GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor.
Advancement cases in this Court tend to follow a familiar pattern. An employer offers a prospective employee an incentive: a right to advancement for litigation costs arising from her employment, even where that litigation is brought by the hiring entity itself. Later, the employer has reason to sue the employee. The employee seeks to exercise her right to advancement, and a kind of "hirer's remorse" sets in with the employer, which objects to funding both sides of the litigation. The employer therefore resists advancement, leading to litigation of the advancement right before this Court.
The matter before me here involves a twist on this pattern. The employees are former directors and a former officer of Current Media, LLC and have advancement rights via the company's operating agreement with respect to litigation arising out of that status. The entity resisting advancement, however, is not the former employer—Current—but the acquirer of that entity, Al Jazeera International (USA) Inc., and its related companies. Al Jazeera's obligations arise only indirectly from Current's operating agreement. In the merger agreement by which Al Jazeera acquired Current, however, it agreed to honor those advancement obligations to the extent Current would have been so obligated.
In a separate underlying action, the employees, Joel Hyatt and Albert Gore, Jr., sued Al Jazeera not as former employees of Current but as members' representative and member of Current, seeking the release, to the former members of Current, of money in an escrow fund created pursuant to the merger. The parties concede that those allegations did not trigger any advancement rights in favor of Hyatt and Gore. Al Jazeera, however, counterclaimed. It argued in part that Hyatt breached the Merger Agreement by denying the release of the funds in escrow, and that its claims to those funds is valid because Current had breached representations and warranties in the merger agreement leading to liability on the part of Al Jazeera. The underlying allegations of breaches of representations and warranties depend upon Al Jazeera's contention that Hyatt and Gore, as directors and officers of Current, had caused Current to breach so-called "most favored nation" clauses in contracts between Current and third parties.
I conclude that the answer to that question is yes as to the majority of Al Jazeera's counterclaims. My reasoning follows.
Plaintiff Joel Z. Hyatt is a former member and director of Current Media, LLC ("Current") and its former CEO.
Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, a portion of the proceeds from the Merger were set aside to establish a General Indemnity Escrow Account (the "Escrow Fund") for purposes of satisfying damages associated with Current and suffered by Al Jazeera post-Merger.
The Merger Agreement also provides that for a period of six years after the Merger, Al Jazeera agrees to indemnify and advance fees and expenses to Current's former officers and directors to the same extent such persons were indemnified by Current's Second Amended and Restated Operating Agreement, dated January 13, 2012 (the "Operating Agreement").
Following the close of the Merger, Al Jazeera served five claim certificates (the "Claim Certificates") on Hyatt as Members' Representative, demanding indemnification for several claims, including damages arising from alleged breaches by Current of representations and warranties in the Merger Agreement. In many of the Claim Certificates, Al Jazeera alleges that Current, at the time of the Merger Agreement, had breached the most-favored-nations ("MFN") provisions in three of its distributor agreements, but that Current had represented in the Merger Agreement that it was in compliance with its MFN provisions. Upon receiving the Claim Certificates, Hyatt, as Members' Representative, rejected the claims.
On August 15, 2014, Hyatt and Gore initiated an action in this Court (the "Underlying Action"),
The Plaintiffs filed their Verified Amended and Supplemental Complaint (the "Complaint") on October 1, 2015, alleging four counts for advancement and one count for fees and expenses incurred in pursuit of litigating its advancement claims—the latter of which, I note, is commonly referred to as "fees on fees." Shortly thereafter, the parties entered into a confidential settlement agreement, pursuant to which the parties agreed to dismiss three of the four counts seeking advancement,
In Count Four, the Plaintiffs allege that under the terms of the Merger Agreement and Current's Operating Agreement, Hyatt and Gore are entitled to advancement of the litigation costs associated with defending the Counterclaims in the Underlying Action. Pursuant to Count Four, the Plaintiffs seek an order (1) declaring that Hyatt and Gore are entitled to advancement for the Counterclaims raised in the Underlying Action; (2) declaring that Current and Al Jazeera are liable to Hyatt and Gore for advancement for their defense of the Counterclaims in the Underlying Action; and (3) ordering Current and Al Jazeera to pay Hyatt and Gore their fees and expenses for defending against the Counterclaims raised in the Underlying Action—totaling $1,731,285.99 at the time of the Complaint—plus pre- and post-judgment interest. In Count Five, the Plaintiffs allege that they are entitled to "fees on fees" for the fees and expenses associated with prosecuting this action.
All parties moved for summary judgment on the issue of the Plaintiffs' entitlement to, and the Defendants' liability for, advancement. The parties have requested that I only address the issue of liability.
I heard oral argument on the cross-motions on November 24, 2015. At oral argument, the Defendants clarified that, in spite of its Counterclaims in the Underlying Action, which are drafted to seek to impose liability on Hyatt and Gore personally, they do not seek relief beyond the balance of the Escrow Fund.
Summary judgment shall be granted when the moving party shows that there is "no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."
