2013 for failing to meet listing requirements and
subsequently terminated its registration as an issuer in July 2014 and stopped
reporting its financials publicly. Hauppauge’s common stock—its only class of
equity—has nonetheless continued trading in the public over-the-counter (the
“OTC”) market. Despite Hauppauge’s lack of current public financial reporting, in
2018, James Rivest, an individual investor, bought shares on the OTC market as a
“deep value” investment.1
(3) In July 2019, Rivest sent Hauppauge a Section 220 demand to inspect
its books and records for the purpose of valuing his shares. Receiving no response,
Rivest retained counsel and sent Hauppauge a second demand in October 2019,
seeking books and records, including financial statements for the years 2016
through 2018 and any appraisals or valuations relating to the value of the Company,
its stock, or any of its assets. Like the July 2019 demand, this demand stated that
Rivest was seeking documents so that he could value his shares. After Hauppauge
failed to respond to the second demand, Rivest brought a Section 220 action in the
Court of Chancery; a Master presided over the matter. To simplify the issues for
1
Rivest v. Hauppauge Digital, Inc., 2022 WL 3973101, at *8 (Del. Ch. Sep. 1, 2022).
2
decision, Rivest limited his request to historical financial statements for closed
periods, withdrawing his request for appraisals or other valuation-related
documents.
(4) In December 2019, Rivest moved for a default judgment, and the
Master set a deadline requiring Hauppauge to respond by April 20, 2020. Four days
after the deadline expired, the Master granted Rivest’s motion for a default
judgment. Hours later, the Master received a letter from Hauppauge’s sole director
and chief executive officer, Kenneth Plotkin.2 In the letter, Plotkin expressed his
belief that Hauppauge, “a public corporation,”3 was not required to disclose its
financial statements because it was deregistered. He claimed that, because
Hauppauge shares continued to trade on the public OTC market, Rivest did not need
books and records to value his shares. Around this time, Rivest made a
supplemental demand for 2019 and 2020 financial statements. The following
month, on May 5, the Master received an additional letter from Plotkin, in which he
agreed to produce the documents subject to “a reasonable Non Disclosure
Agreement.”4 Raising the issue for the first time, Plotkin stated that “the public
2
Plotkin, purporting to represent the Company pro se, sent the letter, dated April 20, via regular
mail, but it was not postmarked until April 21, after the deadline had expired. Id. at *7.
3
Id. at *8.
4
Id.
3
release of the financial condition of the Company will cause a loss of confidence
among our customers and result in the loss of business[.]”5
(5) Ultimately, the default judgment entered against Hauppauge was
vacated.6 Thereafter, Hauppauge moved for summary judgment, claiming that
Rivest could not establish a proper purpose as a matter of law. Among other things,
it complained for the first time that public disclosure would implicate a newly
amended Rule of the Securities Exchange Commission, Rule 15c2-11 (the
“Quotation Rule”).7 Effective September 28, 2021, the Quotation Rule imposes
requirements before any broker-dealer or qualified interdealer quotation system
(jointly, “Market Makers”) can provide a quotation for a security in the OTC
market. Relevant here, the “information review requirement” prohibits a Market
Maker from publishing a quotation unless the Market Maker has obtained and
reviewed certain current and publicly available information about the issuer.
Market Makers may, however, continue to provide unsolicited quotations in the
OTC “Expert Market,” but, to protect retail investors, only certain sophisticated
investors can view those quotations.8
5
Id.
6
Id. at *9.
7
Id. at *10–11.
8
See id. at *11 (citing Cass Sanford, Understanding the Expert Market, OTC MARKETS BLOG
(Mar. 25, 2021), https://blog.otcmarkets.com/2021/03/25/understanding-the-expert-market;
Publication or Submission of Quotations Without Specified Information, 85 Fed. Reg. 68124,
68145 & 68186 n.646 (Oct. 27, 2020)).
