IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
JOSHUA J. ANGEL, individually and on )
behalf of all others similarly situated, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) C.A. No. 2019-0235-SG
)
WARRIOR MET COAL INC., APOLLO )
MANAGEMENT LLC, ARES )
MANAGEMENT LLC, CASPIAN )
CAPITAL LP, FIDELITY )
INVESTMENTS, FRANKLIN )
MUTUAL ADVISORS LLC, GSO )
CAPITAL PARTNERS LP, and KKR )
CREDIT ADVISORS (US) LLC, )
)
Defendants. )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: March 16, 2021
Date Decided: June 30, 2021
Julia B. Klein, of KLEIN LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff Joshua
J. Angel.
Matthew F. Davis and Justin T. Hymes, of POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON
LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Stephen M. Baldini, Brian Carney, and
Stephanie Lindemuth, of AKIN GUMP STRAUSS HAUER & FELD LLP, New
York, New York, Attorneys for Defendants Warrior Met Coal, Inc., Apollo
Management LLC, Ares Management LLC, Caspian Capital LP, Fidelity
Investments, Franklin Mutual Advisors LLC, GSO Capital Partners LP, and KKR
Credit Advisors (US) LLC.
GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
The Plaintiff here received a right to acquire equity in a Delaware limited
liability company (an “LLC”) via a bankruptcy court order. He failed to file
paperwork required by the LLC to receive the equity; his right was forfeited
accordingly. Per the Plaintiff, he did not receive notice sufficient to the exercise of
his rights. He now brings a litany of claims against some, but not all, of the parties
involved in implementing the bankruptcy court order; with these claims, he seeks to
frame his loss as a remediable impoverishment. As I explain in more detail below,
all but one of his attempts must fail.
This matter involves the bankruptcy of a coal company, Walter Energy, Inc.
(“Debtor”). The Plaintiff, Joshua Angel, was a holder (a “Lienholder”) of the
Debtor’s first lien debt. An ad hoc steering committee (the “Steering Committee”)
composed of other such Lienholders—including all the Defendants here, with the
exception of Warrior Met Coal Inc. (“Warrior, Inc.”)—proposed a purchase of
Debtor’s assets in return for a release of debt, including the Lienholders’ debt. Angel
was not a member of the Steering Committee.
The Steering Committee’s proposal involved the Debtor’s assets being
transferred to a purpose-created Delaware entity, Coal Acquisition LLC, later
renamed Warrior Met Coal LLC (“Warrior LLC”). In exchange, the Debtor’s
creditors would receive equity in Warrior LLC (the “Distribution”). Additionally,
Lienholders would be permitted to participate in a rights offering (the “RO”),
1
intended to raise sufficient capital to ensure Warrior LLC equity would continue to
have value. The RO permitted Lienholders to acquire Warrior LLC equity at what
Angel perceives as a favorable price. This acquisition was ultimately approved by
order of the Bankruptcy Court dated January 8, 2016 (the “BC Order”).1 Angel did
not object to the proposal in the Bankruptcy Court.
The BC Order required that the Distribution and the RO comply with
securities law. To facilitate that provision, the Steering Committee and trustees for
both the unsecured creditors and the Lienholders negotiated procedures for the
Distribution, under which the Lienholders would be required to demonstrate
entitlement to the Distribution—and, therefore, receive Warrior LLC equity—by
submitting eligibility documents by a date certain, December 31, 2016. After that
date, the Lienholders’ rights to distribution of equity were forfeited to Warrior LLC.
The documentation was required to establish, among other things, that each equity
claimant was an accredited investor in compliance with SEC regulations. Notice of
this condition was sent to Lienholders by Warrior LLC’s agent, Kurtzman Carson
Consultants LLC (“KCC”). In Angel’s case, the notice was sent to his designated
agent, UBS Financial Services Inc. (“UBS”). Angel did not respond and did not
receive equity in the distribution.
1
This order, oddly, is not attached to the Amended Complaint.
2
With respect to the RO, Angel alleges that he agreed to purchase Warrior LLC
equity. The RO, however, required payment in cash. Angel failed to pay for the
equity, and Warrior LLC did not distribute any equity to him under the RO.
In his First Amended Complaint (the “Complaint”), Angel avers that he did
not receive notice of any duty to submit eligibility documents in connection with the
Distribution, and that, in any event, he had a vested right to receive equity in the
Distribution, without condition. With respect to the RO, he alleges that he submitted
sufficient instructions for the ultimate payment of the subscription amount such that
he should be deemed to have purchased equity under the RO.
