Title: GXP Capital v. Argonaut Manufacturing Services, et al

State: delaware

Issuer: Delaware Supreme Court

Document:

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE 
 
GXP CAPITAL, LLC,  
a Nevada limited liability company, 
 
Plaintiff Below,  
Appellant, 
 
          v. 
 
ARGONAUT MANUFACTURING 
SERVICES, INC., a Delaware 
corporation, TELEGRAPH HILL 
PARTNERS III, L.P., a Delaware 
limited partnership, and TELEGRAPH 
HILL PARTNERS III INVESTMENT 
MANAGEMENT, LLC, a Delaware 
limited liability company, 
 
Defendants Below, 
Appellees. 
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Nos. 247, 2020 and 248, 2020 
 
          Court Below – Superior Court 
 
of the State of Delaware 
 
          C.A. No. N18C-07-267 
 
 
 
Submitted: March 24, 2021 
Decided: 
May 20, 2021 
 
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, and 
MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc. 
 
Upon appeal from the Superior Court.  AFFIRMED. 
 
David L. Finger, Esq. (argued), FINGER & SLANINA, LLC, Wilmington, 
Delaware; Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant GXP Capital LLC. 
 
John L. Reed, Esq. (argued), Peter H. Kyle, Esq., DLA PIPER LLP (US), 
Wilmington Delaware; Brian A. Foster, Esq., and Julie Gryce, Esq., DLA PIPER 
LLP (US), San Diego, California; Attorneys for Defendants-Appellees Argonaut 
Manufacturing Services, Inc., Telegraph Hill Partners III, L.P., and Telegraph Hill 
Partners III Investment Management, LLC. 
 
 
2 
 
SEITZ, Chief Justice: 
 
GXP Capital, LLC filed two lawsuits against the defendants in different 
federal courts.  GXP alleged that the defendants violated non-disclosure agreements 
by using confidential information to buy key assets at bargain prices from GXP’s 
parent company.  Those cases were dismissed for lack of personal and subject matter 
jurisdiction.  GXP then filed a third suit in Delaware Superior Court.  The Superior 
Court stayed the case on forum non conveniens grounds to allow GXP to file the 
same case in California state court—a forum the court decided had a greater 
connection to the dispute and was more convenient for the parties.   
On appeal GXP makes two arguments—first, the Superior Court did not apply 
the correct forum non conveniens analysis when Delaware is not the first-filed 
action, the prior-filed lawsuits have been dismissed, and no litigation is pending in 
another forum; and second, the defendants waived any inconvenience objections in 
Delaware under the forum selection clause in their non-disclosure agreements.   
We affirm the Superior Court’s judgment.  The trial court properly exercised 
its discretion in this case’s procedural posture to stay the Delaware case in lieu of 
dismissal when another forum with jurisdiction exists and that forum is the more 
convenient forum to resolve the dispute.  And certain of the defendants’ consent to 
non-exclusive jurisdiction in California did not waive their right to object to venue 
in other jurisdictions, including Delaware. 
3 
 
I. 
GXP Capital, LLC (“GXP”) is a limited liability company organized and 
headquartered in Nevada.1  GXP CDMO, Inc., formerly known as Bioserv 
Corporation, is GXP’s parent company.  Following bankruptcy proceedings, Bioserv 
Corporation assigned to GXP substantially all its assets, including this action. 
Argonaut Manufacturing Services, Inc., is a Delaware corporation 
headquartered in California and is the successor entity to Argonaut EMS 
(“Predecessor”), a California sole proprietorship.  Telegraph Hill Partners III, L.P., 
(“THP III”) is a Delaware limited partnership with Telegraph Hill Partners III 
Investment Management (“THP”), a Delaware LLC, operating as THP III’s general 
partner.  THP III and THP are both headquartered in and operate out of California.  
We will refer to Argonaut, THP III, and THP as “the defendants.” 
GXP alleges that Predecessor, THP III, and THP violated non-disclosure 
agreements by misusing confidential business information about Bioserv 
Corporation disclosed during acquisition talks.  Specifically, GXP argues that 
Argonaut, THP III, and THP—working with others—acquired key Bioserv 
Corporation assets at below-market prices in bankruptcy proceedings by using and 
disclosing protected confidential information. 
 
