Court Opinion

ID: 4706047
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-07-23 15:05:14.466542+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:06:34.553107
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

CONTINENTAL INVESTORS FUND                    )
LLC,                                          )
                                              )
               Plaintiff,                     )
                                              )
       v.                                     )   C.A. No. 10164-VCL
                                              )
TRADINGSCREEN INC., PHILIPPE                  )
BUHANNIC, PIERO GRANDI, PIERRE                )
SCHROEDER, and PATRICK                        )
BUHANNIC,                                     )
                                              )
               Defendants.                    )

                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

                             Date Submitted: May 11, 2021
                              Date Decided: July 23, 2021

Kevin G. Abrams, John M. Seaman, Stephen C. Childs, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP,
Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Brian C. Ralston, Jaclyn C. Levy, Callan R. Jackson, POTTER ANDERSON &
CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Defendants.

LASTER, V.C.
       Plaintiff Continental Investors Fund LLC (“Continental”) purchased preferred stock

in TradingScreen, Inc. (the “Company”) as part of a financing round led by Technology

Crossover Ventures (“TCV”). The preferred stock carried a mandatory redemption right

that TCV could exercise in its capacity as the holder of a majority of the preferred stock.

       In 2013, TCV requested redemption. Continental received notice of TCV’s request

and exercised its right to participate. After the Company only redeemed a portion of their

shares, TCV and Continental filed this action asserting that the Company breached its

redemption obligation. TCV took the laboring oar, and the case proceeded through trial.

       During post-trial briefing, events transpired that led to a more constructive

relationship between the plaintiffs and the Company. The case was stayed.

       In 2020, the Company completed a transaction that provided enough capital to

redeem all the plaintiffs’ shares of preferred stock. The Company and the plaintiffs

disagreed on the amount of interest that was due on the redemption payment. TCV reached

a settlement with the Company that included a premium over the redemption amount.

       Continental declined to participate in the settlement. Continental maintained that the

Company breached the redemption obligation in 2013, resulting in interest accruing on the

redemption amount at a rate of 13% since the date of breach. Continental’s claim to interest

depended on proving the underlying breach, so Continental took over as sole plaintiff and

resumed litigating the case.

       This decision holds that the Company did not breach the redemption obligation. The

Company acted properly by redeeming all the shares it could. A committee of directors

properly engaged in the judgment-laden task of determining the amount of funds that the
Company could use for redemptions. The directors determined that using a greater amount

of cash to redeem more shares threatened the Company’s ability to continue as a going

concern. Under the governing standard, Continental had the burden of proving that the

directors acted in bad faith, relied on unreliable methods or data, or reached conclusions so

off the mark as to constitute constructive fraud. Continental failed to carry its burden.

       Because the Company did not default on its obligations, Continental is not entitled

to interest at a rate of 13% beginning eight years ago. The record shows, however, that the

Company had sufficient funds to redeem all of Continental’s shares in July 2020. The

Company did not redeem Continental’s shares until August 2020. The Company paid

Continental some interest, but not the full amount of interest due. Continental is entitled to

the difference, plus pre- and post-judgment interest through the date of payment.

                            I.      FACTUAL BACKGROUND

       Trial took place over four days. The parties introduced 662 exhibits, lodged

deposition from twenty-four fact witnesses, and presented live testimony from eight fact

witnesses and four experts.1 The parties only agreed to forty-two stipulations of fact.2

       1
           One witness testified both as a fact witness and as an expert.
       2
         Citations in the form “PTO ¶” refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order.
See Dkt. 229. Citations in the form “[Name] Tr.” refer to witness testimony from the trial
transcript. Citations in the form “[Name] Dep.” refer to witness testimony from a
deposition transcript. Citations in the form “JX — at —” refer to a trial exhibit with the
page designated by the last three digits of the control number or internal page number. If a
trial exhibit used paragraph numbers or sections, then references are by paragraph or
section. To constrain the proliferation of footnotes, most citations appear in the text. In
                                               2
       Continental bore the burden of proving the facts supporting its claims. The standard

of proof was a preponderance of the evidence.

A.     The Funds Invest In The Company.

       The Company is a global provider of electronic trading solutions that enable

institutional investors to access markets, connect with counterparties, and execute trades.

Philippe Buhannic co-founded the Company and served from the outset as its Chairman

and CEO.3

       In August 2007, funds managed by TCV (the “TCV Funds”) and other sophisticated

investors, including Continental, entered into an agreement with the Company to purchase

shares of Series D Convertible Preferred Stock (respectively, the “Preferred Stockholders”

and the “Preferred Stock”). See JX 1. Continental is the family investment vehicle of Philip

Purcell, the former CEO of Morgan Stanley. See Purcell Dep. 6–8.

some instances, typically involving short paragraphs or background information, the
supporting citation appears at the end of the paragraph.
       3
         PTO ¶¶ 4–5. There are two Buhannics in the case: Philippe and his brother Patrick.
To distinguish them, this decision uses their first names. Philippe played a far greater role
in the underlying events, and his testimony spanned nearly two days of trial. During that
time, the defendants impeached him on multiple occasions, and his demeanor further
undermined his credibility. He engaged combatively with opposing counsel, often
interrupting the questioning. So extreme was Philippe’s behavior that the court took
recesses so he could compose himself. Because of Philippe’s central role, his testimony
remained significant, but the court approached his assertions with care. At times, Philippe
testified credibly. When possible however, the court has looked to other sources of
evidence. Philippe is now deceased.

