Case Title: West v. Access Control Related Enterprises, LLC

Citation: 

Docket Number: 230, 2022

State: delaware

Court: Delaware Supreme Court

Date: 2023-04-13T00:00:00Z

Document:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE 
 
WILLIAM WEST, 
            
 
 § 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 §  
 
 
Plaintiff Below, 
 
 
 §  
 
 
Appellant,  
 
 
 §  
No. 230, 2022 
 §  
 
v. 
 
 
 
 
 § 
Court Below: Superior Court 
 § 
of the State of Delaware 
ACCESS CONTROL RELATED       § 
ENTERPRISES, LLC, LLR EQUITY  § 
PARTNERS, IV, L.P., LLR EQUITY  §  
C.A. No. N17C-11-137 
PARTNERS PARALLEL IV, L.P.,   § 
SETH LEHR, an individual,  
 
 § 
DAVID STIENES, an individual,  
 § 
GREG CASE, an individual,  
 
 § 
ROBERT CHEFITZ, an individual,   § 
and JOSEPH GRILLO, an individual,  §  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 §  
 
 
Defendant Below,  
 
 § 
 
Appellee. 
 
 
 
 § 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Submitted:  February 22, 2023 
Decided:  
April 13, 2023 
 
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VAUGHN and TRAYNOR, Justices. 
 
Upon appeal from the Superior Court.  AFFIRMED. 
 
Geoffrey G. Grivner, Esquire, Kody M. Sparks, Esquire, Buchanan Ingersoll & 
Rooney PC, Wilmington, Delaware; Ekwan E. Rhow, Esquire (argued), Timothy B. 
Yoo, Esquire, Kate S. Shin, Esquire, Alexander H. Tran, Esquire, Bird, Marella, 
Boxer, Wolpert, Nessim, Drooks, Lincenberg & Rhow, P.C., Los Angeles, 
California; for Plaintiff Below, William West. 
 
Jody C. Barillare, Esquire, Amy M. Dudash, Esquire, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius 
LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael L. Banks, Esquire (argued), Vishal H. Shah, 
Esquire, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; for Defendant 
2 
 
Below, Appellee Access Control Related Enterprises, LLC, LLR Equity Partners, IV, 
LLP, LLR Equity Partners Parallel IV, L.P., Seth Lehr, David 
Stienes, Greg Case, Robert Cheftiz, and Joseph Grillo.   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3 
 
SEITZ, Chief Justice: 
William West, the founder of Access Control Related Enterprises, LLC 
(“ACRE”), was forced out as an officer of the company by its majority owners, LLR 
Equity Partners, IV, L.P. and LLR Equity Partners Parallel IV, L.P. (collectively, 
“LLR”).  He responded by filing a wrongful termination suit against ACRE and 
others in California state court.  The California court stayed the case based on the 
forum selection provisions in the controlling agreements that designated Delaware 
as the exclusive forum for disputes arising out of the agreements.  After a failed 
detour to Delaware District Court, West filed the same claims in the Delaware 
Superior Court.   
At first, the Superior Court ordered that the case be transferred to the Court of 
Chancery because the latter had exclusive jurisdiction over West’s breach of 
fiduciary duty claim.  In response, West chose not to transfer the case, withdrew his 
breach of fiduciary duty claim, and persuaded the California court to lift the stay.  
The Superior Court then reversed course and decided to continue exercising 
jurisdiction over the case.  It also denied West’s multiple motions to dismiss the 
Delaware case in favor of the California litigation.  After more motion practice by 
both sides, a Delaware jury eventually found against West on his breach of contract 
claim. 
4 
 
