Case Title: BitGo Holdings, Inc. v. Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd., et al.

Citation: 

Docket Number: 219, 2023

State: delaware

Court: Delaware Supreme Court

Date: 2024-05-22T00:00:00Z

Document:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE 
BITGO HOLDINGS, INC., 
§  
 
§ No. 219, 2023 
 
Plaintiff Below, 
§  
 
Appellant, 
§ Court Below: Court of Chancery 
 
§ of the State of Delaware  
 
v. 
§  
 
 
§ C.A. No. 2022-0808 
GALAXY DIGITAL HOLDINGS, 
§ 
LTD., GALAXY DIGITAL  
§ 
HOLDINGS LP, and GALAXY 
§ 
DIGITAL INC., 
§ 
 
§  
 
Defendants Below,  
§  
 
Appellees. 
§ 
Submitted: February 7, 2024 
Decided: 
May 22, 2024 
 
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and 
GRIFFITHS, Justices constituting the court en banc. 
Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery.  REVERSED and REMANDED. 
 
A. Thompson Bayliss, Esquire (argued), Michael A. Barlow, Esquire, Eliezer Y. 
Feinstein, Esquire, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; R. Brian 
Timmons, Esquire, David M. Grable, Esquire, QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART 
& SULLIVAN, LLP, Los Angeles, California; David Cooper, Esquire, Deborah K. 
Brown, Esquire, Nathan Goralnik, Esquire, QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & 
SULLIVAN, LLP, New York, New York, for Appellants BitGo Holdings, Inc. 
 
Bradley R. Aronstam, Esquire, S. Michael Sirkin, Esquire, ROSS ARONSTAM & 
MORITZ LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Andrew Ditchfield, Esquire (argued), Brian 
M. Burnovski, Esquire, Pascale Bibi, Esquire, Kyra Macy Kaufman, Esquire,  
DAVIS POLK & WARDWELL LLP, New York, New York; Neal Kumar Katyal, 
Esquire, Nathaniel A.G. Zelinsky, Esquire, HOGAN LOVELLS US LLP, 
Washington, D.C., Dennis H. Tracey, III, Esquire, HOGAN LOVELLS US LLP, 
New York, New York, for Appellees Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd., Galaxy Digital 
Holdings LP, and Galaxy Digital Inc. 
2 
 
TRAYNOR, Justice:  
In this appeal, we are asked to review the Court of Chancery’s interpretation 
of a merger-agreement provision that required the acquired company—BitGo—to 
submit audited financial statements to the acquiror—Galaxy—by a specified date.  
When BitGo submitted the financial statements in a timely manner, Galaxy protested 
that the statements were deficient because they failed to apply recently published 
guidance from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s staff.  BitGo did not agree 
that the time was ripe for the application of that guidance, but took advantage of a 
provision in the merger agreement that allowed for another financial-statement 
submission and, according to Galaxy, extended the final deadline for completing the 
merger, or the “end date.”  When Galaxy received the second submission, this time 
applying the guidance not applied in the first submission, Galaxy found fault with 
the submission for other reasons—specifically, its inclusion of a “restriction on use” 
legend—and terminated the merger agreement. 
BitGo then sued Galaxy in the Court of Chancery, alleging wrongful 
repudiation and breach of the merger agreement.  Galaxy moved to dismiss the 
complaint, arguing that BitGo’s claims failed as a matter of law because its 
noncompliant financial statements provided Galaxy with a valid basis to terminate 
the merger agreement.  BitGo countered that both sets of statements, the ones that 
3 
 
did not apply the SEC staff’s guidance and those that did, were compliant.  The Court 
of Chancery sided with Galaxy and dismissed the complaint. 
As discussed in detail below, whether the financial statements at issue were 
compliant turns on the interpretation of the merger agreement’s definition of the term 
“Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.”  The parties agree that, should this 
Court determine that BitGo’s first submission—the submission with financial 
statements that did not apply the SEC staff’s guidance—fit that definition, the 
adequacy of the second submission would be irrelevant and the Court of Chancery’s 
decision should be reversed.  If, however, the first submission was noncompliant, 
we must then assess the adequacy of the second submission.  As with the first 
submission, if the second was compliant, reversal would be required.   
Having considered the parties’ respective positions, we have concluded that 
both parties have proffered reasonable interpretations of the merger agreement’s 
definition of “Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.”  In a word, the 
definition is ambiguous.  We therefore reverse the Court of Chancery’s judgment 
and remand for the consideration of such extrinsic evidence as may be appropriate 
to resolve this ambiguity.  
 
 
 
4 
 
I 
A 
Plaintiff BitGo Holdings, Inc. (“BitGo” or “the Company”), a Delaware 
corporation, is a privately held technology company that established the first 
independent, regulated custodial business for digital assets.1   
Defendant Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd. is a company formed under the laws 
of the Cayman Islands and headquartered in New York.  Galaxy Digital Holdings 
Ltd. offers investment banking and other financial services in the cryptocurrency 
sector.  Defendant Galaxy Digital Holdings LP is a limited partnership formed and 
registered under the laws of the Cayman Islands and headquartered in New York.  
Defendant Galaxy Digital Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of 
business in New York and is a direct wholly owned subsidiary of Galaxy Digital 
Holdings Ltd.  We refer to the defendants collectively as “Galaxy.” 
B 
Galaxy became a strategic investor in BitGo in 2018.  This investment brought 
with it an observer seat on BitGo’s board of directors, through which Galaxy became 
privy to commercially sensitive and confidential information about the Company.  
By December 2020, aware of BitGo’s “advanced discussions with other leading 
 
1 We draw the facts from the well-pleaded allegations in the verified amended complaint and from 
documents integral to it or incorporated by reference. 
5 
 
financial technology companies about possible strategic transactions[,]” Galaxy 
approached BitGo to discuss “potential synergies between the two companies[.]”2  
BitGo chose to pursue a transaction with Galaxy (the “Acquisition”), and the parties 
entered into a merger agreement in May 2021 (the “Original Agreement”).  Under 
the Original Agreement, the end date for the transaction was set for March 31, 2022, 
allowing Galaxy time to, among other things, reincorporate in the United States and 
register its shares (together, the “Reorganization”) with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (the “SEC”).   
Galaxy told BitGo that this Reorganization, which contemplated the listing of 
Galaxy’s shares on the Nasdaq exchange, was already underway independently from 
the Original Agreement.  The Reorganization would require the approval of 
Galaxy’s shareholders and, hence, Galaxy was required to file an S-4 registration 
statement with the SEC.  Because Galaxy would acquire all of BitGo’s outstanding 
shares in exchange for 33.8 million shares of Galaxy’s reorganized entity and $265 
million in cash, the Original Agreement’s success depended on the success of 
Galaxy’s Reorganization.  The aggregate consideration for acquiring BitGo, based 
on Galaxy’s then-current share price, was approximately $1.2 billion. 
According to the complaint, the parties allocated the risks associated with the 
Reorganization almost entirely to Galaxy.  For example, Galaxy assumed 
 
2 See App. to Opening Br. at A36. 
6 
 
responsibility for and control over governmental approvals.  But BitGo bore a 
critical, albeit limited, role in helping Galaxy submit information for inclusion in an 
effective registration statement.  BitGo was required to submit to Galaxy its financial 
statements for the year ended December 31, 2020, which the agreement defined as 
“Company 2020 Audited Financial Statements.”  These financial statements were to 
be “‘in a form that complies with the requirements of Regulation S-X for an offering 
of equity securities pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-1 for a non-
reporting company.’”3  BitGo’s failure to submit the financial statements to Galaxy 
on time would provide Galaxy with a termination right.  No termination fees of any 
kind, though, were available under the Original Agreement. 
BitGo submitted the Company 2020 Audited Financial Statements to Galaxy 
in September 2021.  Galaxy accepted them.  Together with a report from BitGo’s 
auditor, Galaxy provided the statements as part of its confidential draft registration 
statement to the SEC.  In the ensuing months, BitGo assisted Galaxy by responding 
to numerous data requests and consulting with Galaxy’s finance and legal teams, as 
Galaxy engaged with the SEC and its extensive commentary on the draft 
submissions.  The SEC’s comments inquired into Galaxy’s accounting and internal 
controls practices, which, according to the complaint, included significant errors and 
weaknesses; by contrast, the SEC did not raise concerns about BitGo’s financial 
 