In this action, Hyatt and Gore seek advancement of fees and expenses to defend against the Counterclaims raised by Al Jazeera in the Underlying Action. As the Plaintiffs point out, Al Jazeera agreed in the Merger Agreement to advance fees and expenses to Current's former officers and directors to the fullest extent provided in the Operating Agreement. Because the Counterclaims require Hyatt and Gore to defend actions taken while acting in their capacity as former officers and directors, Plaintiffs argue that Al Jazeera is liable for the fees and expenses incurred thereby. While Al Jazeera does not dispute that it agreed to advance fees and expenses to Current's former officers and directors, it argues that its Counterclaims are alleged against Hyatt in his capacity as Members' Representative only, and that, in such capacity, Hyatt is not entitled to advancement in accordance with the Merger Agreement. Furthermore, Al Jazeera describes Gore's role in the Underlying Action instruments setting forth the purported right to advancement and the pleadings in the proceedings for which advancement is sought.'") (quoting Weinstock v. Lazard Debt Recovery GP, LLC, 2003 WL 21843254, at *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 2003)). as a mere fortuity, arguing that Gore is a party to the action solely in his capacity as a former member of Current, in which capacity he is not entitled to advancement.
While the issue of advancement implicates important policy concerns of the ability of Delaware corporations to attract and retain talented officers and directors,
The Merger Agreement, according to its terms, displaces all prior agreements between the parties and is therefore the chief expression of their intent.
Al Jazeera argues that the fee-shifting provision in Section 8.9(d) reflects the parties' intention to solely provide indemnification—and therefore not advancement—for all actions brought against the Members' Representative to resolve disputes regarding the Escrow Fund. It is Al Jazeera's position, therefore, that the terms of the Merger Agreement preclude advancement of fees for claims brought against Hyatt in his capacity as Members' Representative. Conversely, the Plaintiffs argue that Section 8.9(d) addresses only the shifting of fees following the final resolution of a dispute concerning the Escrow Fund and is otherwise silent as to advancement. Furthermore, the Plaintiffs argue that advancement is specifically provided in Section 6.9(a) of the Merger Agreement, which provides that Al Jazeera will indemnify and advance expenses to Current's former officers and directors to the extent provided in the Operating Agreement. Section 6.9(a) states, in part, the following:
Accordingly, the Plaintiffs contend that Current's Operating Agreement controls the determination of whether Hyatt and Gore are entitled to advancement.
At the heart of the contractual dispute here is whether, and in what circumstances, the parties intended Section 8.9(d) or Section 6.9(a) of the Merger Agreement to control the reimbursement of fees and expenses incurred to defend the Counterclaims alleged in the Underlying Action. In order to determine the intent of the parties, this Court "reads an agreement as a whole to give effect to each term and to harmonize seemingly conflicting terms."
Al Jazeera argues that Section 8.9(d) displaces Hyatt's advancement rights in Section 6.9(a) because Hyatt is sued in the Underlying Action in his capacity as Members' Representative. I disagree with Al Jazeera's interpretation of the Merger Agreement, however. The first issue is whether the fee-shifting provision in Section 8.9(d), by itself, supplants the provision for advancement in Section 6.9(a). The "fee-shifting"—or indemnification—provision in Section 8.9(d), as I read it, is distinct from the right to advancement provided in Section 6.9(a). Although indemnification and advancement rights are closely related, each are "distinct types of legal rights,"
The second aspect of Al Jazeera's argument is that Hyatt is sued in his capacity as Members' Representative and not as a former officer and director, thus precluding application of Section 6.9(a). Hyatt's role as Members' Representative is separate from his former role as officer and director, however—the latter does not eliminate the former, and his rights in each role are preserved in accordance with the Merger Agreement.
In accordance with Section 6.9(a) of the Merger Agreement, Hyatt and Gore are entitled to advancement to the extent they would have been so entitled under Current's Operating Agreement. Section 11.2 of the Operating Agreement, which confers the right to indemnification, states, in part, the following:
The next section confers the right to advancement. Section 11.3 states, in part, the following:
When read together, Sections 11.2 and 11.3 provide a former officer or director who was, is, or is threatened to be made a named defendant in a proceeding a right to reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred "by reason of the fact" that he is or was a member of the Board of Directors or officer of Current. As a threshold matter, the parties agree that Hyatt and Gore would not be entitled to advancement had they not been named as counterclaim-defendants in the Underlying Action. The parties also agree that, while Current was a limited liability company not subject to the Delaware General Corporate Law ("DGCL"),
This Court has held that an action is brought "by reason of the fact" of a defendant's position as an officer or director if a "nexus or causal connection" exists between the underlying proceedings and the defendant's "official corporate capacity."