                                             3
       To facilitate the issuance, the Company adopted an amended and restated certificate

of incorporation. See JX 5 (“Charter”). The Charter authorized a total of 8,000,000 shares

of Preferred Stock.4 The TCV Funds purchased 4,340,398 shares, constituting 52.4% of

the series. PTO ¶ 10. The magnitude of their holdings made the TCV Funds the “Majority

Holders” for purposes of exercising the rights carried by the Preferred Stock. See id. ¶ 12.

Continental purchased 425,663 shares, representing 5.3% of the series. See id. ¶ 11.

       The Majority Holders received the right to require the Company to assist the

Preferred Stockholders in selling their shares. See Charter § 7.1.1. If the Preferred

Stockholders were unable to find a buyer during the following nine months, then the

Majority Holders could “require the Corporation to purchase all or a portion of such holders

shares.” Id. § 7.1.2. The redemption process involved a series of steps:

•      First, the Company and the Majority Holders would notify the other Preferred
       Stockholders of their right to participate. Id.

•      Second, the Company and the Majority Holders would negotiate in good faith to
       determine the fair market value of the Preferred Stock. Id.

•      Third, if the Company and the Majority Holders could not reach an agreement, then
       they would jointly select an independent financial advisor who would determine the
       fair market value of the Preferred Stock. See id. §§ 7.1.2, 7.1.4.

•      Finally, on a date thirty days after the receipt of the financial advisor’s opinion, the
       Company would redeem the tendered shares of Preferred Stock at the price
       determined by the financial advisor. Id. § 7.1.2.

       4
        Charter Art. IV § A.1. The Company had previously issued Series A, Series B, and
Series C Convertible Preferred Stock. As part of the Series D issuance, the Company
“cancelled [those classes] in their entirety” and gave them “the status of authorized and
unissued shares of Preferred Stock.” Id. Art. IV § A.2.

                                              4
       The Company was not obligated to pay the full redemption price all at once. The

Charter contemplated that the Company would pay the redemption price in three equal

installments, with one-third of the price due on the six-month, twelve-month, and eighteen-

month anniversaries of the redemption date. Id.

       The Charter recognized that the Company might be unable to redeem all of the

shares tendered due to a lack of sufficient funds. The Charter addressed that risk using the

following language:

              In the event the Corporation has insufficient cash to pay the
              holders of the [Preferred Stock] the full redemption amount
              due to them under [Section 7.1.2], then the holders of
              [Preferred Stock] shall share ratably in any cash available pro
              rata in proportion to the respective amount of [Preferred Stock]
              held by such holder until all such holders are paid in full.

Id. § 7.1.3. The Charter also recognized that the Company might simply default on its

obligation. Addressing that possibility, the Charter provided that if the Company “defaults

on any payments due pursuant to this [section], interest shall accrue on all amounts then

owed pursuant to this [section] equal to an annual percentage rate of thirteen percent

(13%).” Id. § 7.1.2.

       The Company and the Preferred Stockholders supplemented the rights and

obligations in the Charter by entering into a stockholders agreement. See JX 802

(“Stockholders Agreement”). In Section 7 of the Stockholders Agreement, the parties

committed to take action to ensure that the Board had seven seats that would be filled in

the following manner:

•      The CEO would hold one seat.

                                             5
•      Directors designated by the common stockholders would hold two seats.

•      Directors designated by the Preferred Stockholders would hold two seats.

•      Two independent directors designated by the common stockholders and subject to
       the approval of the Preferred Stockholders would hold the final two seats.

Id. § 7. Through a voting agreement, Philippe controlled the rights held by the common

stockholders.5 As the Majority Holders, the TCV Funds controlled the rights held by the

Preferred Stockholders.

       As of 2010, Philippe served as the CEO director. Philippe’s brother Patrick served

as one of the two directors designated by the common stockholders. Pierre Schroeder, an

early investor in the Company, served as the other. Robert Trudeau, a general partner of

TCV, and Richard Kimball, the founding general partner of TCV, served as the two

directors designated by the Preferred Stockholders. In 2015, Frank Placenti replaced

Kimball; Placenti was the global chair of the corporate finance and governance practice at

Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP. Piero Grandi served as one of the jointly designated

directors. The seat for a second jointly designated director remained vacant.

       5
         Philippe controlled founders’ shares constituting 68.5% of the issued and
outstanding common stock. Under a voting agreement, the holders of the common stock
committed to vote their shares as determined by the holders of a majority of the common
stock. Because Philippe’s founders’ shares carried a majority of the voting power of the
common stock, Philippe could exercise all of the voting power of the common stock under
the voting agreement. See JX 89 at 34–35; JX 812; JX 815 at ’982, ’995, ’999–003, ’017;
Philippe Tr. 13.