3 Id. at A41. 
7 
 
statements.  After several rounds of revisions, Galaxy publicly filed its S-4 
registration statement on January 28, 2022, which included BitGo’s 2020 Audited 
Financial Statements and other information. 
It became clear to Galaxy by February 2022 that time was running out for 
closing the Acquisition under the Original Agreement.  Galaxy would not be able to 
secure an effective S-4 registration statement, notice a shareholder meeting, hold a 
shareholder vote, and complete the Reorganization and Acquisition before March 
31, 2022.  But BitGo was reluctant to grant Galaxy an extension.  After all, the 
transaction had been pending for nearly a year, foreclosing other potentially lucrative 
transactions, and the industry was experiencing a boom.  To assuage BitGo’s 
concerns, the parties agreed to several new terms, including a reverse termination 
fee of $100 million, payable to BitGo if, among other reasons, the Acquisition did 
not close by the new end date.  The parties signed an amended agreement (the 
“Amended Agreement”) on March 30, 2022, the day before the Original 
Agreement’s end date. 
The Amended Agreement bought Galaxy more time by pushing the end date 
to December 31, 2022.  And if certain conditions were met, then the end date could 
be extended for three more months.  Because Galaxy was required to submit an 
amended S-4 registration statement to the SEC, BitGo was again required to deliver 
financial statements to Galaxy—this time what the agreement referred to as 
8 
 
“Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.”  The definition of this term, which 
is otherwise identical to the definition of Company 2020 Audited Financial 
Statements, updated the year, replaced a reference to a specific auditor with a general 
one, and required a report for 2021 only rather than reports for 2020 and 2019.  
Because the 2021 definition is central to the parties’ dispute, we quote it here in full:  
“Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements” means the audited 
financial statements of the Company and its Subsidiaries as of and for 
the year ended December 31, 2021, including the accompanying notes, 
prepared in accordance with GAAP and in a form that complies with 
the requirements of Regulation S-X for an offering of equity securities 
pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-1 for a non-reporting 
company and audited in accordance with PCAOB auditing standards 
by a PCAOB-qualified accounting firm that is independent from the 
Company and such Subsidiaries under Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X 
under the Securities Act, together with auditor’s reports from such 
independent accounting firm (which reports shall include an 
unqualified opinion that such financial statements present fairly, in all 
material respects, the consolidated financial position of the Company 
and its Subsidiaries as of December 31, 2021 and the results of their 
operations and their cash flows for the year ended in accordance with 
GAAP).4 
 
When companies like Galaxy seek to register their securities on a stock 
exchange like Nasdaq, the SEC requires the applicants to submit registration 
statements in varying forms.  For example, because Galaxy was attempting to 
consummate both the Reorganization and Acquisition, Galaxy originally filed a 
Form S-1 (initial registration statement) and Form S-4 (registration statement for a 
 
4 Id. at A100–01. 
9 
 
company involved in a merger or acquisition).  SEC Regulation S-X “sets forth the 
form and content of and requirements for” financial statements to be filed as a part 
of some such registration statements.5  For the SEC to declare a registration 
statement effective, the statement must comply with Regulation S-X—and the 
parties drafted the Amended Agreement with this compliance goal in mind.   
The Amended Agreement defines neither Regulation S-X nor Rule 2-01 of 
Regulation S-X.  But § 1.02 of the Amended Agreement, titled “Other Definitional 
and Interpretative Provisions,” states that “[r]eferences to any statute, rule, 
regulation, law or Applicable Law shall be deemed to refer to such statute, rule, 
regulation, law or Applicable Law as amended or supplemented from time to time 
and to any rules, regulations and interpretations promulgated thereunder.”6  
Applicable Law, in contrast, means 
with respect to any Person, any transnational, domestic or foreign 
federal, state, provincial or local law (statutory, common or otherwise), 
constitution, treaty, convention, ordinance, code, rule, regulation, 
order, injunction, judgment, decree, ruling or other similar requirement 
enacted, adopted, promulgated or applied, in each case, by a 
Governmental Authority, and authoritative interpretations of each of 
the foregoing, in each case that is binding upon or applicable to such 
Person or its properties.7  
 
 
5 17 C.F.R. § 210.01. 
6 App. to Opening Br. at A129.   
7 Id. at A96. 
10 
 
The parties also selected April 30, 2022 as the deadline for submitting the 
2021 statements (the “April Submission”).  BitGo’s failure to furnish the statements 
by that date would have two consequences:  (i) BitGo would then have until July 31, 
2022 to deliver the statements (the “July Submission”) and (ii) the end date would 
automatically be extended to March 2023.  If BitGo failed to submit compliant 
statements to Galaxy by July 31, then Galaxy could exercise its right to terminate 
the agreement without having to pay the reverse termination fee.   
The day after the Amended Agreement was signed, the SEC published Staff 
Accounting Bulletin No. 121 (“SAB 121” or the “Bulletin”).  The Bulletin detailed 
new accounting guidance applicable to filings by certain public companies and SEC 
registrants that safeguard, or act as custodians for, digital assets as part of their 
business plan.  Early in the document, the Bulletin disclosed that the  
statements in staff accounting bulletins are not rules or interpretations 
of the Commission, nor are they published as bearing the Commission’s 
official approval.  They represent staff interpretations and practices 
followed by the staff in the Division of Corporation Finance and the 
Office of the Chief Accountant in administering the disclosure 
requirements of the federal securities laws.8 
 
Later in the document, the Bulletin describes the parties whom the staff expects will 
comply with SAB 121, together with timelines for implementation. 
 
8 Id. at A804. 
11 
 
SAB 121 became effective on April 11, fewer than three weeks before BitGo 
was to submit its financial statements to Galaxy.  Although BitGo’s auditor was 
aware of SAB 121, the auditor did not apply it to the Company 2021 Audited 
Financial Statements that BitGo supplied to Galaxy on April 29, 2022, the day before 
the submission deadline.  The Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements were 
audited and presented in the same form as the Company 2020 Audited Financial 
Statements that BitGo had delivered to, and were accepted by, Galaxy seven months 
earlier.  Accompanying BitGo’s Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements was 
the auditor’s opinion that the “‘financial statements present fairly, in all material 
respects, the financial position of [BitGo] as of December 31, 2021, and the results 
of its operations and its cash flows for the year then ended in accordance with 
accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.’”9  The auditor also 
stated in a note that  
SAB 121 will likely require the Company to record an obligation to the 
balance sheet relating to its obligation to safeguard any crypto-assets 
held for their platform users and a corresponding indemnification asset 
of assets held under custody.  The Company is currently evaluating the 
effect this new guidance will have related to obligations to safeguard 
crypto-assets, 
corresponding 
indemnification 
asset[s] 
and 
its 
consolidated financial statements.10  
 
 
9 Id. at A50. 
10 Id. at A51, A688. 
12 
 
The day after BitGo’s April Submission, Galaxy responded that, because the 
financial statements did not “‘appear to give effect to SAB 121,’” the statements 
failed to meet the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.11  
According to Galaxy, this meant that the end date was automatically extended.  
BitGo responded that SAB 121 was inapplicable to the statements.  BitGo insisted, 
as the complaint recounts, that SAB 121’s instructions made plain that it applied to 
entities other than BitGo and, in any event, on a timeline for implementation well 
after the April Submission.  Galaxy nevertheless held fast to its position—that the 
submission’s failure to apply SAB 121 meant the financial statements were 
contractually noncompliant—but raised no other concerns about the statements.  
Galaxy emphasized that BitGo should apply SAB 121 to assist Galaxy with its goal 
of securing SEC approvals.  BitGo disagreed with Galaxy’s position and stated that 
the end date remained December 31, 2022.  Even so, BitGo began preparing 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements that applied SAB 121, in what BitGo 
described as an “accommodation” to Galaxy.12   
Meanwhile, Galaxy was not only facing challenges in securing SEC 
approvals; it was facing financial headwinds too.  Signs of financial problems 
emerged when Galaxy reported a loss of $111.7 million for the first quarter of 2022.  
 