In the Underlying Action, Al Jazeera's Counterclaims allege seven counts against Gore and Hyatt, most of which fundamentally relate to the argument that Current breached representations and warranties at the time of the Merger. These allegations form the bulk of Al Jazeera's Claim Certificates seeking indemnification from the disputed Escrow Fund. Six of the counts in the Counterclaims assert that the former members of Current breached the Merger Agreement by failing to indemnify Al Jazeera consistent with its Claim Certificates, and one count seeks a declaratory judgment that Current's former members must indemnify Al Jazeera for those claims identified in the disputed Claim Certificates. In relief, Al Jazeera seeks, among other things, an order compelling the "Counterclaim-Defendants"—that is, Hyatt and Gore—"to indemnify Al Jazeera for the Damages claimed pursuant to the Claim Certificates delivered to Hyatt as Members' Representative."
Al Jazeera argues that the sole question before the Court with respect to the Counterclaims is whether Hyatt, as Members' Representative, properly rejected Al Jazeera's Claim Certificates. Therefore, according to Al Jazeera, the Counterclaims question only Hyatt's action in his role as Members' Representative and do not reach actions taken by Hyatt or Gore in their capacity as former officers and directors. Hyatt and Gore, in response, argue that, while they do not face liability in their capacity as officers and directors in the Underlying Action, the Counterclaims nonetheless require them to defend their actions as former officers and directors.
The Plaintiffs argue that their position is supported by then-Master Legrow's final report in Rizk v. Tractmanager, Inc.
I find Master Legrow's reasoning persuasive to my analysis here. Although the Counterclaims appear on their face to merely implicate Hyatt's role as Members' Representative, the resolution of the validity of the Claim Certificates in the Underlying Action, in part, necessarily requires Hyatt and Gore to defend their actions as former officers and directors, for which they are contractually entitled to advancement. Without such a (successful) defense, the rights of Hyatt and Gore (and the other former members of Current) in the Escrow Fund will be forfeit. Accordingly, I will examine each count in the Counterclaims, and the issues raised in the corresponding Claim Certificates, to determine whether the allegations establish sufficient "nexus" to Hyatt's and Gore's "corporate powers" such that advancement of fees and expenses is appropriate.
In Counts I, II, and III, Al Jazeera seeks validation of those Claim Certificates that allege that Current breached the Merger Agreement by falsely representing that Current was in compliance with its distributor agreements, including the MFN provisions
In order to defend Hyatt's rejection of the Claim Certificates, Hyatt and Gore, like the plaintiff in Rizk, will be required to defend their actions as officers and directors. The underlying pleadings are telling. According to Al Jazeera's Counterclaims, Current's distribution contracts were "the most critical part of the Merger Agreement."
In Count IV, Al Jazeera seeks validation of a Claim Certificate that alleges that Current's former members agreed in the Merger Agreement to indemnify Al Jazeera for fifty percent of the expenses it incurred to perfect the "termination, cancelation, discontinuance or nonperformance" of a pre-existing distribution agreement between Al Jazeera—not Current—and Time Warner Cable, Inc. ("TWC"). Prior to the Merger, Al Jazeera and TWC entered into a distribution agreement relating to the distribution of the Al Jazeera English ("AJE") service.
In Count V, Al Jazeera seeks validation of a Claim Certificate that asserts that Al Jazeera was forced to make a settlement payment to CBS Broadcasting, Inc. ("CBS") to settle a dispute between Current and CBS that existed at the time of the Merger. Current disclosed the dispute with CBS in the Merger Agreement. According to Al Jazeera, however, Current had represented that the resolution of the claim would not result in a substantial payment to CBS.
In Count VI, Al Jazeera seeks validation of a Claim Certificate that requests reimbursement of defense costs that Al Jazeera allegedly paid on behalf of Hyatt as Members' Representative. Hyatt, in his capacity as Members' Representative, controlled the defense of a third party claim—referred to by the parties as the "Terenzio Claim"—raised against Current after the Merger.
The crux of the dispute in Count VI is whether Al Jazeera may seek reimbursement from Hyatt for fees and expenses beyond the balance of the Escrow Fund. This dispute, therefore, will turn on the arrangement between Al Jazeera and Hyatt, as Members' Representative, as well as the interpretation of the Merger Agreement, and not Hyatt's and Gore's actions as directors and officer. Accordingly, Count VI does not create the requisite "nexus" to Hyatt and Gore in their former capacity and is a non-advanceable claim.
Finally, Count VII seeks numerous declarations that the former members of Current must indemnify Al Jazeera for the Claim Certificates at issue in Counts I through VI. Therefore, Count VII is advanceable to the extent it seeks declarations related to those counts that are advanceable—namely, Counts I, II, III, and V.
Hyatt and Gore argue that they are entitled to their legal fees and expenses incurred in this action. This Court has found that "plaintiffs who succeed in prosecuting a request for advancement or indemnification are entitled to receive fees on fees."
The Plaintiffs also request an award of pre- and post-judgment interest. In Delaware, "prejudgment interest is awarded as a matter of right."
Based on the foregoing, Counts I, II, III, and V, and the related portions of Count VII are advanceable. In addition, the Plaintiffs are entitled to fees on fees related to those advanceable claims, as well as pre- and post-judgment interest. The parties should submit a form of order consistent with my decision.