Gregory M. Sleet, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
The plaintiff, Cato Capital LLC ("Cato Capital"), brought this action for damages and attorneys' fees against Hemispherx Biopharma, Inc. ("Hemispherx") alleging breach of contract, and fraudulent inducement, and against The Sage Group, Inc. ("Sage") alleging fraud and intentional interference with contractual relationship.
The court held a three-day bench trial in this matter from March 4, 2013 through March 6, 2013. After the trial, each party submitted Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. (D.I. 185; D.I. 186.) Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), and after having considered the entire record in this case and the applicable law, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Plaintiff Cato Capital is a limited liability company in the investment banking business that was formed in mid-2005. (D.I. 157, Ex. A at ¶ 1; D.I. 185 at ¶ 1; D.I. 186 at ¶ 1.) Solomon Lax ("Mr. Lax") is one of Cato Capital's Managing Directors. (Id.) Defendant Hemispherx is a publicly traded biopharmaceutical corporation and Dr. William Carter ("Dr.Carter") is its Chief Executive Officer, Chief Science Officer, Chairman, and President. (D.I. 157, Ex. A at ¶ 2; D.I. 185 at ¶ 2; D.I. 186 at ¶ 2.) Defendant Sage is a consulting firm that advises healthcare and life science companies regarding transactions and strategy. (D.I. 157, Ex. A at ¶ 3;
In October 2008, Mr. Hulse made the acquaintance of Kathleen Millier ("Ms. Millier"), a prospector for Cato Capital. (Id. at ¶ 6.) Ms. Millier had just joined Cato Capital and she was responsible for finding companies that might be looking for capital and bringing them to Cato Capital as clients. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 5; D.I. 186 at ¶ 4; Trial Transcript ("Tr.") at 234:12-16.) Mr. Hulse knew that Hemispherx was seeking financing, so he put Ms. Millier in touch with his partner, Mr. Pambianchi. (D.I. 157, Ex. A at ¶ 7.) Acting on behalf of Hemispherx as a facilitator, Mr. Pambianchi discussed Hemispherx's immediate need for capital with Ms. Millier. (D.I. 186 at ¶ 5; Tr. 249:23-250:6, 345:12-346:5.) Specifically, he informed Ms. Millier that Hemispherx was contemplating a transaction in which it would attract investors' interest, despite the difficult economy, by using its FDA-approved facility in New Jersey as collateral. (D.I. 186 at ¶ 6; Tr. 188:6-189:4, 250:2-6.)
On November 10, 2008, after speaking with Mr. Lax, Ms. Millier informed Mr. Pambianchi and Dr. Carter that Cato Capital believed the transaction was "doable" and "definitely in our sweet spot."
The parties negotiated the terms of the Engagement Letter from November 11, 2008 until November 19, 2008. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 6-7; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 19-20.) Mr. Pambianchi served as Hemisphere's conduit during the negotiation. (D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 15-17; Tr. 351:10-18.) He transmitted drafts of the Engagement Letter to Dr. Carter, made revisions pursuant to Dr. Carter's instructions, and communicated both his own impressions and Dr. Carter's thoughts on the Engagement Letter to Mr. Lax and Ms. Millier. (Id.) Ms. Millier served a similar function on behalf of Cato Capital. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 6; D.I. 186 at ¶ 15; Tr. 237:15-25.) On November 24, 2008, Mr. Lax signed the final engagement letter on behalf of Cato Capital and Dr. Carter signed the letter on behalf of Hemispherx. (JX 26.)
The Engagement Letter is a non-exclusive contract, (D.I. 186 at ¶ 21; Tr. 215:9-14), the term of which extended from November 24, 2008 to March 24, 2009, with an additional eight-month tail period. (JX 26 at ¶¶ 2(b) and 3(a).) Paragraph 3(d) of the Engagement Letter's Terms and Conditions makes clear that the Engagement Letter is a fully integrated document that "contains all of the understandings between the parties hereto with reference to the subject matter hereof." Consequently, "[n]o party can rely or be bound by any understanding or statement, oral or otherwise, not specifically in this Agreement." (Id.)