                                             6
B.     TCV Tries to Oust Philippe.

       In 2010, the relationship between Philippe and TCV fractured. Two TCV employees

told Trudeau that they thought Philippe was diverting Company resources to another entity

that he owned. Trudeau invited Philippe to a meeting at TCV’s offices. When Philippe

arrived, Trudeau notified him that an independent law firm had been retained to investigate

his conduct and that it would be best for him to step down as CEO. Philippe felt blindsided.

See Philippe Tr. 121–24; Trudeau Tr. 816–22.

       The Board ultimately did not take any specific action against Philippe. But Philippe

believed TCV had attempted to oust him as CEO and viewed the incident as an act of

“war.” See Philippe Tr. 215.

C.     The TCV Funds Exercise Their Exit Rights.

       In June 2012, the TCV Funds notified the Company that they intended to sell their

Preferred Stock. The TCV Funds asked the Company to engage a financial advisor to

facilitate the sale process and to furnish “all documents and materials regarding the

Corporation that would customarily be provided to a third-party investor considering a

significant preferred equity investment in the Corporation.” JX 12. The TCV Funds noted

that if they were unsuccessful in selling their shares, then they intended to exercise their

redemption rights. Id. at 1.

                                             7
       In August 2012, the Board formed a special committee to facilitate the sale of the

Preferred Stock and handle “related matters” (the “Committee”). JX 602 at 3–4. Initially,

its members were Philippe, Grandi, and Schroeder, with Grandi serving as Chair.6

       In September 2012, the Company created a management presentation and set up a

data room for interested parties. See JX 20 at 7; Trudeau Tr. 758. Except for that assistance,

TCV largely ran the sale process itself. See Trudeau Dep. 98–100. TCV solicited at least

five potential buyers, but was unable to secure a deal. See JX 20; Trudeau Tr. 758–60.

       On March 14, 2013, the TCV Funds notified the Company that they were exercising

their redemption rights for their shares of Preferred Stock. JX 31. The Company provided

notice to the other Preferred Stockholders, and Continental elected to participate as to all

its shares. See JX 32.

D.     The Company Retains Advisors And Explores Debt Financing.

       With the redemption process unfolding, the Committee recognized that it needed to

determine the amount of funds that the Company could deploy to repurchase shares. As

part of that process, the Committee evaluated the Company’s ability to obtain debt

financing to facilitate redemptions.

       6
        See PTO ¶¶ 5–8; JX 602 at 6; Grandi Tr. 463. Minutes from a meeting of the
Committee on September 19, 2012, state that Schroeder was elected as Chair, but that
appears to be an error. See Schroeder Dep. 89–90. Trudeau acknowledged that the TCV
Funds and their designees on the Board faced a conflict of interest in connection with the
redemption process, warranting the formation of the Committee. See Trudeau Tr. 762.

                                              8
       Philippe charged John Gross, the Company’s CFO, with leading the search for debt

financing. On March 19, 2013, Philippe instructed Gross to secure terms for three lines of

credit, each in the amount of $10 million, “with no covenants but to maintain 10 m usd of

cash.” JX 36 at ’699. Gross agreed to conduct the search, but he cautioned that he was “not

sure how realistic it is to expect that for a $10MM loan you’ll only be required to maintain

10MM in cash with NO other covenants” and that to secure three lines on those terms was

“totally unrealistic.” Id.

       Later that day, Gross contacted HSBC to explore a potential financing. See JX 63.

After discussing various options, Gross asked HSBC to provide a $5 million line of credit

to be used for working capital and the redemption. Id. HSBC was skeptical about using

loan proceeds to redeem equity and asked to review the Company’s 2012 financial

statements. The Company never sent its financial statements to HSBC. See id.;

Considine Dep. 51. Due to the combination of the potential use of the loan proceeds and

the lack of financial statements, HSBC declined to proceed. Id. at 49–51.

       In April 2013, Gross contacted JPMorgan Chase & Co. (“Chase”). See JX 570 at 1.

Gross explained that the Company was contemplating “a $150MM buyout” of the

Preferred Stock and was “looking to fund the first payment with ~$20MM of debt and

~30MM of internal cash.” Id. Gross also told Chase that the “[t]he Company has ~$45MM

in cash and needs approximately $5-10MM in cash to operate.” Id. Gross warned Chase

that the financial covenants were “one of the hot-buttons” for Philippe. See id. Chase began

considering the request.

                                             9
       Also in April 2013, Greenberg Traurig, LLP and Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP

started providing legal advice to the Committee about the redemption process. The firms

advised the Committee that “the Company was permitted to defer the redemption if it didn’t

have ‘legally sufficient funds.’” JX 50 at ’853. The firms also advised the Committee that

when determining the amount of funds available for redemptions, the Company was

permitted to retain a level of cash that was needed to maintain its operations. Id.

       At the end of April 2013, Gross updated Philippe on the financing process. In

addition to HSBC and Chase, Gross had contacted Bank of America Merrill Lynch

(“BAML”), Webster Bank, CapitalOne, and Wells Fargo. JX 60 at ’254. Gross reported

that the “key thing” that each bank wanted was a “forecast” of the Company’s performance.