4
(6) In September 2021, Hauppauge’s motion for summary judgment was
denied without prejudice. The following month, in October 2021, the Master held
a one-day trial via Zoom. The trial was recorded to facilitate de novo review by the
Vice Chancellor if exceptions were taken.
(7) At trial, Plotkin and Hauppauge’s chief financial officer, Gerald
Tucciarone, testified that any public disclosure of Hauppauge’s financial statements
would harm its business, citing two incidents from 2014. They testified that two
manufacturers reduced Hauppauge’s credit lines after the release of the Company’s
2013 Form 10-K disclosing its financial statements.9 They also testified about a
2014 meeting between Plotkin and a buyer from Best Buy that led Plotkin to suspect
that disclosure of the 2013 Form 10-K caused Best Buy to cut ties with Hauppauge.10
After the trial, the Master issued a report (the “Report”), recommending that Rivest
had a proper purpose in seeking to inspect Hauppauge’s books and records to value
his holdings and that the production be subject to a two-year confidentiality
agreement. Notably, only Rivest took exception to the Report, challenging the
recommendation that confidential treatment was warranted.
9
Id. at *21.
10
Tucciarone further testified that Hauppauge operates in a “pretty competitive environment” and
that if he got his hands on a competitor’s financial information that showed it was “doing very
poorly,” he would use it against the competitor. Id. at *22.
5
(8) Thereafter, the Vice Chancellor, in a memorandum opinion and final
judgment, declined to adopt the Report in its entirety. Hauppauge did not take
exception with the Master’s recommendation that the court find that Rivest had a
proper purpose; consequently, the Court of Chancery adopted that recommendation
as a ruling of the court. The court did not, however, adopt the recommendation that
the production be made subject to a two-year confidentiality agreement. Rather, the
Vice Chancellor, reviewing the facts and law de novo, held that, under this Court’s
decision in Tiger v. Boast Apparel, Inc.,11 the Section 220 production was not
subject to a presumption of confidentiality and that “the Company failed to provide
a credible basis for a threat of harm sufficient to warrant a confidentiality
restriction.”12 Thus, the court ordered Hauppauge to produce annual and quarterly
financial statements for closed periods (2016-2022) free of any confidentiality
restrictions. Relatedly, the court noted that “Delaware law should strive to maintain
its historically symbiotic relationship with the federal securities laws”13—a nod to
the SEC’s Quotation Rule.
(9) On appeal, Hauppauge argues that the Court of Chancery erroneously
applied Tiger’s balancing test by imposing a heightened burden on the Company.
Hauppauge claims that the Vice Chancellor decided, without guidance from this
11
214 A.3d 933 (Del. 2019).
12
Rivest, 2022 WL 3973101, at *23.
13
Id. at *26.
6
Court, that the evidentiary standard within Tiger’s balancing test is a “credible
basis.”14 Hauppauge further asserts that the appropriate Tiger evidentiary standard
should be “a credible basis, by a preponderance of the evidence, with the burden
placed upon [the plaintiff-stockholder][.]”15 Alternatively, citing Southpaw Credit
Opportunity Master Fund LP v. Advanced Battery Techs., Inc.,16 a pre-Tiger case,
Hauppauge—an unregistered public company—argues that it should be treated like
a private company for the purpose of analyzing whether a Section 220 production
should be made subject to confidentiality restrictions. We disagree with these
contentions. As will be explained below, the Vice Chancellor’s application of
Tiger’s balancing test was proper.
(10) This Court reviews the Court of Chancery’s determination of any
limitation or condition on a Section 220 production under an abuse-of-discretion
standard that “is highly deferential.”17 “Undergirding this discretion is a recognition
14
It is the case that the Court of Chancery used the phrase “credible basis”—a term of art in our
Section 220 jurisprudence that typically refers to the evidentiary standard that a stockholder must
satisfy to establish a proper purpose for an investigatory inspection demand—and that “credible
basis” does not appear in Tiger. See Seinfeld v. Verizon Communications, Inc., 909 A.2d 117, 123
(Del. 2006) (“Stockholders need only show, by a preponderance of the evidence, a credible basis
from which the Court of Chancery can infer there is possible mismanagement that would warrant
further investigation—a showing that ‘may ultimately fall short of demonstrating that anything
wrong occurred.’ That ‘threshold may be satisfied by a credible showing, through documents,
logic, testimony or otherwise, that there are legitimate issues of wrongdoing.’”).