Under the terms in the first section of the Engagement Letter, Cato Capital was to act as Hemisphere's "financial advisor and placement agent in connection with facilitating debt and equity financings for the Company and its subsidiaries...." (Id.) In particular, Cato Capital was to "assist the Company in identifying potential investors and financing sources" and also provide the following services:
(Id. at ¶ 1.) Cato Capital was to render these services on a "`best efforts only basis" and Cato Capital would "in its sole discretion, determine the reasonableness of its efforts and [would be] under no obligation to perform at any level other than what it deem[ed] reasonable." (Id.)
The second section of the Engagement Letter, titled "Compensation for Services," governs the payment that Cato Capital was to receive in the event it fulfilled the Agreement's requirements. (Id. at ¶¶ 2(a)-(c).) The paragraph states, in relevant part, that any fees due Cato Capital were to be calculated as follows:
Paragraphs 2(b) and 2(c) of the Engagement Letter provide additional requirements with which Cato Capital was mandated to comply in order to receive the fees detailed in paragraph 2(a):
Paragraph 2(b) appeared in all drafts of the Engagement Letter and only the length of the tail period was modified during the negotiations. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 24; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 30-31.) Paragraph 2(c) resulted from negotiations between Hemispherx and Cato Capital over Hemispherx's request that Cato Capital first seek and receive approval from Hemispherx before contacting a prospective investor with Hemispherx's name. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 22; D.I. 186 at ¶ 33; Tr. 93:7-95:18, 166:15-168:25, and 172:1-173:6.)
On November 24, 2008, pursuant to paragraph 2(c) of the Agreement, Cato Capital e-mailed Mr. Pambianchi a list of prospective investors that Hemispherx had given Cato Capital approval to contact on Hemispherx's behalf.
Before Mr. Lax contacted Iroquois, Iroquois was already familiar with Hemispherx because Iroquois had previously invested in Hemispherx through an equity transaction in 2004. (D.I. 186 at ¶ 64; Tr. 443:19-444:9.) In fact, Iroquois still owned shares of Hemispherx stock and warrants for Hemispherx stock when Mr. Lax contacted Iroquois. (Id.) Nonetheless, Dr. Carter agreed to let Cato Capital contact Iroquois because Dr. Carter was familiar only with Iroquois' equity side. (D.I. 186 at ¶ 65; Tr. 444:10-24.) He was under the impression that Mr. Lax had contacts at Iroquois that could facilitate a secured debt-based transaction. (Id.)
On November 30, 2008, Mr. Lax e-mailed Josh Silverman ("Mr.Silverman"), the co-founder and managing member of Iroquois, and Michael Gregory, an analyst at Iroquois. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 48; D.I. 186 at ¶ 47.) In the e-mail, Mr. Lax explained that Hemispherx "has a clean balance sheet with a [sic] FDA approved manufacturing plant and equipment that are currently unencumbered which are being offered as security for any convertible done." (JX 43; D.I. 185 at ¶ 48; D.I. 186 at ¶ 47.) Mr. Silverman agreed to meet with Hemispherx and Mr. Lax sent him a PowerPoint presentation in advance of the meeting. (Id.) On December 10, 2008, Mr. Silverman met with Mr. Lax and representatives from Hemispherx. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 48; D.I. 186 at ¶ 63.) About two weeks after the meeting, Iroquois made a proposal of $500,000 cash.
On November 30, 2008, Mr. Lax sent to George Antonopoulos at Hudson Bay the
On November 30, 2008, Mr. Lax sought permission from Mr. Pambianchi to contact five additional prospects, including Cranshire. (JX 42; D.I. 185 at ¶ 27; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 42-43.) After Mr. Pambianchi approved Cranshire, Mr. Lax e-mailed Keith Goodman ("Mr. Goodman") at Cranshire on December 4, 2008. (JX 47; D.I. 185 at ¶ 50; D.I. 186 at ¶ 48.) The e-mail that he sent was the same one he had sent Iroquois and Hudson Bay. (Id.) Mr. Lax called Mr. Goodman after sending the e-mail. At his deposition, Mr. Goodman stated that he understood Mr. Lax to be seeking "some type of secured transaction to put [Hemispherx's manufacturing plant in New Jersey] up as collateral." (Goodman Dep. 41:5-42:12.) Mr. Goodman also stated that he had already been introduced to this same transaction by another investment banker, Mid-South Capital, who had called Mr. Goodman before Mr. Lax did. (Id. at 25:9-26:16.) Mr. Goodman informed Mr. Lax that he had already seen the transaction and was not interested.