West has not appealed the jury’s adverse verdict.  Instead, he seeks to undo 
his loss in Delaware by challenging the Superior Court’s procedural rulings.  First, 
he argues that the Superior Court no longer had jurisdiction once it issued the order 
transferring the case to the Court of Chancery.  According to West, the court’s 
unprompted decision to continue to exercise jurisdiction was improper.  Second, he 
claims that the Superior Court improperly denied his motions for voluntary 
dismissal.  And third, he believes that if the Superior Court had applied forum non 
conveniens, it would have dismissed the Delaware case in favor of the California 
litigation. 
We affirm the Superior Court’s decision to keep the dispute in Delaware.  The 
Superior Court did not lose jurisdiction when it issued the transfer order.  The 
transfer never occurred because West did not take the steps to effectuate the transfer 
to the Court of Chancery.  Also, the court did not exceed its broad discretion when 
it denied West’s motions to dismiss.  And forum non conveniens does not apply 
when the parties have contracted for a specific forum to resolve their disputes. 
I. 
A. 
In 2012, West, a California resident, co-founded ACRE, a Delaware limited 
liability company.  A year later, two Delaware limited partnerships – LLR Equity 
Partners, IV, L.P. and LLR Equity Partners Parallel IV, L.P. – became ACRE’s 
5 
 
majority owners and controlled its board.  The LLR-controlled board appointed West 
ACRE’s Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer.  The parties entered 
into eight agreements, four of which designated a state or federal court in Delaware 
as the exclusive forum to resolve disputes among the parties.1  The Securityholders’ 
Agreement and LLC Agreement both designated the Court of Chancery and any 
federal court in Delaware for dispute resolution, while the Severance Agreement and 
Noncompetition Agreement both designated any federal or state court in Delaware.  
The Securityholders’ Agreement also covered the rights and obligations of ACRE’s 
securities, and the Severance Agreement governed the employment relationships.  
The four other agreements either contained no forum selection provision or had a 
non-Delaware forum selection provision.  Three of the agreements provided the 
grounds under which West could be terminated as an ACRE employee.   
The parties’ relationship deteriorated for reasons not relevant to our decision, 
which led ACRE’s LLR-controlled board to terminate West for cause as ACRE’s 
CFO and COO.  In 2016, West filed suit in the Los Angeles Superior Court against 
LLR and claimed wrongful termination, conversion, and breach of fiduciary duty, 
 
1 App. to Opening Br. at A821-33 (Equity Incentive Plan); A834-44 (Noncompetition Agreement); 
A917-76 (Securityholders’ Agreement); A980-84 (Equity Award Agreement); A1124-30 
(Severance Agreement); A1147-99 (LLC Agreement); A2587-639 (Contribution and Purchase 
Agreement); A2768-92 (Securities Purchase Agreement). 
6 
 
and sought declaratory relief.2  LLR responded by moving to dismiss or stay the 
action.3  The Los Angeles Superior Court granted the motion and stayed the case 
based on the forum selection provisions in the agreements.4 
B. 
In August 2017, West brought the same claims in the United States District 
Court for the District of Delaware.  The District Court dismissed the action for lack 
of diversity jurisdiction.  A few months later, West filed again in the Delaware 
Superior Court and added a breach of contract claim.5  LLR moved to dismiss the 
case for lack of jurisdiction, or alternatively, asked the Superior Court to transfer the 
case to the Court of Chancery to decide West’s equitable breach of fiduciary duty 
claim.  The Delaware Superior Court granted the motion and permitted West to 
transfer the case to the Court of Chancery.6  As the court reasoned, the Court of 
Chancery could exercise jurisdiction over the legal and equitable claims.   
West chose not to take the steps necessary to transfer the case and instead 
voluntarily dismissed his breach of fiduciary duty claim.7  He then moved to amend 
his complaint by dropping the breach of fiduciary duty claim and adding three new 
 
2 Id. at A859-63 (West’s original complaint filed with the Los Angeles Superior Court).  The 
Defendants also included ACRE and affiliates of ACRE and LLR.  They will be referred to 
collectively as LLR. 
3 Id. at A515 (Los Angeles Superior Court May 2, 2017 Order). 
4 Id. at A514-25 (Los Angeles Superior Court May 2, 2017 Order). 
5 Id. at A631-62 (West’s original complaint filed with the Delaware Superior Court). 
6 Id. at A738 (Delaware Superior Court’s June 2018 Order). 
7 Id. at A887 (Notice of voluntary dismissal of the breach of fiduciary claim). 
7 
 