1 The facts are drawn from the Superior Court’s opinion, GXP Capital, LLC v. Argonaut Mfg. 
Servs., Inc., 234 A.3d 1186 (Del. Super. Ct. 2020). 
4 
 
GXP filed suit first in the Federal District Court for the District of Nevada.  It 
voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit because that court lacked personal jurisdiction over 
the defendants.  GXP filed another lawsuit in the Southern District of California.  
That court dismissed the suit for a lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the 
parties lacked complete diversity.  Trying a third time, GXP filed a complaint in the 
Superior Court of Delaware, alleging nine causes of action against the defendants.  
The complaint was eventually whittled down to two counts—breach of non-
disclosure agreements and misappropriation of confidential information.2   
In response to the defendants’ motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens, 
the Superior Court found California a more convenient forum and stayed the case to 
allow GXP to file suit in California state court “solely to preserve the possibility of 
litigation here should the state courts of California close their doors to this dispute.”3  
In its decision, the court explained that under the procedural posture of this case—
when the Delaware action is not the first-filed action and no other case is pending in 
another jurisdiction—the court weighs the convenience factors without applying any 
presumption or heightened burden in favor of a particular forum or party according 
to our decision in Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C.4  
 
2 The Superior Court issued a May 4, 2020 decision to stay the litigation in lieu of dismissal.  GXP 
filed a Motion for Reargument under Superior Court Rule 59(e).  The court withdrew its May 4, 
2020 opinion and order and issued a superseding opinion on July 1, 2020.   
3 GXP Capital, LLC v. Argonaut Mfg. Servs., Inc., 2020 WL 4464471, at *6 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 
3, 2020). 
4 173 A.3d 1033 (Del. 2017). 
5 
 
The Superior Court also relied on its decision in National Union Fire Insurance Co. 
of Pittsburgh, PA v. Axiall Corp.,5 where the court weighed the forum non 
conveniens hardship factors in the competing jurisdictions against each other.  After 
weighing the factors in this case, the Superior Court decided that California was the 
preferred forum to resolve the dispute.      
GXP filed two appeals from the Superior Court’s stay order—a direct appeal 
from the court’s stay order and another as an interlocutory appeal under Supreme 
Court Rule 42.  The Superior Court granted in part GXP’s application for 
certification of an interlocutory appeal.  The two issues certified to our Court from 
the Superior Court are as follows: 
a. 
Is the Axiall comparative burden analysis the correct 
framework to analyze forum non conveniens motions in the 
intermediate Gramercy posture where the courts of another state 
indisputably possess personal and subject matter jurisdiction 
over the case? 
 
b. 
Is a trial court within its discretion to grant a Gramercy 
stay in lieu of dismissal when that relief is, in the court’s 
judgment, the least burdensome to the parties under the forum 
non conveniens factors?6 
 
  This Court accepted the interlocutory appeal under Supreme Court Rule 
42(b) and consolidated the two appeals.7  We issued an order stating in part: 
 
5 2019 WL 4303388 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 11, 2019), appeal denied, 219 A.3d 523 (Del. 2019). 
6 GXP Capital, 2020 WL 4464471, at *7. 
7 GXP Capital, LLC v. Argonaut Mfg. Servs., Inc., Consol. Nos. 247, 2020 and 248, 2020 (Del. 
Oct. 7, 2020) (ORDER). 
6 
 
In addition to any other arguments the parties wish to make, the parties’ 
briefs should address: (i) whether the Stay Order is appealable as a final 
judgment; and (ii) the questions certified for interlocutory review by 
the Superior Court.8 
 
Forum non conveniens motions are addressed to the trial court’s discretion.  
Thus, we must determine “whether the findings and conclusions of the Superior 
Court are supported by the record and are the product of an orderly and logical 
[reasoning] process.”9  “If they are, whether or not reasonable people could differ on 
the conclusions to be drawn from the record, this Court must affirm . . . .”10  Whether 
the Superior Court applied the correct standard of review is a question of law that 
we review de novo.11  Questions of contract interpretation are reviewed de novo.12 
II. 
GXP filed a direct and an interlocutory appeal from the Superior Court’s stay 
order.  Before turning to the merits, we address our jurisdiction to hear GXP’s direct 
 
8 Id. at 9. 
9 Martinez v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Inc., 86 A.3d 1102, 1104 (Del. 2014) (alteration in 
original) (quoting Williams Gas Supply Co. v. Apache Corp., 594 A.2d 34, 37 (Del. 1991)). 
10 Id. 
11 MCA, Inc. v. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd., 785 A.2d 625, 638 (Del. 2001) (“A claim that 
the trial court employed an incorrect legal standard, however, raises a question of law that this 
Court reviews de novo.”); SmithKline Beecham Pharms. Co. v. Merck & Co., Inc., 766 A.2d 442, 
450 (Del. 2000) (“Whether the [trial court] applied the correct standard . . . is a question of law 
which is reviewed de novo.”). 
12 Urdan v. WR Capital Partners, LLC, 244 A.3d 668, 674 (Del. 2020). 
7 
 
appeal.  Unless we accept an interlocutory appeal under Supreme Court Rule 42, our 
jurisdiction is limited to appeals from final orders.13  As we have explained: 
An aggrieved party can appeal to this Court only after a final judgment 
is entered by the trial court.  A final judgment is generally defined as 
one that determines the merits of the controversy or defines the rights 
of the parties and leaves nothing for future determination or 
consideration.  In short, a final judgment is one that determines all the 
claims as to all the parties.  The test for whether an order is final and 
therefore ripe for appeal is whether the trial court has clearly declared 
its intention that the order be the court’s “final act” in a case.14   
 
A stay order is a non-final order.15  Thus, we do not have jurisdiction to hear GXP’s 
direct appeal from the Superior Court’s stay order. 
 