In an e-mail to Mr. Pambianchi dated January 5, 2009, Mr. Lax identified three more Cato Prospects and sought approval for them. (JX 54; D.I. 185 at ¶ 28; D.I. 186 at ¶ 70.) In the e-mail, Mr. Lax wrote: "If you can please confirm that these
On January 12, 2009, after receiving the list, Mr. Pambianchi sent an e-mail to Mr. Lax stating:
(JX 58; D.I. 185 at ¶ 31; D.I. 186 at ¶ 75.)
Mr. Pambianchi attached to the e-mail a mark-up of the list that Mr. Lax had e-mailed to him on January 7, 2009. (JX 58; D.I. 185 at. ¶ 32; D.I. 186 at ¶ 77.) The mark-up identified seven of the Cato Prospects, including Hudson Bay, Cranshire, and Iroquois, as overlapping with a list provided to Hemispherx by another agent. (JX 58; D.I. 185 at ¶ 32; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 78-79.) Mr. Pambianchi struck four of the seven Cato Prospects, including Cranshire, off the list and suggested that Cato Capital split with the other agent the fees for the remaining three Cato Prospects, including Hudson Bay and Iroquois. (Id.) The parties disagree about Mr. Pambianchi's motives in revising the list and also about the representations that Mr. Pambianchi and Mr. Lax made to each other in a subsequent call. As discussed below, however, these matters are immaterial to resolution of the claims in this case.
In January 2009, Cato Capital approached Centurion in much the same way as it had approached Iroquois, Hudson Bay, and Cranshire. (Tr. 130:10-20.) Discussions with Centurion proved unfruitful at this point, however. (Id.) By March 2009, the end of the Agreement's term was near, but Cato Capital had yet to raise any capital for Hemispherx. (Id. at 130:20-131:2.) At this point, Mr. Hulse called Mr. Lax to ask that Mr. Lax "reignite" his efforts to raise capital. (Id.; D.I. 185 at ¶ 51.) Though the Agreement's term had yet to end, the evidence suggests that Cato Capital had ceased its efforts to find funding for Hemispherx and resumed its efforts only at Mr. Hulse's prodding. (Tr. 129:21-130:3, 130:20-131:11, and 132:12-21; JX 2.) Mr. Lax suggested that Cato Capital approach Centurion again because Centurion was the "one remaining option." (Tr. 131:3-15.) Indeed, as Mr. Lax testified at trial, he did not believe that any of the other Cato Prospects could result in a transaction and "there was nothing really alive other than Centurion at one point was interested and we couldn't get over the NDA issue." (Id. at 129:21-130:3.)
Since Hemispherx was desperate for capital, (Id. at 129:21-24), Mr. Hulse prepared information to share with Centurion and authorized Mr. Lax to attempt to revive Centurion's interest. (Id. at 129:16-134:4; D.I. 185 at ¶ 51.) Mr. Lax complied with Mr. Hulse's request and contacted
On March 24, 2009, the term of the Agreement ended. (JX 26 at ¶ 3.) Paragraph 2(b) of the Agreement stated that Cato Capital should designate at the end of the term the Cato Prospects for which it expected payment during the tail period. (Id. at ¶ 2(b).) Despite this provision, Cato Capital did not send Hemispherx a list at the end of the term. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 53; D.I. 186 at ¶ 87.)
