Court Opinion

ID: 6496143
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-29 12:01:33.310267+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:48:35.840534
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

KEVIN DIEP, derivatively on behalf §
of EL POLLO LOCO HOLDINGS, §
INC.,                              §
                                   §
      Plaintiff Below,             §
      Appellant,                   §
                                   §     No. 313, 2021
      v.                           §
                                   §
TRIMARAN POLLO PARTNERS, §               Court Below: Court of Chancery
L.L.C.,                            §     of the State of Delaware
      Defendant Below,             §
      Appellee,                    §
                                   §     C.A. No. 12760
      and                          §
                                   §
EL POLLO LOCO HOLDINGS,            §
INC.,                              §
      Nominal Defendant Below,     §
      Appellee.                    §
                                   §

                       Submitted: March 30, 2022
                       Decided:   June 28, 2022

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, and
MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware: AFFIRMED.

Ralph N. Sianni, Esquire, ANDERSEN SLEATER SIANNI LLC, Wilmington,
Delaware, Hung G. Ta, Esquire (argued), JooYun Kim, Esquire, Natalia D.
Williams, Esquire, HGT LAW, New York, New York, and Peter Safirstein, Esquire,
SAFIRSTEIN METCALF LLP, New York, New York, for Plaintiff Below,
Appellant Kevin Diep, derivatively on behalf of El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc.
Kurt M. Heyman, Esquire, Jamie L. Brown, Esquire, HEYMAN ENERIO
GATTUSO & HIRZEL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Adam H. Offenhartz, Esquire
(argued), GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP, New York, New York, and Tyler
H. Amass, Esquire, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP, Denver, Colorado, for
Defendant Below, Appellee Trimaran Pollo Partners, L.L.C., and Nominal
Defendant Below, Appellee El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc.

                                  2
SEITZ, Chief Justice, for the Majority:

         El Pollo Loco is a fast casual Mexican-inspired restaurant chain specializing

in fire-grilled, citrus-marinated fresh chicken and other dishes prepared in front of

the customer. Kevin Diep, a stockholder of El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc. (“EPL”),

filed derivative claims against some members of EPL’s board of directors and

management, as well as a private investment firm. The suit focused on two acts of

alleged wrongdoing—concealing the negative impact of price increases during an

earnings call and selling EPL stock while in possession of material non-public

financial information.

         After the Court of Chancery denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss, the

EPL board of directors designated a special litigation committee of the board

(“SLC”) with exclusive authority to investigate the derivative claims and to take

whatever action was in EPL’s best interests. After a lengthy investigation and

extensive report, the SLC moved to terminate the derivative claims. All defendants

but the private investment firm settled with Diep while the dismissal motion was

pending. The Court of Chancery granted the SLC’s motion after applying the

familiar two-step review under Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado.1

         On appeal, Diep challenges the Court of Chancery’s decision on several

grounds. He contends that there were disputed issues of material fact concerning the

1
    430 A.2d 779 (Del. 1981).

                                           3
independence of the SLC members and the reasonableness of its investigation, the

court abused its discretion when it found that the SLC’s conclusions were

reasonable, and the court erred when it applied the second prong of the Zapata test.

After our review of the record, including the SLC’s report, and the Court of

Chancery’s decision, we find that the court properly evaluated the SLC’s

independence, investigation, and conclusions, and we affirm the judgment of

dismissal.

                                              I.

                                             A.

       The background facts are drawn from the derivative complaint and the SLC’s

2019 Report.2 El Pollo Loco is a restaurant chain operating in the “quick service

plus” or “QSR+” category.3 According to EPL, its restaurants provide “fresh quality

food, but with a fast casual dining experience” or, in other words, “speed,

convenience, and value.”4 Founded in 1980 in Los Angeles, California, it expanded

to many locations, and completed an Initial Public Offering on July 25, 2014. 5

Defendant Trimaran Pollo Partners, L.L.C. (“TPP”) is an investment vehicle formed

in 2005 by private asset management firm Trimaran Capital Partners (“Trimaran

2
  App. to Opening Br. at A6–112 (Diep’s Compl.); App. to Answering Br. at B3–443 (hereinafter,
the “SLC Report”).
3
  App to Answering Br. at B16.
4
  Id.
5
  Id.

                                              4
Capital”) to acquire EPL’s predecessor. 6 Dean Kehler, Andrew Heyer, and Jay

Bloom founded Trimaran Capital. Kehler is one of two managing members of

Trimaran Capital, and Trimaran Capital is the managing member of TPP. TPP

membership is otherwise made up of Trimaran Capital affiliates, except for one

member—private investment firm Freeman Spigoli & Co (“Freeman Spigoli”). On

the EPL board, TPP was represented by Kehler, John Roth, and Michael Maselli.

Roth is CEO of Freeman Spigoli and Maselli is a TPP managing partner. Maselli

served as chairman of the EPL board.

       After the IPO, TPP owned 59.2% of EPL’s outstanding common stock. EPL

then adopted an insider trading policy (the “Trading Policy”) restricting stock sales

by EPL insiders outside of specific trading windows. 7 The insiders under the

Trading Policy included “directors, officers, employees and service providers” as

well as “corporations or other business entities controlled or managed by” the

former.8 The Trading Policy prohibited the purchase and sale of EPL stock unless

the party was “(1) . . . not aware of material non-public information . . . ; (2) the

purchase or sale [fell] within the Trading Window . . . ; and (3) the trade was pre-

cleared under the Company’s mandatory pre-clearance policy” by EPL’s chief legal

6
  Id. at B18.
7
  App. to Opening Br. at A614–627.
8
  Diep v. Sather, 2021 WL 3236322, at *2 (Del. Ch. July 30, 2021).

                                              5
officer, Edith Austin.9 The first trading window after the IPO opened May 19, 2015,

and closed June 10, 2015. Austin notified the EPL insiders of the trading window

on April 23, 2015 and reminded them that they were required to seek pre-clearance

for trades.10

       Ryan Hawley was EPL’s vice president of marketing planning and analysis.

His role included “develop[ing] and refin[ing] the Company’s pricing strategy

and . . . developing pricing recommendations.”11 Hawley created daily and weekly

reports on EPL’s performance and recommended price changes to the EPL executive

management team. The reports included EPL’s “key performance metric” of Same

Store Sales or “SSS”—the year-to-year change in the number of transactions and the

aggregate amount spent per transaction at each store.12

       Hawley also tracked consumer response to price changes, in both sales and

value perception.      These perception reports included the overall value of the

company—the         experience      divided       by   the   price—and   EPL’s   price

competitiveness/value for money, drawn from consumer surveys. Given EPL’s

place in the QSR+ category, consumer perceptions were important to the overall

9
  App. to Opening Br. at A622.
10
   App. to Answering Br. at B218.
11
   Id. at B83.
12
   Id. at B8, B30, B87, B110.

                                              6
business. EPL historically looked to large-scale trends rather than specific market

responses when evaluating the importance of value scores.13

                                              B.

       EPL increased food prices three times between 2014 and 2015. The increases

were a response to rising labor costs as well as a brand decision “to cover costs to

drive top line sales[.]”14 Together, prices increased 3% across the menu, a change

EPL had never implemented in just one year.15 In 2014 and the beginning of 2015,

EPL had a larger than expected drop in sales, though revenue remained strong.

       In April 2015, Hawley began preparing materials for the May 11–12 board

meeting. Various insiders, including then-director, president, and chief executive

officer Stephen Sather, chief financial officer Laurance Roberts, chief marketing

officer Edward Valle, then-chief operating officer Kay Bogeajis, and board chair

Maselli, reviewed and commented on these materials and other draft presentations.

       On May 5, 2015, Sather sent Maselli a customer survey showing a decline in

EPL’s value score from 59.6% to 58.1% between April and May. The sample size

was “less than 15.5% of the likely total responses for the month.”16 Sather asked

13
   “Mr. Hawley explained that there had been ‘many ups and downs’ with respect to value scores:
M9 2014 value scores were good, M10 2014 scores dropped, M1 2015 scores increased, and then
M2 2015 declined again. Mr. Hawley stated that ‘the bigger concern’ was the general trend over
time, not any specific drop.” Id. at B139.
14
   Id. at B131.
15
   Id. at B128–29.
16
   Id. at B143.

                                              7
Maselli to “keep this between us at this point as I don’t want anyone to over react.”17

Maselli told the SLC “that he understood Mr. Sather’s comment about keeping the

data between them as being related to the fact that the report was a ‘very early read,’

and that he believed that Mr. Sather had wanted more data before sharing the data

with others.”18 Meanwhile, the presentations were finalized and distributed to board

members on May 6.

       The EPL board, managing and non-managing executives, and representatives

from Freeman Spigoli attended the May 11 meeting.19 Roberts presented financial

updates that showed a decline in SSS but explained that he felt EPL was still in a

good place overall. He also presented a lower projected SSS for the second quarter

of 2015 based on year-to-date sales. Apparently, there was no explanation given for

the SSS decline, but management was optimistic that the 3rd and 4th quarters could

compensate because the company had a plan to introduce new menu items.

       Essentially the same group attended the May 12 session of the board meeting.

For the most part, Hawley ran this meeting. His presentation had been updated since

the May 6 draft and offered possible explanations for the SSS drop. Hawley

explained that the first quarter issues could be attributed to the holidays, given the

growth over the rest of the quarter, but that issues in amount-per-transaction were

17
   Id.
18
   Id.
19
   Id. at B146.

                                          8
likely caused by the “2015 pricing action” which “had ‘led to lower total sales.’”20

He also pointed out a significant dip in the answer to the consumer survey question

of whether EPL “provides good value for the money”—from 71% to 54% between

2014 and 2015.21 During the meeting, the board and management team discounted

the consumer survey analysis and the value scores because they were from a new,

untested firm.22 Hawley conceded that EPL was working with a new firm and the

data could be wrong.23

       EPL filed a Form 10-Q on May 14, 2015, reporting its first quarter earnings.

Earnings failed to meet company forecasts. On an earnings call that evening (the

“Earnings Call”), management gave a scripted presentation followed by a live Q&A.

In drafting the presentation script, the management team discussed what they should

disclose about the current quarter, which was also unlikely to meet forecasts. EPL

had not typically disclosed information about quarters in progress. “Preparation for

the Earnings Call thus included discussions regarding how much second-quarter

forecasting to disclose to adequately ‘manage the market’s expectations’ without

20
   Id. at B157–59.
21
   Id. at B161.
22
   For instance, Valle thought EPL had mistakenly prioritized steak and shrimp menu items, which
were not as healthy as other EPL offerings and led to the dip in earnings.
23
   Id. at B161–64.

                                               9
creating an expectation that the market would continue to receive such detailed

forward-looking information ‘forever.’”24

       Hawley was involved in drafting the Q&A responses. He proposed answers

about the link between EPL’s increased pricing and decreased performance, as well

as decreases in value score. Specifically, he included a projected second-quarter

Company SSS range of 1.0–2.5% instead of the 2.5% number he had presented at

the board meeting.25 This range showed the possibility that the previous drops were

not anomalies but instead due to general sales trends. Roberts did not include the

specific range in his draft answers, instead offering language about a strong quarter

in the previous year and marketing issues. He also edited the Q&A draft answer

about the drop in value scores, saying it was due to the prioritization of certain menu

items. After a management meeting on May 12, Hawley inserted the SSS ranges

and specific forecasts into the draft, and suggested consumer pricing resistance as a

response to questions about the decreased value score.26 Hawley’s comments were

not included in the final draft.27

24
   Diep, 2021 WL 3236322, at *6 (quoting SLC Report at 193–94 (available at App. to Answering
Br. at B207–08)).
25
   App. to Answering Br. at B198.
26
   Id. at B197–99 (“Mr. Hawley also proposed answers to questions about franchise versus
company performance, Q1 comps, Houston restaurants, and whether there was ‘any negative
response from consumers to our price increases [and] any impact on value scores,’ the last of which
Mr. Hawley answered by noting that EPL was ‘seeing some potential pushback from consumers
on prices.’”).
27
   Id. at B201–03; App. to Opening Br. at A924–31 (SLC Report Ex. 193).

                                                10
       The management team drafting the statement, conscious of the upcoming

trading window, sent the draft script to outside counsel to make sure it would be

“sufficient from an insider-trading standpoint.” 28 The final version read on the

Earnings Call revealed the likelihood that second quarter SSS would “be closer to

the low end of the [previously projected] range,” and attributed the drop to how

strong the quarter had been the previous year (given that SSS reflected year-to-year

changes from the same stores).29 Management maintained a full-year SSS projection

of 3–5%.

       On the Earnings Call, a Morgan Stanley analyst asked about the earnings drop

and value score decrease. 30 Roberts and Valle attributed the issues to the non-

chicken proteins, and not “price resistance in the higher price points[.]”31 Sather

specifically touted EPL’s value scores as consistently strong but did not mention the

new scores received earlier that month.

                                             C.

       Maselli had been considering selling some of TPP’s EPL stock in the

upcoming trading window. On May 3, 2015, Maselli emailed Sather about a

potential sale. He then met with EPL management before the May 11 board meeting

28
   App. to Answering Br. at B191.
29
   App. to Opening Br. at A932–44 (SLC Report Ex. 197 at 5).
30
   Id. at A940 (SLC Report Ex. 197 at 8).
31
   Id.

                                             11
to discuss. On May 18, 2015, Wesley Barton, a Trimaran Capital vice president and

EPL director, informed EPL’s chief legal officer of the possible sale. Barton said

that “TPP [was] considering a block sale of some stock” and that he “suspect[ed]

that the c-level team [would] participate in the block with TPP.”32 Around the same

time, Maselli emailed Bogeajis, Roberts, Valle, and Sather, requesting a “quick call

to discuss the process for the possible share sale.”33   According to Maselli, the

underwriters involved in the Block Trade had requested executive involvement to

streamline the process and avoid a subsequent block sale that lowered the value of

the first stock sale.34 Sather, Valle, and Bogeajis each requested and received pre-

clearance under the EPL Trading Policy from the chief legal officer. TPP did not

request approval for its sale.

       EPL’s stock closed at $29.06 per share on May 14, 2015, the day of the

Earnings Call. It opened on May 15 at $24.96 and continued to drop. On May 19,

2015, the first day of the first trading window since the IPO, the stock opened at

$24.07. TPP, Sather, Valle, and Bogeajis sold stock that day (the “Block Trade”).

As the managing member of TPP, Trimaran Capital negotiated the terms of the

Block Trade, and its managing members Kehler and Bloom authorized the trade on

behalf of Trimaran Capital and TPP. In total, they sold 5,962,500 shares for

32
   App. to Answering Br. at B222.
33
   Id.
34
   Id. at B221.

                                        12
$130,280,625, or $21.85 per share. The Block Trade sales were distributed as

follows:

 Seller                         Number of Shares            Proceeds

 TPP                            5,402,500                   $118,044,625

 Sather                         360,000                     $7,866,000

 Valle                          175,000                     $3,823,750

 Bogeajis                       25,000                      $546,250

          Distributed among the TPP members, Trimaran Capital received $68,122,313,

Freeman Spigoli received $39,010,728, and other members received $10,911,584.

