H&S Ventures, Inc. v. RM Techtronics, LLC

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE H & S VENTURES, INC., Plaintiff, C.A. No. Nl 5C-l l-082 JRJ RM TECHTRONICS, LLC, Defendant. Date Subrnitted: December l6, 2016 Date Decided: January 18, 2017 ORDER GRANTING RM TECHTRONICS, LLC’S MOTION TO STAY OR DISMISS IN FAVOR OF ARBITRATION Upon consideration of Defendant RM Techtronics, LLC’s Motion to Stay or Dismiss in Favor of Arbitration,l and Plaintiff’s Response thereto;2 and the record in this case, IT APPEARS THAT: l. This dispute arises out of a 2013 transaction between Plaintiff H&S Ventures, Inc. (“H&S”) and Defendant RM Techtronics, LLC (“RM”) in Which H&S sold its assets to RM in exchange for one-third ownership in RM.3 RM and H&S signed multiple agreements in connection With the transaction, including the l RM Techtronics LLC’s Opening Brief Supporting its Motion to Dismiss or Stay in Favor of Arbitration (“Def. Mot. to Dismiss or Stay”) (Trans. ID. 59708705). 2 Memorandum of Law of Plaintiff H&S Ventures, Inc. in Opposition to RM Techtronics LLC’s Motion to Dismiss or Stay in Favor of Arbitration (“Pl. Opp. to Def. Motion to Dismiss or Stay”) (Trans. ID. 59803148). 3 See Cornplaint 1111 6-19 (Trans. ID. 58146083). Asset Purchase Agreement (“APA”), executed on October l4, 2013, and the LLC Operating Agreement (“LLC Agr_eement”), executed on December 23, 2013.4 2. The APA contains a “Put Right” Provision which provides that H&S “shall have the right to require [RM] to purchase all . . . of the Membership Units” owned by H&S “if and only if’ RM fails to meet three financial performance conditions (the “Put Conditions”), set forth in the APA, within twelve months from the Closing Date.5 3. The APA also contains an Integration Clause which provides: “This Agreement and the schedules referred to herein and the Transaction Documents constitute the entire agreements of the parties hereto with respect to the purchase of the Purchased Assets and the other transactions contemplated herein. Any reference herein to this Agreement shall be deemed to include the schedules 336 hereto. The APA defines “Transaction Documents” as “all such other bills of 7 .” In sale, endorsements, assignments, or other instruments or documents . addition, a form LLC Operating Agreement, referred to as a “counterpart” to the later-executed LLC Agreement,8 is listed as “Exhibit D” on the APA’s “List of Schedules and Exhibits.”9 The APA also contains a list of deliveries to be made by 4 ld. 1111 6_7. 5 Asset Purchase Agreement (“APA”) § 2.4(a) (Trans. ID. 58643392). 6 Id. § 18.3. 7 Id. § 3.2(a). 8 Id. § 3.2(¢). 9 Id. at 43. H&S to RM at the Closing; all of the Exhibits on the “List of Schedules and Exhibits,” including the LLC Operating Agreement, are expressly included in this iisr.‘° 4. The LLC Agreement contains an arbitration clause which provides: “[A]ny dispute, claim, or controversy arising from or related in any way to this agreement or the interpretation, application, breach, termination or validity thereof . will be resolved by arbitration before a single arbitrator in Hartford, Connecticut, pursuant to the commercial rules then obtaining of the American Arbitration Association” (the “Arbitration Provision”).ll The Arbitration Provision contains one exception for violations of Section ll of the LLC Agreement,12 which are instead subject to injunctive relief.13 5. The LLC Agreement includes an Integration Clause which provides: “This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement among the parties hereto pertaining to the subject matter hereof and supersedes all prior agreements and ”l4 understandings pertaining thereto. The LLC Agreement also contains the following Counterparts Provision: “This Agreement may be executed in any 10 Id. § 3.2(e). The other exhibits specifically included in the list are: Exhibit A (Bill of Sale), Exhibit B (Key Employee Agreements), and Exhibit C (Proprietary Rights and Noncompetition Agreements). Ia'. § 3.2(a)-(d). The list also includes “Transaction Documents.” ld. § 3.2(a). ll Limited Liability Company Agreement of RFCO Acquisition LLC (“LLC Agreement”) § 13.12 (Trans. ID. 58643531). 12 Section ll details the covenants relating to confidentiality See ia'. § ll.l. '3 Id. § 11.3. 141611.