On or around April 30, 2009, Dr. Bowen, the head of health care banking at Rodman and Renshaw ("Rodman"), contacted Dr. Carter. (Tr. 450:21-451:20.) Rodman was a bank specializing in PIPE transactions and the bank had a longstanding relationship with Hemispherx. (Id.) Dr. Bowen reached out to Dr. Carter because, as a result of recent publications in the public health field highlighting the risk of pandemic influenza, interest in companies with products capable of treating influenza was very high. (Id. at 451:8-20, 465:1-6.) Hemispherx was developing a new influenza product and the increased market interest resulted in Hemispherx's stock rapidly rising by several hundred percent. (Id. at 451:19-20; D.I. 185 at ¶ 58.) Dr. Bowen informed Dr. Carter that he believed Hemispherx could successfully secure an investor in an equity offering. (Id.) Accordingly, Hemispherx and Rodman executed an engagement letter around May 8, 2009. (Id. at 451:22; JX 65.) At trial, Dr. Carter testified that Rodman did not disclose to Hemispherx which investors Rodman intended to approach until after the parties had signed the engagement letter. (Tr. 451:23-452:6, 453:19-24.) Dr. Carter also claimed that, in engaging Rodman, Hemispherx relied on the fact that Cato Capital had not provided a paragraph 2(b) list, suggesting that Cato Capital would not seek payment for any prospects. (Id. at 453:1-17 (Explaining that "[i]f we had a list that suggested parties that were still within the tail period, we would have advised Rodman and Renshaw not to contact them for the investment because that would have opened us up to a double fee proposal.").) Soon after Rodman and Hemispherx signed the engagement letter, Hudson Bay made a $7.5 million equity investment in Hemispherx on May 10, 2009 with Rodman acting as facilitator for the transaction. (Id. at 453:25-454:3; JX 66.) Hemispherx remitted payment to Rodman immediately. (Id. at 454:4-12; JX 76.) On May 18, 2009, Rodman facilitated two additional equity investments in Hemispherx of $8 million each by Cranshire and Iroquois. (Tr. 454:13-20; JX 66.) Hemispherx paid Rodman again for facilitating this second traunch. (Id. at 454:17-455:6; JX 77.) Dr. Carter testified that neither Hemispherx nor Sage suggested Iroquois, Cranshire, or any potential investors to Rodman. (Tr. 452:7-10, 455:7-22.)
On May 22, 2009, Cato Capital sent Hemispherx a demand letter seeking fees for the transactions that Hemispherx had concluded with Hudson Bay, Iroquois and Cranshire. (JX 70.) Hemispherx determined that Cato Capital was not entitled to any of the fees because it had not
Cato Capital alleges that Hemispherx breached the Agreement by failing to pay it for the equity investments that Cranshire, Iroquois, and Hudson Bay in Hemispherx made in May 2009. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 2.) Hemispherx contends, however, that Cato Capital was not entitled to these fees for two reasons. First, Hemispherx points out that Paragraph 2(b) of the Agreement required Cato Capital to provide Hemispherx with a list of prospects for which Cato Capital expected to be paid in the tail period. (D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 14-16.) Thus, Hemispherx contends, because Cato Capital failed to provide such a list, it breached a material term of the Agreement and is not entitled to payment. (Id. at ¶ 26.) Second, Hemispherx argues that Cato Capital was entitled to payment under the contract only for those transactions that resulted from its efforts. (Id. at 36-37.) Thus, Hemispherx reasons, because the equity investments that Cranshire, Iroquois, and Hudson Bay made in Hemispherx did not result from Cato Capital's efforts, Cato Capital is not entitled to payment. (Id. at ¶ 52.) The court concludes that Hemispherx is correct and that Cato Capital is not entitled to payment both because it failed to comply with the unambiguous terms of paragraph 2(b) of the Agreement and because Cato Capital did not cause the equity investments that the three investors made in Hemispherx.
The court interprets the Agreement in accordance with Delaware law. Under Delaware law, contract interpretation is a question of law, see Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A.2d 1192, 1195 (Del.1992), and the role of the court is to effectuate the parties' intent, see Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Am. Legacy Found., 903 A.2d 728, 739 (Del.2006). When interpreting a contract, the court must first determine whether there is any ambiguity in the contract. See Nw. Nat'l Ins. Co. v. Esmark, Inc., 672 A.2d 41, 43 (Del.1996). Where the contract is clear and unambiguous, the court must then ascertain the parties' intent by giving the words of the contract their "ordinary and usual meaning." Id. In short, "[c]ontract terms themselves will be controlling when they establish the parties' common meaning so that a reasonable person in the position of either party would have no expectations inconsistent with the contract language." Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del.1997). A court may consider extrinsic or parol evidence to determine the parties intent only when a contract is ambiguous. Id. A contract is not ambiguous merely because the parties disagree about its meaning. See Harrah's Entm't, Inc. v. JCC Holding Co., 802 A.2d 294, 309 (Del.Ch.2002).