15
Opening Br. at 18.
16
2015 WL 915486 (Del. Ch. Feb. 26, 2015).
17
KT4 Partners LLC v. Palantir Technologies, Inc., 203 A.3d 738, 748 (Del. 2019) (quoting Wal-
Mart Stores, Inc. v. Ind. Elec. Workers Pension Trust Fund IBEW, 95 A.3d 1264, 1272 (Del.
2014)).
7
that the interests of the corporation must be harmonized with those of the inspecting
stockholder.”18 “Given ‘the breadth of this discretion, Delaware courts have viewed
the determination of whether to impose a condition or limitation on an inspection as
inherently case-by-case and fact specific.’”19 “When an act of judicial discretion is
under review the reviewing court may not substitute its own notions of what is right
for those of the trial judge, if his judgment was based upon conscience and reason,
as opposed to capriciousness or arbitrariness.”20
(11) At the outset, we note that Hauppauge conflates the burden of proof
placed upon a stockholder to establish a proper purpose in a Section 220 action with
the Court of Chancery’s authority under Section 220 to impose limitations and
conditions on a Section 220 production. Once a stockholder has established a proper
purpose to inspect a corporation’s books and records, whether the Court of Chancery
then imposes limitations or conditions on the Section 220 production is not
predetermined by either the stockholder’s or the corporation’s failure to carry an
evidentiary burden. This is because Section 220 vests the Court of Chancery with
discretion to “prescribe any limitations or conditions with reference to” a books-and-
records inspection.21 It may, of course, in the exercise of that discretion, refrain
18
Id. (quoting Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., Inc., 681 A.2d 1026, 1035 (Del. 1996)).
19
Id. (quoting United Techs. Corp. v. Treppel, 109 A.3d 553, 558 (Del. 2014)) (internal quotations
omitted).
20
Chavin v. Cope, 243 A.2d 694, 695 (Del. 1968).
21
8 Del. C. § 220 (c)(3).
8
from imposing such limitations or conditions. In either case, the court’s analysis is
not constrained by a burden of proof as that concept is typically understood. Instead,
it engages in a context-driven balancing exercise, the result of which will not be
disturbed on appeal unless clearly unreasonable or capricious.22
(12) In Tiger, this Court provided guidance regarding the Court of
Chancery’s broad discretion under Section 220, holding that a Section 220
production is not subject to a presumption of confidentiality.23 We explained that,
in determining whether to impose or lift confidentiality restrictions, the Court of
Chancery “should weigh the stockholder’s legitimate interests in free
communication against the corporation’s legitimate interests in confidentiality.”24
“Although a corporation need not show specific harm that would result from
disclosure before receiving confidentiality treatment in a Section 220 case, one
cannot conclude reflexively that the need for confidentiality is readily apparent.”25
The Court of Chancery, exercising its discretion, “must assess and compare benefits
and harms when determining the initial degree and duration of confidentiality.”26
Importantly, the standards for placing confidentiality restrictions are not the same as
22
Chavin, 243 A.2d at 699.
23
Tiger, 214 A.3d at 939.
24
Id. at 934. See CM & M Group, Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 793 (Del. 1982) (“Counterposed
to the duty to protect the rights of the stockholder, the Court has the duty to safeguard the rights
and legitimate interests of the corporation.”).
25
Tiger, 214 A.3d at 939 (cleaned up) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
26
Id.