TPP held 16,746,544 shares of EPL stock after the Block Trade. Other directors on

the EPL board (Douglas Ammerman and Samuel Borgese) exercised purchase

options and sold stock on May 19 separate from the Block Trade.

          On August 13, 2015, EPL issued a press release announcing the results for the

quarter ending July 1, 2015. The press release stated that “system-wide comparable

restaurant sales [SSS] grew 1.3%” while company SSS declined 0.5%, driven by a

“3.9% decrease in traffic, partially offset by a 3.4% increase in average check size.”35

In the press release EPL adjusted its overall SSS projection for 2015 from 3–5% to

35
     Id. at B254.

                                            13
“approximately 3.0%[.]”36 EPL stock opened at $18.04 a share on August 13, 2015.

It closed at $14.56 per share the next day. From the beginning to the end of 2015,

EPL’s stock price dropped 37%.37

                                                D.

          On August 24, 2015, Daniel Turocy, an EPL stockholder, filed a class action

against EPL, Sather, Roberts, Valle, TPP, Trimaran Capital, and Freeman Spigoli in

the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. He alleged federal

securities law violations for the Block Trade (the “Turocy Action”). On November

5, 2015, Armen Galustyan, another EPL stockholder, sued TPP, Sather, Roberts,

Valle, Bogeajis, Maselli, Kehler, Barton, Ammerman, and Borgese in the Court of

Chancery, alleging breach of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment for the Block

Trade (the “Galustyan Action”). The parties agreed to stay the Galustyan Action

pending the outcome of the Turocy Action. The Court of Chancery later granted

Galustyan’s motion to dismiss his suit voluntarily with prejudice.

          On September 20, 2016, Diep, another EPL stockholder, filed this action after

obtaining books and records through a Section 220 demand. The complaint named

Sather, Roberts, Valle, Bogeajis, Ammerman, Borgese, and TPP as defendants. The

complaint contained two counts: first, that all defendants except Roberts breached

36
     Id.
37
     From $20 per share on January 2, 2015, to $12.63 per share on December 31, 2015. Id. at B260.

                                                 14
their fiduciary duties by making the Block Trade—an insider trading Brophy v.

Cities Service Co. claim—and second, that Sather, Roberts, and Valle breached their

fiduciary duties by making intentionally false public disclosures in the Earnings

Call.38

          All defendants responded with a multi-pronged motion—to stay in favor of

the Federal Action, to dismiss under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to

state a claim, and to dismiss under Rule 23.1 for failure to make a demand (the “2016

Motion to Dismiss” or “2016 Motion”).39 Specifically, the defendants argued that

Diep had failed to plead facts showing a substantial likelihood of liability for the

majority of the Board.        According to the defendants, the alleged non-public

information was disclosed publicly, the intra-quarter results were immaterial, and

there was no showing of scienter.40

          The defendants also claimed that similar defects existed in Diep’s claim for

relief, because the complaint did not contain “specific supporting factual

allegations.”41 The 2016 Motion was filed on behalf of “Nominal Defendant El

Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc.” and defendants Bogeajis, Roberts, Sather, Valle,

38
   70 A.2d 5 (Del. Ch. 1949); Malone v. Brincat, 722 A.2d 5 (Del. 1998).
39
   Diep, 2021 WL 3236322, at *10; App. to Opening Br. at A113–A175 (Defendants’ Brief in
Support of Their Motion to Stay or to Dismiss Pursuant to Rules 23.1 and 12(b)(6)).
40
   App. to Opening Br. at A117, A160–72.
41
   Id. at A173 (quoting In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 897 A.2d 162, 168 (Del.
2006)).

                                            15
Ammerman, Borgese, and TPP. 42            The Court of Chancery stayed the count

addressing the statements made during the Earnings Call in favor of the Turocy

Action (given the potential to recover and California’s interest in the matter), but

denied the motions with respect to the insider trading claims. According to the court,

“the plaintiffs [had] plead that it is reasonably conceivable that the executives did

give knowingly false and misleading answers about the cause for the slowdown and

that they subsequently traded, along with the controlling stockholder, before the full

information was known by the market.”43 The court held that Delaware’s interest in

the matter—protecting the fiduciary relationship—“is a quintessential Delaware law

concern” and refused to stay because stockholders would not benefit from the

Turocy Action.44

       Turning to the Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court found Diep had successfully

pled a possible Brophy claim by identifying instances where Sather, Roberts, and

Valle had said that higher prices had not influenced SSS, instead pointing to timing,

marketing, or brand messaging. 45 Diep had demonstrated there was “a serious

problem . . . a serious risk” with price increases at the time, as shown in later EPL

materials which confirmed issues with pricing. 46 And while the defendants had

42
   Id. at A114–15.
43
   Diep v. Sather, C.A. No. 12760, at 89 (Del. Ch. Mar. 17, 2017) (TRANSCRIPT).
44
   Id. at 94.
45
   Id. at 103.
46
   Id. at 105.

                                            16
claimed there was no scienter pled, the Court of Chancery held that “knowledge can

be alleged generally under Rule 8.” 47 The other circumstances surrounding the

Block Trade, while not determinative, supported an inference of scienter at the

pleading stage. As such, the Rule 23.1 motion was dismissed because Diep had

shown that five of nine directors faced a substantial likelihood of liability.48

                                             E.

       After the Court of Chancery denied the motions to dismiss, the EPL board

formed the SLC to investigate the allegations in all three suits, as well as demands

for suit from other EPL stockholders. The EPL board appointed three directors to

the SLC—Douglas Babb, William Floyd, and Carol Lynton. All three newly

appointed directors joined the board after the 2015 events at issue in the derivative

action.

                                             1.

       Babb, an attorney, served in executive positions for various companies, more

recently in the healthcare industry and previously in the transportation industry.49

Babb and Floyd worked together before Babb joined the EPL board.50 Floyd was

the one who recommended him to serve as an outside director. When interviewing

47
   Id. at 107.
48
   Id. at 109–10.
49
   App. to Answering Br. at B34–35.
50
   “From 2001 to 2006, Mr. Floyd was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at Beverly
Enterprises, and Mr. Babb reported to him as Executive Vice President-Chief Administrative and
Legal Officer and Secretary from 2002 to 2006.” Id. at B35.

                                             17
for the board position, Babb reviewed pending litigation against EPL and discussed

the suits with Lynton and others. It was mentioned during the board interview

process that he would likely join the SLC.51 He joined the board on January 3, 2018,

and the SLC on January 11, 2018.

                                           2.

      Floyd served as chairman and in executive positions for various businesses,

including businesses in the restaurant and fast-food industries. He was also a

member of the Board of Overseers at the University of Pennsylvania School of

Nursing. Before joining the board, Floyd knew Kehler through the Board of

Overseers, where the two served together.52 The Board of Overseers meets three or

four times a year and has thirty members. Kehler recruited Floyd to join the board

of directors “because [EPL] was seeking independent board members to meet federal

and agency requirements for public companies.” 53           Floyd discussed pending

litigation with Kehler but did not raise the possibility of joining the SLC until after

Floyd joined the board. When Kehler recruited Floyd to the board, Kehler told Floyd

“three things [about the pending litigation]. He said we did nothing illegal, we did

nothing unethical, but he said the optics did not look good with the, you know, with

51
   Id.
52
   Floyd also knew Sather and Bogeajis when the three worked at Taco Bell but had limited
relationships with both individuals.
53
   Id. at B37.

                                           18
the trading of the stock.”54 Floyd joined the board on April 1, 2016, and the SLC on

October 6, 2017.

                                               3.

         Lynton was a co-founder, executive, and director for various restaurant

groups, based primarily in New York. As with Floyd, Kehler recruited Lynton to

join the board “because [EPL] was seeking independent board members to meet

federal and agency requirements for public companies.”55 In the interview process,

Kehler and Lynton discussed the litigation pending against EPL, but the possibility

of an SLC was not raised until after Lynton joined the board.

         Lynton attended Harvard College with Kehler’s wife, where they met two or

three times. From 1983 to 1985, Lynton, Kehler, and Kehler’s wife all worked for

Lehman Brothers. Lynton and Kehler’s wife were junior analysts and Kehler was a

senior associate and vice president. Lynton briefly worked with Kehler at this point,

primarily on a two-week project.

         Since their time in the 1980s at Lehman Brothers, Lynton has dined with the

Kehlers about twenty times, including once at Lynton’s mother’s home. Her eldest

daughter briefly went to the same high school as the Kehlers’ eldest son. Lynton

characterized her social activities with the Kehlers as primarily related to their

54
     App. to Answering Br. at B469–70 (Floyd Depo. Tr. 10–11).
55
     Id. at B39.

                                               19
children, who are now adults.56 Since joining the EPL board, Lynton has dined with

Kehler’s wife twice.           Lynton and Kehler have also donated what could be

characterized as small amounts to non-profits that the other was involved in, and

Lynton once asked Kehler and two other individuals for business advice about ten

years ago. Lynton joined the EPL board on April 1, 2016, and the SLC on October

6, 2017.

          For their SLC service, the members were paid $4000 a month, plus

expenses—an amount in line with remuneration of SLC members appointed by other

companies. 57           The SLC members also agreed to surrender their SLC-related

compensation or have the court adjust the amount received if their compensation

was found by the court to be unreasonable or to impair their impartiality or

independence.

                                             F.

          The Court of Chancery stayed the suit while the SLC went to work. The SLC

undertook an extensive investigation. It hired counsel whose independence has not

been challenged. It reviewed over 249,000 documents that included board materials,

financial updates and reports, internal governance and policies, and business and

personal emails about the Board Presentation, the Management Presentation, and the

56
     Id. at B40, B50.
57
     Id. at B41, 53.

                                             20
Block Trade. 58 It also reviewed deposition transcripts from other litigation and

conducted interviews with all potential defendants and key EPL employees,

including Hawley. Diep’s counsel and counsel for other stockholders were invited

to participate in the investigation but, unfortunately, did not cooperate with the

SLC.59

       The SLC met formally sixteen times between December 2017 and February

2019 and consulted with its counsel throughout the investigation. It finalized its

conclusions and published its report on February 13, 2019 (the “SLC Report”). In

its 377-page report, the SLC considered 1) the merits of the claims; 2) the cost of

potential litigation; 3) how distracting litigation would be to the company; and 4) the

reputational challenges and costs to public relations.60

       Diep had pled a Brophy claim against the defendants for insider trading. A

Brophy claim requires 1) that there existed material, nonpublic information and 2)

evidence that the parties were motivated to trade by the information.61 The SLC

determined that Hawley’s information was not material because it was an early,

sample-size estimate and because various other theories were presented at the same

58
   Id. at B63–64.
59
   Id. at B66–77.
60
   Id. at B387–390.
61
   Kahn v. Kolberg Kravis Roberts & Co., L.P., 23 A.3d 831, 838 (Del. 2011) (Brophy requires
“1) the corporate fiduciary possessed material, nonpublic company information; and 2) the
corporate fiduciary used that information improperly by making trades because she was motivated,
in whole or in part, by the substance of that information.” (quoting In re Oracle Corp., 867 A.2d
904, 934 (Del. Ch. 2004), aff’d, 872 A.2d 960 (Del. 2005) (ORDER))).

                                               21
time.62 The management team had also proactively disclosed on the Earnings Call

the earnings results and the potential that the SSS would be lower than anticipated.

In the SLC’s view, this made any material information public, as shown by the drop

in stock price after the Earnings Call.63

       The SLC also found that there was insufficient evidence of scienter. The

Block Trade took place on the first day of the trading window. Because the

defendants had taken the first possible opportunity to sell stock, it was less likely

that the sale was a calculated effort to benefit from inside information.64 And the

EPL board and management viewed Hawley’s analysis as more of a contrary point

of view rather than a definitive determination of value perception.65 As such, the

SLC concluded, it was unlikely that they were motivated to trade by that

information.66

       Diep and the other plaintiffs had also alleged breaches of fiduciary duty by

Sather, Roberts, Valle, and TPP. Specifically, Diep contended that their failure to

62
   App. to Answering Br. at B276–77; id. at B285–89.
63
   Id. at B304–26.
64
   Id. at B351–52 (“[Maselli] stated that the ‘norm’ is to sell early in the open window because the
disclosure is ‘freshest’ and the best data is available to the market. Thus, the timing of the Block
Trade—the first day of the trading window on May 19, 2015—does not suggest an ulterior motive,
but is consistent with the usual practice of private equity firms.”).
65
   E.g., id. at B283 (“Mr. Kehler, among other individuals interviewed by the SLC, said that he
believed Mr. Hawley’s value score slides were part of a narrative to raise warning signs about
pricing. Moreover, Mr. Kehler suggested that Mr. Hawley’s presentation of the survey data was
‘intentionally misleading’ and designed to ‘soften up’ the Directors and Executive Management
Team to lower prices.”).
66
    Id. at B347–56 (discussing whether there was a viable Brophy claim against the TPP
representatives).

                                                22
disclose material information on the Earnings Call “breached their fiduciary duties

of loyalty and good faith by engaging in stock sales while in possession of

purportedly material, nonpublic information.”67 And Diep also argued that Sather,

Roberts, and Valle “‘breached their fiduciary duties, including their duty of candor,’

by purportedly making untrue statements and by failing to provide material facts.”68

EPL’s certificate of incorporation contained an exculpatory provision, meaning that

directors would only be liable if they “(i) engaged in intentional misconduct; (ii)

committed a knowing violation of law; or (iii) acted in bad faith.”69 With respect to

management, the SLC had to determine whether the directors were grossly negligent

or had acted in bad faith, given that they were not exculpated from the duty of care.

       The SLC found “that the Executive Management Team was well informed,

acted in good faith, and was not grossly negligent in” not disclosing “potentially

unreliable value score data” and SSS projections. 70 It also determined that the

disclosures were “adequate in light of the information available to the Company

during the Relevant Period.”71 Finally, the SLC found that, for all defendants, there

was no “evidence of bad faith, intent to violate the law, failure to implement internal

controls, or a conscious disregard of their corporate oversight duties[.]”72 Among

67
   Id. at B357.
68
   Id.
69
   Id. at B261–62.
70
   Id. at B359.
71
   Id.
72
   Id. at B369.

                                          23
other evidence, the SLC considered the decision to settle the Turocy Action and

concluded that the Turocy Defendants settled “not because they believed the

allegations had merit, but because of the risks inherent in potentially proceeding to

trial and the significant costs that would be incurred in doing so.” 73 The SLC

concluded “that the Company should move to dismiss” the instant matter and should

“not pursue litigation nor otherwise take any further action against any of the

Defendants[.]”74

                                          G.