In vindication of his rights, the Plaintiff serves up a dog’s breakfast of claims:
breach of contract against Defendant Warrior, Inc. and the members of the Steering
Committee; breach of fiduciary duty against members of the Steering Committee;
the tort of conversion; unjust enrichment; and declaratory judgment. The
Defendants have moved to dismiss all counts and for summary judgment with
relation to the breach of contract claim. What follows is consideration of those
motions. I find that the unjust enrichment claim survives.
3
I. BACKGROUND2
A. The Parties and Relevant Nonparties
Plaintiff Joshua J. Angel is a former owner of 9.50% senior secured notes due
2019 (the “9.50% Notes”) of non-party Walter Energy, Inc. (defined above as
“Debtor”) and a lender under the Debtor’s credit agreement dated April 1, 2011 (the
“Term Loan” and, together with the 9.50% Notes, the “First Lien Debt”).3
Defendant Warrior Met Coal Inc. (defined above as “Warrior, Inc.”) is a
Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Alabama.4 It is the
successor entity to Warrior Met Coal, LLC (defined above as “Warrior LLC”).
Warrior Met Coal, LLC was formed under the name Coal Acquisition LLC (“Coal
Acquisition”), for the express purpose of acquiring Debtor’s assets via a credit bid;5
it changed its name from Coal Acquisition LLC to Warrior Met Coal, LLC, on
March 4, 2016.6 Warrior LLC converted into a corporation, Defendant Warrior Inc.,
on April 12, 2017.7
The remaining Defendants—Apollo Global Management LLC, Ares
Management LLC, Caspian Capital LP, Fidelity Investments, Franklin Mutual
2
The facts, except where otherwise noted, are drawn from the First Am. Compl., Dkt. No. 41
[hereinafter “Compl.”], and exhibits or documents incorporated therein, and are presumed true for
the purposes of this Motion to Dismiss.
3
Compl., at Introduction.
4
Compl. ¶ 8.
5
Compl. ¶ 8.
6
Compl. ¶ 8.
7
Compl. ¶ 8.
4
Advisers LLC, GSO Capital Partners LP, and KKR Credit Advisors (US) LLC
(collectively, the “Steering Committee Defendants”)—were all holders of First Lien
Debt. These defendants later together created an ad hoc steering committee in
connection with the Debtor’s bankruptcy proceedings (defined above as the
“Steering Committee”).8 The Complaint does not allege that the Steering Committee
was formed pursuant to any Bankruptcy Court order, or that it operated pursuant to
any governing contract or agreement.
B. The Debtor’s Restructuring
Debtor filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 15,
2015, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Alabama, Southern
Division (the “Bankruptcy Court”).9 The Steering Committee Defendants
collectively retained Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP (“Akin Gump) as legal
counsel to represent the Steering Committee in connection with the Debtor’s
restructuring.10
8
See generally Compl.
9
Compl. ¶ 20.
10
Compl. ¶ 17.
5
On September 3, 2015, the Steering Committee Defendants formed Coal
Acquisition,11 a Delaware limited liability company.12 Coal Acquisition was formed
“for the purposes of bidding on and acquiring a select portion of the Debtor[’]s
assets.”13 The Steering Committee Defendants were the sole members of Coal
Acquisition at the time and, accordingly, had complete control of the entity.14
C. The Genesis of the Distribution
On November 5, 2015, Coal Acquisition entered into an asset purchase
agreement to acquire the Debtor’s assets, including the entirety of the First Lien
Debt, in return for Class A equity in Coal Acquisition (a transaction defined as the
“Distribution,” above). The debt to be surrendered, per the agreement, included debt
owned by non-Steering Committee Lienholders like Angel.15
The Bankruptcy Court established so-called “Bid Procedures” for the
Distribution that meant to ensure that Coal Acquisition—the equity of which was
the consideration for the Debtor’s assets—had value. In particular, the Bid
11
The Complaint uses passive voice, but the implication is that Coal Acquisition LLC was formed
by the Steering Defendants. See Compl. ¶ 18 (“The Steering Committee Defendants were the sole
members of Warrior LLC until the March 31, 2016 Rights Offering and [Distribution] closings.”);
Compl. ¶ 21 (“On September 3, 2015, Warrior LLC, then operating as Coal Acquisition [LLC],
was formed . . . .”). At any rate, I make this Plaintiff-friendly assumption here.