The pertinent provision of paragraph 2(b) states: "At the end of the term of this Agreement, Cato shall designate in writing to the Company all Cato Prospects. Cato will only be entitled to Placement Fees for Transactions during the Tail Period completed with any of the listed Cato Prospects or their affiliates." (JX 26 at ¶ 2(b).) Cato Capital contends that this language created a promise, rather than a condition precedent, because it supposedly contains
The court concludes that the language of paragraph 2(b) of the Engagement Letter is clear and unambiguous, and created a condition precedent with which Cato Capital was obligated to comply in order to be entitled to payment. A condition precedent is "[a]n act or event, other than a lapse of time, that must exist or occur before a duty to perform something promised arises." AES Puerto Rico, L.P. v. Alstom Power, Inc., 429 F.Supp.2d 713, 717 (D.Del.2006) (citation omitted). There are no particular words that must be used in order to create a condition precedent.
Not only did paragraph 2(b) create a condition precedent, but also this condition precedent was a material requirement of the Agreement. The purpose of the list was to give Hemispherx notice of the prospects for which Cato Capital would seek payment should a transaction with those prospects be completed during the tail period. (JX 26 at ¶ 2(b); Tr. 222:18-25; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 25-26.) Since only after receiving the list could Hemispherx know with certainty the full scope of its obligations under the Agreement, Cato Capital's delivery of a prospect list at the end of the Agreement's term is a material requirement of the Agreement. In addition, Cato's failure to provide the paragraph 2(b) list deprived Hemispherx of the ability
Cato Capital contends that even if paragraph 2(b) created a condition precedent to Cato Capital's entitlement to a fee, Cato Capital substantially complied with this requirement by providing Hemisphere an updated list of prospects in January 2009.
As discussed above, the Agreement requires for two different lists. (JX 26 at ¶ 2(b) and 2(c).) One, governed by paragraph 2(c), was a list of contacts that Hemisphere gave Cato Capital its approval to contact on its behalf. The other, governed by paragraph 2(b), was a list of prospects for which Cato Capital expected to be paid if they invested in Hemisphere during the tail period of the Agreement. In short, the two lists are provided for by different terms of the Agreement and serve entirely different purposes.
It is undisputed that Mr. Lax sent Mr. Pambianchi a list of Cato Prospects on November 24, 2008 pursuant to paragraph 2(c) of the Agreement. (JX 25.) On November 30, 2008, Mr. Lax sought and obtained Hemispherx's approval to update the paragraph 2(c) list of Cato Prospects. (JX 42.) Finally, on January 5, 2009, Mr. Lax sought permission again to update the paragraph 2(c) list of Cato Prospects. (JX 54.) A day later, Mr. Pambianchi informed Mr. Lax that this update was approved and asked Mr. Lax to send him a "full list, updated" of Cato Prospects. (Id.) At the time Mr. Lax made this request, there was no consolidated list of all of the approved investors. (D.I. 186 at ¶ 72.) Rather, the Cato Prospects were spread over the initial list that Mr. Lax had e-mailed Hemispherx on November 24, 2008 and Mr. Lax's subsequent e-mails. (Id.) These circumstances indicate that the list that Mr. Pambianchi was requesting was an updated paragraph 2(c) list, rather than a list for the purposes of paragraph 2(b).
Another argument that Cato Capital makes is that the list of updated prospects that Mr. Lax submitted to Mr. Pambianchi on January 7, 2009 was identical to the list that Mr. Lax would have sent Hemispherx at the end of the term. (D.I. 185 at ¶¶ 13-14.) Thus, Cato Capital argues, there was no need to resend the same list containing redundant information to Hemispherx at the end of the term.