11 Id. at A52. 
12 Id. at A54. 
13 
 
Near that time, the parties executed the Amended Agreement when Galaxy’s share 
price was CA$24.82,13 a decrease from the calendar-high price of CA$26.65 posted 
two days earlier.  Less than a month later and on the same day of the April 
Submission, Galaxy’s share price dropped to CA$14.05, a symptom of broader stress 
in the cryptocurrency and bitcoin markets.  Within days, the Luna cryptocurrency, 
in which Galaxy was heavily invested, suddenly collapsed, ushering in what has 
been described in the industry as the “crypto winter.”     
The day that Luna collapsed, Galaxy’s shares closed at CA$7.72.  The next 
day, Galaxy took the unusual step of furnishing a preliminary, mid-quarter update 
of its capital and liquidity position.  Galaxy disclosed that it had suffered an 
approximately $300 million loss thus far in the quarter-to-date alone.  
Contextualizing the loss in terms of broader trends, Galaxy revealed that “‘total 
cryptocurrency market capitalization had decreased approximately 40%.’”14  In an 
open letter to shareholders a few days later, Galaxy’s CEO Mike Novogratz 
acknowledged that Luna was “‘a big idea that failed,’” and said that Galaxy would 
have to “‘manage its balance sheet appropriately with respect to the macroeconomic 
backdrop,’” which would “‘remain challenging[.]’”15  As the second quarter of 2022 
 
13 “CA” is shorthand for Canadian dollars. 
14 App. to Opening Br. at A56 (emphasis omitted). 
15 Id. at A57. 
14 
 
ultimately turned out, Galaxy’s losses ballooned to $554.7 million, a figure more 
than triple the quarterly loss from the prior year.   
The complaint alleges that, in mid-May 2022, the Amended Agreement, with 
its $1.2 billion price tag, represented Galaxy’s most costly upcoming financial 
commitment.  At the same time, during an earnings call, Novogratz expressed that 
it was “‘so frustrating’” how much time the process was taking for not only Galaxy 
but also others in the industry to secure approvals for the U.S. listing of their shares.16  
Within the same month, BitGo and Galaxy learned that the SEC had expressed 
concerns about accounting practices related to the lending of digital assets, a 
segment of the industry that represented a major part of Galaxy’s business.  But the 
SEC only raised questions at this time; it did not provide definitive answers for how 
to resolve them.   
BitGo urged Galaxy to seek pre-clearance from the SEC regarding these new 
accounting issues.  BitGo suggested this course of action because of Galaxy’s 
contractual obligation both to spearhead interactions with the SEC and to use 
commercially reasonable efforts to consummate the Reorganization and Acquisition.  
Doing so, BitGo underscored, could have prevented progress on the parties’ 
agreement from stalling.  Moreover, the uncertainty surrounding these accounting 
issues prevented not only Galaxy but also BitGo from “even seeking consent from 
 
16 Id. at A59 (emphasis omitted). 
15 
 
their respective auditors to include their audited financial statements in an Amended 
S-4 filing.”17  Galaxy refused BitGo’s request that it seek pre-clearance, choosing 
instead to await guidance from the American Institute of Certified Public 
Accountants once its digital-asset working group reached consensus with the SEC.  
Whenever BitGo would request updates on Galaxy’s progress on preparing the draft 
amended S-4 and other transaction milestones, Galaxy deflected the inquiries, 
providing neither a timeline nor meaningful answers.18   
Around this time, comments from an unlikely source augured ill for BitGo in 
the coming months.  A senior Galaxy officer admitted privately to BitGo’s CEO that 
the officer had attended meetings where Galaxy and its attorneys discussed plans to 
exit the Amended Agreement.  Galaxy would blame the unraveling of the transaction 
on BitGo, which meant that Galaxy could walk away without paying the $100 
million reverse termination fee.19 
And it came to pass.  At the end of July 2022, when BitGo provided to Galaxy 
its second set of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements—this time applying 
SAB 121—Galaxy raised several objections to them.  In August, Galaxy informed 
BitGo that the July Submission was deficient because (i) the auditor report submitted 
with the statements was “‘intended solely for the information and use of BitGo . . . 
 
17 Id. at A62. 
18 Id. at A61–62. 
19 See id. at A64. 
16 
 
and Galaxy . . . ,’” which Galaxy viewed as a restriction on use that was incompatible 
with Regulation S-X (the “Restriction on Use Legend”), and (ii) the statements were 
audited in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards, or GAAS, rather 
than the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, or PCAOB, standards.20   
As to the Restriction on Use Legend on the auditor’s report, BitGo responded 
that, because Galaxy was nowhere close to submitting an amended S-4 to the SEC 
(in part, a result of the uncertainty surrounding accounting guidance for digital asset 
lending), and because the auditor’s consent could not be given until the auditor 
reviewed the draft amended S-4, the auditor’s consent was not required at that time.  
BitGo also maintained that the report’s language limiting its use to the parties was 
consistent with the Amended Agreement.  As to the PCAOB standards, BitGo said 
that Galaxy knew that BitGo, a private company, had its auditor employ GAAS 
instead of PCAOB, and Galaxy had accepted and used the Company 2020 Audited 
Financial Statements that applied GAAS in multiple confidential submissions to the 
SEC and the publicly filed first version of the registration statement.   
For Galaxy, however, the purported deficiencies of the July Submission 
sounded the death knell for the Amended Agreement.  Galaxy sent BitGo a 
termination notice on August 12, 2022, triggered by BitGo’s purported failure to 
deliver Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements by July 31, 2022.  Galaxy 
 
20 Id. at A30, A65–66, A70–71. 
17 
 
trumpeted the same message publicly in a press release issued three days later, 
declaring that “‘[n]o termination fee is payable in connection with the 
termination.’”21  Following the press release, Novogratz claimed that Galaxy was 
“‘still full steam ahead with the [Nasdaq] listing.’”22  But he offered no timeline for 
when the process would be completed.   
C 
In September 2022, BitGo sued Galaxy in the Court of Chancery.  The 
amended complaint alleged three counts:  (i) wrongful repudiation of the Amended 
Agreement, (ii) breach of contract, and (iii) breach of the implied covenant of good 
faith.  Galaxy moved to dismiss under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure 
to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.  After the parties briefed the 
motion, the Court of Chancery held oral argument in June 2023 and then announced 
its decision from the bench.  The court dismissed the complaint and held that the 
plain language of the Amended Agreement required BitGo to apply SAB 121 to the 
April Submission.  It reasoned that, under the definition of Company 2021 Audited 
Financial Statements, the April Submissions had to be in a form that could actually 
be used “for an offering of equity securities pursuant to a registration 
statement  .  .  .  .”  According to the court, BitGo’s submission was noncompliant 
 
21 Id. at A72. 
22 Id. 
18 
 
because the financial statements did not comply with SAB 121 and therefore could 
not be used to gain registration.  The alleged deficiency automatically triggered the 
extension of the end date.   
This result, in turn, gave rise to the possibility that a defective July Submission 
would be grounds for termination.  The court found that the July Submission was 
defective because “the 2021 audited financial statements had a condition that limited 
their use[,] . . . [a] condition [that] was inconsistent with Regulation S-X and [that] 
renders them incapable of being used in a Form S-1.”23  The court’s support for this 
conclusion was a letter that the SEC Acting Chief Accountant and Director of 
Corporation Finance addressed to the president of the Institute of Chartered 
Accountants of England and Wales (the “2003 Letter”).  In the court’s view, the July 
Submission failed to observe the 2003 Letter’s instruction that “‘[i]n no 
circumstances, . . . should an audit opinion containing restrictions, such as the UK 
form of audit opinion, be included as part of, or incorporated into, the annual report 
on Form 20-F or any other report filed with the Commission.’”24  The court opined 
 