12
Compl. ¶ 21.
13
Compl. ¶ 21.
14
Compl. ¶ 18–19.
15
Compl. ¶ 22–23.
6
Procedures required Coal Acquisition to show that it would be able to carry on the
Debtor’s business with adequate liquidity to honor its contractual obligation.16
D. The Development of the Rights Offering
To fulfill the liquidity obligation of the Distribution, Coal Acquisition pledged
to raise $200 million of operating capital from existing holders of debt—i.e., the
rights offering defined as “RO” above.17 The RO offered existing Debtor
stakeholders—both the unsecured creditors and the Lienholders18—the opportunity
to purchase Class B equity in Coal Acquisition.19
To cover the possibility that the RO would not raise the full $200 million
required by the Bankruptcy Court, the Steering Committee Defendants committed
to backstopping the RO.20 The Steering Committee Defendants agreed to split the
backstop commitment according to each Defendant’s pro rata portion of the First
Lien Debt.21 As consideration for the backstop commitment, the Steering
Committee Defendants collectively received22 278,438 fully paid Class A Units of
16
Compl. ¶ 26.
17
Compl. ¶ 26.
18
Compl. ¶ 25.
19
Compl. ¶¶ 30–31. The Class B Units were later converted to Class A Units, which were then
collectively converted into equity in Warrior, Inc. Compl. ¶ 54.
20
Compl. ¶ 27.
21
Compl. ¶ 27.
22
The passive voice is used in the Amended Complaint and adopted here. Compl. ¶ 28.
7
Coal Acquisition—equivalent to about 5% of all Class A Units fully outstanding at
the time the commitment was made.23
E. The Bankruptcy Court Order and Execution of the Distribution and RO
The Bankruptcy Court approved both the Distribution and RO by order on
January 8, 2016 (defined above as the “BC Order”).24 Accordingly, representatives
of the various stakeholders—including the Steering Committee, Coal Acquisition,
the trustee of the unsecured creditors, and the indenture trustees for the First Lien
Debt holders (defined in the Complaint as the “Indenture Trustees”)25—then
negotiated and agreed on the procedure by which stakeholders could participate in
each transaction.26 The Complaint is entirely silent as to how, if at all, this
“agreement” was memorialized, under what authority the participants presumed to
act, or the terms of the “agreement,” other than the “procedure” alleged to have
resulted from the negotiation.27 For the Distribution, that procedure required
existing stakeholders, including Lienholders like Angel, to provide Coal Acquisition
with a credit bid eligibility letter (a “CBEL”).28 If a Lienholder did not return the
CBEL by December 31, 2016, the Lienholder’s right to the equity would be
23
Compl. ¶ 28.
24
Compl. ¶ 29.
25
Compl. ¶ 35; see Compl. ¶¶ 35–40.
26
See Compl. ¶¶ 35–38.
27
See Compl. ¶¶ 35–39.
28
Compl. ¶¶ 35–36.
8
forfeited.29 As to the RO, stakeholders were given, for no consideration, a right to
participate in the RO;30 to exercise that right, the stakeholders were required to
execute a subscription agreement (“Subscription Agreement”) by March 29, 2016.31
After establishing the deadlines, those same representatives—which, I note,
included the Indenture Trustees—agreed that the CBEL should be delivered, by Coal
Acquisition, to the stakeholders in tandem with documents informing them of the
RO;32 this was done on February 25, 2016.33 Certain stakeholders, including Angel,
did not receive either the CBEL or the RO-related documents, however.34 As a result
of that error, the Bankruptcy Court ordered an extension of the March 29, 2016 RO
participation deadline—to April 15, 2016—for the unsecured creditors, but did not
extend the deadline for the Lienholders.35 In June 2016, the Defendants re-sent the
CBELs—return of which was necessary to participate in the Distribution.36 Angel
alleges that he did not receive this updated CBEL either.37
Angel filed an executed Subscription Agreement, along with the requisite
paperwork, on March 28, 2016, “one day prior to the Subscription Deadline” for the
29
Compl. ¶ 36.
30
Compl. ¶ 31.
31
Compl. ¶ 46.
32
Compl. ¶ 38.