9
those for lifting existing restrictions.27 “If anything, the burden upon the corporation
is more demanding—and the corresponding burden upon the stockholder less
demanding—when the parties request a court to craft an initial confidentiality order
than when a stockholder later requests a court to modify a presumably reasonable
existing confidentiality order.”28 “[W]e expect that the targets of Section 220
demands will often be able to demonstrate that some degree of confidentiality is
warranted where they are asked to produce nonpublic information.”29 As noted
above, the Court of Chancery exercises its discretion under Section 220 when
applying the Tiger balancing test; neither the corporation nor the stockholder has an
evidentiary burden under Tiger.
(13) Here, the Court of Chancery, weighing the parties’ legitimate interests
under Tiger, concluded that Hauppauge’s interest in placing confidentiality
restrictions on financial statements for closed periods did not outweigh Rivest’s
legitimate interests in free communication. It reasoned that the harm Hauppauge
experienced in 2014—the reduction of trade credit and the loss of the Best Buy
business—was not caused by Hauppauge disclosing financial statements in its 2013
Form 10-K “but rather because of the information those statements provided about
27
Id. (“[S]imply because a party has not shown circumstances justifying modification of a
judgment does not indicate that judgment would be entered against it in the first instance.”).
28
Id.
29
Id.
10
its financial condition.”30 It determined, in other words, that the threat of harm did
not come from the disclosure of the financial statements itself but the fact that
Hauppauge’s weak financial condition became public knowledge.31 The court
found that, “[a]gainst that meager showing, Rivest has identified important
interests[,]” including his wish to confer with other stockholders about the value of
the Company and his stock.32 It further explained that, if it accepted Plotkin’s and
Tucciarone’s trial testimony as a basis for a confidentiality restriction, the court—
finding said testimony unpersuasive—“would be endorsing a presumption in
disguise” in violation of Tiger.33
(14) Likewise, as to Hauppauge’s claim that it should be treated like a
private company under Southpaw, the Court of Chancery observed that “[t]o err on
the side of confidentiality, notwithstanding serious doubts about whether the
information is confidential, is to apply a presumption of confidentiality.”34 In
30
Rivest, 2022 WL 3973101, at *21.
31
Id. at *22 (“The Company’s officers seem to believe that their counterparties would not want to
be in business with them if they knew the Company’s true financial condition. They are effectively
seeking a confidentiality restriction so that they can continue to create a misleading impression
about the Company’s financial strength. That is not an equity that favors a confidentiality
restriction.”); Id. (noting that “[p]ortions of the Company’s 2015 to 2018 federal tax returns were
made public in 2020 in connection with unrelated litigation in New York. Tucciarone conceded
that, despite this disclosure, there is no evidence that any competitor used information in those tax
returns against the Company.”).
32
Id. at *24.
33
Id. at *23 (noting that the testimony that Plotkin and Tucciarone gave about the threat of harm
“was exaggerated and relied on a formulaic assertion about the reality of conducting business in a
free-market economy.”).
34
Id. at *19.
11
reaching its conclusion, the court noted “the fact that the Company accepted money
from public investors and then took those investors dark with it undercuts the
Company’s claim of confidentiality.”35 The court held that Hauppauge failed to
make a persuasive showing of harm sufficient to outweigh Rivest’s interest or
support imposing a two-year confidentiality restriction on financial statements for
closed periods. This, in our view, represents a faithful application of Tiger’s
balancing test. And the Court of Chancery did not abuse its discretion in ordering
the Section 220 production free from confidentiality restrictions, as its
determination rested upon a reasonable basis, not clearly unreasonable or capricious
grounds.36
(15) Hauppauge also contends on appeal that the Vice Chancellor
committed legal error by considering how a confidentiality condition would affect
Rivest’s ability to communicate freely with other stockholders and buy or sell shares
of the Company, particularly in light of the SEC’s Quotation Rule. Hauppauge
relies on Southpaw, which noted that “the Court of Chancery does not craft use and
confidentiality restrictions on Section 220 productions based on the rights and
35
Id. See id. at *18 (“[R]etail investors continue to hold ninety percent of [Hauppauge’s] shares.