§13.11. number of counterparts with the same effect as if all parties hereto had signed the same document. All counterparts shall be construed together and shall constitute one instrument.”15 6. Sections 8.8(c) and 8.10 of the LLC Agreement specifically contemplate the APA’s Put Right Provision_the provision pursuant to which H&S has filed the instant suit against RM.16 7. On November lO, 2015, H&S sued RM for breach of contract.17 H&S seeks to enforce the Put Right defined in the APA, alleging that RM failed to meet the Put conditions by December 31, 2014.'8 8. On October 17, 2016, RM moved to dismiss or stay this suit in favor of arbitration.19 RM asserts that this dispute should be submitted to arbitration pursuant to the Arbitration Provision in the LLC Agreement.20 9. In opposition, H&S contends that this dispute arises solely under the APA, and therefore, the Arbitration Provision in the LLC Agreement is inapplicable21 H&S further argues that even if the Arbitration Provision is deemed applicable, RM waived its right to demand arbitration because RM '5 Id. § 13.7. 16 Ia'. §§ 8.8(c) (referring to the Put Right Provision in the APA and defining “Asset Purchase Agreement”), 8.10 (twice referring to § 2.4 of the APA). 17 See Complaint. ‘81¢1.111111,15_16,18_19,22. '9 Def. Mot. to Dismiss or Stay. 20 See id. 21 See Pl. Opp. To Def. Motion to Dismiss or Stay. 4 substantially participated in these proceedings, and because RM waited over ten months to raise the issue of arbitration.22 10. RM contends that the Arbitration Provision is broad and applies because it is incorporated into the APA,23 RM argues that it has not waived its right to demand arbitration because H&S has not been prejudiced by Rl\/I’s delay in bringing this motion.24 ll. The APA and the LLC Agreement are integrated and must be read together. The APA’s definition of “Transaction Documents” is broad, including a list of “all such . . . bills of sale, endorsements, assignments, or other instruments ”25 This broad definition of “Transaction Documents” includes the or documents. LLC Agreement.26 The APA’s List of Schedules and Exhibits includes a form LLC Agreement,27 and the APA’s Integration Clause states that the Transaction Documents and Schedules, along with the APA, “constitute the entire agreements of the parties hereto.”28 The APA’s list of documents to be delivered at the 22 See id. 23 See Def. Mot. to Dismiss or Stay at 13-17; RM Techtronics LLC’s Reply Brief Supporting its Motion to Dismiss or Stay in Favor of Arbitration at 1-6 (“Def. Reply Br.”) (Trans. ID. 59864854). 24 Def. Reply Br. at 13. 25 APA § 3.2(3). 26 See, e.g., Zimmerman v. Crothall, 62 A.3d 676, 715 n.212 (Del. Ch. 2013) (Deeming the term “Indemnified Party,” defined in the contract as “includ[ing] the Purchasers and their affiliates and their respective officers, directors, trustees, agents, representatives, employees, and controlling persons,” to include an individual the Court identified as an “agent,” given that it was a “broad definition”). 27 APA at 43. 28 Id. § 18.3. Closing expressly includes the LLC Agreement.29 Moreover, the LLC Agreement, ”30 which functions to “further[] the transaction outlined in the [APA], references the APA’s Put Right Provision in two sections and states that it “supersedes all prior agreements.” The numerous cross-references between the two agreements,31 and the fact that they are both parts of the same overall transaction,32 are “sufficient nexus[es] to justify the merging of . . . these documents.”33 12. The Arbitration Provision encompasses disputes “in any way related to” the LLC Agreement. In BA YPO Parmership v. Technology JP, LP,34 at issue was an arbitration clause containing the language, “arising out of and related to the »35 Transactions. The dispute in BAYPO arose under an agreement that was separate from, but integrated with, the agreement which contained the arbitration 29 Id. § 3.2. 30 See BA YP() Lta'. P ’ship v. Tech. JV, LP, 940 A.2d 20, 27 (Del. Ch. 2007). 2‘ See, e.g., APA §§ 3.2(a), 18.3; LLC Agreement §§ 8.8(¢), 8.10. 32 See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 202 (1981) (“[W]ritings that are part of the same transaction are interpreted together.”). 33 BA YPO, 940 A.2d at 28 n.33. lt is not fatal to RM’s integration argument that the APA and the LLC Agreement were signed at different times. See id. Also persuasive to this determination are the paragraphs in the Complaint which reference the LLC Agreement. See Complaint 1[11 10, 13, 17 (Trans. ID. 58146083). The Complaint cites the Net Cash Flow Provision and definition, and refers to the LLC Agreement for the definition of Net Cash Flow. Id. 11 13; see also LLC Agreement § 1.27. The APA states: “[I]n the event that the Seller exercises the Put Right, the Purchaser shall distribute to the Seller, a percentage, equal to the Seller’s Percentage Interest (as defined in the [LLC] Operating Agreement), of the Purchaser’s Net Cash Flow (as Such term is defined in the [LLC] Operating Agreement) as of the date of the exercise of the Put Right . . . .” APA § 2.4(a). The Complaint’s reference to Net Cash Flow, which is inextricably linked to the Put Right, further evidences the applicability of the Arbitration Provision to this dispute. 