33
Compl. ¶ 38. Shortly after this, Coal Acquisition changed its name to Warrior LLC.
34
Compl. ¶ 41.
35
Compol. ¶ 42–43, 46; Ex. E.
36
Compl. ¶ 48.
37
Compl. ¶ 57.
9
RO.38 The Complaint alleges that, included with requisite paperwork was an
instruction by Angel to wire payment for the new equity to be issued in the RO.39
However, that is the only allegation as to the payment;40 there are no details
regarding the recipient of the instruction, what the instruction said, the amount (if
any) authorized, or when payment was to be made—all details presumably in the
possession of the Plaintiff. In fact, the Complaint avers nothing other than the
existence of the instructions—and the parties do not dispute that payment was not
actually made.41 Angel allegedly became aware that he did not, in fact, own Warrior
LLC equity when he did not receive the dividend that was issued in connection with
Warrior LLC’s initial public offering and conversion into a corporation, Defendant
Warrior, Inc.42 He contacted Warrior, Inc. and Akin Gump, and first learned of the
CBEL requirement through his correspondence with an Akin Gump partner.43
F. Procedural History
Angel filed his Verified Class Action Complaint for Breach of Fiduciary
Duties and Breach of Contract on March 27, 2019.44 Following motion practice, he
38
Compl. ¶ 53.
39
Compl. ¶ 53.
40
See Compl. ¶ 53.
41
Tr. of Mar. 16, 2021 Oral Argument on Defs.’ Mots. To Dismiss and for Partial Summ. J., at
14:23–15:1, Dkt. No. 75 [hereinafter “MTD Tr.”].
42
Compl. ¶ 56.
43
Compl. ¶ 57.
44
Dkt. No. 1.
10
filed a First Amended Complaint in July of 2020.45 That complaint contains five
counts: (I) Declaratory Judgment; (II) Conversion; (III) Breach of Contract related
to the RO; (IV) Unjust Enrichment; and (V) Breach of Fiduciary Duty.46 The
Defendants filed a Motion to Dismiss47 and a Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment48 only a day apart. The two motions were briefed in tandem and heard
together on March 16, 2021. This opinion addresses the Motion to Dismiss, granting
it for all counts except Count IV; such a ruling moots the Motion for Partial
Summary Judgment.
II. ANALYSIS
The Defendants seek dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6). At this stage, I must take
as true all well-pled allegations and draw inferences therefrom in the light most
favorable to the Plaintiffs.49 I may only grant the motion if I find it not reasonably
conceivable that the Plaintiffs may prevail.50 I turn, then, to each of the five counts
of the Complaint, albeit out of order as presented in that pleading.
45
Dkt. No 41.
46
Compl. ¶¶ 68–100.
47
Dkt. No. 63.
48
Dkt. No. 64.
49
Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Capital Holdings LLC, 27 A.3d 531, 536 (Del.
2011).
50
Id. at 536. In a recent Memorandum Opinion, I referred to “reasonable conceivability” using
the venerable English term “plausible.” In re Oracle Corp. Deriv. Litig., 2021 WL 2530961, at
*2 (Del. Ch. June 21, 2021). I am well aware that our Supreme Court has rejected the federal
standard applied to motions under Rule 12(b)(6)—denominated a “plausibility” standard—in favor
of the Delaware standard, “reasonable conceivability.” See Cent. Mortg., 27 A.3d at 537. It is of
course within the purview of the Supreme Court to provide the standard under which a pleading,
attacked for failure to state a claim, shall be reviewed; my review here, as in Oracle, is made under
11
A. Count III, for breach of contract, must be dismissed.
In Count III, the Plaintiff alleges that a contract exists between the
Defendants—that is, the Steering Committee Defendants who are fellow
Lienholders and Warrior, Inc.—and Angel, the Plaintiff Lienholder, because the
Defendants used Angel’s portion of the first lien debt to obtain the BC Order
implementing the Distribution and RO.51 This supposed contract allegedly
“contractually entitled” Angel both “to receive adequate notice of the Rights
Offering and the distributions emanating therefrom”52 and to receive Warrior LLC
equity via the Distribution.53
the “reasonable conceivability” standard—that is, assuming the truth of the allegations, together
with plaintiff-friendly inferences, I may only dismiss if I find that the plaintiff is nonetheless unable
to recover “under any reasonably conceivable set of circumstances.” Cent. Mortg., 27 A.3d at 535.