          The SLC moved to terminate the litigation (the “SLC Motion to Dismiss” or

“SLC Motion”). Before the Court of Chancery reviewed the motion, Diep and the

individual defendants settled for $625,000 in exchange for a release. TPP was

therefore the only remaining defendant. In his opposition to the SLC’s motion, Diep

challenged the SLC’s independence and the reasonableness of its investigation. He

argued that the SLC was not independent because Floyd and Lynton were conflicted,

and that there were material questions of fact as to the SLC’s conclusions. Diep

argued in the alternative that the Court of Chancery should apply its own business

judgment and find that even if there was a reasonable, good faith investigation, Diep

pled claims that should be pursued in the best interests of the company.

73
     Id. at B61 n.319.
74
     Id. at B391.

                                          24
       The Court of Chancery reviewed Diep’s objections “under a ‘procedural

standard akin to a summary judgment inquiry.’”75 It first considered whether the

directors’ ties to the defendants rendered them, “for any substantial reason,

incapable of making a decision with only the best interests of the corporation in

mind,” focusing on “impartiality and objectivity.”76 As part of its analysis, the court

examined the relationships of the SLC members with the defendants, and whether

they were “of such a nature that they might have caused [the SLC] to consider factors

other than the best interests of the corporation in making their decision to move for

dismissal.”77

       Diep did not challenge Babb’s independence. With respect to Floyd and

Lynton, Diep claimed that “they prejudged Plaintiff’s claims by filing a motion to

dismiss this action in 2016, and [] that each lacked independence from Kehler.”78

The Court of Chancery disagreed. The only evidence that Floyd and Lynton had

familiarity with the motion to dismiss was Floyd’s testimony that “no one on the

Board [had] objected to the filing.” 79 The Court of Chancery viewed Diep’s

argument as essentially that being a board member when the motion was filed made

the SLC directors conflicted, an argument with “no support in Delaware law.”80 The

75
   Id. (quoting In re Oracle Corp. Derivative Litig., 824 A.2d 917, 928 (Del. Ch. 2003)).
76
   Id. at *15 (quoting Oracle, 824 A.2d at 938) (emphasis in original).
77
   Id. (quoting London, 2010 WL 877528, at *13) (alteration in original).
78
   Id.
79
   Id. at *16 (citing Floyd Dep. Tr. at 66, App. to Answering Br. at B482).
80
   Id.

                                               25
court also looked to the tone of the SLC Report, which it found was “even-keeled

and unbiased, suggestive of a fair investigation[.]”81

        The Court of Chancery then turned to Floyd and Lynton’s relationships with

Kehler. The court found that Floyd and Kehler primarily interacted through the

Pennsylvania Nursing School’s Board of Overseers, which only met occasionally

and had many members. This, the court held, was “plainly not enough to impugn

Floyd’s independence.”82 The court also examined the statements Kehler made to

Floyd while recruiting him to the EPL Board and held that, compared with Floyd’s

extensive testimony, there was “no basis to conclude that Kehler’s conclusory

statements to Floyd would have caused Floyd to prejudge the merits of the

litigation.”83 The SLC, the court concluded, had shown Floyd’s independence.

        Although Lynton’s independence presented a closer call, the court reviewed

the personal ties described earlier and observed that “[t]o meet its burden, the SLC

must establish that Lynton’s relationship with the Kehlers would not have biased

Lynton in her investigation of the claims against Pollo Partners.” 84 The court

observed that our courts have recognized that social ties are not as strong as familial

ones, and Lynton’s role in the industry gave her “a reputational incentive to act

81
   Id.
82
   Id. at *17.
83
   Id.
84
   Id. at *18.

                                          26
independently.” 85 Moreover, the court found that because the social ties of the

directors were centered around the directors’ children, they did not create a “sense

of obligation” and were “unlikely to result in the type of awkward post-investigation

encounters that would weigh on a director’s decision-making during the course of

the SLC’s investigation.” 86        Finally, the charitable contributions, given their

relatively small size, would not compromise Lynton’s independence. The Court of

Chancery concluded that the SLC had established Lynton’s independence, and there

was no genuine dispute of material fact as to the independence of any of the SLC

directors.

       The court looked next at whether the SLC had “conducted a reasonable

investigation of the matters alleged in the complaint in good faith.”87 Diep had two

primary grounds for objection: the SLC’s failure to consider settlements and scienter

on the part of TPP. The Court of Chancery first determined that the SLC had

considered the Turocy Action and concluded that the SLC could have reasonably

decided that non-legal business decisions led the parties to settle. The court also

found that the SLC could not have considered the settlement in the instant case with

85
   Id.
86
   Id. (quoting London, 2010 WL 877528, at *15).
87
   Id. at *19 (quoting Kaplan v. Wyatt, 484 A.2d 501, 507 (Del. Ch. 1984), aff’d, 499 A.2d 1184
(Del. 1985)).

                                              27
the individual defendants because it took place over a year after the SLC finalized

its report.

       Regarding scienter, the court found that the SLC had conducted a full and

comprehensive investigation of the materiality of the information, the scienter of the

defendants, and the violation of the Trading Policy, all aspects Diep had alleged were

insufficiently considered. The court also found that the SLC had reasonable bases

for its conclusions. As the court held, the SLC considered Hawley’s statements,

including “statements discounting a correlation between value scores and pricing

increases” and came to the conclusion that he “had been, in effect, providing his own

point of view throughout his portion of the [Management Presentation].”88 And the

SLC noted that the recipients of Hawley’s reports did not ascribe certainty to the

reports as they did with his formal quarterly forecasts.                Hawley himself had

concluded the lower sale numbers were early data and might not be indicative of

longer-term trends. While it was possible to view the evidence in a different light

than the SLC had, the court held that this did not render the SLC Report devoid of

reasonable bases.

       As for consciously making material misstatements on the Earnings Call, Diep

had alleged only misstatements against individuals, not TPP. The court found that

88
   Id. at *22 (quoting SLC Report at 154 (available at App. to Answering Br. at B168); and citing
id. at 151 (available at App. to Answering Br. at B165)) (alteration in original).

                                               28
“[n]o Pollo Partners representatives participated in the Earnings Call where

information was purportedly ‘affirmatively concealed’” and thus could not be liable

for a breach of a fiduciary duty.89 Nevertheless, the SLC concluded that, because

Hawley’s forecasts were only estimates, not disclosing a specific SSS range on the

call was within the discretion of the EPL board and management team. The Court

of Chancery also agreed with the SLC’s determination that the sale in the trading

window did not support scienter because of TPP’s private equity investment goals

and the fact that the trading window was the first selling opportunity.

       Finally, the Court of Chancery reviewed the SLC Motion under the second

step of Zapata to decide “whether the SLC’s recommended result falls within a range

of reasonable outcomes that a disinterested and independent decision maker for the

corporation, not acting under any compulsion and with the benefit of the information

then available, could reasonably accept.”90 According to the court, the extensive,

well-reasoned SLC Report and the scope of the investigation led to the conclusion

that the SLC’s decision was reasonable. Specifically, the court concluded, “[o]nly

the Brophy claim of Count I is asserted against [TPP]. That claim requires a showing

of scienter. The SLC directly addressed the facts on which Plaintiff relies to support

89
   Id.
90
   Id. at *23 (quoting In re Primedia, Inc. S’holders Litig., 67 A.3d 455, 468 (Del. Ch. 2013); and
citing Obeid v. Hogan, 2016 WL 3356851, at *12 n.14 (Del. Ch. June 10, 2016)) (footnote
omitted); Zapata, 430 A.2d 779.

                                                29
a finding of scienter and concluded that they offered little support.”91 The court

found that the SLC’s conclusion not to pursue a “weak Brophy claim” against TPP

was reasonable because it was “not worth the expense of protracted and uncertain

litigation.”92 It therefore granted the SLC Motion to Dismiss.

       Diep has appealed the Court of Chancery’s application of the Zapata analysis.

On appeal, “Zapata’s first prong is subject to a summary judgment standard, our

review of which is de novo. Because Zapata’s second prong implicates the Court of

Chancery’s business judgment, we review for an abuse of discretion.”93 We review

the Court of Chancery’s “legal conclusions de novo.”94

                                               II.

       The “business and affairs” of a Delaware corporation are managed by or under

the direction of its board of directors.95 An important aspect of a board’s managerial

decisions is whether to initiate, or refrain from initiating, litigation on the

corporation’s behalf.96 Like a fleet of trucks or a factory, a lawsuit is a corporate

asset that must be managed by the board consistent with its fiduciary duties.97

91
   Diep, 2021 WL 3236322, at *23.
92
   Id. at *24.
93
   Kahn, 23 A.3d at 840–41 (first citing Williams v. Geier, 671 A.2d 1368, 1375 (Del. 1996); then
citing Neponsit Inv. Co. v. Abramson, 405 A.2d 97, 100 (Del. 1979)).
94
   Id. at 836 (citing Alaska Elec. Pension Fund v. Brown, 941 A.2d 1011, 1015 (Del. 2007)).
95
   8 Del. C. § 141(a).
96
   Grimes v. Donald, 673 A.2d 1207, 1215 (Del. 1996).
97
   Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 811 (Del. 1984), overruled on other grounds by Brehm v.
Eisner, 746 A.2d 244 (Del. 2000).

                                               30
       While the board typically controls litigation on the corporation’s behalf, “a

stockholder is not powerless to challenge director action which results in harm to the

corporation.”98 As this Court stated in Aronson v. Lewis:

       The machinery of corporate democracy and the derivative suit are
       potent tools to redress the conduct of a torpid or unfaithful
       management. The derivative action developed in equity to enable
       shareholders to sue in the corporation’s name where those in control of
       the company refused to assert a claim belonging to it. The nature of the
       action is two-fold. First, it is the equivalent of a suit by the shareholders
       to compel the corporation to sue. Second, it is a suit by the corporation,
       asserted by the shareholders on its behalf, against those liable to it.99

To strike a balance between the “managerial freedom of directors” and a

stockholder’s desire to police the conduct of her fiduciaries, a stockholder must,

before filing a derivative suit, “(1) make a demand on the company’s board of

directors or (2) show that demand would be futile.”100 A stockholder who makes a

demand concedes that the board as a whole is capable of considering a demand.101

98
   Id.
99
   Id.
100
    United Food and Commercial Workers Union and Participating Food Industry Employers Tri-
State Pension Fund v. Zuckerberg, 262 A.3d 1034, 1047 (Del. 2021) (Zuckerberg II) (cleaned up).
See Grimes v. Donald, 673 A.2d 1207, 1216 (Del. 1996) (“The demand requirement serves a
salutary purpose. First, by requiring exhaustion of intracorporate remedies, the demand
requirement invokes a species of alternative dispute resolution procedure which might avoid
litigation altogether.”); Aronson, 473 A.2d 805, 812 (“Thus, by promoting this form of alternate
dispute resolution, rather than immediate recourse to litigation, the demand requirement is a
recognition of the fundamental precept that directors manage the business and affairs of
corporations.”); Ct. Ch. R. 23.1.
101
    Scattered Corp. v. Chi. Stock Exch., Inc., 701 A.2d 70, 74 (Del. 1997) (“If the stockholders
make a demand, as in this case, they are deemed to have waived any claim they might otherwise
have had that the board cannot independently act on the demand.”); Grimes, 673 A.2d at 1218–19
(“If a demand is made, the stockholder has spent one—but only one—‘arrow’ in the ‘quiver.’ The

                                              31
After receiving a demand, the board can establish a demand review committee to

conduct a review of the demand proportional to the nature and strength of the claims

and decide whether it is in the best interests of the corporation to pursue the claims.

If the demand review committee investigates and concludes that the demand should

be refused, an independent and disinterested demand review committee decision is

accorded a business judgment standard of review. A plaintiff claiming wrongful

demand refusal must raise a reasonable doubt about “the good faith and

reasonableness of [the board’s] investigation.”102

       If the stockholder files a derivative action without first making a demand on

the board, and the board contests whether demand is futile, the court must review on

a director-by-director basis:

       (i) whether the director received a material personal benefit from the
       alleged misconduct that is the subject of the litigation demand;

       (ii) whether the director would face a substantial likelihood of liability
       on any of the claims that are the subject of the litigation demand; and

       (iii) whether the director lacks independence from someone who
       received a material personal benefit from the alleged misconduct that is

spent ‘arrow’ is the right to claim that demand is excused.”). The concession is limited to the
board’s ability to consider the demand. The stockholder does not waive the right to challenge on
independence and disinterestedness grounds the board’s disposition of the demand. Grimes, 673
A.2d at 1219. The Scattered and Grimes decisions were overruled on grounds not pertinent here.
See Brehm, 746 A.2d at 253–54 (overruling prior precedent that the Court of Chancery’s decision
under Rule 23.1 is reviewed by the Supreme Court under an abuse of discretion standard).
102
    Spiegel v. Buntrock, 571 A.2d 767, 777 (Del. 1990); see also Grimes, 673 A.2d at 1219 (“If a
demand is made and rejected, the board rejecting the demand is entitled to the presumption of the
business judgment rule unless the stockholder can allege facts with particularity creating a
reasonable doubt that the board is entitled to the benefit of the presumption.”).

                                               32
       the subject of the litigation demand or who would face a substantial
       likelihood of liability on any of the claims that are the subject of the
       litigation demand.103

Here we deal with the “demand excused” paradigm, where the Court of Chancery

found at the motion to dismiss stage that it was reasonably conceivable that members

of the board misled the public and traded on material nonpublic information. The

court also decided that, as pled, a majority of the EPL board received a material

benefit from the alleged misconduct and faced a substantial likelihood of liability.104

       Although the Court of Chancery gave the green light for the litigation to

proceed at the stockholder’s direction, the conflicted board had one final arrow in its

quiver to gain control of the derivative litigation—the special litigation committee.

Unlike a demand review committee formed in response to a stockholder demand,

the special litigation committee typically comes into existence after demand is

excused. The board can appoint independent and disinterested board members to

the SLC to investigate and decide what action should be taken to address the

litigation.

103
    Zuckerberg II, 262 A.3d at 1058.
104
    Diep, C.A. No. 12760, at 89 (TRANSCRIPT) (“In my view . . . the plaintiffs have been able to
plead that it is reasonably conceivable that the executives did give knowingly false and misleading
answers about the cause for the slowdown and that they subsequently traded, along with the
controlling stockholder, before the full information was known by the market.”); id. at 109–10
(finding Sather, Ammerman, and Borgese “face[d] a substantial risk of liability for a breach of the
duty of loyalty, again, under a pleading-stage analysis. Three other directors are affiliated with
Trimaran Pollo Partners, which is the company’s controlling stockholder and a major
seller . . . [and that Maselli, Kehler, and Roth] are insiders of the controller when the controller
unloaded shares. So that is five of nine. That means that demand is futile.”).