23 Opening Br. Ex. A (“Tr. Ruling”) at 76.  
24 Tr. Ruling at 84; see also App. to Opening Br. at A860–61. 
19 
 
that the 2003 Letter created a requirement under Regulation S-X.25 And the July 
Submission’s noncompliance with this requirement, according to the court, provided 
Galaxy with a “clean contractual basis for termination” that swallowed up all three 
counts of the complaint.26  The court entered final judgment in favor of Galaxy that 
same day.    
D 
On appeal, BitGo argues that the Court of Chancery erred by (i) holding that 
BitGo’s April Submission did not meet the definition of Company 2021 Audited 
Financial Statements because they did not apply SAB 121, (ii) holding that BitGo’s 
July Submission failed to meet the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements based on the auditor’s language restricting the use of its report, and 
(iii) dismissing BitGo’s claims based on Galaxy’s breach of the Amended 
Agreement, which required Galaxy to use commercially reasonable efforts to resolve 
issues related to the lending of digital assets, which breach BitGo urges was the 
 
25 See, e.g., Tr. Ruling at 82–85.  After reading the foregoing passage from the 2003 Letter, the 
court stated, “[t]hat is about as clear a statement of policy on this issue as you can get.”  Id. at 84.  
The court then rejected BitGo’s argument that the letter was not “part of Regulation S-X[.]”  Id.  
Instead, the court said that “[w]hen you have clear guidance from the SEC about something that is 
absolutely not permitted in any filing with the SEC, it is clear that a set of financial statements 
containing that restriction would not comply with the requirements of Regulation S-X for an 
offering of equity securities pursuant to a registration statement on form S-1 for a nonreporting 
company.”  Thus, the court seems to have treated the 2003 Letter as a requirement of Regulation 
S-X.  See id. at 82–85. 
26 Id. at 76. 
20 
 
origin of the Restriction on Use Legend.  BitGo did not appeal the dismissal of its 
third and final count, which alleges a breach of the implied covenant of good faith.   
Galaxy responds that the Court of Chancery was correct, as a matter of law, 
that SAB 121 applied to the April Submission.  In support of this position, Galaxy 
contends that SAB 121’s express language makes clear that it applies to entities such 
as BitGo and dovetails with the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements.  Galaxy also points to BitGo’s alleged concession in the April 
Submission that the application of SAB 121 was required and the July Submission’s 
actual application of SAB 121 as evidence that undercuts BitGo’s appeal.  
Galaxy also defends the Court of Chancery’s conclusion that the Restriction 
on Use Legend in the July version of BitGo’s financial statements rendered them 
noncompliant with the contractual definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements.  Thus, according to Galaxy, the trial court did not err when it found that 
Galaxy validly terminated the Amended Agreement.   
Because we have concluded that the Amended Agreement’s language 
governing BitGo’s April and July Submissions is ambiguous, we focus the balance 
of our discussion on that issue. 
21 
 
II 
A 
We review the Court of Chancery’s grant of a motion to dismiss de novo,27 
which means that we  
‘(1) accept all well pleaded factual allegations as true, (2) accept even 
vague allegations as ‘well pleaded’ if they give the opposing party 
notice of the claim, (3) draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the 
non-moving party, and (4) do not affirm a dismissal unless the plaintiff 
would not be entitled to recover under any reasonably conceivable set 
of circumstances.’28 
 
Moreover, “whether a contract is unambiguous is a question of law[.]”29  Questions 
of contract construction are reviewed de novo.30   
The basic principles that guide us when we review a trial court’s interpretation 
of a contract are well settled.  “When interpreting a contract, Delaware courts read 
the agreement as a whole and enforce the plain meaning of clear and unambiguous 
language.”31  “‘Delaware law adheres to the objective theory of contracts, i.e., a 
contract’s construction should be that which would be understood by an objective, 
reasonable third party.’”32  “‘The true test is not what the parties to the contract 
intended it to mean, but what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would 
 
27 In re GGP, Inc. S’holder Litig., 282 A.3d 37, 54 (Del. 2022).  
28 Id. (citation omitted). 
29 Sunline Com. Carriers, Inc. v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 206 A.3d 836, 847, 847 n.68 (Del. 
2019). 
30 Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1158 (Del. 2010). 
31 Manti Holdings, LLC v. Authentix Acquisition Co, Inc., 261 A.3d 1199, 1208 (Del. 2021). 
32 Salamone v. Gorman, 106 A.3d 354, 367–68 (Del. 2014) (citing Osborn, 991 A.2d at 1159). 
22 
 
have thought it meant.’”33  If a contract is “plain and clear on its face, i.e., its 
language conveys an unmistakable meaning, the writing itself is the sole source for 
gaining an understanding of intent.”34  Stated differently, clear and unambiguous 
language is “reasonably susceptible of only one interpretation.”35  Language from a 
contract need not be perfectly clear for an interpretation of it to be deemed as the 
only reasonable one.36   
An “interpretation that conflicts with the plain language of a contract is not 
reasonable[,]”37 but an interpretation can be at once both “reasonable, though 
problematic[.]”38  Accordingly, “although the ‘more natural[]’ reading is a factor to 
be considered, it does not conclude the analysis.  Even a ‘less natural’ reading of a 
contract term may be ‘reasonable’ for purposes of an ambiguity inquiry.”39     
A provision in a contract is ambiguous “when the provision in controversy is 
reasonably or fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or more 
different meanings.”40  “[I]f the words of the agreement ‘can only be known through 
an appreciation of the context and circumstances in which they were used’” at the 
 
33 Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Am. Legacy Found., 903 A.2d 728, 739 (Del. 2006) (citing Rhone-
Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A.2d 1192, 1196 (Del. 1992)). 
34 City Inv. Co. Liquidating Tr. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 624 A.2d 1191, 1198 (Del. 1993). 
35 Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196 (emphasis added).  
36 See Hercules, Inc. v. AIU Ins. Co., 784 A.2d 481, 506 (Del. 2001). 
37 Bank of New York Mellon v. Commerzbank Cap. Funding Tr. II, 65 A.3d 539, 555 (Del. 2013).  
38 Phillips Home Builders, Inc. v. Travelers Ins. Co., 700 A.2d 127, 130 (Del. 1997). 
39 Bank of New York Mellon, 65 A.3d at 550. 
40 Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196. 
23 
 
time of drafting, then the language is ambiguous, such that “a court is not free to 
disregard extrinsic evidence of what the parties intended.”41  It is also true that we 
“do not consider extrinsic evidence unless we find that the text is ambiguous.”42  
Extrinsic evidence may not to be used to “create an ambiguity.”43  Finally—and 
importantly for present purposes—“[d]ismissal is proper only if the defendants’ 
interpretation is the only reasonable construction as a matter of law.”44 
B 
We begin with a review of the crucial contractual definition of “Company 
2021 Audited Financial Statements” and the Court of Chancery’s conclusion that the 
April Submission did not measure up to it.  This exercise is, in the court’s words, 
“important because if Galaxy wrongfully rejected the April version of the financial 
statements, then the end date would not extend, and the termination right on which 
Galaxy relied would not be available.”45   
The definition of “Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements,” which we 
quoted earlier in full,46 includes the requirement that the statements be “prepared . . . 
 
41 See City Inv., 624 A.2d at 1198. 
42 Samuel J. Heyman 1981 Continuing Tr. For Lazarus S. Heyman v. Ashland LLC, 284 A.3d 714, 
721 (Del. 2022). 
43 See Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del. 1997). 
44 Vanderbilt Income and Growth Assocs., L.L.C. v. Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., 691 A.2d 609, 
613 (Del. 1996) (emphasis in original) (citations omitted) (observing that “[o]n a motion to dismiss 
for failure to state a claim, a trial court cannot choose between two differing reasonable 
interpretations of ambiguous documents.”). 
45 Tr. Ruling at 76–77. 
46 See supra p. 8. 
24 
 
in a form that complies with the requirements of Regulation S-X for an offering of 
equity securities pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-1 for a non-reporting 
company . . . .”47  Because the definition does not expressly mention SAB 121, its 
inclusion must hinge on whether its application to BitGo’s financial statements when 
they were submitted on April 29, 2022 was a requirement on that date.  Under 
BitGo’s interpretation, it was not. 
BitGo’s interpretation finds support in the explicit interpretative guidance the 
Amended Agreement itself provides.  Specifically, § 1.02 of the Amended 
Agreement, titled “Other Definitional and Interpretative Provisions,” explains that 
“[r]eferences to any statute, rule, regulation, law or Applicable Law shall be deemed 
to refer to such statute, rule, regulation, law or Applicable Law as amended or 
supplemented from time to time and to any rules, regulations and interpretations 
promulgated thereunder.”48  Taken together, § 1.02 and the definition of Company 
2021 Audited Financial Statements expand the scope of “requirements of Regulation 
S-X” to include compliance with any “rules, regulations, and interpretations 
promulgated thereunder.”  Neither the Court of Chancery nor Galaxy disagree that 
§ 1.02 applies here—but neither considered how § 1.02 relates to the definition of 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.   
 