Id. Philippe hesitated over providing forecasts as a first step, telling Gross: “We should not

send our information before getting some validation of the possibility that they will work

with us. Don’t you think? If their conditions or legal are horrible why would we send our

accounts for a small credit lines [sic]? We need to be very discrete about our accounts.”

JX 71 at ’076. In other words, Philippe wanted to receive a meaningful indication of

interest from a bank before providing the bank with a forecast. Gross explained that the

banks wanted the forecast first, telling Philippe: “I can’t move forward until we can share

a forecast with the bank . . . .” JX 56 at ’931–33.

       Philippe turned out to be right, at least as far as one bank was concerned. Without

receiving projections, Webster Bank sent Gross a term sheet on May 16, 2013, for a

                                             10
$15 million secured line of credit.7 The proposal contemplated a covenant establishing a

minimum level of quarterly adjusted EBITDA and a requirement for monthly financial

reporting. See JX 78; see also JX 74. The Company’s auditor regarded the terms as

reasonable. See JX 78; JX 81. In an internal memorandum, a Webster Bank representative

noted that the bank still needed to “obtain a comprehensive understanding of the

redemption issue and the term ‘insufficient cash’ to determine if any exposure is created

for Webster by supplying the company with a line of credit.” JX 74 at ’393. Talks broke

down once the parties had a “conversation about how the redemption might work.” See

Gross Dep. 115–17.

       On May 21, 2013, the Committee retained BAML to provide financial advice

concerning the redemption. The engagement letter established a compensation structure

under which BAML’s fees and the redemption price were inversely correlated, i.e., a lower

redemption price led to greater compensation for BAML. See JX 83 ¶¶ 3–5. If the Company

redeemed the Preferred Stock for less than $21 per share, then BAML would receive a fee

equal to 7.5% of the difference between the aggregate price paid and the aggregate

redemption at $21 per share.8

       7
         Management provided Webster Bank with a PowerPoint presentation, but it did
not include projections. See JX 78; Gross Tr. 337.
       8
         JX 83 ¶¶ 3–5. The terms of the BAML engagement letter thus illustrated the
conflict of interest that led to the establishment of the Committee. The Company benefitted
from a lower redemption price, and it was in the best interests of the Company and all of
its stockholders (other than the holders of the Preferred Stock in their capacities as
beneficiaries of the redemption right) for the Company to pay the least amount possible. It
was even in the best interest of those holders of Preferred Stock who had not exercised
                                            11
       On June 14, 2013, Gross provided Philippe with another update on the financing

process. He explained that it was “difficult to get the combination of an unsecured line with

limited financial covenants with a ‘traditional bank.’”9 Philippe responded: “I think we are

going nowhere. Please stop the effort. Will pick it up in a differemnt [sic] way later.” JX 94

at ’183. He also instructed Gross to call the banks and “tell them that [TradingScreen is]

not interested any more as their terms are not attractive enough.” JX 93 at ’056.

       Despite Philippe’s instructions, Gross kept searching for debt financing. Over the

following year, Gross communicated with approximately ten lenders about obtaining a loan

secured by the Company’s receivables or cash flow. See JX 224 at ’119; JX 263 at ’579.

Based on these discussions, Gross ascertained that a cash-flow-based loan was infeasible

and that, “best case,” the Company could obtain a receivables-based loan in the amount of

$2 million. JX 263 at ’580. His discussions with lenders revealed that it was “very difficult”

for the Company to obtain debt financing because the Company was “asset light” and

because the debt would be used at least in part to fund the redemption.10 The banks did not

their redemption right for the Company to pay the least amount possible. By contrast, the
TCV Funds and Continental benefitted from maximizing the value of their contract right
through the highest possible redemption price. Continental has complained about BAML’s
fee structure, but the arrangement aligned BAML’s interests with the best interests of the
Company and the orientation of the directors’ fiduciary duties.
       9
         JX 94 at ’184; see also JX 160 at ’484 (Gross’s 2013 self-performance review)
(“Was unable to obtain unsecured ‘0’ covenant financing. Had multiple meetings with
multiple potential partners . . . . None of them would consider financing under these
terms.”).
       10
         See JX 327 at ’588; see also JX 263 at ’579 (noting that BAML “cannot
underwrite any loans to TradingScreen” because of a “lack of sufficient cash flow” and
                                             12
have any interest in loaning money that immediately would flow out of the Company to

redeem equity.

       Continental contends that by failing to provide financial statements to HSBC, by

hesitating before providing a forecast to the banks, and by telling Gross to stop the process,

Philippe tried to scuttle the effort to secure debt financing. Although that is one way to

view the evidence, the record shows that Philippe was generally obsessed with

confidentiality and reluctant to share financial information.11 He did not manufacture a set

of concerns to torpedo the financing process. The record also indicates that Philippe’s

resistance to providing financial information and his instruction to Gross to stop the process

did not affect the search for debt financing. Gross continued the efforts, and it became clear

that the Company could not obtain a material amount of debt financing in any event.