                                                33
       In Zapata, the Court recognized that a conflicted board appoints the SLC, and

the SLC is charged with scrutinizing the conduct of the board members who have

appointed them.105 If the SLC then moves to dismiss the derivative litigation, it is

not a typical motion to dismiss. The motion “is addressed necessarily to the

reasonableness of dismissing the complaint prior to trial without any concession of

liability on the part of the defendants and without adjudicating the merits of the cause

of action itself.”106 In this atypical procedural posture, the SLC motion to dismiss is

treated as a hybrid under Court of Chancery Rules 41(a)(2) and 56. To terminate

derivative litigation, the SLC must show, and the court must be satisfied, that no

disputed issues of material fact exist about the independence, good faith, and

reasonableness of the SLC’s investigation and whether the SLC had reasonable

bases for its conclusions. As a second discretionary step, the court can review, in its

business judgment, whether litigation dismissal or some other course of action

proposed by the SLC is in the corporation’s best interests.107

                                               A.

       For the first prong of the Zapata two-step analysis:

       the Court should inquire into the independence and good faith of the
       committee and the bases supporting its conclusions. . . . The
       corporation should have the burden of proving independence, good
105
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 786 (citing 8 Del. C. §§ 141(a), (c)).
106
    Kaplan, 484 A.2d at 507.
107
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 787–89 (“If, however, the Court is satisfied under Rule 56 standards that
the committee was independent and showed reasonable bases for good faith findings and
recommendations, the Court may proceed, in its discretion, to the next step.”).

                                               34
       faith and a reasonable investigation, rather than presuming
       independence, good faith and reasonableness. If the Court determines
       either that the committee is not independent or has not shown
       reasonable bases for its conclusions, or, if the Court is not satisfied for
       other reasons relating to the process, including but not limited to the
       good faith of the committee, the Court shall deny the corporation’s
       motion.108
In most challenges to director independence, the court must confront the personal

and professional relationships between those who judge and those being judged.

Directors have relatives and friends.            They have acquaintances who may be

classmates, professional associates, or business contacts. They hold memberships

in clubs and other organizations and have political affiliations. They own property,

make financial investments, and have other business activities. It is a fact of life that

“business dealings seldom take place between complete strangers” and “it would be

a strained and artificial rule which required a director to be unacquainted or

uninvolved with fellow directors in order to be regarded as independent.”109

       Given the common personal and professional relationships between board

members, the independence question “is a fact-specific determination made in the

context of a particular case.”110 Under Zapata, a director is independent “when he

is in a position to base his decision on the merits of the issue rather than being

108
    Id. at 788–89.
109
    Sutherland v. Sutherland, 958 A.2d 235, 241 (Del. Ch. 2008) (quoting In re Oracle Sec. Litig.,
852 F.Supp. 1437, 1442 (N.D. Cal. 1994)).
110
    Beam v. Stewart, 845 A.2d 1040, 1049 (Del. 2004).

                                               35
governed by extraneous considerations or influences.”111 In other words, the court

must ask whether the SLC member would be more willing to risk her reputation than

the personal or professional relationship with the director subject to investigation.112

Thus, “[t]he composition and conduct of a special litigation committee . . . must be

such as to instill confidence in the judiciary and, as important, the stockholders of

the company that the committee can act with integrity and objectivity.”113

       For the EPL SLC, it was undisputed that Babb was independent, and the Court

of Chancery found that Floyd and Lynton had not prejudged the merits of the suit by

serving on the board when EPL filed its motion to dismiss the derivative suit. The

court also held that the SLC demonstrated that the business and personal connections

between the two SLC members and Kehler did not impact their independence or the

reasonableness of the SLC’s conclusions. Finally, the court held that the SLC

conducted a reasonable investigation and had reasonable bases for its conclusions.

On appeal, Diep challenges each of the Court of Chancery’s findings. We address

his arguments in turn.

111
    Kaplan, 499 A.2d at 1189.
112
    Beam, 845 A.2d at 1052.
113
    Oracle, 824 A.2d at 940. In the dissent, our colleague states that the SLC members must be
“above reproach.” The “above reproach” and “Caesar’s wife” descriptions come from a decision
referring to a single member SLC. See Lewis v. Fuqua, 502 A.2d 962, 967 (Del. Ch. 1985) (“If a
single member committee is to be used, the member should, like Caesar’s wife, be above
reproach.”). Although the Court in Beam v. Stewart quoted from Lewis, the Court also made clear
in Beam that “[w]e need not decide whether the substantive standard of independence in an SLC
case differs from that in a presuit demand case.” Beam, 845 A.2d at 1055.

                                              36
                                     1.      Independence

       Diep argues that Floyd and Lynton, as EPL board members, prejudged the

merits of the investigation when EPL moved to dismiss Diep’s claims for failure to

state a claim. In other words, as members of a board that controls EPL’s litigation

decisions, the two SLC directors authorized EPL to take the litigation position that

the derivative claims were without merit before the SLC was formed.

       As noted earlier, “[i]ndependence is a fact-specific determination made in the

context of a particular case.”114 In the demand futility context, directors have been

held to be independent despite being defendants in litigation and filing motions to

dismiss the claims against them.115 If that was not possible, a few stockholders could

“incapacitate an entire board of directors merely by leveling charges against

them[.]”116 The qualifier is, of course, that the board member defendants must not

face a substantial likelihood of personal liability for their conduct.117

114
    Beam, 845 A.2d at 1049.
115
    E.g., Aronson, 473 A.2d at 810 (noting that because futility is judged at the time a derivative
suit begins, a motion to dismiss by the board does not create a conflict); Rales v. Blasband, 634
A.2d 927, 937 (Del. 1993) (“the appropriate inquiry is whether Blasband’s amended complaint
raises a reasonable doubt regarding the ability of a majority of the Board to exercise properly its
business judgment in a decision on a demand had one been made at the time this action was filed.”).
116
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 785 (quoting Lewis v. Anderson, 615 F.2d 778, 783 (9th Cir. 1979)).
117
    Rales, 634 A.2d at 936 (distinguishing between “mere threat” and “substantial likelihood” of
liability in determining independence in ruling on a Rule 23.1 motion (quoting Aronson, 473 A.2d
at 815)); Katell v. Morgan Stanley Grp., Inc., 1995 WL 376952, at *7 (Del. Ch. June 15, 1995)
(holding a defendant in a lawsuit facing potential liability could determine whether to pursue the
suit as an SLC member). While our colleague in dissent says that “the SLC process is not
necessarily unavailable where an entire board is named in a lawsuit and moves to dismiss it,”
Dissent at 27, it is hard to square the words “above reproach” and “Caesar’s wife” with anything

                                                37
       While the procedural posture of the demand futility context is different than

the SLC context, Diep has not raised a disputed issue of material fact showing the

two SLC directors prejudged the merits of the litigation when EPL as nominal

defendant joined in the motion to dismiss. The record does not show that Floyd and

Lynton approved or participated in a substantive way in the decision to file the

motion on EPL’s behalf. As explained next, at most, the record shows they attended

a board meeting when the motion was discussed.

       The board minutes of October 31 and November 1, 2016 show that the board

granted signatory authority for various matters, scheduled upcoming meetings, and

received an audit committee update.118 Sather and Roberts presented on business

and financial matters, Austin provided an update regarding “pending litigation,” and

the meeting adjourned.119 The minutes do not mention the motion to dismiss. While

our colleague in dissent argues as a “logical conclusion” that the board “at least

tacitly approved and authorized filing the 2016 Motion after that discussion,” the

record does not support tacit approval or authorization of anything. Although

other than a lack of independence in that situation. Our point is not to lessen the independence
inquiry for SLC members. The point is to recognize that those words came from a case involving
a single member SLC and these descriptions are not always helpful to decide the independence
inquiry. The Court has never required that board members named as defendants appoint new board
members to serve on an SLC to meet the independence requirement. As we stated in Beam, the
independence inquiry should be treated as a “fact-specific determination made in the context of a
particular case.” Beam, 845 A.2d at 1049.
118
    Attach. to Diep’s Letter, Apr. 4, 2022.
119
    Id. at 4–5.

                                               38
Lynton attended the meeting, the record is devoid of evidence that Lynton was

involved in any discussion about, or approved the filing of, the motion to dismiss.

As to Floyd, he testified at his deposition that he was “sure” there “would have” been

a “litigation update” and “discussion” on the subject, but “did not recall the details

of it.”120 Although he did not recall anyone objecting to the motion, he did not say

that he “approved” its filing. Instead, he testified that:

         As a member of the board, I don’t recall whether it was put to a formal
         vote, how it was handled, but I don’t -- I don’t remember any details
         that -- of getting into depth about this at the board meeting.121

         At best, what can be said about the pending litigation discussion and the

motion to dismiss is that the motion was discussed as part of the litigation review, it

was not discussed in depth, and Floyd does not remember anyone objecting to the

motion. In our view, these facts do not raise a material question of fact about

whether Floyd and Lynton prejudged the merits of the suit because they were

exposed to a litigation review that included a less than in-depth discussion of the

motion to dismiss.

         Diep relies heavily on London, where the Court of Chancery found that

directors had prejudged a lawsuit against the company. There, the court found the

SLC directors had significant “prior exposure” and “familiarity” with the issues

120
      App. to Answering Br. at B481–82.
121
      Id. at B482–83.

                                           39
because they sat on an audit committee that reviewed valuations related to the

alleged wrongdoing.122 The directors also characterized their committee actions as

an “attack” on those valuations—and therefore the merits of the underlying

litigation. 123 The Court of Chancery concluded:                “Given the SLC members’

relationships to [the alleged wrongdoer], their exposure to the merits of plaintiffs’

suit well before the SLC was formed, and the unsatisfactory scope of the

investigation conducted, the court was not convinced that the SLC was

independent.”124

       The facts here are starkly different. The directors did not express hostility

towards Diep’s claims, nor does Diep claim that they formed any opinion about the

claims. Mere familiarity with an issue does not compromise independence.125 Like

the Court of Chancery, we are satisfied that the SLC demonstrated there are no issues

of material fact about whether Floyd and Lynton had prejudged the merits of the

derivative complaint when the board caused EPL to join the motion to dismiss.126

122
    London, 2010 WL 877528, at *15.
123
    Id. at *16.
124
    Id.
125
    See Katell, 1995 WL 376952, at *10 (holding that prior knowledge of the deals at issue did not
show a prejudgment of the issues).
126
    See also Stephen A. Radin, The Business Judgment Rule 4776 n.6704 (6th ed. 2009); Strougo
ex rel. The Brazil Fund, Inc. v. Padegs, 27 F. Supp. 2d 442 (S.D.N.Y. 1998) (holding that SLC
members who participated in a Rule 12(b)(6) motion while on the board were independent); Mills
v. Esmark, Inc., 544 F.Supp. 1275, 1283 n.5 (N.D. Ill. 1982) (“The independence and good faith
of [the SLC members] is also unimpaired by their earlier motions to dismiss plaintiffs’ original
complaint. Those motions, seeking dismissal on the ground that plaintiffs had failed to make
adequate demand on the board under Rule 23.1, did not manifest any prejudgment of the merits of

                                               40
       As to the professional and personal relationships of two of the SLC members

with Kehler and his family, we agree with the Court of Chancery that the SLC carried

its burden to show the absence of a material issue of fact as to their independence.

As noted previously, Lynton had professional and social connections with the Kehler

family over many years, with less frequent contact recently.                    Floyd had a

professional relationship with Kehler through the Board of Overseers of the

University of Pennsylvania Nursing School. While the personal and professional

relationship between Lynton and Kehler and his family were closer than what one

would ordinarily expect of SLC members, several factors showed that, overall, the

SLC members were capable of acting independently:

           • The SLC members were individuals with significant backgrounds in

              business with prominent company positions and industry experience;

           • The SLC members disclosed fully and upfront in the SLC process their

              personal and professional connections with Kehler and his family;127

           • Neither SLC member was a defendant in the derivative litigation,

              having been brought on the EPL board after the events in question;

this case.”); Scalisi v. Grills, 501 F. Supp. 2d 356, 362 (E.D.N.Y. 2007) (where the preliminary
complaint was dismissed on the grounds that demand was not excused, the court held that
“[s]imilarly unavailing in establishing lack of independence is plaintiffs’ contention that the
Committee members authorized or participated in efforts by defendants to dismiss the earlier
October 2002 action.”).
127
    See Oracle, 824 A.2d at 929 (“Noticeably absent from the SLC Report was any disclosure of
several significant ties between Oracle or the Trading Defendants and Stanford University, the
university that employs both members of the SLC.”).

                                              41
          • No SLC member had exposure to liability or participated in the conduct

              in question;

          • All SLC members were outside, non-management directors;

          • No SLC member had a business relationship with EPL;

          • The SLC was represented by independent counsel with no prior EPL

              relationship; and

          • The SLC had a member whose independence is uncontested, and who

              joined in the SLC’s report and agreed with the decision to move to

              dismiss the complaint.

       We agree with the Court of Chancery that, based on the facts before it, the two

SLC members were unlikely to sacrifice their personal and professional reputations

for their relationship with Kehler and his family.

         2.     Reasonableness of the SLC’s Investigation and Conclusions

       The Court of Chancery concluded that the SLC conducted a good faith

investigation of reasonable scope that yielded reasonable bases supporting its

conclusions.128 On appeal, Diep claims that the court “improperly resolved disputed

questions of material fact” about “the negative impact of higher prices,”

“defendants’ scienter,” and “deterioration in 2015 Q2 Company SSS.”129 Diep’s

128
    Diep, 2021 WL 3236322, at *14 (quoting London, 2010 WL 877528, at *11) (articulating the
Zapata standard of a good faith reasonable investigation).
129
    Opening Br. at ii.

                                            42
arguments on appeal, however, misunderstand the nature of the court’s review.

When reviewing the good faith and reasonableness of the SLC’s investigation:

          the granting of the SLC’s motion using the Rule 56 standard does not
          mean that the court has made a determination that the claims the SLC
          wants dismissed would be subject to termination on a summary
          judgment motion, only that the court is satisfied that there is no material
          factual dispute that the SLC had a reasonable basis for its decision to
          seek termination.130

In other words, the question is not whether there were disputed issues of material

fact about the three merits-based issues raised by Diep. Instead, the question is

whether disputed issues of material fact were raised about the scope of the

investigation and the reasonableness of the SLC’s conclusions. We agree with the

Court of Chancery that the SLC had reasonable bases to conclude that the TPP

directors did not have material nonpublic information when TPP authorized the

Block Trade.

          First, the SLC found that the TPP directors had a reasonable basis to question

Hawley’s view that EPL’s pricing actions caused a sales slowdown in Q2 2015.