47 App. to Opening Br. at A100–01. 
48 Id. at A129 (emphasis added). 
25 
 
BitGo does not contest that the Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements 
must comply with Regulation S-X and interpretations promulgated thereunder.  It 
posits that the dispositive question is whether SAB 121 is an “interpretation[] 
promulgated under Regulation S-X.”49  BitGo argues that it is not for three reasons.   
First, BitGo notes that SAB 121 does not mention Regulation S-X or purport 
to interpret its text.  On this point, BitGo cites staff accounting bulletins that actually 
purport to interpret Regulation S-X, which make specific reference to it.50  BitGo 
next observes that Regulation S-X does not provide for the promulgation of staff 
accounting bulletins and that “nothing in SAB 121 indicates it was an interpretation 
promulgated under Regulation S-X.”51  Finally, BitGo contends that, because SAB 
121 “has no force of law,” it was not “promulgated at all,”52 within the plain meaning 
of that word.  Importantly, BitGo notes that the text of SAB 121 itself clarifies that 
the guidance it provides does not constitute “rules or interpretations of the 
Commission, nor [is it] published as bearing the Commission’s official approval.”53 
 
49 Id. 
50 See, e.g., id. at A857, Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 69 (May 8, 1987) (expressing staff views 
regarding “[t]he use of Article 9 of Regulation S-X”); id. at A853, Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 
53 (June 13, 1983) (“express[ing] the staff’s views with respect to certain disclosure and reporting 
requirements relating to the issuance of securities guaranteed by affiliates of the issuer and to Rule 
3-10 of Regulation S-X”) (cited at Opening Br. 27–28). 
51 Opening Br. at 28. 
52 Id. 
53 App. to Opening Br. at 804. 
26 
 
Galaxy’s response to these contentions focuses on whether SAB 121 is an 
“interpretation” that is applicable to entities like BitGo.  Galaxy chides BitGo, for 
instance, for ignoring “that SAB 121 states that it provides ‘interpretations’ 
applicable to the financial statements of companies charged with safeguarding 
crypto assets (like BitGo) . . . .”54  Galaxy also cites authority for the proposition that 
courts accept staff accounting bulletins as “‘interpretations and practices’” followed 
by the SEC.55  And Galaxy takes issue with BitGo’s understanding of what it means 
to “promulgate” an interpretation.  But Galaxy never squarely addresses whether 
SAB 121 was an “interpretation promulgated under” Regulation S-X. 
Instead of focusing on § 1.02 and its interpretative guidance, the Court of 
Chancery relied on the language from the definition of Company 2021 Audited 
Financial Statements.  According to the court, the issue was whether the April 
Submission was in a form that could actually be filed with the SEC.  The court found 
that it was not because SAB 121 had to be applied in the “next submission or filing 
with the SEC,”56 which, according to the court, was “the contemplated S-1.”57   
 
54 Answering Br. at 22. 
55 Id. at 23 (citing Ginano v. Citizens Utils. Co., 228 F.3d. 154, 163 (2d Cir. 2000)). 
56 App. to Opening Br. at 808 (SAB 121 states that “the staff expects . . . entities . . . to apply the 
guidance . . . beginning with their next submission or filing with the SEC (e.g., the initial or next 
amendment of the registration statement, proxy statement, or Form 1-A), with retrospective 
application, at a minimum, as of the beginning of the most recent annual period ending before June 
15, 2022 . . . .”).  
57 Tr. Ruling at 79.  We note here that, although the Court of Chancery described the parties’ next 
filing with the SEC as “the contemplated S-1,” the amended complaint asserts that the parties’ next 
contemplated SEC filing was an amended S-4:  “Galaxy continued to emphasize that its only 
27 
 
The court also considered the Amended Agreement’s definition of 
“Applicable Law.”  The court recognized that the “Applicable Law” provision was 
not “directly applicable”58 to the definition, but that it nevertheless provided a 
“signal . . . that when there is a law to be complied with, the obligation extends not 
only to the regulations themselves but also to interpretations like SAB 121.”59  And 
finally, the court relied on “the financial statements self-acknowledge[ment] in the 
notes that there is a need to comply with SAB 121”60 and the adherence to SAB 
121’s guidance in BitGo’s July Submission.  We take up these reasons for the Court 
of Chancery’s conclusion in turn. 
 
 
 
concern was that BitGo should retrospectively apply SAB 121 to assist Galaxy and HoldCo’s 
eventual filing of the Amended S-4.  The parties’ understanding was that Galaxy and HoldCo 
would not file on Form S-1.”  App. to Opening Br. at A53–54.  As best we can discern, neither 
party has challenged this assertion. 
58 Tr. Ruling at 79–80.  The court’s invocation of the “Applicable Law” provision and our 
characterization of it is reflected in the following passage from the court transcript ruling:  “Galaxy 
has also invoked to its aid Section 1.02 and the definition of ‘Applicable Law.’  I don’t think that 
provision is directly applicable.  The definition of “Applicable Law” is just that, a defined term, 
‘Applicable Law.’  The definition of ‘Company Financial Statements’ doesn’t say ‘compliance 
with the requirements of Applicable Law.’  It specifically says ‘compliance with the requirements 
of Regulation S-X.’ ‘Applicable Law’ is used in other sections of the agreement, most notably in 
the representation that the company is, in fact, in compliance with Applicable Law.  But 
‘Applicable Law’ is not directly implicated in the definition of ‘Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements.’  It is, however, a signal as to what people thought compliance meant.  And what that 
definition indicates is that is when there is a law to be complied with, the obligation extends not 
only to the regulations themselves but also to interpretations like SAB 121.” (emphasis added). 
59 Id. at 80. 
60 Id. 
28 
 
C 
We see the timing issue—that is, the applicability of SAB 121 to BitGo’s 
financial statements as of April 30, 2022—as decisive.  The question, in our view, is 
not whether BitGo would ultimately be required to apply SAB 121’s guidance to the 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements in its next submission or filing with 
the SEC, the contemplated filing of which was months away.  Rather, the relevant 
question is whether, on April 30, 2022—the deadline for the April Submission—the 
financial statements were “in a form that complies with the requirements of 
Regulation S-X for an offering of equity securities pursuant to a registration 
statement on Form S-1 for a non-reporting company[.]”61  And a finding that the 
April Submission met the definition as of the deadline would be dispositive here 
because Galaxy’s assertion that BitGo’s submission “d[id] not meet the definition of 
[Company 2021] Audited Financial Statements” was the sole basis for its rejection 
of the statements62 without which Galaxy’s termination right would not have 
arisen.63   
 
61 App. to Opening Br. at A100–01. 
62 Id. at A699. 
63 Galaxy concedes as much on appeal.  Delaware Supreme Court, Oral Argument Video:  BitGo 
Holdings, Inc. v. Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd., at 31:40–32:40 (Dec. 6, 2023) 
(https://vimeo.com/891912984) (Galaxy’s admission that if the April Submission was compliant, 
“everything else falls away, and I think we’re back into the Chancery Court”).  Both the Court of 
Chancery and Galaxy also agreed on this point at oral argument on Galaxy’s motion to dismiss.  
See Tr. Ruling at 33–34; 76–77.  There, the court asked Galaxy’s counsel to assume that Galaxy 
“incorrectly asserted that SAB 121 applies . . . [and] in fact, the Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements were contractually compliant,” and to “take [the court] through what happens if that’s 
29 
 