13 Supr. Ct. R. 42; see Bowen v. E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co., Inc., 879 A.2d 920, 922 (Del. 
2005) (“Except for interlocutory appeals that are accepted in our discretion, this Court has no 
jurisdiction over Superior Court determinations in civil proceedings that are not final.”); see also 
Levinson v. Conlon, 385 A.2d 717, 720 (Del. 1978) (“[T]he proscription is intended to minimize 
two highly undesirable problems inherent in [interlocutory appeals]:  the fragmentation of a case 
and a delay in its final disposition.”). 
14 Tyson Foods, Inc. v. Aetos Corp., 809 A.2d 575, 579 (Del. 2002) (citation omitted); accord 
Mentor Graphics Corp. v. Shapiro, 818 A.2d 959, 962 (Del. 2003) (“Rather, essential to the 
analysis is whether the order ‘ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the trial court 
to do but execute the judgment.’”) (quoting Lipson v. Lipson, 799 A.2d 345, 347 (Del. 2001)). 
15 See, e.g., Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA v. Axiall Corp., 219 A.3d 523, 2019 WL 
4795508, at *2 (Del. Oct. 1, 2019) (TABLE) (denying interlocutory appeal of granted motion to 
stay on the ground of forum non conveniens); iPCS, Inc. v. Sprint Nextel Corp., 956 A.2d 31, 2008 
WL 2942136, at *2 (Del. Aug. 1, 2008) (TABLE) (stating that the denial of a “motion to dismiss 
or stay on the ground of forum non conveniens” is an “interlocutory ruling”); Derdiger v. Tallman, 
765 A.2d 950, 2000 WL 1589929, at *1 (Del. Aug. 29, 2000) (TABLE) (refusing interlocutory 
appeal of stay order for forum non conveniens); ANR Pipeline Co. v. Shell Oil Co., 525 A.2d 991, 
992 (Del. 1987) (discussing accepted interlocutory appeal of decision to stay litigation in Delaware 
for forum non conveniens); see also Coaxial Commc’ns, Inc. v. CNA Fin. Corp., 367 A.2d 994, 
997 (Del. 1976) (“Beyond doubt, the Chancellor’s order denying the stay was interlocutory[.]”); 
Apple Computer, Inc. v. Exponential Tech., Inc., 1999 WL 39547, at *14 (Del. Ch. Jan. 21, 1999) 
(“Where granted, a motion to stay is not a final decision on the merits, but an interlocutory order.  
Thus, appellate review of the trial court’s decision is limited.”). 
8 
 
GXP’s arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive.  According to GXP, by 
staying the case instead of dismissing it, the Superior Court “created a unique 
circumstance where GXP will not be able to get appellate review.”16  If GXP filed 
in California state court, it argues, a live controversy would no longer exist before 
this Court and thus deprive it of appellate review.  This circumstance, GXP claims, 
violates constitutional separation of powers through “judicial revision of appellate 
rights granted by law.”17  GXP also points to federal law, where federal courts have 
adopted the “collateral order” and “effectively out of court” exceptions to the finality 
requirement for appellate review.18 
What GXP ignores, however, is the availability of interlocutory review under 
Supreme Court Rule 42.19  Indeed, we accepted an interlocutory appeal from the 
Superior Court’s certified questions in the case before us.  Given this well-
established path to appellate review, we see no need to apply or adopt other carve-
outs to our jurisdiction when reviewing stay orders.20  We recognize our ruling has 
 
16 Opening Br. at 26. 
17 Id. at 27. 
18 Id. at 24–26. 
19 See States Marine Lines v. Domingo, 269 A.2d 223, 225 (Del. 1970) (holding that “denial of a 
motion to dismiss on the ground of [f]orum non conveniens . . .  meets the tests for appealability 
of an interlocutory order in this jurisdiction”).  
20 The Superior Court’s stay order is not a “collateral order” and therefore not a final order for 
appeal purposes.  See Gannett Co., Inc. v. State, 565 A.2d 895, 900 (Del. 1989) (recognizing 
collateral review of a final decision “since it determined a [civil] matter independent of the issues 
to be resolved in the criminal proceeding itself, bound persons who were non-parties in the 
underlying criminal proceeding and had a substantial, continuing effect on important rights”) 
(alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Schiavo, 504 F.2d 1, 5 (3d Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 
419 U.S. 1096 (1974)); see also Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U.S. 
9 
 