I occasionally use the term “plausible” herein, but not to refer to the federal standard set out in
Twombly and Iqbal and rejected by Central Mortgage. Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S.
544, 556 (2007); Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (2009). Instead, I use the term “plausible”
because, in my perhaps modest understanding of English, it is a synonym of “reasonably
conceivable,” and is clearer and better English usage than the double-barreled term. “Plausible,”
in this context, per the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, means “Having a show of truth,
reasonableness or worth.” 2 The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 1603 (3rd ed. 1973). With
that adjective describing a claim, then, the claim is plausible if it has an appearance of
reasonableness.
In any event, I have applied the Delaware standard of reasonable conceivability, as I understand
it, throughout. Per Central Mortgage, the federal 12(b)(6) standard requires something “beyond
mere ‘possibility’ but short of ‘probability[,]’” while the Delaware “governing standard of
conceivability is more akin to ‘possibility.’” Accordingly, as I understand this pronouncement, a
claim survives if its success appears possible to a rational objective observer. Where this decision
dismisses a claim, it is under that standard.
51
Compl. ¶ 80.
52
Compl. ¶ 80.
53
Compl. ¶ 81.
12
I confess to some confusion as to the source of this alleged agreement; that
the Plaintiff’s property—his share of the First Lien Debt—was implicated in a court
order does not, to my mind, create a contract. The facts, as I understand them from
the Complaint, are thus: The BC Order approved a transfer of the Debtor’s assets to
Warrior LLC as fair to the creditors, in that they would receive equity in Warrior
LLC in return for the sublimation of their debt; the Lienholders would, via the
Distribution, receive equity pro rata to their secured debt. The Bankruptcy Court
did not address the terms under which the Distribution would be made, other than to
require it to comply with securities law.54 The Steering Committee, a subgroup of
the Lienholders, were to be the initial members of Warrior LLC pending the
distribution.55 They negotiated terms with fiduciaries appointed by the Bankruptcy
Court—one for the Lienholders and one for the unsecured creditors—and arrived at
a condition whereby the Lienholders would submit documentation proving that they
were accredited investors, so that the Distribution would qualify as a private
placement under the securities regulations.56
Warrior LLC sent notice of the Distribution through its agent, KCC, in March
2016, informing the Lienholders that they must return documentation, including an
54
Compl. ¶¶ 29–30.
55
Compl. ¶ 18.
56
Compl. ¶ 34.
13
executed copy of the CBEL, a draft eligibility letter.57 That notice encouraged the
Lienholders to submit the documentation by March 20, 2016, in order to timely
receive their share of the Warrior LLC equity, but made clear that the right to receive
their share of equity would be forfeit absent compliance by December 31, 2016. 58
The parties do not dispute that Angel did not provide the requisite paperwork.59
Although the parties do dispute whether and when Angel received actual
notice, I accept, for purposes of this motion, the allegation that the notice was sent
to an ineffective email address for Angel’s agent, and that he never received that
notice. Angel alleges the Defendants breached a contractual duty to ensure that he
received both notice of the RO60 and his pro rata share of Warrior LLC equity,61 in
light of the fact that his lien against Debtor was cancelled.
The problem is, Angel is unable to identify the contract. He suggests that an
amorphous blend of the indenture agreement under which he became a debtor entity
Lienholder, the BC Order, Warrior LLC’s Operating Agreement, and equity, read
together, require that he receive both proper notice and his share of interest in
Warrior LLC; but he is unable to frame a cogent explanation of an actual contract,
express or implied, that was breached. The indemnification agreement between the
57
Compl. ¶¶ 34–36.
58
Compl. Ex. C, at 2.
59
See Compl. ¶ 58.
60
Compl. ¶ 80.
61
Compl. ¶ 81.
14
Lienholders and the Debtor does not bind Warrior LLC. The BC Order is a court
order, not a contract. And nothing in the LLC Operating Agreement provides for
distribution without documentation.