claims: breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, tortious 
interference with contract, and tortious interference with prospective business 
relations.8   
The Superior Court granted West’s motion to amend his complaint,9 which 
prompted LLR to file a partial motion to dismiss.  In June 2019, the court granted 
the motion in part and denied it in part.  It dismissed the breach of implied covenant 
of good faith and fair dealing claim and allowed the other claims to proceed.10 
C. 
About six months later, LLR filed a renewed motion to dismiss the Superior 
Court action and to transfer the remaining claims to the Court of Chancery.  At a 
January 20, 2020 hearing, the court granted the motion, and found that the Court of 
Chancery had jurisdiction under the Limited Liability Company Act, 6 Del. C. § 18-
111, to hear West’s claims.11  It also concluded that the remaining claims could not 
be tried without referring to or interpreting the Securityholders’ Agreement, which 
 
8 Id. at A68-110 (West’s motion to amend the original complaint). 
9 Id. at A162-65 (Delaware Superior Court’s Order granting West’s motion to amend the original 
complaint). 
10 Id. at B47-64 (Delaware Superior Court’s Order partially granting LLR’s partial motion to 
dismiss the amended complaint). 
11 App. to Opening Br. at A1287-89 (Transcript of the January 20 Hearing).  Section 18-111 
provides that “[a]ny action to interpret, apply or enforce the provisions of a limited liability 
company agreement, or the duties, obligations or liabilities of a limited liability company to the 
members or managers of the limited liability company, or the duties, obligations or liabilities 
among members or managers and of members or managers to the limited liability company, or the 
rights or powers of, or restrictions on, the limited liability company, members or managers, or any 
provision of this chapter, or any other instrument, document, agreement or certificate contemplated 
by any provision of this chapter, may be brought in the Court of Chancery.” 
8 
 
designated either a Delaware federal court or the Court of Chancery as the forum to 
resolve disputes between the parties.  
Reacting to the Superior Court’s decision, West returned to California and 
asked the Los Angeles Superior Court to lift the 2017 stay.  In June 2020, the 
California court lifted the stay.  It reasoned that enforcing the forum selection clause 
and requiring West to litigate in the Court of Chancery would force West to forfeit 
his right to a jury trial.12  West returned to Delaware and asked the Delaware Superior 
Court to stay the case in favor of the California action.   
After an August 20, 2020 teleconference, the Superior Court observed in a 
September 1, 2020 order that LLR had withdrawn its request to transfer the case to 
the Court of Chancery and was prepared to proceed to trial in the Superior Court.  
The court also noted that all discovery and most pretrial proceedings had been 
completed and that it would continue to exercise jurisdiction over the case.13   
A day before the Superior Court issued its September 1, 2020 order, West 
filed a motion and asked the Superior Court to maintain the transfer order or to 
dismiss the case without prejudice to allow him to proceed in California.  At a 
December 9, 2020 hearing, the court denied West’s motion.14  It “incorporated” its 
January 20, 2020 finding – that the underlying case is governed by § 18-111 and 
 
12 Id. at A1427-36 (Los Angeles Superior Court’s Order lifting the stay). 
13 Id. at A1305-06 (Delaware Superior Court’s September 1, 2020 Order). 
14 Id. at A1669-722 (Delaware Superior Court December 9, 2020 hearing). 
9 
 
Delaware has a strong interest in the governance of Delaware LLCs – as one of the 
bases for its ruling.15  It also re-emphasized its previous finding that the forum 
selection provisions controlled.  The court noted further that LLR had moved to stay 
the California case three months prior to its ruling.  It found that dismissal was 
inappropriate considering the pending motion to stay.16  For the January 20, 2020 
transfer order, it found that the transfer was moot.   
At this point, LLR had withdrawn its request to transfer the case to the Court 
of Chancery, and the breach of fiduciary duty claim was no longer part of the case.  
The court, however, gave West the option to reinstate the breach of fiduciary duty 
claim if he wanted to proceed on that claim in Delaware.17  It also noted the 
possibility of the Court of Chancery requesting the Chief Justice to designate a judge 
from the Superior Court to serve as a Vice Chancellor – because of the Superior 
Court’s experience with jury trials – if the case was transferred to the Court of 
Chancery.18   
 