little practical effect in this appeal.  In accepting the interlocutory appeal we invited 
the parties to raise whatever issues they wished in addition to the certified issues.  
But we dismiss GXP’s direct appeal from the Superior Court’s stay order for lack of 
jurisdiction. 
III. 
Next, we turn to whether the non-exclusive venue provision in the NDA 
prohibited the defendants from arguing that Delaware was an inconvenient forum.  
The non-disclosure agreements contained the following restriction:   
This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in 
which the Disclosing Party is located (or if the Disclosing Party is based 
in more than one country, the county in which its headquarters are 
located) (the “Territory”) and the parties agree to submit disputes 
arising out of or in connection with this Agreement to the non-exclusive 
[jurisdiction] of the courts in the Territory.21 
 
The Superior Court held as a matter of plain language that the parties’ 
agreement to non-exclusive jurisdiction in California did not waive objections or act 
as consent to venue in any other jurisdiction, including Delaware.  It is, after all, an 
agreement that California is an appropriate but non-exclusive forum.  Nonetheless, 
 
1, 10 & n.11 (1983) (“Idlewild does not disturb the usual rule that a stay is not ordinarily a final 
decision for purposes of § 1291, since most stays do not put the plaintiff ‘effectively out of 
court.’”).  GXP is also not effectively out of court—we are reviewing its appeal from the stay 
order, and by agreement of the defendants, GXP can file suit in California without fear of dismissal 
on statute of limitations grounds.   
21 App. to Opening Br. at A60 (Confidential Disclosure Agreement).  “[T]he parties agreed that 
the word ‘jurisdiction’ was erroneously omitted between exclusive and of.”  GXP Capital, 234 
A.3d at 1199 n.62. 
10 
 
GXP argues that the parties agreed “to place no limit on venue, essentially waiving 
claims of inconvenience, and expected courts to respect that choice equally.”22  In 
other words, the parties’ non-exclusive forum selection provision operated implicitly 
as consent to venue not only in California, but anywhere else in the United States.  
GXP points us to two cases to support its argument—our decision in Ingres Corp. v. 
CA, Inc.,23 and the Court of Chancery’s application of Ingres in Utilipath, LLC v. 
Hayes.24  In Ingres, we held that contracting parties are bound by an exclusive forum 
selection clause even if applying forum non conveniens might lead to a different 
result.  In Utilipath, the Court of Chancery followed Ingres and held that the same 
contractual modification of exclusive forum selection clauses applied equally to non-
exclusive provisions.  Relying on Utilipath, GXP argues that the forum selection 
clause defeats the defendants’ forum non conveniens objections. 
In Utilipath, however, the parties expressly designated Delaware in the forum 
selection clause, thus barring inconvenience objections in Delaware.  Here, the 
parties agreed to California as a non-exclusive forum but did not waive forum non 
conveniens objections for litigation outside of California.  The Superior Court 
correctly held that, applying the plain language of the forum selection clause, the 
defendants did not waive the right to object to Delaware as an inconvenient forum.   
 
22 Opening Br. at 30. 
23 8 A.3d 1143 (Del. 2010).   
24 2015 WL 1744163 (Del. Ch. April 15, 2015). 
11 
 
IV. 
Delaware courts are often called upon to resolve forum disputes when related 
cases are filed in other courts.  The proper forum non conveniens analysis is 
associated with the names of the Supreme Court cases applying the doctrine in 
various contexts—General Foods Corp. v. Cryo–Maid, Inc.,25 McWane Cast Iron 
Pipe Corp. v. McDowell–Wellman Engineering Co.,26 and Gramercy Emerging 
Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C.27  Each of these cases dealt with a unique 
procedural posture—“a first-filed Delaware case with no case pending elsewhere 
(the Cryo–Maid test); a second-filed Delaware case with another first-filed case 
pending elsewhere (the McWane test); and . . . [the] Gramercy [test]—a later-filed 
Delaware case after another jurisdiction had dismissed a first-filed case for forum 
non conveniens.”28  “All these scenarios call upon the courts to apply, in one form 
or another, the same forum non conveniens factors.”29  The factors applied are: 
(1) the relative ease of access to proof; (2) the availability of a 
compulsory process for witnesses; (3) the possibility to view the 
premises, if appropriate; (4) all other practical problems that would 
make the trial easy, expeditious, and inexpensive; (5) whether the 
controversy is dependent upon Delaware law, which the courts of this 
State should decide rather than those of another jurisdiction; and (6) the 
pendency or non-pendency of a similar action in another jurisdiction.30   
 
 
25 198 A.2d 681 (Del. 1964). 
26 263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970). 
27 173 A.3d 1033 (Del. 2017). 
28 Aranda v. Phillip Morris USA Inc., 183 A.3d 1245, 1250 (Del. 2018). 
29 Id. 
30 Id. at 1251. 
12 
 