“no viable security package”). The Company’s projected quarterly cash flow from
operations for the following seven quarters fluctuated between -$3.55 million and $3.71
million. See JX 330 at 43.
       11
           See, e.g., JX 13 at ’114–17 (email from Philippe to a member of the Company’s
Accounting and Finance department referring to Chase requests for information related to
a credit line as “intrusive” and instructing the employee to “send them to hell”); JX 345 at
’430 (email from Philippe to a potential customer, stating: “We usually provide no
information as we are a private company and are not supposed to disclose this information.
My board has been consistently refusing to give this information and will continue to do
so unfortunately. We never gave this information to any of our clients even contract much
larger than the one we are talking about. I am sorry but this is a strict rule for us.”). Philippe
and Patrick conceded that the Board did not prevent Philippe or the Company from
disclosing financial information. See Philippe Tr. 31–32; Patrick Dep. 223–24. These
incidents nevertheless show that Philippe did not adopt a different stance for purposes of
the search for debt financing. He kept all of the Company’s financial information close to
the vest and resisted sharing it with anyone.

                                               13
E.     The Redemption Price

       As part of the redemption process, the Company and the TCV Funds attempted to

reach agreement on the redemption price. PTO ¶ 27. They failed, and on January 6, 2014,

the Company and the TCV Funds engaged Centerview Partners LLC as an independent

financial advisor under Section 7.1.4 of the Charter. Id. ¶ 28.

       BAML helped Company management prepare projections for Centerview to use in

its valuation. Gross Tr. 369–70. Gross described the projections as a “conservative

forecast” and agreed that a lower forecast would “drive down the ultimate value that was

generated by Centerview.” Id. at 370.

       In February 2014, Centerview determined that the fair value of the Company was

$120 million, resulting in a redemption price of $16.71 per share. PTO ¶ 29. The TCV

Funds responded by withdrawing 310,000 shares from their request for redemption. That

step enabled the TCV Funds to continue as the Majority Holders. See id. ¶¶ 31–32. The

TCV Funds plainly took this step because it was clear that the Company would not be able

to redeem all the shares of Preferred Stock, and the TCV Funds wanted to maintain control

over the rights that the Preferred Stock carried.

F.     The Committee Evaluates The Amount Of Cash Available For Redemptions.

       Between February and September 2014, the Committee met six times.12 In March,

the Board expanded the Committee’s mandate to confirm that it possessed “all authority”

       12
            See JX 175; JX 221; JX 232; JX 246; JX 263; JX 327.

                                             14
with respect to the redemption process. JX 201 at ’724–25. The Board also added Patrick

to the Committee. JX 602 at ’007.

       Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP joined Morgan Lewis and Greenberg Traurig

in providing the Committee with legal advice about the redemption process.13 The firms

advised the members of the Committee that they could and should consider the

requirements of the Company’s business, its financial prospects in the “intermediate term,”

and the “long-term health of the company” when determining the amount of funds that

were available for redemptions.14

       In July 2014, the Committee retained AlixPartners LLP to provide additional

financial advice regarding the amount of funds that the Company could use to redeem

shares. JX 233 at ’278. AlixPartners gave a presentation which advised that the Company

had surplus of between $16.7 million and $52.1 million, reflecting the difference between

the net asset value of the Company and the aggregate par value of its stock. See JX 330

at 7. The presentation covered various scenarios for employee compensation, including a

scenario that contemplated additional cash compensation. See JX 330 at 31, 34, 37, 40, 43.

AlixPartners prepared a cash forecast for that scenario (the “AlixPartners Forecast”), which

projected that in March 2016, at the low point of the forecast, the Company would have a

       13
            See, e.g., JX 169; JX 191; JX 192; JX 216.
       14
         See JX 191 at ’219; JX 192 at 2, 4–5; JX 216 at ’656. The firms did not define
those terms in the context of the redemption process. See Schroeder Tr. 634;
Patrick Tr. 706; Dudney Tr. 1017.

                                             15
cash balance of $27.2 million, including $12.7 million in restricted cash held in foreign

jurisdictions. JX 330 at 12, 43.

       On September 4, 2014, the Committee determined that the Company could use

$7.2 million in cash to redeem shares of Preferred Stock. JX 327 at ’591. In making its

determination, the Committee relied on the AlixPartners presentation, including the

AlixPartners Forecast. The Committee also received an analysis from BAML, which

determined that the Company had a surplus of $62.7 million using book values and a

surplus of $42.0 million using fair market values. JX 190 at 5.

       In concluding that the Company had $7.2 million available for redemptions. the

Committee started with the low point in the forecast of $27.2 million in cash, then

subtracted $20 million to reflect the minimum amount of cash that the Committee believed

in its judgment that the Company needed to keep on hand to continue as a going concern.

Because of the nature of the Company’s business, the Committee determined that the

Company needed to retain more than simply an amount of working capital sufficient to

cover its bills. The Company’s core business involved offering a trading platform for

clearing securities trades, so the amount of capital that the Company required to operate as

a going concern included a reserve that would demonstrate to trading counterparties that

the Company was financially secure and would not default on its trades.15

       15
         See Philippe Tr. 240–43; Gross Tr. 439–41; Grandi Tr. 537–39, 565; Schroeder
Tr. 669–70; Patrick Tr. 736–37; Trudeau Tr. 837–38; Purcell Dep. 77–79.