As mentioned, the Court of Chancery focused on the SEC guidance that BitGo 
might be required to follow in its next submission or filing of financial statements 
with the SEC.  In essence, the court read the relevant definition as requiring BitGo 
to submit “file-ready” statements by April 30, 2022, even though the next filing was 
months in the future at a time when the questions of SAB 121’s applicability and the 
SEC’s position on accounting practices related to the lending of digital assets were 
subject to uncertainty.  In reaching this conclusion, however, the court did not 
address § 1.02’s interpretative guidance.  
On appeal, the parties joined issue over § 1.02 and whether SAB 121 was 
“promulgated” as that word is used in § 1.02 of the Amended Agreement.  BitGo 
favors a narrow definition that involves an administrative agency’s “‘formal process 
of rulemaking by publishing the proposed regulation, inviting public comments, and 
approving or rejecting the proposal.’”64  Galaxy, on the other hand, favors a broader 
definition that simply refers to the SEC’s ability to “‘declare or announce publicly; 
to proclaim[.]’”65  If BitGo’s preferred definition applies, then it would seem that 
SAB 121 was not “promulgated.”  Conversely, SAB 121 was declared and 
announced publicly and therefore “promulgated” under Galaxy’s definition.  On this 
 
the case” to which Galaxy’s counsel replied, “if [BitGo] deliver[ed] contractually compliant 
financial statements as of April 30, 2022, [Galaxy] ha[d] an obligation to move forward[.]”   
64 Opening Br. at 29–30 (citing Promulgate, Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009)). 
65 Answering Br. at 25 n.5 (citing Promulgate, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)). 
30 
 
pleading-stage record and without the benefit of any guidance as to the word’s 
accepted meaning in the world of securities regulation, we are not prepared to say 
that either of these definitions is unreasonable.  
Under its proffered definition of “promulgate,” BitGo argues that nothing in 
SAB 121 suggests that it was required by or promulgated under Regulation S-X.  In 
fact, SAB 121’s text does not even mention Regulation S-X, though it refers to other 
SEC regulations, such as Regulation A and Regulation S-K.  What is more, BitGo 
argues, the text of SAB 121 expressly disclaims that it provides officially sanctioned 
interpretative guidance.  The Bulletin says,  
statements in staff accounting bulletins are not rules or interpretations 
of the Commission, nor are they published as bearing the Commission’s 
official approval.  They represent staff interpretations and practices 
followed by the staff in the Division of Corporation Finance and the 
Office of the Chief Accountant in administering the disclosure 
requirements of the federal securities laws.66  
 
This disclaimer, together with the absence of any reference to Regulation S-X in 
SAB 121, leads BitGo to conclude that SAB 121 was not promulgated under 
Regulation S-X.   
Alternatively, BitGo argues that, even if SAB 121 was promulgated under 
Regulation S-X, the Bulletin’s own terms did not expressly require BitGo to apply 
 
66 App. to Opening Br. at A804. 
31 
 
its guidance in April 2022.  The relevant language from SAB 121 reflects the 
expectation that entities will apply its guidance 
beginning with their next submission or filing with the SEC (e.g. the 
initial or next amendment of the registration statement, proxy 
statement, or Form 1-A), with retrospective application, at a minimum, 
as of the beginning of the most recent annual period ending before June 
15, 2022 . . . .”67 
 
BitGo homes in on the phrase “retrospective application,” describing it as an 
“esoteric accounting practice[]” or “a term of art[.]”68  In BitGo’s view, the meaning 
of this term presented a factual question that the court mistakenly decided without 
the benefit of expert testimony, requiring the April Submission to apply SAB 121 
“contemporaneously, not retrospectively.”69 
But as BitGo tells it, “retrospective application” is a term that “refers to ‘the 
application of a different accounting principle to one or more previously issued 
financial statements.’”70  BitGo asserts that the April Submission was properly 
prepared based on the accounting guidance applicable at the end of BitGo’s fiscal 
year; whatever adjustments SAB 121 required “would be ‘retrospectively adjusted 
in the future as a result of the change.’”71  Had the court appreciated the distinction, 
BitGo suggests, the court would not have “effectively reject[ed] [BitGo’s auditor’s] 
 
67 Id. at A808; see Opening Br. at 31. 
68 Opening Br. at 31–32. 
69 Id. (emphasis in original). 
70 Id. (emphasis in original) (citing App. to Opening Br. at A850, ASC Topic 250-20). 
71 Id. at 32 (emphasis in original) (citing SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin Codification Topic 11.M). 
32 
 
understanding of the applicable accounting standards as a matter of law.”72  BitGo 
further claims that, under the Amended Agreement, § 13.01’s “text and 
structure  .  .  . embed[] the distinction between retrospective application and a prior-
period restatement[,]” such that the agreement allowed for the former but not the 
latter.73   
In answer to BitGo’s primary argument that SAB 121 was wholly 
inapplicable, Galaxy builds on the Court of Chancery’s view that the definition of 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements calls for “file-ready” statements.  That 
is, Galaxy emphasizes that BitGo’s statements were to be “in a form that complies 
with the requirements of Regulation S-X for an offering of equity securities pursuant 
to a registration statement on Form S-1 for a non-reporting company[.]”74  
Combining this language with language from § 9.07 of the Amended Agreement,75 
Galaxy avers that BitGo’s financial statements “had to be in a form that could 
actually be filed with—and accepted by—the SEC as part of Galaxy’s forthcoming 
registration statement.”76 
 
72 See id. at 34. 
73 Id. at 33–34 (citing § 13.01(b), (h)). 
74 App. to Opening Br. at 100–01; Answering Br. at 17–18. 
75 App. to Opening Br. at A218.  Under § 9.07, BitGo’s submissions to Galaxy were “required to 
be included in the [registration statement] under the Securities Act and the rules and regulations 
promulgated thereunder in order for any such registration statement to be declared effective by the 
SEC.”  Id. 
76 Answering Br. at 18. 
33 
 
Galaxy then ties SAB 121 to Regulation S-X in three steps.  First, Galaxy 
argues that Regulation S-X “governs the form, content, and requirements of financial 
statements filed with registration statements.”77  Second, Galaxy points to SAB 
121’s language stating that it offers “interpretive guidance for entities to consider 
when they have obligations to safeguard crypto-assets held for their platform uses,” 
such that it applies, among others, to “private operating companies whose financial 
statements are included in filings with the SEC in connection with a business 
combination[.]”78  And third, Galaxy concludes that BitGo and the Acquisition fall 
within the scope of SAB 121.  Hence, Galaxy holds out that the definition of 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements required BitGo to apply SAB 121. 
Responding to BitGo’s alternative argument, Galaxy defends the court’s 
interpretation of what it calls SAB 121’s “plain language” that required BitGo to 
apply SAB 121’s guidance to the April Submission, concluding that expert 
testimony was unnecessary.79  Galaxy also maintains that § 13.01 is inapplicable, as 
it relates only to scenarios arising after BitGo’s April or July Submissions (and even 
then, only if one of them was compliant).80 
 
77 Id. at 22 (citing 17 C.F.R. Part 210). 
78 App. to Opening Br. at A805; Answering Br. at 18–19. 
79 Answering Br. at 27–29. 
80 Galaxy also claims that BitGo’s conduct undercuts its position in two ways:  first, BitGo “self-
acknowledged” in the April Submission that SAB 121 would be required, and second, BitGo 
applied SAB 121 to the July Submission as of January 1, 2021.  We address these points in II.D. 
34 
 
After considering these respective interpretations, we conclude that the 
definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements is “reasonably or fairly 
susceptible of different interpretations.”81  On the one hand, Galaxy’s interpretation 
accords with a common sense reading of the definition’s “file-ready” requirement.  
And Galaxy’s interpretation takes SAB 121’s “plain meaning” as requiring BitGo to 
comply with the Bulletin, under “retrospective application,” by April 30, 2022.  On 
the other hand, BitGo’s interpretation accounts for how the meaning of Company 
2021 Audited Financial Statements is qualified by § 1.02 in a way that suggests that 
SAB 121 was not applicable.  And BitGo’s interpretation suggests that 
“retrospective application” did not call for compliance by April 30, 2022.  This is 
not to say that each interpretation is without its own problems; interpretations can 
be, after all, “reasonable, though problematic[.]”82  Nor must we determine at this 
stage which of the interpretations is the “most reasonable.”  Instead, our task is to 
determine whether the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements is 
“reasonably susceptible of only one interpretation.”83  At the pleading stage, it is not.   
In the absence of extrinsic evidence bearing on how securities law and 
accounting principles interact in relation to the Amended Agreement—including, 
but not necessarily limited to, the meaning of “promulgated” under Regulation S-X 
 