34 Id. 25 Id. at 28 n.io. clause.36 Because the agreements were integrated, the Court of Chancery found the language sufficient to send the dispute to arbitration37 Here, the language “in any way” precedes “related to” in the Arbitration Provision. The phrase “in any way” thus makes the Arbitration Provision here even broader than that at issue in BAYPO. Given this language, it is apparent that the parties intended for the Arbitration Provision to have a broad scope.38 13. The claim sub judice is related to the LLC Agreement: the LLC Agreement contemplates the Put Right in two sections; the execution of the LLC Agreement, along with the other Transaction Documents, perfected the Closing as contemplated in the APA; and the LLC Agreement and the APA are integrated and therefore should be read together. Consequently, this dispute does not arise solely under the APA.39 26 ld. at 27_28. 37 Id. at 28. 38 See Douzinas v. Am. Bureau of Shipping, Inc., 888 A.2d 1146, 1150 (Del. Ch. 2006); see also, e.g., Rose Heart, Inc. v. Ramesh C. Batta Assocs., P.A., 1994 WL 164581, at *4 (Del. Super. Apr. 12, 1994); Karish v. SI Int’l, Inc., 2002 WL 1402303, at *2 (Del. Ch. June 24, 2002); Bayless v. Davox Corp., 2000 WL 268310, at *1 (Del. Ch. Mar. l, 2000). 39 See James & Jackson v. Willie Gary, 906 A.2d 76 (Del. 2006). The Arbitration Provision satisfies both prongs of the Willie Gary test. As to prong l, the Arbitration Clause generally provides for arbitration of all disputes. There is one narrowly tailored exception that does not contravene this conclusion. See West IP Communications, Inc. v. Xactly Corp., 2014 WL 3032270 (Del. Super. June 24, 2014). As to prong 2, the Arbitration Provision references the American Arbitration Association’s set of rules (“AAA Rules”). The AAA Rules empower arbitrators to decide the issue of arbitrability. See Carder v. Carl M. Freeman Communities, 2009 WL 106510 (Del. Ch. Jan. 5, 2009). Therefore, it is proper for an arbitrator to ultimately decide Whether this claim is arbitrable. 7 14. With regard to waiver, while it is undisputed that RM waited over ten months before it raised the issue of arbitration, and actively participated in this lawsuit for over ten months,40 Delaware has a strong public policy favoring arbitration.41 It is very difficult to waive arbitration even when there has been a delay in demanding arbitration, or where the party demanding arbitration has already played a substantial role in the litigation.42 Courts generally look to whether the party opposing arbitration has suffered any prejudice as a result of the delay in demanding arbitration.43 Here, there is no substantial prejudice to H&S resulting from the delay. While it is true that H&S’s Motion for Summary Judgment will not be considered by the Court should this claim be arbitrable, H&S will have the opportunity to present its arguments, and related evidence, to an arbitrator. Consequently, this prejudice is not so substantial as to overcome the strong public policy favoring arbitration in Delaware.44 40 See W.R. Ferguson, Inc. v. William A. Berbusse, Jr., Inc., 59 Del. 229, 216 A.2d 876 (Del. 1966)_; Fr:f¢.'on S!er:f (.`o. v. Weher Engfneer.ing C'r)._. 517 A.2d 281 (Dcl. Ch. 1988). 'H S'ee, e.g.. .)'mne.r.firh`¢m, h?c', v. Rc{v!)'?t.’r)!t Sert-‘. (`0.. 424 A.2d 665_. 663 {'D€|- Ch- 1980)- 42 See. e.g.. The Tr)w:? of .S`:'H_\,)rm: v. Ker.')‘ ("!_v. Le\'y ('r)m'!, 2004 WL 2671745. at *3 (Del. Ch. Nov. 9, 2004); Parfi Holdl`ng AB v. Mirror lmage Internet, Inc., 842 A.2d 1245, 1260 (Del. Ch. 2004); Ballenger v. Appll'ea' Digital Solutions, Inc., 2002 WL 749162, at *7 (Del. Ch. Apr. 24, 2002); Wilshire Rest. Group, Inc. v. Ramaa'a, Inc., 1990 WL 195910, at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 5, 1990`}; Actz'on Drug (_`0. v. R. Buyh'n C0., 1989 WL 69394, at *5 (Del. Ch. June 19. 1988). 42 E.g., Halpem Me.»,!. Servs.. /.Lc_' v. Gem»y. 2012 WL 691623, at *3 (Del. Ch. :-=eh. 17, 2012) (“[I]t is not merely the inconsistency of a party’s actions, but the presence or absence of prejudice which is determinative of waiver.”) (quoting Gavlik Constr. C0. v. H.F. Campbell Co., 526 F.2d 777, 783 (3d Cir. 14)7’5)_). 44 E.g., .s'H-r_w-na, 2004 WL 2621745, at *3. NOW THEREFORE, for the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or Stay in Favor of Arbitration is GRANTED and this matter is STAYED pending, and subject to, the arbitrator’s decision on arbitrability. The parties shall report the arbitrator’S decision on arbitrability to the Court within 30 days of its issuance. IT IS SO ORDERED. /s/ J an R. Jurden J an R. Jurden, President Judge