                                            16
       The Committee and management generally referred to the total amount of capital

that the Company required as “show capital.” By using this term, they meant the total

amount of capital that the Company needed to show on its balance sheet to reassure any

counterparties that the Company had the financial wherewithal to complete trades. See

JX 327 at ’590–91; Gross Tr. 377; Grandi Tr. 489–90. The term was potentially

misleading, because it could be understood to suggest that the capital was not really needed

and “just for show.” Recognizing that fact, Schroeder suggested that the Committee stop

using “show capital” and that “Commercial Cash balance florr [sic]” was a more

appropriate term. See JX 326 at ’027. The term nevertheless remained standard, so this

decision adopts it.

       Importantly, the Committee regarded show capital as an all-in figure. The

Committee did not estimate an additional amount, over and above working capital or

restricted cash, that the Company needed to reassure counterparties. The Committee

instead exercised its judgment to determine the total amount of capital that the Company

needed to retain to operate as a going concern, including an amount that would alleviate

any potential concern that customers might have about counterparty risk.

       1.     The Committee’s Judgment Regarding Employee Compensation

       As noted, the Committee determined how much cash the Company could use for

redemptions by identifying the amount of cash that the Company would have at the low

point of its cash forecast. One of the key inputs in the cash forecast was the amount of cash

that the Company needed to pay its employees.

                                             17
       When forecasting the Company’s cash needs, the Committee considered that the

Company usually reached a low point in its cash usage cycle in March or April, after paying

bonuses for the prior year. See JX 186. The Committee believed that it was essential to

retain sufficient cash to pay employee bonuses across two bonus cycles. See Philippe

Tr. 249; Grandi Tr. 541–42. The members of the Committee believed that if they did not

retain that amount of cash, then employees would think their compensation was at risk and

would look elsewhere for employment. A cascade of employee departures would represent

a “death sentence” for the Company. See Grandi Tr. 541–42.

       When evaluating the Company’s cash forecast, the Committee considered

management’s plan to increase the amount of cash compensation paid to employees by

$5.5 million annually. To support their recommendation, management provided the

Committee with an analysis prepared by Pearl Meyer & Company, an outside

compensation consultant. JX 346 at ’635–38. Pearl Meyer advised that the Company’s

employee compensation ranked below the 25th percentile of peer companies and that to

attract and retain talent, the Company needed to increase base compensation to the 75th

percentile. JX 263 at 1, 3. Based on that recommendation, management proposed to

increase base salaries by $2.6 million and cash bonuses by $2.9 million. JX 330 at 22.

       When using the Company’s cash forecast to determine the amount of cash that the

Company needed to retain, the Committee did not use the full $5.5 million in

management’s proposal. The Committee excluded the additional $2.9 million for bonus

compensation because the bonuses were tied to performance targets. The Committee only

                                            18
included the additional $2.6 million in base compensation. See JX 327 at ’590; JX 330

at 22.

         As part of its deliberations, the Committee evaluated the merits of paying bonuses

in cash versus stock. In the past, the Company had paid bonuses partly in stock. Gross Tr.

459. During the previous two years, however, the Company had paid bonuses in cash. Id.

Grandi believed that the Company could not “motivate people through the awarding of

stock, largely because, with the liability of the redemption, the stock was really not worth

a lot.” Grandi Tr. 483. The Committee therefore decided that the Company needed to

continue paying bonuses in cash. See Gross Tr. 459; Grandi Tr. 479–83; Held Tr. 918–19.

         Having made these decisions, the Committee determined that at the low point in its

cash forecast, the Company would have $27.2 million in cash on hand. The question then

became how much cash the Company needed to retain to continue as a going concern.

         2.    The Committee’s Judgment Regarding Show Capital

         To determine how much cash the Company could use to redeem shares, the

Committee evaluated the amount of “show capital” that the Company needed to retain to

operate as a going concern. In exercising its judgment on this issue, the Committee

considered several inputs.

         One input was the Company’s historic cash balance. Between 2011 and 2013, the

Company’s cash balance fluctuated between $32 million and $50 million. See JX 186

at ’207. These figures obviously exceeded the $27.2 million in cash that the Company

would have at the low point of the cycle. Based on the Company’s historical practice, the

Company did not have additional cash that could be used for redemptions.

                                             19
       A second input was the views of Company management, represented by Philippe

and Gross. Philippe consistently maintained that the Company needed to retain a balance

of $30 million in cash. See JX 190 at ’846. Gross initially agreed with Philippe, and in early

August 2014, they prepared a submission for AlixPartners and the Committee about the

“Importance of Cash for Clients/Suppliers.” See JX 253 at ’975. Gross’s first draft, dated

August 8, 2014, stressed that the Company needed to maintain at least $30 million to

convey financial stability to sell-side and buy-side counterparties and noted that this

amount was “still well below many of our competitors.” Id. Philippe added the following

comment about the Company’s peers:

              Having a cash balance of less than 20 M USD is a no go zone
              for all these players . . . . They require at leasyt [sic] 25 M USD
              of cash balances to be comfortable as they know that it takes at
              least 20 M USD to stay competitive per year in our business
              and want a coverage of that risk.