15 Id. 
16 Id. at A1710. In October, 2020, the Los Angeles Superior Court denied LLR’s motion to stay 
because West could not obtain a jury trial on all his claims in Delaware.  LLR appealed the denial 
to the California Second Appellate District.  The appellate court denied the petition in February 
2021.  In light of the Superior Court’s December 9, 2020 ruling, LLR again moved to stay the 
California action in the Los Angeles Superior Court.  The California court denied the motion 
because it was not sure West could obtain a jury trial on his breach of fiduciary duty claim in 
Delaware.   It expressed doubts about the Delaware Superior Court’s December 9, 2020 ruling and 
thought it was unclear which Delaware court would hold a jury trial and whether the breach of 
fiduciary duty claim would be at issue. 
17 Id. at A1718. 
18 Id. at A1711-12. 
10 
 
West petitioned for certification of an interlocutory appeal of the Superior 
Court’s December 9, 2020 ruling.19  The Superior Court denied the application,20 
and this Court refused the request for certification.21 
D. 
Not content to live with the Superior Court’s rulings, in July 2021, West filed 
another motion to dismiss the Delaware case in favor of the California action.  West 
relied heavily on the California court’s finding that he had a right to a jury trial that 
would be waived should the case proceed in Delaware.  He also argued that the 
Delaware Superior Court’s concerns at the initial motion hearing had been resolved.  
He highlighted the fact that the California court had ruled in his favor on LLR’s 
motion to stay, and that a jury trial was scheduled to begin in California on May 23, 
2021.  West argued further that LLR would not be prejudiced by proceeding in 
California.22 
The Delaware Superior Court denied the motion on September 27, 2021.23  
The court gave several reasons for its denial.24  First, it noted that there had been 
 
19 Id. at A1724-33 (West’s application for certificate of an interlocutory appeal to the Delaware 
Superior Court), A1794-97 (West’s application for certificate of an interlocutory appeal to this 
Court). 
20 Id. at A1790-93 (The Delaware Superior Court Order). 
21 Id. at A1798. 
22 The California jury trial has not taken place yet.  During oral argument, the parties informed the 
Court that the California trial is scheduled for April 17, 2023. 
23 Id. at A2175-77 (The Delaware Superior Court’s Order). 
24 Id. at A1917-18. 
11 
 
extensive preparation and expenses to get the case trial-ready in Delaware.  Second, 
it viewed the voluntary dismissal of the breach of fiduciary duty claim as “an 
acknowledgement that [the remaining] claims [could] be decided separately, in 
theory.”25  Lastly, it noted that the parties were sophisticated, and they had 
contracted for a forum selection clause that the court should honor.  On October 14, 
2021, West tried his luck again by filing a motion for reargument of the renewed 
motion to dismiss without prejudice.  The court denied the motion.26 
After a 6-day trial limited to West’s breach of contract claim, on June 2, 2022, 
the jury returned a defense verdict and found that LLR had properly terminated West 
for cause under the applicable agreements.27 
E. 
On appeal, West does not challenge the jury’s adverse verdict.  West has only 
appealed from the Superior Court’s September 1, 2020 order, in which the court 
decided to continue exercising jurisdiction over the case, and the court’s denials of 
his multiple motions for voluntary dismissal without prejudice.  West argues that the 
court erred when it failed to satisfy the requirements of Superior Court Civil Rule 
60 by transferring the case under 10 Del. C. § 1902 and then continuing to exercise 
jurisdiction.  According to West, Rule 60 does not authorize the court on its own to 
 