Angel does point out that the BC Order provides that Lienholders “shall
receive” equity in Warrior LLC.62 But, again, that assertion is not an allegation of
breach of contract, but rather a claim that the BC Order was breached.63 The BC
Order is, manifestly, not a contract. To the extent that Angel believes that any
defendant violated the BC Order, nothing in this decision is in prejudice of his right
to seek relief from the Bankruptcy Court. But to succeed under a contract theory, a
plaintiff must, at minimum, point to a meeting of the minds between the parties,
mutual consideration, and a promise to perform. Such a contractual relationship is
absent here. Finally, to the extent Angel makes a contractual argument as to the RO,
the Complaint fails to allege that Angel’s failure to pay—the fatal flaw to his
participation in the RO—was related to the inadequate notice. Angel returned the
62
Pl.’s Answering Br. to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss First Am. Compl. 14, Dkt. No. 68 [hereinafter
“MTD AB”].
63
To the extent that the Complaint argues that the decisions jointly made by the Steering
Committee, the Indenture Trustees, and the trustees for the unsecured creditors to effectuate the
BC Order were not followed, those allegations do not point to any agreement or understanding,
the terms of which were breached. In other words, if the Complaint alleged that some parties
created a contractual distribution protocol to which Angel was a party or third-party beneficiary,
that was subsequently breached to Angel’s detriment, that could presumably state a claim. But
such a protocol is not pled in the Complaint, nor can I infer such even at the pleadings stage, based
on the allegations here.
15
requisite paperwork to participate in the RO in a timely fashion.64 The Complaint
does not explain why, or even assert that, the allegedly inadequate notice, sufficient
for his return of the requisite paperwork, was insufficient to allow him to pay for his
participation in the RO.
B. Count V, for breach of fiduciary duty, must be dismissed.
As with his breach of contract claim, Angel has failed to perfect this claim for
the most basic of reasons: here, a failure to establish fiduciary duty. Count V appears
to allege that the Steering Committee Defendants owed the Plaintiff fiduciary duties
because the Plaintiff was entitled to become an owner of Warrior LLC Class A units
and the Steering Committee Defendants were controlling equityholders of Warrior
LLC.65 In particular, the Complaint alleges: (1) that the Steering Committee
Defendants acted as the alter ego of Warrior, Inc., Warrior LLC, and Coal
Acquisition and, accordingly, owed the Plaintiff fiduciary duties by holding
themselves as acting on the behalf of the Lienholders;66 (2) that Warrior LLC’s
Operating Agreement provides for the same fiduciary duties that a Delaware
corporation owes;67 (3) that the Steering Committee Defendants controlled Warrior
LLC by virtue of their majority equity ownership;68 (4) that, by virtue of their control
64
Compl. ¶ 53.
65
See Compl. ¶¶ 93–96.
66
Compl. ¶ 93.
67
Compl. ¶ 94.
68
Compl. ¶ 95.
16
of Warrior LLC, the Steering Committee Defendants owed fiduciary duties to
Warrior LLC equityholders;69 and (5) that Angel was entitled to become such an
equityholder.70 Angel also alleges that he “reposed a special trust in the Steering
Committee to act in his best interest because the Steering Committee was privy to
non-public and highly detailed information concerning” the Debtor—a special trust
that “likewise gave rise to fiduciary duties.”71
None of these allegations suffice to establish fiduciary duties. A sufficient
pleading that the Steering Committee Defendants owe fiduciary duties to the Warrior
LLC equityholders requires two allegations: first, that the Steering Committee
Defendants acted in concert in “some legally significant way,” thus forming a
control group,72 and second, that they exerted control over the managers of Warrior
LLC.73 The former is alleged throughout the Complaint, albeit without any
specificity—in fact, the actions of individual members of the Steering Committee
69
Compl. ¶¶ 95–96.
70
Compl. ¶ 96.
71
Compl. ¶ 97.
72
In re Hansen Med., Inc. S’holders Litig., 2018 WL 3030808, at *5 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2018);
Dubroff v. Wren Holdings, LLC, 2009 WL 1478697, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 22, 2009) (“Although a
controlling shareholder is often a single entity or actor, Delaware case law has recognized that a
number of shareholders, each of whom individually cannot exert control over the corporation
(either through majority ownership or significant voting power coupled with formidable
managerial power), can collectively form a control group where those shareholders are connected
in some legally significant way[—]e.g., by contract, common ownership, agreement, or other
arrangement[—]to work together toward a shared goal.” (italics added)).
73
Lacey on behalf of S. Copper Corp. v. Mota-Velasco, 2021 WL 508982, at *10 n.110 (Del. Ch.
Feb. 11, 2021); Bay Ctr. Apartments Owner, LLC v. Emery Bay PKI, LLC, 2009 WL 1124451, at
*9 (Del. Ch. Apr. 20, 2009) (“First, to have any fiduciary duties to an entity, the affiliate must
exert control over the assets of that entity.”).