81 Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196. 
82 Phillips Home Builders, 700 A.2d at 130. 
83 Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196 (emphasis added). 
35 
 
and “retrospective application”—we hold that dismissal as a matter of law was 
improper.84 
D 
 
To round out our analysis of the adequacy of the April Submission, we address 
the two remaining grounds that prompted the Court of Chancery to conclude that the 
submission was noncompliant:  BitGo’s purported “self-acknowledgement” in the 
April Submission that SAB 121 was applicable to its financial statements and 
BitGo’s application of SAB 121 in its July Submission. 
In its ruling, the court took “into account that [the April Submission] self-
acknowledges in the notes that there is a need to comply with SAB 121.”85  The so-
called “self-acknowledgement” in the auditor report reads as follows:  
SAB 121 will likely require the Company to record an obligation to the 
balance sheet relating to its obligation to safeguard any crypto-assets 
held for their platform users and a corresponding indemnification of 
assets held under custody.  The Company is currently evaluating the 
effect this new guidance will have related to obligations to safeguard 
crypto-assets, 
corresponding 
indemnification 
assets 
and 
its 
consolidated financial statements.86  
 
The day after Galaxy received the April Submission, it seized upon this language 
and wrote to BitGo, noting—much as the Court of Chancery did in its ruling—“the 
 
84 See Vanderbilt, 691 A.2d 609 at 613. 
85 Tr. Ruling at 80. 
86 App. to Opening Br. at A51, A688 (emphasis added). 
36 
 
company’s acknowledgment in Note 2 that the application of SAB 121 is 
required.”87 
This characterization of the auditor’s note is, in our view, subject to dispute.  
On its face, the note draws attention to the potential, future—as opposed to the 
certain, present—applicability of SAB 121.  The complaint reveals, moreover, that 
BitGo promptly responded to Galaxy, maintaining that it “[did] not agree that the 
financial statements that BitGo delivered last week do not meet the definition of 
‘2021 Company Audited Financial Statements’ in the merger agreement.”88  BitGo 
told Galaxy that it would “cooperate[] in good faith . . . by working to provide 
retrospective application of SAB 121” but explained to Galaxy its position that “the 
April 29, 2022 delivery of its Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements was fully 
compliant with the Amended Agreement and that the End Date remained December 
31, 2022.”89  In other words, BitGo made clear its position that SAB 121 did not 
apply to its financial statements submitted pursuant to the Amended Agreement at 
the time of the April Submission.90  By characterizing the auditor’s note as a 
“self-acknowledgement” by BitGo that SAB 121 applied to the April Submission as 
 
87 Id. at A699. 
88 Id. at A52. 
89 Id. at A54. 
90 Id.  
37 
 
of April 30, 2022, the Court of Chancery appears to have drawn an inference in 
Galaxy’s favor contrary to our Rule 12(b)(6) standards. 
We also question the final ground that the court cited in support of its decision.  
The court observed that “when BitGo later delivered a July version of the same 
financial statements, BitGo acknowledged its own adoption of SAB 121 as an 
accounting policy effective as of January 1, 2021[,]” an apparent reference to 
BitGo’s concession that it would retrospectively apply SAB 121.91  But on the day 
of the July Submission, BitGo wrote to Galaxy stating its position that the Company 
had “previously delivered its 2021 Audited Financial Statements . . . in satisfaction 
of BitGo’s obligation under the merger agreement”92 and that it had applied SAB 
121 in response to Galaxy’s request “[i]n the spirit of cooperation—and without 
waiving any rights regarding prior compliance.”93   
As with the auditor’s note in the April Submission,94 we do not read BitGo’s 
application of SAB 121 to the July Submission as an admission that the April 
Submission required the application of SAB 121.  Instead, we view BitGo’s behavior 
here, crediting the well-pleaded allegations in the complaint accordingly, with 
BitGo’s desire to accommodate Galaxy, not to admit to past deficiencies.  The 
 
91 Tr. Ruling at 80–81. 
92 App. to Opening Br. at A733. 
93 Id. at A733–34. 
94 Id. at A54, A64–65. 
38 
 
complaint alleges that BitGo acted in this way in the service of closing a deal that 
had been pending at that point for over a year.  And even if there were doubt as to 
the import of the July Submission, our Rule 12(b)(6) standard, which requires us to 
accept the complaint’s well-pleaded allegations as true and draw all reasonable 
inferences in a light favorable to the plaintiff,95 settles the question in BitGo’s favor. 
As mentioned above, the Court of Chancery’s dismissal of all three counts of 
the complaint hinged entirely on Galaxy’s so-called “clean contractual basis for 
termination,” which relied on the supposed deficiencies in the April and July 2022 
Submissions.  But that termination right never arose if the April Submission was 
compliant.  The only reason that Galaxy cited for rejecting the April Submission was 
that BitGo failed to apply SAB 121.  If the April Submission failed to comply with 
the Amended Agreement, then the termination right might yet have been triggered 
by the July Submission if it, too, were defective.  We therefore turn to the issues 
surrounding the July Submission. 
E 
First, BitGo claims that the Court of Chancery erred when it held that the July 
Submission failed to meet the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements because of the Restriction on Use Legend.  Second, BitGo claims that 
the court erred when it dismissed BitGo’s count based on Galaxy’s breach of the 
 
95 In re GGP, 282 A.3d at 54.  
39 
 
commercially reasonable efforts clause in the Amended Agreement.  We address 
these contentions in turn. 
BitGo’s first argument is grounded in two considerations.  First, BitGo points 
to two provisions of the Amended Agreement that permitted the Restriction on Use 
Legend—the definition of Company 2021 Financial Statements, which does not 
expressly prohibit a legend, and § 9.07, which describes, in BitGo’s words, the 
“iterative regulatory process involving the preparation, finalization, approval and 
dissemination of Galaxy’s S-4.”96  The definition of Company 2021 Audited 
Financial Statements calls for BitGo’s auditor to include a report but does not 
mention the auditor’s consent.  By contrast, § 9.07(c) requires BitGo to provide its 
auditor’s consent “prior to any filings of an amended” registration statement.97  
BitGo thus claims that the “consent to use the auditor[’s] reports in financial 
statements is both separate from and can be completed later than the delivery of 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.”98  Because Galaxy had not 
completed an amended S-4 in July 2022, BitGo advances the view that its auditor 
would have violated its professional standards of conduct if it provided its consent 
 
96 Opening Br. at 39.   
97 Section 9.07(c) states that BitGo “shall as promptly and practicable furnish to Parent . . . the 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements and prior to any filings of an amended S-4 
Registration Statement or S-1 Registration Statement that Parent has determined will include such 
Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements, as applicable, consents from the independent 
registered accounting firm[.]”  App. to Opening Br. at A218. 
98 Opening Br. at 40. 
40 
 
before reviewing the completed amended S-4.  BitGo cites its email confirmations 
to Galaxy both on the day of the July Submission and the next day that BitGo would 
provide its auditor’s consent “‘as promptly as practicable after the SEC clarifies its 
views on accounting for digital asset lending[,]’”99 the issue on which BitGo had 
requested that Galaxy seek pre-clearance from the SEC.   
BitGo further challenges the Court of Chancery’s conclusion that § 9.07 
implicated a separate issue.  In particular, BitGo questions the court’s observation 
that “[h]aving financial statements with a restriction on use is one thing.  Consent to 
use the financial statements in a Form S-1 is another thing.”100  For BitGo, however, 
“a restriction on use and consent to use are two sides of the same coin.  If consent to 
use need not happen until later, then there can be restriction (i.e., non-consent) on 
use beforehand.”101  Put differently, granting the auditor’s consent when Galaxy 
completed the amended S-4 “necessarily would require [the auditor] to remove the 
‘Restriction on Use’ legend[.]”102   
Second, BitGo insists that the Court of Chancery erred by concluding that the 
2003 Letter constituted a de facto requirement of Regulation S-X.103  BitGo argues 
here, much as it did as to SAB 121’s applicability to the April Submission under § 
 