JX 256 at ’335; see JX 179 at ’950; JX 260.

       At the end of August 2014, Gross prepared charts to illustrate the cash balance under

various scenario. JX 296. Gross presented total show capital and restricted cash separately,

showing minimum show capital of $20 million with restricted cash of $8 million. See id.

at 2. Gross testified at trial that he relied on his own judgment when developing the show

capital figure. See Gross Tr. 388–91.

       A third input was advice from the Company’s financial and legal advisors. BAML

and AlixPartners did not independently assess the amount of cash that the Company

                                              20
needed.16 AlixPartners considered management’s estimates and worked with Gross.17 In its

final presentation, AlixPartners presented a range of $20–30 million in cash.18 Despite

depicting the range, AlixPartners did not make a recommendation as to the minimum

amount of cash that the Company should maintain. Dudney Tr. 1003–07; see JX 330. The

Company’s legal advisors advised the Committee members that they could consider:

“projected cash flows in the near to intermediate term, . . . the Company’s past performance

and success or failure to meet projections, . . . the Company’s current and anticipated debts

and business obligations, . . . [and] business concerns unique to the Company that may

impact its cash flows.” JX 192 at 4–5; accord. JX 191 at 5–9; JX 216 at ’656–57.

       The Committee members then exercised their business judgment. They engaged in

a “long debate” about the cash balance that the Company needed to retain. Grandi Tr. 490.

They ultimately determined that a cash balance of $20 million was necessary. JX 327 at

’591; see JX 326 at ’027. The Committee thus chose the low end of the range presented by

AlixPartners and adopted a figure materially below the $30 million that Philippe

proposed.19

       16
            See JX 190; JX 261 at ’422; JX 287 at ’934; Clemow Dep. 151; Dudney Tr. 1003.
       17
            See JX 302 at 12; JX 310 at 12; see also JX 281 at 11; JX 298 at 12.
       18
         See JX 330 at 12. Gross testified that to support this figure, he prepared “an
extremely granular bottom-up projection.” Gross Tr. 442–43. Trudeau, the principal
witness for the TCV Funds, testified that he had no “major dispute with the projections”
on which the cash estimate was based. Trudeau Tr. 860.
       19
         At trial, Trudeau agreed that the Company needed to maintain at least $10–
15 million in working capital. Trudeau Tr. 790–94. He also agreed that the Company
                                              21
       During their deliberations, the Committee members recognized that their

determination would have implications for the amount of cash that the Company could use

for redemptions. Schroeder pointed out that at with a high enough cash balance, the

Company would not be able to redeem any shares. See JX 326 at ’027. After taking all of

these factors into account, the Committee concluded that the Company needed to retain

$20 million in cash to remain a going concern, which meant the Company had $7.2 million

in cash that it could use for redemptions. JX 327 at ’591.

G.     The Company Redeems Shares.

       On September 5, 2014, Philippe informed the Preferred Stockholders that the

Committee had approved total redemptions in the amount of $7.2 million at $16.71 per

share. PTO ¶ 36. The letters noted that the Committee “will meet on a regular basis, and

no less than quarterly, to determine the amount of funds legally available for TradingScreen

to make an additional payments [sic] in partial redemption of the shares of [Preferred

Stock] that have been the subject of redemption notices.” PTO ¶ 36.

       The Company sent a check payable to the TCV Funds for $4,400,049.86 in

exchange for 263,319 shares. The Company sent a check payable to Continental for

$464,703.09 in exchange for 27,810 shares. See PTO ¶ 37.

needed “at least $10 million to demonstrate financial strength.” Id. at 838–39. An internal
TCV presentation similarly stated that the Company needed $15 million “to stay in
business.” JX 15 at 3. The internal TCV presentation did not separately address the need
for capital to show financial strength. See id.

                                            22
       On September 9, 2014, the TCV Funds delivered a notice of default to the Company.

JX 336. The notice asserted that the Company had “failed to pay the full amount due to”

the TCV Funds, had therefore defaulted, and that consequently “interest shall accrue on all

amounts due and owing.” Id. at ’576–77. The notice demanded immediate payment of

$18,049,267.01 plus accrued interest. Id. at ’577.

       By letter dated September 18, 2014, the Company disputed that it was in default.

The Company maintained that it was “in full compliance with the [Charter] and Delaware

law” because the Company used all “legally available funds” to redeem shares of Preferred

Stock. JX 344 at ’455.