17
are never propounded. The latter determination—that the will of the managers of
Warrior LLC was overborne concerning the Distribution—is entirely absent from
the Complaint; indeed, the Complaint fails even to disclose the identities of the
Warrior LLC managers, much less how they were beholden or controlled by the
alleged control group. The Complaint utterly fails to show that the Steering
Committee Defendants, acting as a group, exerted their control to force Warrior LLC
to act concerning the Distribution.
Even assuming the Steering Committee Defendants seized control of Warrior
LLC with regard to the Distribution, the Complaint is silent as to what duty may
have been breached, other than failing to ensure that Angel received proper notice.
The Complaint alleges that the Steering Committee and fiduciaries for the creditors
agreed to a notice provision to implement the BC Order, that responsibility for such
notice was given to Warrior LLC (then-Coal Acquisition), and that Warrior LLC
delegated its notice responsibilities to an agent, KCC. KCC then sent Angel’s notice
to a bad email address. What duty was breached by the Steering Committee
Defendants in this scenario is not stated or implied in the Complaint.
Further, Angel’s allegations of breach of fiduciary duty in this regard fail for
one fundamental reason: he is not, and was not, an owner of Warrior LLC units. In
fact, the entire basis for Angel’s Complaint is that he never received that equity, even
though he was entitled to it. Thus, even if the Steering Committee Defendants did
18
owe fiduciary duties to Warrior LLC equityholders, those fiduciary duties would not
run to Angel, who was and is not a Warrior LLC equityholder.
Finally, Angel alleges that the Steering Committee Defendants owe him
fiduciary duties apart from their role as supposed Warrior LLC fiduciaries. He
alleges that he accorded the Steering Committee Defendants a “special trust,” in that
they had confidential information related to the transaction for the benefit of the
Lienholders.74 But it is implausible that the Debtor’s Lienholders reposed a special
trust in the Steering Committee Defendants. Rather, the Lienholders had their own
representatives that did owe them fiduciary duties and who participated in the
drafting and execution of the Distribution and RO participation procedures—the
Indenture Trustees.75 In fact, the Indenture Trustees—not the Steering Committee
Defendants—were responsible for preparing the February 25, 2016 CBEL cover
letter to the Lienholders.76 Angel has not sued the Indenture Trustees, even though
they signed off on the Distribution documentation requirements on his behalf.
Angel complains that, under the BC Order, he was entitled to Warrior LLC
equity; he criticizes the documentation requirement as unwarranted, but his real
complaint is that he failed to receive actual notice because that attempted notice—
with which he could easily have complied—was sent to the wrong email address.
74
Compl. ¶ 97.
75
Compl. ¶ 35; see Compl. ¶¶ 35–40.
76
Compl. ¶ 40.
19
That harm is not one that sounds in breach of fiduciary duty under the facts pled,
and Count V must be dismissed.
C. Count II, for conversion, must be dismissed.
Count II of the Complaint alleges that the Defendants wrongfully exerted
dominion over the Plaintiff’s “Warrior Class A and Class B Equity, Warrior
Common, and their pro rata share of the cash dividend paid in connection with the
IPO.”77 In other words, Count II alleges that the Defendants converted not only the
Plaintiff’s share of the First Lien Debt, but also (a) the Warrior LLC equity that his
share of the debt entitled him to under the Distribution; (b) whatever the Plaintiff
would have bought in the RO if he had, in fact, perfected his participation; and (c)
any benefits accruing from his resulting ownership of Warrior LLC equity.
The tort of conversion applies to goods held by another in which the plaintiff
has a present right of possession.78 In order to state a claim for conversion, then,
Angel must establish that he had a present right of possession in either the Class A
equity he would have received from the Distribution, or the Class B equity he would
have received from participating in the RO. He has failed to establish a present right
of possession of either.
77
Compl. ¶ 75 (italics added).
78
Kuroda v. SPJS Holdings, L.L.C., 971 A.2d 872, 889 (Del. Ch. 2009).