Without a causal link between the two, the SLC concluded that the TPP directors

could not have material, nonpublic information about the connection between the

pricing actions and the sales slowdown. While Diep focuses his arguments on how

Hawley expressed concerns about pricing decisions and its impact on sales, the

130
      Oracle, 824 A.2d at 929 n.20.

                                              43
quarters immediately following the pricing increases showed sales growth.131 It was

not until April and May 2015 that sales began to slump.132 The record supports the

SLC’s view that it was not a situation where the board implemented a pricing change

and saw an immediate impact. Rather, it was a long-term, larger-scale change that,

in retrospect, influenced EPL’s performance.133

       To support its conclusion, the SLC relied on the board’s contemporaneous

reaction to Hawley’s reports. The board members believed factors other than price

increases better explained the price dip.134 Hawley was just one point of view, and

while he oversaw pricing reports, he was focused on short term results. Hawley also

did not hold a consistent view and acknowledged to the SLC that the sales issues

could be attributed to other factors, such as business trends.135 EPL had variable

sales patterns influenced by “the introduction of new products, refocusing of market

emphasis, [and] operational issues[.]” 136 Roberts’ presentation the day before

Hawley’s also supports the SLC’s conclusion. 137                   The SLC reviewed many

documents and sources, and fully considered material unhelpful to EPL such as the

draft Q&A answers. It determined that the board and the TPP directors could have

131
    App. to Answering Br. at B129, 136, 140–41.
132
    Id. at B141.
133
    Id. at B252–54 (discussing the Q2 2015 results and the influence of pricing in greater detail).
134
    Id. at B283–84.
135
    App. to Opening Br. at A1751.
136
    App. to Answering Br. at B294.
137
    Id. at B146–51.

                                                44
reasonably believed that slowing sales were not attributable to the pricing actions.

The SLC’s conclusion was supported by the record and reasonable.

       Second, the SLC had reasonable bases to support its conclusion that the

financial information that formed the basis for Diep’s insider trading claims was

immaterial or made public. “For information to be material, there must be a

‘substantial likelihood’ that the nonpublic fact ‘would have assumed actual

significance in the deliberations’ of a person deciding whether to buy, sell, vote, or

tender stock.” 138     When dealing with intra-quarter results and forecasts, the

information is material “only when [it is] . . . likely that the company will either

outperform or underperform its projections in some markedly unexpected

manner[.]”139

       Here, the SLC determined that the Q2 SSS sales information was not material

because there was significant intra-quarter variability in EPL’s results,140 and it was

public because EPL representatives disclosed the possibility of lower-than-expected

results on the Earnings Call.141 The SLC considered the information known to the

EPL board and the TPP directors and found that “the internal performance data and

dynamic forecasting of EPL’s future performance, while indicating that EPL was

138
    In re Oracle Corp., 867 A.2d 904, 934 (Del. Ch. 2004), aff’d sub nom. In re Oracle Corp.
Derivative Litig., 872 A.2d 960 (Del. 2005) (quoting Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., 493 A.2d 929,
944 (Del. 1985)).
139
    Id. at 940; see also App. to Answering Br. at B298 (citing same).
140
    App. to Answering Br. at B421–25, B428–29.
141
    Id. at B304–05, B309.

                                              45
performing below Plan for Company SSS, did not establish a likelihood that its sales

performance would deviate in a markedly unexpected or extreme manner from the

Company’s prior projections . . . .”142 And even if it was material, the SLC observed

that the information was disclosed publicly, when the observation was made that it

was likely the quarter results would be on the “low end of the range.”143

       Finally, as to whether TPP was motived to sell EPL stock by material

nonpublic information, the SLC found that there was insufficient evidence to support

the allegation. TPP’s desire to sell EPL stock had been expressed prior to Hawley’s

presentation; 144 the sale took place on the first day of the first available sale

window;145 and TPP’s actions were consistent with the behavior of private equity

firms following an initial public offering.146

       The SLC did consider facts pointing in the other direction. TPP failed to

comply with EPL’s Insider Trading Policy before conducting the Block Trade.

While the failure was evidence of the need for more respect for corporate formalities,

the SLC concluded that this fact was mitigated by EPL’s knowledge of the Block

Trade.147 The SLC also considered an email that Sather sent Maselli with the early

results of the customer survey value scores. In the email, Sather asked that the results

142
    Id. at B299.
143
    Id. at B305.
144
    Id. at B219–22.
145
    Id. at B347.
146
    Id. at B215–16 & n.1415.
147
    Id. at B295.

                                          46
be kept “between us at this point as I don’t want anyone to over react.”148 The SLC

accepted Maselli’s explanation that he understood Sather to be saying the report was

an “early read” and more data was needed before circulating the report more

broadly.149 The email was also sent after Maselli first looked into a sale and did not

mean that Maselli was motivated to trade on inside information.150

       We agree with the Court of Chancery that no disputed issues of material fact

existed about the reasonableness of the SLC’s investigation and its conclusions.

                                                B.

       The Court of Chancery decided to apply Zapata’s second step and saw no

reason to upset the SLC process or its comprehensive report. In a one paragraph

argument on appeal, Diep claims that “the Court of Chancery abused its discretion

by ruling, under the second step of Zapata, that the SLC’s conclusions were

‘reasonable.’” 151 According to Diep, the discretionary second step addresses

“instances where corporate actions meet the criteria of step one, but the result does

not appear to satisfy its spirit.”152 He argues that, “[g]iven the extensive factual

record supporting [insider trading claims] against a controlling stockholder,” the

148
    Id. at B143.
149
    Id.
150
    Id. at B219–20 (describing interest in a sale at least by May 1, 2015); id. at B347–48 (same).
151
    Opening Br. at 44.
152
    Id. (quoting Zapata, 430 A.3d at 789).

                                                47
Court of Chancery should have found that dismissal “violates the spirit of

Zapata.”153

       The second step of the Zapata analysis is “wholly within the discretion of the

court[.]”154 If it chooses to do so, the court determines, in its own business judgment,

whether the suit should be dismissed. The discretionary second step preserves the

court’s role as the ultimate decider of whether litigation should be dismissed.155 It

serves as “the essential key in striking the balance between legitimate corporate

claims as expressed in a derivative stockholder suit and a corporation’s best interests

as expressed by an independent investigating committee.” 156 The court should

exercise its discretion under Zapata’s second step and refuse to dismiss a derivative

suit when “corporate actions meet the criteria of step one, but the result does not

appear to satisfy its spirit, or where corporate actions would simply prematurely

terminate a stockholder grievance deserving of further consideration in the

corporation’s interest.” 157 As part of its review, the court should give “special

consideration to matters of law and public policy in addition to the corporation’s best

interests.”158

153
    Id.
154
    Kaplan, 499 A.2d at 1192.
155
    Zapata, 430 A.3d at 789; see also id. at 789 n.18 (“This step shares some of the same spirit and
philosophy of the statement by the Vice Chancellor: ‘Under our system of law, courts and not
litigants should decide the merits of litigation.’”).
156
    Id. at 789.
157
    Id.
158
    Id.

                                                48
      The Court of Chancery did not abuse its discretion when it applied Zapata’s

second step. The record surrounding the SLC’s report and its conclusions did not

reveal any unusual concerns about the merits of the claims, the committee’s process,

or matters of law and public policy such that the court should have intervened and

refused to dismiss the derivative suit as a matter of its own business judgment.

                                         III.

      We affirm the Court of Chancery’s judgment.

                                         49
VALIHURA, J., dissenting:

         As this Court recognized in Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado,1 the SLC process affords

a Delaware corporation the unique opportunity to dismiss claims against directors and

officers, even after those claims have survived a pleading stage dismissal motion, and even

after “years of vigorous litigation.”2 One of the trade-offs is that the independence of the

members of the SLC must be “above reproach.”3

         I respectfully dissent because I believe there is an issue of fact as to the SLC’s

independence. The problem with the SLC’s independence concerns Floyd’s and Lynton’s

authorization of a motion to dismiss which challenged the substance of the very claims

they were later charged with investigating as members of the SLC. Although the mere

filing of a motion to dismiss need not be an automatic disqualifying event, I do not believe

that this SLC has met its burden of establishing its independence.4

1
    430 A.2d 779 (Del. 1981).
2
  Id. at 787; see also Lewis v. Fuqua, 502 A.2d 962, 967 (Del. Ch. 1985) (observing that, “[t]he
only instance in American Jurisprudence where a defendant can free itself from a suit by merely
appointing a committee to review the allegations of the complaint is in the context of a stockholder
derivative suit[,]” and that “[a] defendant who desires to avail itself of this unique power to self
destruct a suit brought against it ought to make certain that the Special Litigation Committee is
truly independent”).
3
  The phrase, “like Caesar’s wife--above reproach,” is more than just a famous aphorism. “Above
reproach” means avoiding actions that suggest an appearance of a lack of objectivity or of behaving
in a manner inconsistent with the duty to open-mindedly investigate the claims. See Merriam-
Webster defines “above/beyond reproach” as “not calling for any criticism.” Above Reproach,
Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/above%20reproach (last visited
June 21, 2022). Similarly, American Heritage defines “above/beyond reproach” as “[s]o good as
to preclude any possibility of criticism.” Above Reproach, The American Heritage Dictionary,
https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=above+reproach (last visited June 21, 2022).
4
  See Zapata, 430 A.2d at 789 (stating that the corporation has the burden of proving independence
to the court under Court of Chancery Rule 56 standards).

                                                 1
         The court applies a two-step test, articulated in Zapata, to determine whether the

special litigation committee’s motion to dismiss should be granted. The first step of

Zapata’s two-step test emphasizes that a special litigation committee must be independent

and above reproach.5 The first step requires the court to “inquire into the independence

and good faith of the committee and the bases supporting its conclusions.”6 “[T]he inquiry

into the independence of SLC members is a narrow one[,]”7 and the court conducts the

inquiry without regard to whether the members acted in good faith, or conducted a

reasonable investigation. Instead, the court investigates the members’ personal interest in

the disputed transactions, and “scrutinizes the members’ relationship with the interested

directors.”8 If the committee has ties to key officials suspected of malfeasance, is not fully

empowered to act, or if the “committee behaves in a manner inconsistent with the duty to

carefully and open-mindedly investigate the alleged wrongdoing, its ability to instill

5
  See Lewis, 502 A.2d at 967 (“If a single member committee is to be used, the member should,
like Caesar’s wife, be above reproach.”); Gesoff v. IIC Indus., Inc., 902 A.2d 1130, 1146 (Del. Ch.
2006) (“[I]n those rare circumstances when a special committee is comprised of only one director,
Delaware courts have required the sole member, ‘like Caesar’s wife, to be above reproach.’”
(quoting Lewis, 502 A.2d at 967)). The “above reproach” standard for a single member committee
has since been used to describe the responsibilities of special litigation committee members
generally. See id. at 1146 n.101 (“[I]n the context of a special litigation committee, [above
reproach] has been used repeatedly to describe the responsibilities of directors charged with
managing committees[.]”); Beam ex rel. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v. Stewart, 845
A.2d 1040, 1055 (Del. 2004) (“Unlike the demand-excusal context, where the board is presumed
to be independent, the SLC has the burden of establishing its own independence by a yardstick
that must be ‘like Caesar’s wife’—‘above reproach.’” (quoting Lewis, 502 A.2d at 967)).
6
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 788.
7
    Sutherland v. Sutherland, 958 A.2d 235, 239 (Del. Ch. 2008).
8
 Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Katell v. Morgan Stanley Grp., Inc., 1995 WL
376952, at *8 (Del. Ch. June 15, 1995)).

                                                 2
confidence is, at best, compromised and, at worst, inutile.”9          The burden is on the

corporation to prove the special litigation committee’s independence, and the special

litigation committee is entitled to no presumption of independence.10

       Two of the three SLC members in this case, Floyd and Lynton, were elected to the

Board of Directors on April 1, 2016. The Verified Stockholder Derivative Complaint was

filed on September 20, 2016, against Stephen J. Sather, Laurance Roberts, Edward Valle,

Kay Bogeajis, Douglas K. Ammerman, Samuel N. Borgese, and Trimaran Pollo Partners,

L.L.C. (“TPP”). El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc. (the “Company” or “EPL”) was named as a

nominal defendant. Floyd and Lynton were not named as defendants.11 The two count

Complaint alleged breaches of fiduciary duties for insider trading and misappropriation of

information (the “Brophy” claim), and breaches of fiduciary duties for issuing materially

misleading statements and omissions.12 The Complaint’s allegations centered on the May

19, 2015 stock sales, as well as the disclosures (or lack thereof) leading up to those sales.

9
 Biondi v. Scrushy, 820 A.2d 1148, 1156 (Del. Ch. 2003) (emphasis added), aff’d sub nom. In re
HealthSouth Corp. S’holders Litig., 847 A.2d 1121 (Del. 2004).
10
  Zapata, 430 A.2d at 788; Kaplan v. Wyatt, 484 A.2d 501, 507 (Del. Ch. 1984) (“For purposes
of the motion the [c]ommittee is entitled to no presumption of independence, good faith and
reasonableness.”), aff’d, 499 A.2d 1184 (Del. 1985).
11
  Plaintiffs defined Sather, Valle, Boreajis, Ammerman, Borgese, and Trimaran Pollo Partners as
the “Insider Trading Defendants.” A107 (Compl. ¶ 120). The first count is asserted against them.
As the Vice Chancellor observed in denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss this claim, “[t]he
core concept of Brophy is to obtain disgorgement of the proceeds generated when insiders sell by
misusing confidential company information.” Diep v. Sather, C.A. No. 12760, at 93 (Del. Ch.
Mar. 17, 2017) (TRANSCRIPT) [hereinafter 2017 VC Oral Ruling Tr.].
12
   A107, A109 (Compl. ¶¶ 119–34). See Brophy v. Cities Serv. Co., 70 A.2d 5 (Del. Ch. 1949).
The Complaint defines Sather, Roberts, and Valle as the “Disclosure Defendants.” A109 (Compl.
¶ 129). The second count is asserted against them.

                                               3
         According to the Complaint, the Defendants misled and misdirected investors on a

conference call two business days prior to the stock sales by stating that the decline in same

stores sales growth in 2015 1Q and 2Q was attributable to the timing of New Year’s eve,

poor marketing communication, higher priced offerings, and a tough comparison with a

strong 2014 2Q forecast.13 Diep alleged that the problem was “more straightforward” in

that “customers had reacted negatively and immediately because of the increases in price

on the Company’s value menu.”14

         On May 19, 2015, two business days after the May 14th conference call, “CEO

Sather, CMO Valle, COO Bogeajis, the Company’s controlling stockholder, Trimaran

Pollo Partners, and other Company insiders collectively sold approximately 6 million

shares of El Pollo Loco stock for gross proceeds of over $132 million[.]”15 The Complaint

alleged that the stock sales were “suspicious in amount and timing, and were not made

pursuant to any 10b5-1 trading plans.”16 It alleged that in making these trades, the

13
   A110 (Compl. ¶¶ 69, 73, 95, 133). “It was not so much the ‘extended tests of alternative
proteins’—a reference to the promotions of shrimp and carne asada (beef)—or a tougher
comparison with 2014, that caused the declining trend in the 2015 2Q. Instead, as the presentation
two days earlier by CMO Valle revealed, it was the effect of higher prices across the entire existing
menu that had hit customer traffic, causing the Company to forecast a 1% fall in customer traffic
at Company-operated restaurants in the 2015 2Q.” A91–92 (Compl. ¶ 71).
14
  A99 (Compl. ¶ 91). Diep alleged that: “[a]lthough the information regarding the Company’s
declining sales performance and the reasons for this performance were highly material, Defendants
omitted to disclose [sic] this material information, even when directly asked about the subject.
Indeed, Defendants affirmatively misled stockholders.” A90 (Compl. ¶ 67).
15
  A95–96 (Compl. ¶ 81) (emphasis in original). The Complaint further alleges that the prices of
the stock ranged from “$2.62 to 5.84 per share, a fraction of the market price.” A96 (Compl. ¶
82).
16
     A96 (Compl. ¶ 83).