Depending on the posture of the case, “what changes is the strength of the 
presumptions applied.”31  As we explained in Gramercy: 
When a case is first-filed, Delaware courts award dismissal only when 
the defendant has established overwhelming hardship, thus tilting the 
analysis in the plaintiff’s favor. When a case is later-filed, and its 
predecessors remain pending, McWane’s “strong preference for the 
litigation of a dispute in the forum in which the first action relating to 
such dispute is filed” applies and the analysis is tilted in favor of the 
defendant. But when a case is later-filed and its predecessors are no 
longer pending, the analysis is not tilted in favor of the plaintiff or the 
defendant. In that situation, Delaware trial judges exercise their 
discretion and award dismissal when the Cryo–Maid factors weigh in 
favor of that outcome.32 
 
A. 
The parties agree that this action is not the first-filed case that implicates the 
“overwhelming burden” requirement under Cryo-Maid.  McWane’s presumption of 
dismissal also does not apply because no other prior actions are pending.  Thus, 
Gramercy and its neutral burden assessment supplies the correct framework for this 
appeal.  Under Gramercy, the trial court “still applies Cryo–Maid straightforwardly 
when a plaintiff has not chosen Delaware first,”33 but “the analysis is not tilted in 
favor of the plaintiff or the defendant.”34   
 
31 Id. at 1250–51. 
32 Gramercy, 173 A.3d at 1044 (citation omitted). 
33 Id. at 1042. 
34 Id. at 1044. 
13 
 
In this case the Superior Court analyzed the forum non conveniens factors in 
a neutral fashion, comparing its analysis to the review exercised in its decision in 
Axiall when two cases are filed at about the same time: 
When two cases are filed at approximately the same time, Delaware 
courts will weigh an application for a stay “under the traditional forum 
non conveniens framework” without “preference for one action over the 
other” to avoid rewarding the victor in a “race to the courthouse.” In 
such cases, the reviewing court neutrally compares hardships imposed 
on each party by the adverse party’s chosen forum, and stays the 
Delaware action if the foreign proceeding is less burdensome overall.35 
 
In the order certifying interlocutory appeal, the Superior Court held that 
although no case was pending in California, “the undisputed personal and subject 
matter jurisdiction of [California state] courts over this dispute militated in favor of 
applying a similar framework and considering the relative hardships to the parties 
each would present.”36    
 
35 GXP Capital, 234 A.3d at 1195 (quoting In re Citigroup Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 964 A.2d 
106, 116 (Del. Ch. 2009)); see also HFTP Invs., L.L.C. v. ARIAD Pharms., Inc., 752 A.2d 115, 
122 (Del. Ch. 1999) (“In balancing all of the relevant factors, the focus of the analysis should be 
which forum would be the more ‘easy, expeditious, and inexpensive’ in which to litigate.  That 
approach, which imposes no special or heightened burden of persuasion, leads straightforwardly 
to the following burden of persuasion:  towards which of the two competing fora do the forum non 
conveniens factors preponderate?”). 
36 GXP Capital, 2020 WL 4464471, at *6.   
14 
 
GXP argues that the Superior Court misapplied the Gramercy comparative 
burden analysis by relying on Axiall. 37  In Axiall,38 the Superior Court issued a stay 
in lieu of dismissal of a Delaware action in deference to an ongoing, simultaneously-
filed West Virginia action involving the same issues.  The Superior Court stayed the 
case instead of dismissing it because the plaintiffs could not show overwhelming 
hardship from litigating in Delaware.  In reaching this conclusion, the court 
compared the hardships imposed on each party by the adverse party’s chosen forum 
and granted relief from litigating in the jurisdiction imposing the greater hardship.39 
GXP argues that a comparative burden balancing is inappropriate here 
because the defendants have the initial burden of demonstrating that the plaintiff’s 
chosen forum would cause hardship to the defendants.  According to GXP, requiring 
the plaintiff to prove comparative hardship in the first instance denies the plaintiff 
the presumption respecting its choice of forum.  In essence, GXP advocates for a 
burden-shifting regime whereby the movant has the initial burden of demonstrating 
hardship before the court may factor in the other party’s comparative hardship. 
 