The Company is not an entity that has consistently preserved its status as a private entity. Nor did
the Company build confidentiality restrictions into its constitutive documents.”).
36
Cf. KT4 Partners LLC, 203 A.3d at 764 (holding that the Court of Chancery’s denial of a request
to modify a limitation on a Section 220 production was an abuse of discretion, because this Court
could not discern a reasonable basis for the denial).
12
restrictions found in securities laws.”37 The Vice Chancellor, however,
distinguished Southpaw on this very point, noting that the stockholder in that case
sought to use Section 220 as a vehicle for enforcing the securities laws. The court
found that, here, by contrast, Rivest sought to enforce a right to obtain financial
statements under Section 220, then use the financial statements in a way that he is
permitted to do under the securities laws (the Quotation Rule). 38 In the same vein,
Hauppauge contends that Rivest’s rights could not have been impinged by a
confidentiality condition, because he is an accredited investor—having a net worth
greater than $1,000,000—and can view unsolicited quotations of Hauppauge’s
stock in the OTC Expert Market. This issue was not fairly presented to the Master
or the Vice Chancellor, and it is therefore waived. As noted above, neither party
took exceptions to the Master’s recommendation that Rivest had a proper purpose,
and that recommendation was adopted as a ruling of the Court of Chancery.
(16) Lastly, relying on DiGiacobbe v. Sestak,39 Hauppauge asserts that the
court erred because it reversed material credibility determinations made by the
Master without holding a new trial. But Hauppauge misconstrues DiGiacobbe, as
37
Rivest, 2022 WL 3973101, at *26 (“The Southpaw report did not say that this court never
considers the federal securities laws when dealing with Section 220 actions. . . . The Master
cautioned that Section 220 should not be converted into a method of enforcing the requirements
of the federal securities laws.”).
38
See Carroll, 453 A.2d at 792 (“[O]nce a proper purpose has been established, any secondary
purpose or ulterior motive of the stockholder becomes irrelevant.”).
39
743 A.2d 180 (Del. 1999).
13
a principle of law, requiring a new trial before the court may make an independent
witness credibility assessment in its de novo review. In DiGiacobbe, this Court held
that a Master is constitutionally prohibited from exercising judicial power, and
therefore a “master’s rulings, findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
recommended disposition have no effect until they are adopted by a judge after a
‘meaningful review.’”40 Notably, DiGiacobbe was decided before the Court of
Chancery adopted rules setting forth the standard of review by which a Master’s
findings should be reviewed.41 There, the Court of Chancery also reviewed the
Master’s recommendation without a record. DiGiacobbe held that, when a litigant
takes exception with a Master’s report, the Court of Chancery reviews the Master’s
findings—both factual and legal—de novo. We explained that de novo review
“generally means a new trial or hearing on questions of fact” but that it is also
“possible” for the court to conduct a review de novo on the record.42 In this case,
the trial, which took place via Zoom, was recorded. Given the completeness of the
record available to the Court of Chancery, the determination whether any further
hearings were necessary to complete its de novo review of the Master’s findings
40
Id. at 183 (quoting Redden v. McGill, 549 A.2d 695, 698 (Del. 1988)).
41
See Court of Chancery Rule 144.
42
DiGiacobbe, 743 A.2d at 184.
14
was a sound exercise of the Court of Chancery’s discretion.43 The Vice Chancellor
did not err in reviewing the record de novo without a new trial.
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the opinion and order of the
Court of Chancery be AFFIRMED.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Gary F. Traynor
Justice
43
See McCloskey v. McCloskey, 2014 WL 4364469, at *9 (Del. Ch. Sept. 3, 2014) (videotaping
the trial before the Master facilitated the Chancellor’s review of the record de novo without a new
trial where the Chancellor determined that no good cause existed to conduct a hearing to take
additional testimony), aff’d, 113 A.3d 1081, 2015 WL 1973853 (Del. Apr. 29, 2015) (TABLE).
15