First, the terms of the Agreement plainly require two different lists to be provided at two different times. (JX 26
Second, Mr. Lax's own testimony at trial strongly suggests that Cato Capital failed to send the paragraph 2(c) list not because the list was redundant, but rather because, as Hemispherx contends, (D.I. 186 at ¶ 91), there were no prospects for which Cato Capital expected to be paid in the tail period. Mr. Lax testified at trial that he considered sending Hemispherx a list, but decided against doing so because he believed that the list was unnecessary. (Tr. 206:15-209:4.) He claimed that he believed Hemispherx was "on notice" of the prospects for which Cato Capital expected payment in the tail period because "[w]e had a discussion." (Tr. 208:10-18.) Mr. Lax's testimony was vague regarding when the discussion supposedly took place and what exactly he told Hemispherx and its representatives during this discussion, however. Mr. Lax also contradicted himself by admitting that he did not ever tell Mr. Pambianchi or Dr. Carter that he did not intend to send them a list at the end of the Agreement's term. (Tr. 206:25-207:20.) Moreover, Mr. Lax conceded that by March 2009, he had little hope that any of the companies designated Cato Prospects would invest in Hemispherx. (Tr. 129:21-130:3; 208:24-209:4.) A last ditch effort to interest Centurion in Hemispherx was Cato Capital's last hope. (Id.; Tr. 131:3-15.) It follows from Mr. Lax's admission that there could not have been any names, other than perhaps Centurion, for Mr. Lax to place on the paragraph 2(b) list as Cato prospects likely to invest in Hemispherx during the tail period. Certainly, Mr. Lax had no reason to expect investments by Iroquois, Hudson Bay, and Cranshire. He had not had any contact with them since December 2008 when they all either rejected the possibility of investing in Hemispherx or were rejected by Hemispherx. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 48-50; Tr. 198:12-199:2; 206:11-14.)
Cato Capital's argument that Hemispherx waived the requirements of paragraph 2(b) by not requesting the end-of-term list is unavailing. In support of its argument, Cato Capital offers two facts. First, Hemispherx permitted Cato Capital
The court's ruling that Cato Capital materially breached the Agreement when it failed to comply with the condition precedent in paragraph 2(b) is sufficient to defeat Cato Capital's breach of contract claim. Even if Cato Capital had complied with paragraph 2(b), however, Cato Capital's breach of contract claim would still fail. The Agreement requires Cato Capital to have caused the investments in Hemispherx and the parties agree that Cato Capital was not the cause of any of the transactions.
Hemispherx contends that Cato Capital is not entitled to any fees pursuant to the Agreement because there was no causal relationship between Cato Capital's efforts and the transactions that occurred in May 2009. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 21; D.I. 186 at ¶ 37.) For its part, Cato Capital does not claim that its efforts had anything to do with the transactions through which Hemispherx secured capital in May 2009. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 21-27.) Cato Capital argues instead that the Agreement did not require it to cause the transactions and suggests that it is entitled to fees even though its efforts with Iroquois, Cranshire Capital, and Hudson Bay were short lived and unsuccessful. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 22-23.)
Since the language of the Agreement is unambiguous, the court construes it as an objective third party would understand it. A close reading of the Agreement makes clear that Cato Capital must have caused a transaction in order to be entitled to fees for it. The first line of the Agreement states that Hemispherx retained Cato Capital "in connection with facilitating debt and equity financings for the Company...." (JX 26.) "Facilitate" is defined by Merriam-Webster Dictionary as "to help cause (something)" or "help bring about". (MERRIAM-WEBSTER (Oct. 3, 2013), http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/facilitate.) Thus, the impression created by the Agreement's very first words is that Cato Capital must cause the financings contemplated in the Agreement. This impression is further bolstered by next section of the Agreement titled "Services to be Provided by Cato." (JX 26 at ¶ 1.) The Agreement makes clear that in
The second section of the Agreement titled "Compensation for Services" reinforces the notion that Cato Capital must facilitate the transactions in order to receive fees. Paragraph 2(a)(iv) states thrice that the equity or debt securities, the warrants for which are to be used to calculate Cato Capital's, fees must be "placed by Cato." The repetition in that provision suggests that the use of the phrase "placed by Cato" is not accidental and further establishes that Cato Capital, and not another agent, must have caused the debt or equity investment.