37 This issue was raised by the Superior Court in granting interlocutory appeal.  See GXP Capital, 
2020 WL 4464471, at *7.  GXP argues that because neither party raised or briefed the issue below, 
this Court’s answer to whether the comparative analysis is proper under the intermediate Gramercy 
posture would be an advisory opinion.  Reply Br. at 18.  The Superior Court’s Gramercy analysis, 
however, relied on the Axiall comparative burden framework in granting the defendants’ requested 
relief.  See id. at *6 (“In particular, the Court relied by analogy on its own prior decision in 
[Axiall].”).   
38 In Axiall, the Superior Court denied certification of an interlocutory appeal, and this Court 
denied the interlocutory review.  Axiall, 219 A.3d 523. 
39 See Axiall, 2019 WL 4303388, at *4. 
15 
 
The Superior Court did not err when it examined the comparative burdens 
within the Gramercy framework.  Under Gramercy, “the analysis is not tilted in 
favor of the plaintiff or the defendant.”40  While the movant bears the burden of 
establishing the Cryo–Maid factors, Gramercy’s intermediate posture requires the 
trial court exercising its discretion to “award dismissal when the Cryo–Maid factors 
weigh in favor of that outcome.”41  Applying Gramercy, the trial court respected the 
defendants’ initial burden, placed the Cryo-Maid factors on a scale, and then decided 
which way the scale tipped without putting a finger on the scale.  It applied the Cryo-
Maid factors correctly. 
B. 
We also find without merit GXP’s objections to how the Superior Court 
applied the Cryo–Maid factors.  For purposes of this appeal, only four of the six 
factors are weighted concerns, and the bulk of GXP’s arguments center on how the 
Gramercy analysis differs from weighing the Cryo-Maid factors when there are 
background presumptions present in other procedural postures.  In this case, while 
none of the forum non conveniens factors alone were dispositive, many factors 
pointed to California—not Delaware—as the proper forum and tipped the scale in 
 
40 Gramercy, 173 A.3d at 1044. 
41 Id. 
16 
 
favor of relief.  Considered together, the Superior Court did not abuse its discretion 
in staying this action to allow GXP to file in a more convenient forum. 
i. 
The first two Cryo-Maid factors require review of the relative ease of access 
to proof and whether compulsory process for witnesses is available.  The Superior 
Court observed that “the parties all have their headquarters and operations in 
California or Nevada” and the defendants’ “sole connection” to Delaware is their 
place of incorporation.42  The court found that a plurality of the third-party witnesses 
that the defendants identified reside in California, with none residing in Delaware. 
This meant “that the parties will be unable to compel the attendance of apparently 
any of the third-party witnesses[.]”43  The court also found that in-person testimony 
bore increased importance because “a multiplicity of witnesses [is] identified by 
name, and their relevance to the alleged wrongful conduct is clear and direct.  Many 
of the witnesses are named by GXP as ‘co-conspirators’ in the alleged wrongs, and 
hence their credibility will be a key issue.”44 
Relying on this Court’s decision in Berger v. Intelident Solutions, Inc.,45 GXP 
argues that the operative test is whether litigating in Delaware would prevent the 
 
42 GXP Capital, 234 A.3d at 1196. 
43 Id. at 1197 (emphasis in original). 
44 Id. at 1197 n.49 (“Reliance on depositions alone presents obvious and consequential hardship 
under the specifics of this case.”). 
45 906 A.2d 134 (Del. 2006). 
17 
 
defendants from being able to introduce evidence to support their case.  GXP also 
contends that the Superior Court did not make any findings about whether this was 
the case for the defendants, and that therefore, this factor does not support the 
Superior Court’s relief.  Moreover, according to GXP, since 1964 when this Court 
decided Cryo–Maid, evidence has undergone a shift to electronic data and courts 
now “recognize that transmittal of evidence electronically is not a burden, 
particularly in corporate and commercial disputes.”46  
 GXP’s reliance on Berger is misplaced.  There, this Court found that although 
all the relevant evidence was outside of Delaware, the defendants would not face 
overwhelming hardship because of that fact.  We acknowledged that Delaware 
would be “inconvenient,” but the defendants failed to identify specific evidence that 
could not be produced in Delaware.  The defendants also failed to prove that 
litigating in Delaware would impede access to witness testimony.  Thus, the 
defendants had not met their burden of proving that litigating in Delaware would 
present an overwhelming hardship.47  Overwhelming hardship, however, is not the 
Gramercy standard.  Gramercy simply requires that “Delaware trial judges exercise 
 
46 Opening Br. at 34 (citing Hall v. Maritek Corp., 170 A.3d 149, 161 (Del. Super. Ct. 2017), aff’d, 
182 A.3d 113 (Del. 2018); In re Asbestos Litig., 929 A.2d 373, 384–85 (Del. Super. Ct. 2006); 
Asten v. Wangner, 1997 WL 634330, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 3, 1997)). 
47 Berger, 906 A.2d at 136. 
18 
 
their discretion and award dismissal when the Cryo–Maid factors weigh in favor of 
that outcome.”48 
Further, the Superior Court expressly found that “GXP concedes that the 
parties all have their headquarters and operations in California or Nevada” and that 
“GXP does not deny . . . that the parties will be unable to compel the attendance of 
apparently any of the third-party witnesses[.]”49  These findings were supported by 
the record.50  With all the evidence and a plurality of the witnesses outside of 
Delaware, the Superior Court found that litigation in Delaware would present 
problems that California would not—namely, presentation of witnesses.  Thus, the 
court did not abuse its discretion in giving some weight to this factor.51  Finally, that 
electronic transmission of evidence lessens the burden of litigating where evidence 
may be found outside of the chosen forum does not render this factor irrelevant when 
weighing the forum non conveniens hardship factors under Gramercy. 
 