99 Id. at 38 (citing App. to Opening Br. at A732–34).   
100 Tr. Ruling at 86–87. 
101 Opening Br. at 40. 
102 Id. at 21 (emphasis added). 
103 App. to Opening Br. at A860–61.   
41 
 
1.02, that the letter neither mentions Regulation S-X (or its language) nor was it 
promulgated under Regulation S-X.  BitGo also claims that “nothing in Regulation 
S-X prohibits a restriction on use.”104 
Galaxy counters that the court properly relied on the 2003 Letter.  As both the 
letter and Regulation S-X concern accounting practices related to SEC filings, 
Galaxy concludes that BitGo’s audit report (with its Restriction on Use Legend) 
ignored SEC rules such that it “plainly [could not] be filed with the SEC to satisfy 
the Regulation S-X requirement.”105  Namely, the July Submission failed to meet the 
definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements because it was not 
immediately ready for use “by any Galaxy investors[.]”106  Galaxy also recounts that 
none of BitGo’s previously submitted statements (September 2021 and April 2022) 
had a Restriction on Use Legend. 
Galaxy also criticizes BitGo for misreading § 9.07.  The main thrust of 
Galaxy’s view is that BitGo conflates an auditor’s report, which is required under 
the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements, and the auditor’s 
consent, which is required under § 9.07.  To Galaxy, the report and consent serve 
different ends.  Along these lines, Galaxy claims that, because BitGo would be 
required, once the auditor gave its consent, to reissue its financial statements without 
 
104 Opening Br. at 37. 
105 Answering Br. at 33–34. 
106 Id. 
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the Restriction on Use Legend, that fact “demonstrate[d] that [BitGo] had not 
delivered financial statements that could be included in a registration statement filed 
with the SEC.”107  
Considering these competing interpretations, we conclude once more that the 
meaning of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements is ambiguous.108  That is, 
neither party has persuaded us that its “interpretation is the only reasonable 
construction as a matter of law.”109  It seems to us that the questions surrounding the 
auditor’s inclusion of the Restriction on Use Legend—like the applicability of SAB 
121—implicate the interplay of professional accounting standards and the parties’ 
intentions as to the definition of Company 2021 Audited Financial Statements.  From 
where we sit, we are unable to discern unreasonableness in either party’s 
interpretation of that definition as it relates to the Restriction on Use Legend.  The 
Court of Chancery should therefore consider extrinsic evidence.110   
F 
BitGo’s final argument remains in play if the July Submission is found to be 
deficient.111  This argument concerns one of two provisions related to the 
 
107 Id. at 39. 
108 See Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196. 
109 Vanderbilt, 691 A.2d at 613 (emphasis in original). 
110 See Salamone, 106 A.3d at 374–75 (examples of extrinsic evidence “may include overt 
statements and acts of the parties, the business context, prior dealings between the parties, [and] 
business custom and usage in the industry.”) (citation omitted).   
111 Compare Opening Br. at 6 with id. at 46.   
43 
 
complaint’s second count, the dismissed breach of contract claim.  Generally, § 9.01 
deals with Galaxy’s obligations to use commercially reasonable efforts to 
consummate the transactions.112  BitGo claims that, “even assuming the ‘Restriction 
on Use’ legend violated the requirements for Company 2021 Audited Financial 
Statements,”113 the complaint “generates a reasonable inference that Galaxy’s 
refusal to seek pre-clearance prevented BitGo’s auditor[] from removing the 
‘Restriction on Use’ legend and therefore did ‘materially contribute to the failure of 
the transaction.’”114  BitGo claims that the court’s dismissal is irreconcilable with 
the prevention doctrine, a doctrine that BitGo says it raised but the court did not 
address.  As BitGo argues, the doctrine means that “Galaxy ‘cannot profit from its 
misconduct’ by exploiting a situation it wrongfully created as a basis for 
termination.”115   
Galaxy defends the dismissal, claiming that seeking pre-clearance was not the 
only way to resolve the accounting issue.  Nor was resolving the issue solely 
Galaxy’s job; BitGo’s auditor, Galaxy submits, could have done so.  Galaxy thus 
concludes that the court considered but rejected the prevention doctrine, because 
“BitGo failed to demonstrate that any action or inaction by Galaxy contributed at all, 
 
112 See App. to Opening Br. at A75–77, A208–12. 
113 Opening Br. at 46. 
114 Reply Br. at 25 (emphasis in original) (citing Williams Cos., Inc. v. Energy Transfer Equity, 
L.P., 159 A.3d 264, 273 (Del. 2017)). 
115 Opening Br. at 44 (citing Murphy Marine Servs. of Del. v. GT USA Wilm., LLC, 2022 WL 
4296495, at *13 (Del. Ch. 2022)). 
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much less materially, to BitGo’s own failure” to deliver compliant financial 
statements.116 
As we read the court’s ruling and final judgment,117 it is unclear whether the 
court addressed the doctrine.  The essence of the court’s reasoning is as follows: 
Whether or not [the provisions comprising count II] state a claim in 
their own right doesn’t matter because they don’t affect the valid 
termination right based on the use restriction in the financial statements.  
These issues may well be separate and unrelated breaches, but because 
we have a valid termination pursuant to Section 13.1 for the 
noncompliant financial statements, it is not possible, it is not reasonably 
conceivable, that these alternative theories could lead to some type of 
causally resulting damages.118 
 
But the “‘prevention doctrine’ provides that a party may not escape 
contractual liability by reliance upon the failure of a condition precedent where the 
party wrongfully prevented performance of that condition precedent.”119  An 
analysis whether performance may have been “wrongfully prevented” can stand 
apart from the exercise of a termination right.  The court noted this distinction, on 
the one hand, correctly observing that the breach of contract claims “may well be 
separate and unrelated breaches” from the termination right, but the court 
 
116 Answering Br. at 45–46. 
117 Compare Tr. Ruling at 88–89 with BitGo Holdings, Inc. v. Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd., 2023 
WL 3948788, at *1 (Del. Ch. June 9, 2023) (“Count II fails to state a claim on which relief could 
be granted because in light of the clean termination right, the alleged breaches of the agreement 
could not lead to causally related damages.”). 
118 Tr. Ruling at 88–89. 
119 Mobile Commc’ns Corp. of Am. v. Mci Commc’ns Corp., 1985 WL 11574, at *4 (Del. Ch. 
1985). 
45 
 
overlooked, on the other hand, that the doctrine could still apply.  It is therefore 
unclear to us whether the court did, in fact, apply the doctrine.  BitGo argues that, if 
the Restriction on Use Legend rendered the July Submission noncompliant, then 
Galaxy’s refusal to seek pre-clearance from the SEC breached the contract and 
materially contributed to the failure of the July Submission,120 because the lack of 
pre-clearance was the reason for the Restriction on Use Legend.  We decline the 
invitation to consider whether these allegations implicate the prevention doctrine in 
the first instance.121  On remand, if it determines after the consideration of extrinsic 
evidence that the April and July Submissions were noncompliant, the Court of 
Chancery should consider whether the doctrine applies. 
III 
For the reasons stated above, we reverse the Court of Chancery’s June 9, 2023 
final judgment122 dismissing the amended complaint and remand the case for further 
proceedings consistent with this opinion.  
 
120 Williams Cos., Inc., 159 A.3d at 273–74 (“once a breach of covenant is established, the burden 
is on the breaching party to show that the breach did not materially contribute to the failure of the 
transaction.  The plaintiff has no obligation to show what steps the breaching party could have 
taken to consummate the transaction.”). 
121 Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co. v. Esmark, Inc., 672 A.2d 41, 44 (Del. 1996) (declining to decide 
an issue that the trial court did not rule upon in the first instance); Vanderbilt, 691 A.2d at 614 n.2 
(same). 
122 BitGo, 2023 WL 3948788 (Del. Ch. June 9, 2023).