20
As to the Distribution, the Class A units were held by Warrior LLC; they were
not disbursed to Angel. The representatives of the Debtor’s stakeholders—including
the Indenture Trustees that represented Lienholders like Angel—agreed (per the
Complaint) that certain documentation must be returned by each of the Lienholders
in order to receive Warrior LLC equity under the Distribution.79 Angel failed to
return the requisite documentation before the forfeiture date; accordingly, he did not
have a present right of possession of Class A equity. There was no property of Angel
in hand that had been converted by Warrior LLC (now Warrior, Inc.). If Angel’s
forfeiture of the right to attain the equity was wrongful, the relief is not in conversion,
therefore.
As to the RO, again, the stakeholder representatives agreed that certain
documentation and payment must be received by a date certain—March 29, 2016.80
Angel provided the documents,81 but did not make payment.82 Because he did not
comply with the RO’s participation requirements, he does not have a present right
of possession of the Warrior LLC Class B equity that he would have purchased had
he tendered payment. Accordingly, Angel has failed to state a claim for conversion.
79
Compl. ¶¶ 35–38.
80
Compl. ¶ 46.
81
Compl. ¶ 53.
82
Compl. ¶ 53; MTD Tr. 14:23–15:1.
21
D. Count IV, for unjust enrichment, survives.
Unjust enrichment is an equitable remedy, applicable where, as here, a court
cannot identify a remedy at law.83 It further requires an enrichment, a related
impoverishment, and the absence of justification.84 This claim, alone, is well-pled.
Angel alleges that the Defendants were enriched, and he was impoverished,
because the Steering Committee Defendants and Warrior LLC caused his
entitlement to Warrior LLC equity—through his share of First Lien Debt—to be
extinguished.85 They did so, per Angel, by allowing their agent to attempt notice
using improper email addresses, thus failing to provide actual notice, and thereby
causing Angel to forfeit his entitlement to Warrior LLC equity under the
Distribution. The Complaint alleges that the use of the bad addresses was unjustified
and, perhaps, purposeful. As a result, Angel has lost his inchoate right to Warrior
LLC equity, and that equity remains with a Warrior entity or has been acquired by
the Steering Committee Defendants as part of their backstop commitment.86
I have found that the Plaintiff has failed to state a claim for breach of contract,
breach of fiduciary duty, or conversion. There does not, in my view, appear to be
adequate remedy at law. The Steering Committee Defendants and Warrior LLC
83
Nemec v. Shrader, 991 A.2d 1120, 1130 (Del. 2010).
84
Id.
85
Compl. ¶¶ 87–88.
86
The Complaint is silent as to the current owner of the equity—now converted to Warrior, Inc.
stock—to which Angel was originally entitled.
22
(now Warrior, Inc.) have been enriched to Angel’s detriment, through their purchase
or retention of his forfeited Warrior LLC equity. Further, I note that it should have
been apparent to Warrior LLC that no reason existed for a Lienholder to fail to
provide documentation—which was the only step needed to receive the only possible
compensation for the Lienholders’ lost rights against the Debtor. If Angel proves
that the notice as given was wrongful, leading to the Defendants’ enrichment and
Angel’s impoverishment, an equitable claim to unjust enrichment will lie. I note
that this unjust enrichment claim can only apply to the Distribution, and not to the
RO, because, as noted above,87 the Complaint makes no allegation that inadequate
notice led to Angel’s failure to participate in the RO—i.e., his failure to pay.
E. Count I, for declaratory judgment, must be dismissed.
Finally, Angel makes a claim for a declaratory judgment that the Steering
Committee Defendants owed fiduciary duties to Angel, that those fiduciary duties
were breached, and that the Defendants impermissibly conditioned eligibility to
participate in the RO on receipt of the Distribution CBEL.88 I have already
determined, under the facts pled, that I cannot conclude that the Steering Committee
Defendants breached fiduciary duties to Angel. The declaratory-judgment analog of
that claim is moot. The final request for declaratory judgment is entirely duplicative
87
See Section II.A. supra.
88
Compl. ¶ 69.
23
of the unjust enrichment claim, and resolution of that claim will moot the declaratory
judgment claim.89 Accordingly, the Plaintiff’s count for declaratory judgment must
be dismissed.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Motion to Dismiss is granted as to Counts I, II,
III, and V; it is denied as to Count IV. The parties should submit an appropriate
form of order.
89
Great Hill Equity Partners IV, LP v. SIG Growth Equity Fund I, LLLP, 2014 WL 6703980, at
*29 (Del. Ch. Nov. 26, 2014), judgment entered, (Del. Ch. 2014).
24