 
48 Gramercy, 173 A.3d 1044. 
49 GXP Capital, 234 A.3d at 1196–97 (emphasis in original). 
50 See App. to Opening Br. at A134–36 (Foster Aff. ¶¶ 7–11); id. at A168–69 (Grossman Aff. ¶¶ 
4–5, 10); id. at A174–75 (Woodard Aff. ¶¶ 4, 9). 
51 GXP also argues that deposition testimony is sufficient and the need for in-person testimony 
should not weigh in favor of relief for the second factor—availability of a compulsory process—
when electronic means of testimony are available.  GXP points to this Court’s decision in Kolber 
v. Holyoke Shares, Inc., 213 A.2d 444 (Del. 1965).  Kolber, however, considered the distance 
between Wilmington and New York, but found it “no sufficient reason” to justify dismissal under 
the overwhelming hardship standard.  Id. at 446.  This Court expressly recognized that “the best 
test of the credibility of witnesses requires their appearance before the trier of fact.”  Id.  Thus, 
based on the Superior Court’s findings recited above, the court did not abuse its discretion in giving 
some weight to a lack of a compulsory process in Delaware. 
19 
 
ii. 
Next, the Superior Court concluded that the inspection of premises factor was 
“inconsequential” because “[n]either side suggests that any site inspections will be 
necessary for this litigation.”52  Regarding the choice of law factor, neither party 
disputed that California law governs this case.  The court recognized, however, that 
Delaware courts often apply other states’ laws.  Even so, the court held that choice 
of law “adds little—but some—weight toward forum non conveniens relief.”53  And 
the court found that the pendency or non-pendency of other cases factor “can rightly 
be considered neutral within a Gramercy analysis” because GXP’s prior federal 
actions were dismissed without the possibility of further lawsuits.54 
GXP’s objections focus on the choice of law factor.  GXP argues that applying 
California law should not weigh in favor of the defendants because Delaware courts 
often decide legal issues under other jurisdictions’ laws.  To bolster its argument, 
GXP points out that when California law is applied in this case, the issues are neither 
novel nor unsettled, meaning that this factor should not be given any weight in the 
forum non conveniens analysis. 
 
52 GXP Capital, 234 A.3d at 1197 (quoting GTE Mobilnet Inc. v. Nehalem Cellular, Inc., 1994 
WL 116194, at *5 (Del. Ch. Mar. 17, 1994)). 
53 Id. 
54 Id. at 1198. 
20 
 
We find that the Superior Court properly gave the choice of law factor 
“little—but some—weight.”   It is correct that Delaware courts are well-equipped to 
apply California law, especially where there are no novel or open questions 
present.55  But, “[t]he choice of law factor, while relevant to establishing hardship 
and inconvenience, primarily focuses on ‘Delaware’s interest in the litigation,’ a 
focus evident in the phrasing of the factor itself.”56  While this Court has consistently 
held that “[t]he application of foreign law is not sufficient reason to warrant 
dismissal under the doctrine of forum non conveniens,”57 it does not mean it is 
dispositive of the issue in this case.  In the intermediate Gramercy posture, when the 
trial judge exercises their discretion without any background presumptions, a trial 
court does not abuse its discretion by giving some, non-dispositive weight to the fact 
another jurisdiction’s law applies, even where the law to be applied is routine and 
not unsettled.58  Gramercy did not alter or eliminate the choice of law factor’s 
 
55 See Berger, 906 A.2d at 137 (“Delaware courts often decide legal issues—even unsettled ones—
under the law of other jurisdictions.”). 
56 Warburg, Pincus Ventures, L.P. v. Schrapper, 774 A.2d 264, 271 (Del. 2001) (quoting Ison v. 
E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Inc., 729 A.2d 832, 843 (Del. 1999)). 
57 Berger, 906 A.2d at 137 (alteration in original) (quoting Taylor v. LSI Logic Corp., 689 A.2d 
1196, 1200 (Del. 1997)). 
58 See Candlewood Timber Grp., LLC v. Pan Am. Energy, LLC, 859 A.2d 989, 1002 (Del. 2004) 
(holding that application of Argentine law “weighs slightly, although not significantly” in the 
defendant’s favor); Sequa Corp. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 1990 WL 123006, at *4 (Del. Super. 
Ct. July 13, 1990) (“The need to apply another state’s law will not be a substantial deterrent to 
conducting litigation in this state.”); Monsanto Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 559 A.2d 1301, 
1305–06 (Del. Super. Ct. 1988) (“If it were necessary to adjudicate some or all issues of coverage 
using the laws of other States, this possibility alone would not weigh overwhelmingly in favor of 
the defendants.”). 
21 
 