                                                 4
defendants violated the Company’s Insider Trading Policy -- a fact not disputed.17 Further,

the Complaint stated that “[a]t the time of the [] trades, the insiders were all aware of

material, negative information that had not been fully disclosed to (indeed, deliberately

withheld from) investors on the May 14, 2015 conference call.”18

          According to the Complaint, on August 10 and 11, 2015, EPL’s Board held a two-

day regular meeting. On the second day of the meeting, the Director of Marketing Planning

and Analysis, Ryan Hawley, stated that “sales had fallen across all demographics, across

all modes of orders (dine in/take-out/drive-through), and all parts of the day (lunch, snack

and dinner).”19 The Complaint alleged that “Hawley pointed to price increases in February

2015, the ‘steady increase in LTO [limited time offering] prices through Q2,’ and

‘significant price increases on all of our top sell[ing products]’ for a drop in the Company’s

value scores and the decline in transaction (traffic) growth in the 2015 1Q and 2Q.”20

          The Complaint further alleged that on August 13, 2015, nearly three months after

the alleged insider sales, “El Pollo Loco was forced to reveal the truth when announcing

its 2015 2Q results.”21 Specifically,

          After the close of trading on August 13, 2015, the Company issued a press
          release announcing its results for the 2015 2Q (the three-month period ended
          July 1, 2015). Contrary to the Company’s prior claims of being on track to

17
  See A1636 (Special Litigation Committee’s Opening Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Count I
Against TPP at 32) (acknowledging that “TPP did not comply with the [Insider Trading] Policy’s
written pre-clearance procedures”).
18
     A97 (Compl. ¶ 86).
19
     A98 (Compl. ¶ 88) (emphasis in original).
20
     A98 (Compl. ¶ 89) (alterations in original).
21
     A99 (Compl. ¶ 91).

                                                    5
          achieve 3%-5% comparable store sales increases, the Company reported that
          the 2015 2Q ‘[s]ystem-wide comparable restaurant sales [had only grown]
          1.3% including a 0.5% decrease for company-operated restaurants, and a
          2.6% increase for franchised restaurants.’ The 0.5% decrease at Company-
          operated restaurants was driven by a 3.9% decrease in traffic, much worse
          than the internal forecast of a 1% decrease.22

          The Company announced that “it was cutting its fiscal year 2015 guidance for

comparable store sales growth from a range of 3% to 5% to just 3% because of the

Company’s significant miss in the 2015 2Q.”23 According to the Complaint, “[a]nalysts

reacted with surprise to all of El Pollo Loco’s revelations, reflecting the extent to which

they had been misled by senior management[,]”24 and ultimately, “El Pollo Loco’s stock

price fell by 20%, from its closing price of $18.36 per share on August 13, 2015 to $14.56

per share on August 14, 2015 – 33% below the price at which Company insiders had sold

$132 million of their own stock, and erasing more than $410 million in market

capitalization.”25

          All defendants, including nominal defendant EPL, responded with a motion to

dismiss (the “2016 Motion”),26 and they filed a brief captioned, “Defendants’ Brief in

Support of Their Motion to (A) Stay This Action in Deference to the Prior Pending Federal

Securities Action or (B) in the Alternative, Dismiss Pursuant to Rules 23.1 and 12(B)(6)”

22
     A99–100 (Compl. ¶ 93) (alterations and emphasis in original).
23
     A100 (Compl. ¶ 94).
24
     A102 (Compl. ¶ 99).
25
     A103 (Compl. ¶ 101) (emphasis in original).
26
  At the time of the 2016 Motion, the EPL Board consisted of nine members: Michael Maselli,
Stephen Sather, Dean Kehler, John Roth, Douglas Ammerman, Samuel Borgese, Mark Buller, Bill
Floyd, and Carol “Lili” Lynton. A131 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 11).

                                                   6
on December 17, 2016. The 2016 Motion sought dismissal of the Complaint on two

grounds: (i) failure to plead demand futility under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1; and (ii)

failure to state a claim under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6).27 Nominal defendant EPL

joined the motion to dismiss on demand futility grounds under Rule 23.1 only, and

expressly stated that it was not joining in the Rule 12(b)(6) ground.28 Counsel from

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP signed the 2016 Motion on behalf of nominal

defendant EPL and on behalf of defendants Chief Operating Officer Kay Bogeajis, Chief

Marketing Officer Edward J. Valle, Chief Financial Officer Laurance Roberts, and Chief

Executive Officer Stephen J. Sather. Of these defendants, Bogeajis, Sather, and Valle were

Insider Trading Defendants.29

           Counsel from Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A. and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP

signed the 2016 Motion on behalf of outside director defendants Douglas K. Ammerman

and Samuel N. Borgese (both of whom were Insider Trading Defendants),30 and Counsel

from Ballard Spahr LLP signed on behalf of EPL’s controlling stockholder defendant, TPP

27
     A113–75 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss).
28
  A173 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 53) (“Nominal Defendant El Pollo Loco does
not join in the motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).”).
29
     A107 (Compl. ¶ 120).
30
     Id.

                                                 7
(an Insider Trading Defendant).31 Floyd and Lynton were on the Board when the 2016

Motion was filed but, as noted, were not named as defendants in the action.32

           Defendants collectively argued that the Complaint failed to plead particularized

facts demonstrating that a majority of the board faced a substantial likelihood of liability.

Defendants also argued that the “alleged non-public information was disclosed,” the

“undisclosed intra-quarter results were immaterial,” and that there were “no particularized

facts demonstrating scienter.”33

           The 2016 Motion did not merely raise technical or procedural arguments as to why

the derivative claims should be dismissed. Instead, the 2016 Motion affirmatively argued

the very substantive issues that the SLC would later be tasked with independently

investigating. For example, the 2016 Motion asserted the following:

31
     Id.
32
    Although separate representation is not mandated in all situations, and although courts have
divided on the issue, “there is substantial support for the idea that the corporation and the
shareholders should retain separate counsel in [a] derivative lawsuit where the underlying claim
sounds in fraud (as opposed to negligence) and where the corporation takes ‘an active role’ in the
litigation.” Scott v. New Drug Servs., Inc., 1990 WL 135932, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 6, 1990)
(emphasis added), reprinted in 16 Del. J. Corp. L. 1561, 1567 (1991). See 3 Robert S. Saunders,
Jennifer C. Voss & Cliff C. Gardner, Folk on the Delaware General Corporation Law §327.07
(7th ed. 2021-3 Supp.) (“Whether circumstances require separate representation of corporate and
individual defendants in a derivative action is a ‘highly fact specific’ question. The Court of
Chancery has [also] noted that [although], in theory, separate representation may be the better
practice, it may be ‘unreasonable and wastefully expensive to require separate counsel to represent
the corporate and individual defendants [when] the corporation will remain a neutral party whose
counsel is generally unable to alter the outcome of the litigation’ and, therefore, separate
representation is not mandated in all situations.” (third alteration in original) (footnotes omitted)).
The bottom line is that although representation decisions require careful attention to a myriad of
facts and circumstances that make setting bright-line rules difficult, courts have recognized the
difficulties that are created by dual representation in a shareholder derivative suit alleging fraud,
intentional misconduct, or self-dealing on the part of the directors and officers.
33
     A161, A165, A168 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 41, 45, 48).

                                                  8
           • “[N]either the timing nor the amounts of stock sold were suspicious.
             Three directors and a large stockholder sold only a fraction of their El
             Pollo Loco holdings. They did so at their first opportunity to sell after
             the expiration of lockup agreements and other trading restrictions.”34

           • “[N]one of Plaintiffs insider trading allegations are sufficient as to any of
             the directors.”35

           • “The undisclosed intra-quarter results were immaterial.”36

           •    “[T]he first time a permitted selling window opened for corporate
               insiders was on May 19, 2015, the day the Sellers made their disputed
               sales.” “It is hardly suspicious that corporate insiders would take
               advantage of the first liquidity opportunity after an IPO. Indeed, courts
               uniformly find that such timing negates an inference of scienter.”37

           • “[T]he Sellers sold at a time that did not maximize their potential return,
             further negating an inference that they calculated the sales to reap the
             benefits of insider information.”38

           • “[T]he fact that the Sellers retained a significant percentage of their
             holdings also negates scienter. Insiders’ sales fail to create an inference
             of scienter when the sales constitute a portion of their total holdings in
             the company.”39

           • “[T]he lapse in time between the May 19 sales and the alleged bad news
             disclosed months later on August 13 further underscores the lack of
             scienter.”40

           • “The alleged non-public information was disclosed.”41

34
     A127 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 7).
35
     A159 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 39).
36
     A165 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 45).
37
     A168–69 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 48–49) (emphasis in original).
38
     A170 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 50).
39
     A171 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 51).
40
     Id.
41
     A161 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 41).

                                                  9
          • “The market’s awareness of El Pollo Loco’s menu changes and the
            impact on same store traffic is confirmed by contemporaneous analyst
            reports.”42

The Company, as nominal defendant, joined in each of these arguments,43 which were

directed to the very heart of the merits of the derivative suit. Counsel for EPL presented

oral argument on behalf of all Defendants on March 17, 2017.44 Thus, the Company did

not take a neutral position.45 Although a company is not required to take a neutral position,

taking an active, or as here, a leading role challenging the substance of the claims, may

42
     A163 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 43).
43
   The 12(b)(6) portion of the 2016 Motion consisted of one full paragraph discussing the Rule
12(b)(6) standard, and the sentence: “Here, for the same reasons discussed above, Plaintiff has
failed to plead sufficient facts to state an insider trading claim under Brophy.” A173 (Defs.’ Br.
Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 53). During the argument on the 2016 Motion, Counsel for EPL,
who also represented certain of the Insider Trading Defendants, commented that the directors had
also moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) but “the interaction of the arguments under 12(b)(6)
and 23.1 is -- or the overlap of the arguments is virtually complete because of the standard that
applies here.” 2017 VC Oral Ruling Tr., C.A. No. 12760, at 24. Counsel’s argument centered on
the “heart of the case” which was whether plaintiffs had alleged a Brophy claim with respect to
the members of the board who were alleged to have sold directly or indirectly on May 19. Id. at
25–26.
44
     2017 VC Oral Ruling Tr., C.A. No. 12760, at 4.
45
   See Scott, 1990 WL 135932, at *4 (“While, in theory, separate representation may be the better
practice (and might be expected to enhance the credibility of any position taken by the
corporation), I am mindful that it may be ‘unreasonable and wastefully expensive to require
separate counsel to represent the corporate and individual defendants . . . [when] the corporation
will remain a neutral party whose counsel is generally unable to alter the outcome of the
litigation.’” (alteration in original) (quoting Independent Representation for Corporate Defendants
in Derivative Suits, 74 Yale L.J. 524, 530 (1965))). Chancellor Allen commented further in Scott
that, “[w]hat circumstances will require separate representation is obviously a question that is
highly fact-specific[,]” and that “[c]ounsel (and a court required to pass upon a disqualification
motion) must attempt to assess the likelihood that the corporation will be required, or it will be in
its interest, to take an active part in the litigation.” Id.

                                                 10
come with some risks as the litigation develops.46 One such risk is that a court may not be

convinced that the SLC members’ independence is “above reproach” when the company

has argued previously in court that the claims were meritless.

           In the 2016 Reply Brief, the Company doubled down arguing:

           • “Plaintiff failed to allege that any of the nine directors faces a substantial
             likelihood of liability on the Brophy claim.”47

           • “Plaintiff has failed to plead that any member of the Board possessed
             material, non-public information, or acted with scienter.”48

           • “[T]he supposed non-public information was, in fact, disclosed.”49

           • “[T]he information about second quarter 2015 sales projections was not
             material because it was provided only three weeks into the second

46
   Retaining the same counsel for the corporation and the defendant directors comes with potential
risks, especially if the complaint survives a motion to dismiss. See 1 R. Franklin Balotti, Jesse A.
Finkelstein, John Mark Zeberkiewicz & Blake Rohrbacher Delaware Law of Corporations and
Business Organizations § 13.10 (4th ed. 2022-1 Supp.), Westlaw (database updated 2022) (“[I]t is
the customary practice for the corporation and the defendant directors to have separate counsel in
a derivative action, especially if the complaint has survived a motion to dismiss.”). See, e.g.,
Essential Enters. Corp. v. Dorsey Corp., 182 A.2d 647, 654 (Del. Ch. 1962) (“[T]he same
attorneys represented both the corporation and the individual defendants. I need not pass upon the
desirability or propriety of this practice. The present practice in this court is for the corporation to
have a different attorney. This might seem artifical [sic], but, in theory, the ‘interests’ involved
may be quite different and the corporate attorney should so understand his obligation.”). See also
Robert L. Haug, Ed., Business and Commercial Litigation in Federal Courts, § 26.18 (Responding
to a Derivative Claim) (Dec. 2021 Update) (“While courts have allowed all defendants to be
represented by the same counsel, courts generally have ‘no hesitation in holding that—except for
potentially frivolous cases—allegations of directors’ fraud, intentional misconduct, or self-dealing
requires separate counsel.’” (citing Bell Atl. Corp. v. Bolger, 2 F.3d 1304, 1317 (3d Cir. 1993))).
In Bell, joint representation was permitted as there were allegations of breaches of the duty of care
with little support and a special litigation committee had decided that the “corporation’s interests
were more in line with those of the defendants than plaintiffs.” Bell, 2 F.3d at 1316.
47
  Defs.’ Reply Br. in Further Supp. of Mot. to Stay or Dismiss, C.A. No. 12760-VCL, Dkt. No.
18, at 19 (Del. Ch. Feb. 6, 2017).
48
     Id. at 20.
49
     Id.