Although there is a dearth of Delaware cases addressing whether an agent must cause a transaction in order to be entitled to fees during the tail period of an agreement, the broker-dealer line of cases that Hemisphere cites in support of its position are instructive. Many jurisdictions require that brokers' efforts bear some causal relationship to the transactions for which they seek to collect fees. See e.g., Upper Cape Realty Corp. v. Morris, 53 Mass.App.Ct. 53, 756 N.E.2d 1193, 1197 (2001) (explaining that "introduce" requires "that the broker's actions have at least some minimal causal connection with the sale, or in other words, be in the chain of causation leading to the sale"); Snipes v. Marcene P. Powell & Associates, Inc., 273 Ga.App. 814, 818, 616 S.E.2d 152 (2005) ("introduced" requires "that the broker's actions have at least some minimal causal connection with the sale, or be in the chain of causation leading to the sale"); Korstad v. Hoffman, 221 Cal.App.2d Supp. 805, 809, 35 Cal.Rptr. 61 (Cal.App.Dep't Super.Ct.1963) ("in order to make out a reasonable construction of the contract there must have been at least some connection between the act and the sale").
In addition to its breach of contract claim, Cato also alleges that Hemispherx fraudulently induced Cato to enter into the agreement and continue performing under the agreement. (D.I. 185 at ¶¶ 29, 31.) Specifically, Cato contends that "Hemispherx misled CATO: (1) at the inception of the Agreement, when it did not tell CATO that another investment bank was pursuing the same investors at the same time as CATO; (2) in January 2009 when it confirmed that CATO would be paid for any transactions consummated with a CATO Prospect even though another investment bank had pursued some of the same potential investors; and (3) in March-April 2009 when it asked CATO to reach out to CATO Prospects, beyond the term of the engagement, to attempt to obtain financing." (D.I. 185 at ¶ 32.) For the following reasons, the court concludes that Cato has not established its fraudulent inducement cause of action against Hemispherx.
In order to establish fraudulent inducement, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) the defendant falsely represented or omitted facts that the defendant had a duty to disclose; (2) the defendant knew or believed that the representation was false or made the representation with a reckless indifference to the truth; (3) the defendant intended to induce the plaintiff to act or refrain from acting; (4) the plaintiff acted in justifiable reliance on the representation; and
The record contradicts Cato's allegation that Hemispherx fraudulently induced its continued performance in January 2009 by not disclosing that Hemispherx had hired Mid-South and by promising to pay Cato for any transactions concluded with any Cato prospect. First, the record suggests that Mr. Lax knew by January 2009 that Hemispherx had retained another agent to work simultaneously with Cato. As previously discussed, Mr. Lax admitted at trial that he knew that Hemispherx was at least contemplating reaching out to other agents. (Id.) In addition, at least one of the prospective investors designated Cato prospects informed Mr. Lax that Hemispherx had another agent. (Goodman Dep. 95:15-95:3; D.I. 185 at ¶ 50; D.I. 186 at ¶¶ 56-60.) At his deposition, Mr. Goodman testified that when Mr. Lax called him at Cranshire in December 2008, Mr. Goodman flatly stated that he had already seen and rejected the very same transaction that Mr. Lax was proposing. (Id.) The parties have offered no reason to doubt Mr. Goodman's testimony.