analysis other than to alleviate the defendants from the burden of establishing that 
the hardship of litigating in Delaware would be overwhelming. 
iii. 
Turning to Cryo-Maid’s residual factor, the Superior Court held that “the 
availability of an alternative forum in the California state courts highlights the 
needless practical difficulties that a Delaware forum presents.”59  The California 
courts are available to GXP, all of the defendants operate out of, and have conceded 
jurisdiction in, California, and GXP previously filed suit in California, which 
suggested to the court “the strong amenability of all parties to suit in California.”60  
By contrast, Delaware’s interest in regulating the conduct of its corporate citizenry 
because they are formed under our laws is strongest where “issues of substantive 
corporate governance and structure are implicated.”61  Otherwise, this important 
interest can be outweighed by other considerations. 
According to GXP, the Superior Court erred when it weighed the residual 
factor by not placing enough emphasis on Delaware’s interest in providing a neutral 
forum for disputes involving Delaware-incorporated entities rather than this action’s 
overall minimal connection to Delaware.  GXP also argues that by incorporating 
 
59 GXP Capital, 234 A.3d at 1198.  
60 Id. 
61 Id.  
22 
 
here, the defendants “should be deemed to have waived any argument that litigating 
in Delaware is inconvenient to them.”62   
We have previously explained that “the ‘Other Practical Considerations’ 
factor of Cryo–Maid is neither hollow in meaning nor rigid in application” and 
“where it is appropriate, a trial court may weigh the efficient administration of justice 
and analogous considerations under the rubric of the ‘Other Practical 
Considerations’ Cryo–Maid factor.”63  That is precisely what the Superior Court did 
in its analysis.  The Superior Court recognized Delaware’s interest in regulating its 
corporate citizens’ conduct but decided that Delaware’s public interest in such cases 
is strongest where substantive issues of corporate governance are implicated.  That 
is not the case here.   This is a contract and tort dispute.  The court also weighed the 
defendants’ minimal connection to Delaware accompanied by the relatively minor 
interest that Delaware itself has in hearing this action.64  Putting the defendants’ 
place of incorporation aside, Delaware has virtually no connection to this dispute.  
Finally, the availability of an alternate forum can be a relevant consideration, and 
the defendants are amenable to suit California, where GXP filed suit before coming 
 
62 Opening Br. at 40. 
63 Martinez, 86 A.3d at 1112–13 (“This public interest factor will seldom, in isolation, be 
dispositive of whether dismissal on the grounds of forum non conveniens is warranted.”). 
64 See Nokia Sols. & Networks Oy v. Collision Commc’ns, Inc., 2020 WL 2095829, at *6 (Del. 
Super. Ct. Apr. 30, 2020) (“Finally, the Court is unconvinced by Nokia’s argument that the fact 
that Collision is incorporated [in Delaware] weighs in favor of denying the motion.  As noted 
above, Delaware has no substantial interest in adjudicating this action, unlike an action implicating 
a Delaware corporation’s internal affairs.”). 
23 
 
to Delaware.65  It was not an abuse of discretion to consider these factors.  Rather, 
the Superior Court properly applied Gramercy’s straightforward assessment of the 
Cryo–Maid factors, which, overall, favored California as the appropriate forum. 
V. 
GXP’s direct appeal is dismissed.  We answer the certified questions as 
follows: 
a. Is the Axiall comparative burden analysis the correct 
framework to analyze forum non conveniens motions in the 
intermediate Gramercy posture where the courts of another 
state indisputably possess personal and subject matter 
jurisdiction over the case? 
 
Yes.  The trial court should assess the comparative burdens of 
litigating in the opposing jurisdictions when a case has not been 
filed in the foreign jurisdiction, but that jurisdiction has personal 
and subject matter jurisdiction over the parties and the case. 
 
b. 
Is a trial court within its discretion to grant a Gramercy 
stay in lieu of dismissal when that relief is, in the court’s 
judgment, the least burdensome to the parties under the forum 
non conveniens factors? 
 
Yes.  The trial court has the discretion to grant a stay instead of 
dismissal, especially when, as here, the defendants might have 
substantial procedural or statute of limitations defenses to the 
complaint if filed in the foreign jurisdiction. 
 
The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.   
 
65 See Aranda, 183 A.3d at 1252 (“We think that treating the issue as a factor to be considered, 
rather than as a requirement, gives the issue the weight it deserves in the forum non conveniens 
analysis.”).