                                                  11
                  quarter, the Board was informed that various initiatives were being taken
                  to boost sales, and the projected sales were consistent with what was
                  disclosed to stockholders.”50

          • “Plaintiff has not pleaded particularized facts demonstrating scienter
            because the challenged stock sales were the first time that insiders were
            permitted to sell shares as a result of IPO lockups and trading windows,
            the sellers sold only a portion of their holdings, and they sold after El
            Pollo Loco’s stock price dropped almost 20%.”51
          On March 17, 2017, the Court of Chancery issued an oral ruling denying the 2016

Motion on both Rule 23.1 and 12(b)(6) grounds.52 The court found that Diep had

successfully pleaded a Brophy claim sufficient to withstand dismissal because the

Complaint “specifically highlight[ed] what [wa]s in the board book and why it support[ed]

an inference that the statements made at the conference call were incorrect and that the

defendants had material information to the contrary.”53

          Regarding the argument that there was no inference of scienter, the court stated that

“knowledge can be alleged generally under Rule 8[,]” and that “[t]here is plenty of

circumstantial evidence to support this.”54 The court then highlighted some of the factual

50
     Id. at 26.
51
     Id. at 29.
52
  2017 VC Oral Ruling Tr., C.A. No. 12760, at 88. The court also stayed Count II in favor of the
California federal securities actions, and denied the stay as to Count I, which asserted a Brophy
claim under Delaware law.
53
   Id. at 103 (citing Compl. ¶¶ 53–66). The Court of Chancery rejected some of the defendants’
other arguments, such as the results were just preliminary, or that this was a “pure projections
case.” Id. at 105–07. The court also provided its explanation for the different outcome in this case
compared to the federal action, noting that the federal case “was evaluated under a higher standard
under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, which require[d] that the allegations support a
strong inference of scienter,” and also that it was “evaluated in a context where the plaintiffs in
that case, having not used Section 220, could only cite to the public transcript . . . .” Id. at 90.
54
     Id. at 107.

                                                   12
allegations pled in the Complaint. For example, the court noted that the fact that the

directors “might have sold more doesn’t negate an inference of scienter.”55 The court also

found that the fact that the directors sold in a declining market did not negate scienter.

Further, the court noted that “CEOs usually don’t sell because it sends a negative signal to

the market when they abandon the company.”56 The court emphasized that “[t]he fact that

a defendant could have used insider information more effectively does not defeat an

otherwise valid inference of insider trading.”57 Therefore, the court found that “at this stage

of the case there’s a reasonable inference of scienter[,]”58 and denied the motion to dismiss

on both 12(b)(6) and 23.1 grounds.

           Having denied the Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court stated that the “Rule 23.1 motion

becomes easy.”59 To exercise disinterested and independent judgment, “there needs to be

a board majority that is disinterested and independent.”60 It found that at least five of the

nine directors who were on the board when the Complaint was filed were not. Sather,

Ammerman, and Borgese were sellers and faced a substantial risk of liability for breach of

the duty of loyalty, and the three other directors affiliated with TPP were “insiders of the

controller when the controller unloaded shares.”61 Thus, demand was found to be futile.

55
     Id. at 108.
56
     Id.
57
     Id.
58
     Id. at 109.
59
     Id.
60
     Id.
61
     Id. at 110.

                                               13
          Following the court’s oral ruling on March 17, 2017, the parties began to engage in

discovery. Thereafter, on October 6, 2017, EPL’s board of directors appointed Floyd and

Lynton to the SLC to investigate and evaluate the allegations and issues raised in the

Complaint. In January of 2018, the Board added a third member.62 Also in January of

2018, the parties stipulated and agreed to stay all proceedings in the action, including all

discovery, until the SLC concluded its investigation.63

          On February 13, 2019, the SLC filed its initial Motion to Dismiss based on the

Report of the SLC (the “Report”).64 The parties then engaged in further discovery based

on the Report.

          Diep’s counsel, Hung G. Ta, took Floyd’s deposition on January 17, 2020.65 During

his deposition, Floyd testified that he discussed the litigation with Kehler “briefly” before

joining the Board.66 He recalled that Kehler said that “we did nothing illegal, we did

nothing unethical, but he said the optics did not look good with the, you know, with the

62
   Diep does not challenge the independence of Babb, the third member of the SLC, who was
appointed four months after the SLC was created. One could infer that adding a third member to
the SLC four months after creating the SLC suggests that the Board perceived an issue with the
SLC’s independence.
63
  Stipulation and Proposed Order Staying Proceedings Pending Special Litigation Committee
Investigation, C.A. No. 12760-VCL, Dkt. No. 56 (Del. Ch. Jan. 16, 2018).
64
  Stipulation and Proposed Order Staying Proceedings Pending Special Litigation Committee
Investigation, C.A. No. 12760-VCM, Dkt. No. 161 (Del. Ch. Mar. 30, 2020).
65
  See B488 (Excerpts of Floyd’s Dep. at 238). This Court was provided extremely limited excerpts
of Floyd’s deposition.
66
     B469 (Excerpts of Floyd’s Dep. at 10).

                                              14
trading of the stock.”67 Floyd was also asked whether he recalled the board discussing the

2016 Motion. The following exchange took place:

         Q.     But is your understanding that back in 2016, as one of the steps to stop
                this litigation from proceeding, that El Pollo Loco Holdings applied
                to the Delaware Chancery Court to have this case dismissed? Do you
                recall - -
         A.     Yes.
         Q.     Do you understand that?
         A.     Yes.
         Q.     Okay. And do you recall the process by which the board -- well, first
                of all, did the board discuss this step of getting the Delaware Chancery
                Court to dismiss this litigation back in 2016?
         A.     Yes, they did, but I don’t recall any of the details of it.
         Q.     Do you recall if there were discussions on the board about the subject?
         A.     At that period of time, as part of the board agenda, we would have a
                litigation update of which I’m sure this was part and – I’m sure there
                is -- there was discussion about it, but I don’t recall the details.
         Q.     And when you were on the board at that time -- withdraw that. Do
                you recall any one on the board objecting to applying to the Delaware
                Chancery Court to have the case dismissed back in 2016?
         A.     I don’t recall anybody objecting.
         Q.     Did you object to applying to the Delaware Chancery Court back in
                2016 to have this case dismissed?
         A.     I did not.68
         ....
         Q.     You approved the filing of this application to the Delaware Chancery
                Court?
         A.     As a member of the board, I don’t recall whether it was put to a formal
                vote, how it was handled, but I don’t -- I don’t remember any details
                that -- of getting into depth about this at the board meeting.69

67
     B469–70 (Excerpts of Floyd’s Dep. at 10–11).
68
     B481–82 (Excerpts of Floyd’s Dep. at 65–66).
69
     B482–83 (Excerpts of Floyd’s Dep. at 66–67).

                                                15
          Based upon the limited excerpts of Lynton’s deposition provided to this Court, it

appears that Lynton was not questioned about her recollection of the board meetings,

whether the litigation was discussed, or whether she objected to the filing of the motion to

dismiss.70

         The SLC filed its Opening Brief in Support of its Motion to Dismiss Count I against

TPP on September 25, 2020.71 After briefing concluded, the Court of Chancery scheduled

oral argument on the SLC’s motion to dismiss on April 23, 2021.72 The day before oral

argument, on April 22, 2021, Diep and defendants Bogeajis, Roberts, Sather, Valle,

Ammerman, and Borgese (the “Settling Defendants”) filed their Stipulation and

Agreement of Compromise and Settlement.73                 The Settling Defendants agreed to

collectively pay $625,000 in exchange for Diep’s agreement to release them from the

claims asserted in this action.74 At that point, TPP was the only remaining defendant.

         Diep relies upon this limited record to argue that there is a material issue of fact

about whether Floyd and Lynton prejudged the merits of the suit. He centers his argument

70
     See generally B444–66 (Excerpts of Lynton’s Dep.).
71
  Special Litigation Committee’s Opening Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Count I Against TPP,
C.A. No. 12760-KSJM, Dkt. No. 163 (Del. Ch. Sept. 25, 2020).
72
  Letter to Counsel Confirming Oral Argument Date and Time, C.A. No. 12760-KSJM, Dkt. No.
173 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2021).
73
  Stipulation and Agreement of Compromise and Settlement, C.A. No. 12760-KSJM, Dkt. No.
176 (Del. Ch. Apr. 22, 2021).
74
   Id. The settlement figures associated with this suit ($625,000) and the federal “Turocy Class
Action” and settlement ($20 million), taken together, suggest that the allegations were not merely
conclusory. See A1696–97 (Pl.’s Br. in Opp. to Special Litigation Committee’s Mot. to Dismiss
at 18–19) (“In January 2019, the parties to the Turocy Class Action reached an agreement to settle
the action in principle for a cash payment of $20 million.”).

                                               16
on their participation in the 2016 Motion. The record reflects that Floyd and Lynton were

on the Board at the time the 2016 Motion was filed. It also suggests, through Floyd’s

testimony, that the Board discussed the 2016 Motion as part of a ligation update,75 and that

no director objected to the filing.

       The Court of Chancery viewed Diep’s contentions as essentially challenging

whether merely being a board member when the motion was filed resulted in the SLC

members being conflicted. But the record shows more than just their mere presence on the

Board when the 2016 Motion was filed. It shows that the 2016 Motion was discussed with

the Board and that no director objected to its filing. Floyd specifically stated that he did

not object to the filing. The logical conclusion is that the Board, at least tacitly, approved

and authorized filing the 2016 Motion after that discussion. An important aspect of a

board’s managerial decision-making is whether to initiate, or refrain from initiating,

litigation on the corporation’s behalf.76 When faced with serious insider trading claims

against certain directors and officers of the company, and with the decision of whether or

75
   The parties sent letters to our Court after oral argument before this Court regarding an alleged
misstatement by Diep’s counsel. Specifically, Diep’s counsel’s letter stated that during oral
argument, Mr. Ta stated “We [Appellants] don’t have anything more than that Your Honor because
as we said, this discovery was one-sided. We weren’t given the Board minutes for the meetings
in 2016 when this litigation update was provided.” Diep’s Letter, Apr. 4 (alteration in original)
(citing              Oral              Argument               video              at             19,
https://livestream.com/accounts/5969852/events/10198585/videos/230258828/player). The letter
clarified that “although not included in the limited discovery of the SLC, the minutes for the two-
day Board meeting that occurred on October 31 and November 1, 2016 were subsequently
appended as Exhibit D to the Reply Brief in Further Support of its Motion to Dismiss, that the SLC
filed in the Court of Chancery on January 21, 2021[.]” Id.
76
   See Grimes v. Donald, 673 A.2d 1207, 1215 (Del. 1996), overruled on other grounds by Brehm
v. Eisner, 746 A.2d 244 (Del. 2000).

                                                17
not to initiate suit against them, or move to dismiss the suit, it follows that the Board would

consider this an important decision. The 2016 Motion was obviously authorized by

someone. Given that a corporation acts through its board of directors,77 and given that the

motion was the subject of a Board discussion, the record suggests that the Board authorized

it.

          Appellees have pointed us to the minutes from the October 21, November 1, 2016

Board meeting -- minutes which the SLC chose not to produce in discovery. Rather, the

SLC apparently submitted the minutes with their reply brief to the 2016 Motion. Nor did

the SLC include the minutes in our record -- Diep submitted them after oral argument

before our Court.78 These belated productions suggest to me that neither side thought they

added much to the mix of information. To be clear, the relevant portion of those minutes

states:

          IV. BOARD DISCUSIONS

          The Board received the following updates:

77
  See, e.g., In re Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings, Inc., 2022 WL 2180240, at *10 (Del. Ch. June 16,
2022) (“‘A corporation is an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in
contemplation of law.’ ‘Because it lacks a body and mind, a corporation only can act through
human agents.’ Under Delaware law, a company’s directors are the corporate agents charged with
managing the business and affairs of the corporation.” (quoting Trs. of Dartmouth Coll. v.
Woodward, 17 U.S. 518, 636 (1819); Prairie Cap. III, L.P. v. Double E Holding Corp., 132 A.3d
35, 60 (Del. Ch. 2015)) (citing 8 Del. C. § 141(a))); Quickturn Design Sys., Inc. v. Shapiro, 721
A.2d 1281, 1291 (Del. 1998) (“One of the most basic tenets of Delaware corporate law is that the
board of directors has the ultimate responsibility for managing the business and affairs of a
corporation.” (citing 8 Del. C. § 141(a))).
78
   In contrast to the weight given to these minutes by the Majority, Diep’s counsel’s transmittal
letter to this Court states that “neither party included these minutes in the Record for this appeal.”
Diep’s Letter, Apr. 4.

                                                 18
          ....

          (c) Edith R. Austin, Vice President, Legal concerning pending litigation.

          The meeting was adjourned at 5:45 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time on
          October 31, 2016.

          Appellees have argued that “[t]he minutes contain no indication that any member of

the Board was asked to approve the filing of the 2016 [Motion.]”79 But if any conclusion

from these minutes is to be drawn, it should be that these minutes, along with Floyd’s

testimony, suggest that the Board discussed the 2016 Motion and approved of its filing.

          Moreover, it does not matter whether Floyd or Lynton read the 2016 Motion.80

Given that it is completely reasonable to conclude that they authorized the filing, they

79
     SLC Letter in Resp. to Diep’s Letter, Apr. 5, 2022.
80
  The SLC’s counsel was asked during oral argument before this Court whether determining if
Floyd or Lynton read the briefs was even relevant.
          The Court: Is this even the question that’s relevant, I would ask, and that
          is, a lawyer has taken a position on behalf of a client that may be seen as having
          prejudged claims that the client has had to review later on? I’m not sure whether
          she read the brief is even relevant.
          Mr. Offenhartz: Well, Your Honor, I think it is because, well, I think the issue
          we’re grappling with is, did the brief, and we respectfully think that if they didn’t
          read it, it would not cause them to prejudge anything, but what we’re really looking
          at is, were Ms. Lynton or Mr. Floyd prejudging their investigation before they
          started? Did the existence of the motion to dismiss cause them to prejudge
          anything? I mean, I think that’s ultimately the test. I don’t think, and in fact the
          Delaware cases are clear, they don’t want a box, if you do “X” you’re out, it’s got
          to look at the totality of circumstances.
          The Court: Doesn’t a motion have to be authorized by a client?
          Mr. Offenhartz: Well, Your Honor, yes, but a motion to dismiss, even if authorized
          by the client, it doesn’t mean that these two individuals reviewed it, absorbed it,
          necessarily got into the minutia of it, and adopted it and made it their own. . . .
Oral                  Argument                 video                at                            35:17,
https://livestream.com/delawaresupremecourt/events/10198585/videos/230258828.

                                                   19
should have known what they were authorizing. The SLC bears the burden of establishing

its independence which, in this case, includes establishing that they did not prejudge the

merits of serious insider trading claims they previously challenged in a direct and

substantive way when the Company battled with Diep for six months over the dismissal

motion. The SLC cannot satisfy that burden simply by claiming ignorance about the

Company’s and the Board’s prior involvement in litigating those claims. Giving the SLC

a pass on what I believe is a credible factual challenge to their independence because they

claim ignorance of the arguments made on the Company’s behalf would not create the right

incentives.