25 Id. at A1917. 
26 Id. at A2175-77 (The Delaware Superior Court’s Order denying the motion). 
27 Id. at A2259 (The jury verdict). 
12 
 
relieve a party from a transfer order without a motion.  Next, West argues that once 
the court issued the transfer order at the January 20, 2020 hearing, it no longer had 
jurisdiction over the case.  Thus, he claims, the court lacked jurisdiction to issue its 
later rulings.  
Regarding the motions for voluntary dismissal, West contends that the court 
failed to apply the plain legal prejudice test under Draper v. Paul,28 and that error 
alone requires reversal.  He also claims that even had the court applied the four-
factor test under Draper, LLR could not show plain legal prejudice.  Finally, he 
asserts that, under McWane v. McDowell29 and its forum non conveniens analysis, 
the court should have deferred to the California action. 
II. 
On appeal we review de novo whether the trial court misinterpreted the 
transfer statute and failed to apply forum non conveniens.30  We review the trial 
court’s denial of West’s motions to dismiss to see whether the court exceeded its 
discretion.31 
 
 
 
28 Draper v. Paul N. Gardner Defined Plan Tr., 625 A.2d 859 (Del. 1993). 
29 McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Eng’g Co., 263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970). 
30 Salzberg v. Sciabacucchi, 227 A.3d 102, 112 (Del. 2020). 
31 Draper, 625 A.2d at 860. 
13 
 
A. 
Under 10 Del. C. § 1902, a court can transfer an action to another court for 
lack of jurisdiction.32  Such transfer orders, however, are not self-executing, and the 
transfer only becomes effective after a party files a written election of transfer to the 
transferee court within 60 days of the order.33  If a written election is filed, all court 
papers “in the court where the proceeding was originally instituted [are] [] delivered 
. . . to [the] court to which the proceeding is transferred.”34 
West did not file an election to transfer the case to the Court of Chancery.  
Instead, he dismissed his breach of fiduciary duty claims and returned to California 
where he filed a motion to lift the 2017 stay.  Without a written election, the Superior 
Court docket was never delivered to the Court of Chancery.  It is “well-established 
that a transferor court loses jurisdiction to reconsider its order for transfer once the 
records in the transferred action are physically transferred to and received by the 
transferee court.”35  In this case, the record transfer never occurred, and jurisdiction 
remained with the Superior Court. 
 
32 10 Del. C. § 1902. 
33 Id. 
34 Id. 
35 Database Am., Inc. v. Bellsouth Advert. & Pub. Corp., 825 F. Supp. 1216, 1221 (D.N.J. 1993) 
(citing Wilson-Cook Med., Inc. v. Wilson, 942 F.2d 247, 250 (4th Cir. 1991)); see also In re 
Briscoe, 976 F.2d 1425, 1427 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (D.C. Cir. 1992) (“The basic rule in civil practice 
is that if a case is physically transferred before an appeal or a petition for mandamus has been filed, 
the court of appeals in the transferor circuit has no jurisdiction to review the transfer.”) (citing 
Starnes v. McGuire, 512 F.2d 918 (D.C. Cir. 1974)). 
14 
 
West also argues that the Superior Court’s continued jurisdiction after issuing 
the transfer order violated Superior Court Civil Rule 60(b).  Under the Rule, “[o]n 
motion and upon such terms as are just, the Court may relieve a party or a party’s 
legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding.”36  But Rule 60(b) 
applies only to final orders.  As explained in the advisory notes to the comparable 
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60, “the addition of the qualifying word ‘final’ 
emphasizes the character of the judgments, orders or proceedings from which Rule 
60(b) affords relief; and hence interlocutory judgments are not brought within the 
restrictions of the rule.37  Transfer orders are interlocutory.  Thus, Rule 60 does not 
apply to the transfer order in this case.  The Superior Court did not lose jurisdiction 
to take further action in the case. 
B. 
West argues that the trial judge failed to consider the Draper factors before 
denying West’s voluntary motion to dismiss his Delaware case.  According to West, 
had the court applied the factors, it would have granted the motion.  LLR counters 
that the Draper factors are neither exclusive nor mandatory, and in any event, the 
court properly considered the factors through the parties’ arguments, and explicitly 
considered one of the factors.  
 