Second, there is no evidence, apart from Cato Capital's self-interested account, that Hemispherx knowingly misled Cato Capital when it allegedly promised to pay Cato Capital for any investment during the tail period by the Cato prospects designated in January 2009. Cato Capital claims that the parties understood that the list of prospects that Mr. Lax sent Mr. Pambianchi on January 7, 2009 bound Hemispherx to pay Cato Capital for any transactions completed with those prospects during the tail period of the Agreement. (D.I. 46 at ¶¶ 16, 18; D.I. 185 at ¶¶ 40, 53-54; Tr. 222:18-20.) Hemispherx argues, however, that the list merely detailed the prospects that Cato Capital could contact pursuant to paragraph 2(e). (D.I. 186 at ¶ 74.) The court need not resolve which account is factually correct because it is well established that "[t]he failure to fulfill a promise to perform future acts is not ground for a fraud action unless there existed an intent not to perform at the time the promise was made." Scott-Macon Secs., Inc. v. Zoltek Cos., No. 04 Civ. 2124(MBM), 2005 WL 1138476, at *10, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9034, at *29-30 (S.D.N.Y. May 11, 2005) (Concluding that "there is no trial-worthy issue as to Zoltek's claim of fraudulent inducement.") (Quoting Stamelman v. Fleishman-Hillard, Inc., No. 02 Civ. 8318(SAS), 2004 WL 1719348, at *1, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14667, at *3 (S.D.N.Y. July 29, 2004)); see also Deerfield Commc'ns v. Chesebrough-Ponds, Inc., 68 N.Y.2d 954, 510 N.Y.S.2d 88, 502 N.E.2d 1003 (1986) (Distinguishing between "promissory statements as to what will be done in the future," which permit only a breach of contract claim, and "false representations of fact," which give rise to a fraudulent inducement cause of action.) Thus, even if Hemispherx did indeed promise to pay Cato Capital for any transaction completed in the tail period with the prospects on Mr. Lax's January 7, 2009 list, there is no fraudulent inducement unless Cato Capital can establish that Hemispherx had no intention at the time it made this promise to make good on this undertaking. Cato Capital has not introduced any evidence establishing this and has not even made this assertion. (D.I. 185 at ¶ 34 (Stating only that "Hemispherx, through Sage, confirmed that CATO would be paid for any investments made by a CATO Prospect either during the term of the agreement or during the Tail Period.").)
Cato Capital alleges that Hemispherx is liable for fraudulent inducement
Cato Capital contends that for the same reasons for which Hemispherx is liable for fraud, Sage is also liable for fraud. (D.I. 185 at ¶¶ 38-39.) As discussed above, however, see supra Part III.B., the court concludes that Cato Capital has not demonstrated that Hemispherx acted fraudulently. Because Cato Capital has not adduced any evidence in support of its fraud claim against Sage beyond that which the court has already reviewed and found lacking, the court concludes that Cato Capital's fraud claim against Sage must also fail.
Because Sage acted as Hemispherx's agent at all times, Cato Capital has relinquished its intentional interference claim and instead concedes that "Sage, by law, could not have interfered with Hemispherx's Agreement with CATO" and requests that "CATO's claim against Sage for intentional interference with the Agreement will be dismissed." (D.I. 185 at ¶¶ 40-41.) The court grants Cato's request and dismisses this claim.
For the reasons stated above, the court concludes that (1) Hemispherx is not liable for breach of contract and also is not liable for fraudulent inducement; (2) Sage is not liable for fraud and also is not liable for intentional interference with contractual relationship; and (3) Cato Capital is not entitled to damages and attorneys' fees. Accordingly, Cato Capital's claims are dismissed in their entirety.
For the reasons stated in the court's Memorandum of this same date, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
2. The clerk of court shall enter judgment in favor of the Defendant, The Sage Group, Inc., and against the Plaintiff, Cato Capital LLC on the fraud and intentional interference with contractual relationship claims.
Second, the agreements in question in each case expressly provide that the agents in question did not have to do anything to be entitled to payment. See, e.g., Deutsche Bank, 578 F.Supp.2d at 668 (explaining that the contract's terms "`in connection with any such bank financing' [and] `in the event of a closing of any facility' ... strongly suggest that [plaintiff] did not have to be involved in the closing for it to be entitled to a fee") (emphasis in original); CIBC World Markets Corp., 183 F.Supp.2d at 611 (plaintiff entitled to fee because agreement provided that "[a]ll that must occur is that a qualifying Transaction be `consummated' or `entered into' by [defendant]"); Lazard Freres, 901 F.Supp. at 137 (agreement "specifically provided that [plaintiff] would be entitled to its fees if the Client successfully restructured their debts, even if [plaintiff] was not responsible for the debt restructuring."); Painewebber Inc. v. Campeau Corp., 670 F.Supp. 100, 106 (S.D.N.Y.1987) (plaintiff entitled to fee where agreement did not condition plaintiff's right to payment upon rendering of services).