          Determining whether an SLC is independent is a fact-intensive inquiry. In London

v. Tyrrell,81 the Court of Chancery stated that “[w]hen SLC members are simply exposed

to or become familiar with a derivative suit before the SLC is formed this may not be

enough to create a material question of fact as to the SLC’s independence.” 82 But a

question of fact as to the SLC’s independence may be raised “if evidence suggests that the

SLC members prejudged the merits of the suit based on that prior exposure or familiarity,

and then conducted the investigation with the object of putting together a report that

demonstrates the suit has no merit.”83 Similarly, if the potential conflicts of interest or

divided loyalties, when considered as a whole, raise a question of fact as to an SLC

81
     London v. Tyrrell, 2010 WL 877528 (Del. Ch. Mar. 11, 2010).
82
     Id. at *15.
83
     Id. (emphasis added).

                                               20
member’s independence, then the moving party has not borne its burden of showing the

absence of any possible issue of fact material to the independence of the SLC.84

         Here, Floyd’s testimony confirms that the directors discussed the 2016 Motion, that

he did not recall anyone objecting, and that he did not object to the filing. Further, the

2016 Motion challenged the core arguments set forth in the complaint. EPL, as a nominal

defendant, affirmatively joined the 2016 Motion pursuant to Rule 23.1 and, in fact, took

the lead in challenging the “heart” of Diep’s core allegations. EPL was hardly acting in a

neutral capacity. In my view, the SLC failed to show there was an absence of a material

issue of fact as to the independence of Floyd and Lynton.

         Furthermore, a side-by-side comparison of the assertions in the 2016 Motion and

the SLC’s motion to dismiss illustrates the similarities between the 2016 Motion and the

SLC Motion:

                     2016 Motion to Dismiss            SLC Motion to Dismiss
                   “Neither the timing nor           “[T]he timing of the Block
                   amounts of stock sold were        Trade . . . does not suggest an
                   suspicious. Three directors       ulterior motive, but instead
                   and a large stockholder sold      supports the notion that TPP
                   only a fraction of their [EPL]    was liquidating a long-
                   holdings. They did so at their    standing investment at each
                   first opportunity to sell after   available opportunity.”86
                   the expiration of lockup

84
   Lewis, 502 A.2d at 967 (After listing the circumstances which lead the Court of Chancery to
question a committee member’s independence, the court stated that “[t]hese potential conflicts of
interest or divided loyalties, when considered as a whole, raise a question of fact as to whether
Terry Sanford could act independently. This is not to say that he actually acted improperly, but
[the court] find[s] that the moving party has not borne its burden of showing the absence of any
possible issue of fact material to the issue of the independence of Mr. Sanford.” (citing Warsaw v.
Calhoun, 213 A.2d 539, 541–42 (Del. Ch. 1965), aff’d, 221 A.2d 487 (Del. 1966))).
86
     A1663 (SLC’s Opening Br. Supp. Mot. to Dismiss at 59) (emphasis added).

                                                 21
                   agreements and other trading
                   restrictions.”85
                                                    “[T]he timing of the Block
                                                    Trade—during the first open
                                                    trading window following the
                   “It is hardly suspicious that
                                                    November 19, 2014 secondary
                   corporate insiders would take
                                                    offering . . . supports the
                   advantage of the first liquidity
                                                    notion     that TPP     was
                   opportunity after an IPO.”87
                                                    liquidating a long-standing
                                                    investment at each available
                                                    opportunity.”88
                                                   “[I]n advance of the Block
                                                   Trade,     the      Company
                                                   accurately disclosed that Q2
                                                   2015 [same-store sales] would
                                                   likely be below market
                                                   expectations.”90

                   “The alleged non-public
                   information was disclosed.”89 “The SLC determined that (i)
                                                 TPP did not possess material,
                                                 nonpublic information, and
                                                 (ii) TPP was not motivated, in
                                                 whole or in part, to sell EPL
                                                 shares by the allegedly
                                                 material,            nonpublic
                                                 information at issue.”91

85
     A127 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 7) (emphasis added).
87
     A169 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 49).
88
  A1663 (SLC’s Opening Br. Supp. Mot. to Dismiss at 59). The “secondary offering” refers to
the second opportunity that TPP had to sell its shares.
89
     A161 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 41).
90
  A1664 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 60). Stated another way, “in recognition of
the Company’s early Q2 2015 performance in comparison to market expectations, the TPP
Directors supported the decision to disclose the softness in sales despite the Company’s prior
practice of only providing full-year guidance, which likewise cuts against a claim that TPP was
seeking to trade on undisclosed information.” Id.
91
     A1637 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 33).

                                                 22
                                                   “The       intra-     quarter
                                                   performance and forecasting
                   “The    undisclosed      intra-
                                                   data available to the TPP
                   quarter      results      were
                                                   Directors at the time of the
                   immaterial.” 92
                                                   Block Trade was not material
                                                   under Delaware law.”93

          The SLC cites four cases,94 namely, Kaplan v. Wyatt,95 Katell v. Morgan Stanley

Group, Inc.,96 and Kindt v. Lund,97 as well as the United States District Court for the

Southern District of New York case, Strougo ex rel. The Brazil Fund, Inc. v. Padegs.98

Only three address the independence of the committee members and only one does so in

the context of the members’ participation in a prior motion to dismiss.99

92
     A165 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 45).
93
     A1657 (Defs.’ Br. Supp. Mot. to Stay or Dismiss at 53).
94
   The Majority cites two other cases, namely, Scalisi v. Grills, 501 F. Supp. 2d 356 (E.D.N.Y.
2007) and Mills v. Esmark, Inc., 544 F. Supp. 1275 (N.D. Ill. 1982). These decisions do not
analyze the prior motion to dismiss in any substantive way. In addition, Scalisi applies Maryland
law, and appears to apply a different standard. In Scalisi, the parties disagreed as to what the
appropriate standard was under Maryland law. Without making a determination as to which
standard was correct, it appears that the court applied a combination of the two suggestions. First,
the court applied a standard set forth by the New York Court of Appeals that limited the courts
review to “an analysis of the adequacy or appropriateness of the investigation and to an inquiry
into the independence of the committee members.” Scalisi, 501 F. Supp. 2d at 361. Second, the
court took an “additional step set forth in Zapata” and also considered whether the court was
satisfied with the SLC’s conclusions. Id. at 362. The Scalisi court did not expressly apply Zapata’s
first prong, which includes the heightened independence standard discussed herein. Thus, the
limited inquiry into the independence of the SLC in Scalisi is unavailing. The relevant discussion
in Mills is contained in a footnote that merely mentions that the two SLC members earlier moved
to dismiss plaintiffs’ original complaint and that the motion, made on Rule 23.1 grounds, “did not
manifest any prejudgment of the merits of this case.” Mills, 544 F. Supp. at 1283 n.5.
95
     Kaplan, 484 A.2d 501.
96
     Katell, 1995 WL 376952.
97
     2003 WL 21453879 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2003).
98
     27 F. Supp. 2d 442 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).
99
     The plaintiff in Kindt did not challenge the independences of the SLC.

                                                 23
          The SLC in Kaplan consisted of two members, Marshall and Holliday. Neither

Marshall nor Holliday were named as defendants in the lawsuit. The plaintiff did not

challenge the independence of Holliday, who died after filing the SLC’s report. Instead,

plaintiff focused primarily on the claimed independence of Marshall, who was a director

at the time of the events complained of, and the SLC’s legal counsel. The plaintiff

articulated seventeen different reasons as to why the motion to dismiss brought by the SLC

should be denied.100 The main thrust of plaintiff’s issue with the independence of Marshall

was that he was a director who approved of the transaction complained of (even though he

was not a named defendant in the action), and that Marshall, along with members of his

family, owned stock in companies that had done business with Coastal over the years.101

Without addressing each reason identified by plaintiff, the Court of Chancery stated that it

was “convinced” there were no material facts in dispute, and found that the SLC operated

independently.

          In Katell, the SLC was comprised of one member, a partnership, CIGNA LCF,

which was also a defendant in the lawsuit. CIGNA LCF was the only general partner that

purportedly did not stand to benefit from the transaction, and therefore, it was authorized

by the general partners, and a vote of a majority of the limited partners, to review the merits

100
      The Court of Chancery counted “seventeen in number.” Kaplan, 484 A.2d at 517.
101
    Id. at 512–13. The specifics of plaintiff’s argument against Marshall regarding his stock
ownership are as follows: Marshall, along with members of his family, owned a 9% shareholder
interest in a company that had done business with Coastal over the years. Marshall was also a
50% owner of a company (Petco) which acted or had acted as a general partner of limited
partnerships in oil and gas exploration programs, of which Coastal had participated in. Finally,
Petco owned 38% of a company (IRC), in which plaintiff argued made Marshall, as 50% owner
of Petco, a 19% owner of IRC. Coastal and IRC “engaged in past transactions.” Id. at 513.

                                               24
of the derivative lawsuit. As the only special committee member, CIGNA LCF appointed

three employees of its parent corporation, CIGNA, to conduct the business of the SLC. All

three employees were part of CIGNA’s investment division, and none had been directly

involved in CIGNA LCF prior to serving on the SLC. Although the three employees of

CIGNA acted as the SLC, the court determined that it was CIGNA LCF’s independence,

not the three employees’ independence, that should be the focus of the analysis.102

Plaintiffs argued that CIGNA LCF was not only a defendant, but it had, as general partner,

approved the challenged transactions. However, the Court of Chancery held that “the

undisputed facts put forth by [d]efendants conclusively support CIGNA LCF’s

independence.” Specifically, the court noted that an overwhelming majority of the limited

partners approved of CIGNA LCF’s appointment as the special committee. Further,

CIGNA LCF was in the same economic position as the limited partners during both

transactions, and CIGNA LCF did not stand to benefit from the transactions at the expense

of the partnership.

       Finally, the SLC cites Strougo ex rel. The Brazil Fund, Inc. Procedurally, this case

is arguably the most analogous to the situation presented here. Without making a prior

demand on the board, Strougo filed his complaint, and the directors moved for dismissal,

arguing, among other things, that Strougo failed to state a claim and failed to make a pre-

suit demand on the board. The court denied the motion against the directors (except for

one outside director), and pre-suit demand was held to be excused.           The nominal

  The court stated that the three CIGNA employees “cannot make CIGNA LCF independent if it
102

would not otherwise meet the test for independence.” Katell, 1995 WL 376952, at *6.

                                            25
defendant’s motion to stay all proceedings for three months to permit the SLC to

investigate allegations of the lawsuit was granted.103 The SLC was comprised of two

members—one original defendant who was dismissed (DaCosta), and a new director who

was added over a year after the complaint was filed.104 After the SLC investigation, the

defendants moved to terminate and dismiss the action based upon the report of the SLC.

          The court considered plaintiffs argument that DaCosta was not independent because

he had been named as a defendant and had moved to dismiss the complaint. The plaintiffs

cited a portion of the defendants’ brief in support of that motion to dismiss in an attempt to

demonstrate DaCosta’s prejudgment. The court rejected that argument by simply stating

that a motion to dismiss is designed to test the legal sufficiency of the complaint.105 There

was no discussion or analysis of the substance of the prior motion beyond that.

          A motion to dismiss, in and of itself, is not necessarily disqualifying. Rather, the

court should examine the substance of the motion, including the nature of the allegations

against the directors and whether the corporation has elected to take an active role in the

litigation. If the motion to dismiss was authorized by the SLC member or members and

challenges the very core issues that the SLC is subsequently charged with investigating,

that may be enough to create an issue of fact as to their independence. This requires a case-

103
      Strougo ex rel. The Brazil Fund, Inc., 27 F. Supp. 2d at 444.
104
      See Strougo ex rel. Brazil Fund, Inc. v. Padegs, 1 F. Supp. 2d 276, 278 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).
105
      Strougo ex rel. The Brazil Fund, Inc., 27 F. Supp. 2d at 449.

                                                  26
by-case determination, and the SLC bears the burden on this issue.106 I do not think the

SLC has met its burden.

          Finally, I mention two other points. First, I do not think that London changed the

standard for determining the independence of an SLC member. I note that the Court of

Chancery stated that the SLC Report was “not a ‘combative attack’ on Plaintiff’s

claims[,]”107 and, therefore, did not create a material fact as to Floyd or Lynton’s

independence. That should not be a new standard in evaluating the independence of SLC

members who have previously participated in moving to dismiss claims they are charged

with investigating. The standard, rather, is still that they must be “above reproach.”

          Second, the SLC process is not necessarily unavailable where an entire Board is

named in a lawsuit, and then moves to dismiss it. But that is not this case. Here, Lynton

and Floyd had a role in authorizing a motion to dismiss claims involving loyalty issues.108

Not only that, the Company under their managerial direction, took an active role and even

the lead role, in challenging the merits of the claims. The thorny issues regarding Floyd’s

106
    In Beam, our Court observed that this procedural fact could be outcome determinative. See
Beam, 845 A.2d at 1055 (“We need not decide whether the substantive standard of independence
in an SLC case differs from that in a presuit demand case. As a practical matter, the procedural
distinction relating to the diametrically-opposed burdens and the availability of discovery into
independence may be outcome-determinative on the issue of independence.”).
107
      Diep v. Sather, 2021 WL 3236322, at 16 (Del. Ch. July 30, 2021).
108
   The Majority acknowledges that an important aspect of a board’s managerial decision-making
role is whether to initiate, or refrain from initiating, litigation on the corporation’s behalf. Maj.
Op. at 30. Yet the Majority contends that this Board merely attended a board meeting when that
motion was discussed. Maj. Op. at 38. In fact, its decision is premised on that tenuous conclusion.
That conclusion is inconsistent with the record, with the role of the board, and with the fact that
the SLC bears the burden on the independence issue. After all, this was not a decision about where
to hold the next board meeting. It was a decision about what position the Company should be
asserting in court regarding serious loyalty claims asserted against other directors and officers.

                                                 27
and Lynton’s independence could have been avoided. As pointed out by Diep, EPL could

have formed an SLC as soon as Diep filed the Complaint in 2016. EPL, as nominal

defendant, could have avoided taking a position on the merits of the substantive issues.

EPL also could have selected or added different directors who were not on the Board when

the 2016 Motion was filed, as it did with Babb.

       In sum, Diep raised serious loyalty challenges including directors and officers of the

Company—challenges centered on insider trading and disclosure claims that survived an

initial motion to dismiss. If the SLC process is to have any sanctity and credibility in

dismissing claims simply by having a committee investigate them, the SLC’s independence

must be above reproach.109 Because there is a legitimate factual issue as to Floyd’s and

Lynton’s independence, I respectfully DISSENT.

109
   See Balotti, supra note 46, § 13.17 (“One of the obvious purposes for forming a special litigation
committee is to promote confidence in the integrity of corporate decision making by vesting the
company’s power to respond to accusations of serious misconduct by high officials in an impartial
group of independent directors. By forming a committee whose fairness and objectivity cannot be
reasonably questioned, giving them the resources to retain advisors, and granting them the freedom
to do a thorough investigation and to pursue claims against wrongdoers, the company can assuage
concern among its stockholders and retain, through the SLC, control over any claims belonging to
the Company itself.” (citing Biondi, 820 A.2d at 1156)). The Majority’s questioning of the “above
reproach” standard is unfortunate in that, at best, it avoids an opportunity to provide more clear
guidance for those involved in the SLC process, and at worst, lowers the “independence” bar as it
applies to an already anomalous and unusual procedure whereby defendants can free themselves
of serious claims merely by appointing a committee.

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