36 Super. Ct. Civ. R. 60 (emphasis added). 
37 Fed. R. Civ. P. 60 advisory committee’s note. 
15 
 
 
Before granting a motion to dismiss under Rule 41(a)(2), a court must 
determine whether the defendant would suffer “plain legal prejudice.”38  In Draper, 
the Court set forth four factors for a court to consider when deciding a motion to 
dismiss or stay: (1) the defendant’s effort and expense in preparation for trial; (2) 
excessive delay and lack of diligence on the part of the plaintiff; (3) insufficient 
explanation for the need to take a dismissal; and (4) whether a motion for summary 
judgment has been filed by the defendant.39   
These factors, however, are merely guideposts.  They are neither exclusive 
nor mandatory, and a finding on every factor is not required to grant a motion to 
dismiss.  The discretion ultimately rests with the trial judge.40  As the Seventh Circuit 
noted in Kovalic v. DEC, “[t]he enumeration of the factors to be considered . . . is 
not equivalent to a mandate that each and every factor be resolved in favor of the 
moving party before dismissal is appropriate.  It is rather simply a guide for the trial 
judge, in whom the discretion ultimately rests.”41   
 
38 Draper, 625 A.2d at 863 (citing Pace v. S. Exp. Co., 409 F.2d 331 (7th Cir. 1969)). 
39 Id. at 863-64. 
40 Stillwater Mining Co. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa, 2023 WL 165968, *10 
(Del. Jan. 12, 2023) (citing AT&T Wireless Servs., Inc. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 2005 WL 2155695, *5 
(Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 18, 2005)) (“It is well within the trial court’s discretion to deny a motion for 
voluntary dismissal based on forum shopping concerns.”). 
41 Kovalic v. DEC Int’l, Inc., 855 F.2d 471, 474 (7th Cir. 1988) (alteration in original) (citing Tyco 
Labs., Inc. v. Koppers Co., Inc., 627 F.2d 54, 56 (7th Cir. 1980)); see also Conagra/Pilgrim’s 
Pride, Inc. v. Green, 954 A.2d 909 (Del. 2008) (“Whether the party suffers ‘plain legal prejudice’ 
as a result of such a voluntary dismissal, the trial judge, in his discretion, may consider [the Draper] 
factors . . . .”). 
16 
 
Here, strong considerations favored denial of the motions to dismiss.  The 
court explicitly considered one of the strongest factors in this case – the effort and 
expense incurred in the Delaware case.42  As early as August 2020, before both 
motion hearings, the parties had already engaged in extensive trial preparation and 
litigation expense.  All discovery and most pretrial proceedings had been 
completed.43  In addition to effort and expense, the court relied heavily on the forum 
selection provisions in the various agreements.  It noted that both West and LLR 
were sophisticated parties and had full knowledge of the waiver of jury trial rights 
that formed the basis for West’s motions to dismiss.  Further, West’s counsel agreed 
at the December 9, 2020 hearing that West was aware at the time of contracting that 
there was a possibility that his right to a jury trial could be waived if the case ended 
up in the Court of Chancery.44  The court specifically found that “[West] either was 
aware of, or certainly should have been aware, when the Court of Chancery was 
listed as part of the forum selection clause, of the process and procedures in that 
court.  There was no mystery about that; that is something that is very well-known.”45 
This case is also unusual in that the defendant is the one who is defending the 
plaintiff’s choice of forum.  Typically, the first suit is initiated by the plaintiff and 
 
42 App. to Opening Br. at A1917 (September 27 hearing). 
43 Id. at A1306 (September 1 Order maintaining jurisdiction). 
44 App. to Opening Br. at A1682 (December 9 hearing). 
45 Id. at A1714 (December 9 hearing). 
17 
 
the defendant files a second suit elsewhere.  But West initiated both suits here.  While 
LLR filed the 2017 motion to stay the California case, this atypicality nonetheless 
tilts in favor of LLR as it is not the one who initiated the Delaware action.  The 
Superior Court did not exceed its discretion in denying the motions to dismiss. 
C. 
 
Finally, West argues that McWane required the Delaware Superior Court to 
defer to the California litigation.  Under McWane, the court should dismiss a second-
filed Delaware case when, among other concerns, there is a prior action pending in 
another jurisdiction, the parties and issues involved are the same, and the prior court 
is capable of doing prompt and complete justice.46  West claims that the California 
court found that the Securityholders’ Agreement’s forum selection clause was not 
enforceable because it would result in West waiving his right to a jury trial.  He 
argues further that the Securityholders’ Agreement is controlling and does not 
designate the Delaware Superior Court as one of the chosen forums.  LLR counters 
that McWane does not apply where the parties contracted for a specific forum.  It 
contends that both the California and Delaware courts found that the forum selection 
provisions were enforceable, meaning McWane did not apply. 
LLR is correct that McWane does not apply when the parties contracted for a 
specific forum.  For instance, in Ingres Corp. v. CA, Inc., the defendant brought the 
 
46 McWane, 263 A.2d at 283. 
18 
 
first-filed action in California and the plaintiff brought the second-filed action in 
Delaware.47  The defendant moved to stay the Delaware action in favor of the 
California action.  The trial court denied the motion because of a forum selection 
provision in two contracts that designated either Delaware or New York as the 
required forum.  We upheld the ruling and explained “that where contracting parties 
have expressly agreed upon a legally enforceable forum selection clause, a court 
should honor the parties’ contract and enforce the clause, even if, absent any forum 
selection clause, the McWane principle might otherwise require a different result.”48  
We went on to repeat our prior holdings on forum selection provisions, notably that 
“[they] are presumptively valid and should be specifically enforced unless the 
resisting party [ ] clearly show[s] that enforcement would be unreasonable and 
unjust, or that the clause [is] invalid for such reasons as fraud and overreaching.”49 
Here, the Superior Court relied heavily on the various agreements among the 
parties and their Delaware forum selection provisions.  West argues that the 
controlling agreement is the Securityholders’ Agreement, which does not specify the 
Delaware Superior Court as a selected forum.  But the Superior Court’s rulings at 
both hearings do not rest solely on the forum selection clause in the Securityholders’ 
 
47 8 A.3d 1143, 1145 (Del. 2010). 
48 Id. 
49 Id. at 1146 (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Capital Grp. 
Cos., Inc. v. Armour, 2004 WL 2521295 (Del. Ch. Oct. 29, 2004)). 
19 
 
Agreement.  While it was aware of the forum selection clause in the Securityholders’ 
Agreement, it ultimately denied the motions because of the forum selection 
provisions in the other agreements.50 
The court also believed that the forum selection clause in the Securityholders’ 
Agreement applied only to the breach of fiduciary claim, which was the basis for its 
initial decision to transfer the case on January 20, 2020: 
The parties’ choice of forum is enforceable so long as the Court in 
which the forum is selected has jurisdiction.  And in this case Title 16, 
Section 18-111, titled, “Interpretation and Enforcement of Limited 
Liability Company Agreement” is very broad.  And, upon close, 
questioning it appears to the Court that this litigation cannot be either 
bifurcated or tried in a manner in there is not a reference to or 
interpretation of the Securityholders’ Agreement, which is an 
agreement which I find falls within Section 18-111.51 
In contrast, the forum selection clause in the Severance Agreement applies to 
the breach of contract claim, which was ultimately heard and decided at trial.  This 
case is no different from Ingres, in which the trial judge was faced with forum 
selection provisions in multiple agreements.  The Superior Court “consider[ed] the 
entire collection of related contracts”52 and concluded that the forum selection clause 
in at least the Severance Agreement controlled for purposes of trying the breach of 
contract claim.  West does not challenge the enforceability of the Severance 
 
50 The court noted at the September 27, 2021 hearing: “the overarching reason that I am keeping 
them here is that these sophisticated parties entered into what I have viewed and found to be a 
valid forum selection clause.” App. to Opening Br. at A1918 (September 27 hearing). 
51 Id. at A1287 (January 20 hearing). 
52 Ingres, 8 A.3d at 1146. 
20 
 
Agreement and its forum selection provision.  Thus, the Superior Court did not err 
by not applying the McWane factors to its stay decision. 
III. 
We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.