H.     This Litigation

       On September 24, 2014, the TCV Funds and Continental filed suit. The complaint

asserted a claim for breach of contract against the Company on the theory that the Company

failed to use all “funds legally available” to redeem shares of Preferred Stock. The

complaint also sought a declaratory judgment that interest on all amounts due was accruing

at a rate of 13% per annum. The complaint further maintained that because the Company

had breached its contractual obligations, the full redemption amount, plus interest, was

immediately due and owing, notwithstanding that the Charter provided for three equal

redemption payments over a period of eighteen months. The complaint also asserted a

claim for breach of fiduciary duty against Philippe, Grandi, and Schroeder on the theory

that they breached their duty of loyalty when determining the amount of funds available

for redemptions. The complaint additionally sought injunctive relief to prevent the

                                            23
Company from “dissipating or otherwise encumbering the Company’s assets, including its

cash.” Dkt. 1.

       On October 24, 2014, the TCV Funds and Continental moved for judgment on the

pleadings. They argued that Section 160 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the

“DGCL”), which generally precludes a corporation from redeeming shares of stock except

out of statutory surplus, established the only restriction on the Company’s obligation to

comply with the redemption provision. The defendants responded that common law also

restricted the Company’s ability to redeem the Preferred Stock and that the Company could

not make a redemption payment that would threaten its ability to continue a going concern.

The parties also disputed whether the Company’s failure to redeem all the shares of

Preferred Stock constituted a default that caused interest to accrue at a rate of 13% annually.

See Dkts. 36, 39, 49, 53.

       On November 21, 2014, while the motion for judgment on the pleading was

pending, the Committee held its next quarterly meeting to consider whether additional

funds could be used for redemption. The Committee determined that an additional

$2.5 million could be used for redemptions, and the Company used those funds to redeem

more shares of Preferred Stock. PTO ¶ 40.

       On February 26, 2015, the court denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings.

The court held that, “in addition to the strictures of Section 160, the undoubted weight of

authority teaches that a corporation cannot purchase its own shares of stock when the

purchase diminishes the ability of the company to pay its debts, or lessens the security of

its creditors.” TCV VI, L.P. v. TradingScreen Inc. (TradingScreen I), 2015 WL 1598045,

                                              24
at *5 (Del. Ch. Feb. 26, 2015), appeal refused, 37 A.3d 205 (Del. 2011). The court also

held that the absence of the term “funds legally available” in the Charter did not change

that analysis because a comparable limitation was implied by law. Id. at *5. The court

concluded:

              To succeed in challenging [the Committee’s] decision, a
              plaintiff must prove that in determining the amount of funds
              legally available, the board acted in bad faith, relied on
              methods and data that were unreliable, or made a determination
              so far off the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud.

Id. at *7 (internal quotation marks omitted).

       The court also held that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a declaration that interest

was accruing at an annual rate of 13%. Id. at *8. The court explained that the plaintiffs

were only entitled to interest under Section 7.1.2 if the Company defaulted on its

obligations under the Charter—i.e., by failing to use all “funds legally available” for the

redemption. See id.

       The plaintiffs asked the trial court to certify its decision for interlocutory appeal.

The trial court granted certification. Dkt. 78. However, by order dated April 7, 2015, the

Delaware Supreme Court refused to accept the appeal, noting that the trial court had

certified the appeal “even though its decision hewed closely to the Court of Chancery’s

thoughtful decision in SV Investment Partners, LLC v. ThoughtWorks, Inc. and our

affirming opinion.” TCV VI, L.P. v. TradingScreen Inc. (TradingScreen II), 115 A.3d 1216

(Del. 2015) (TABLE).

                                              25
I.     The Potential Equity Transactions

       The parties proceeded to conduct discovery. While the parties litigated, the

Committee continued to oversee the redemption process and to meet quarterly to evaluate

whether additional funds were available for redemptions. On March 5, 2015, one month

after the trial court’s decision on the motion for judgment on the pleadings, the Committee

determined that an additional $500,000 was available for redemptions. See PTO ¶ 41;

JX 440 at ’545.

       The Committee also explored significant transactions that might facilitate further

redemptions. All involved potential equity issuances. The counterparties in the potential

transactions were Deutsche Böerse AG, FactSet Research Systems, Inc., RealTick, and

Thomson Reuters Corporation.

       1.     Deutsche Böerse

       In March 2014, the Company entered into discussions with Deutsche Böerse about

a potential equity investment. As part of that process, the Company provided Deutsche

Böerse with financial information and other due diligence. See JX 280; JX 397;

Philippe Tr. 67–68. By August 2014, Deutsche Böerse had proposed to pay $68.25 million

in exchange for 35% of the Company’s common stock. Deutsche Böerse also would

receive (i) an option to acquire sufficient additional shares so that Deutsche Böerse would

own a majority of the common stock, exercisable before the end of 2016, and (ii) an option

to acquire the remaining shares of common stock, exercisable before the end of 2018.

JX 309 at ’778, ’780. The proposal acknowledged that the proceeds would be used in part

to redeem the Preferred Stock. See id. at ’780.

                                            26
       In November 2014, Philippe countered by sending Deutsche Böerse a term sheet

that contemplated Deutsche Böerse paying $70 million for 33.33% of the Company’s

outstanding common stock, with the proceeds used entirely to fund a redemption of the

Preferred Stock. JX 363. Philippe’s proposal included options similar to Deutsche Böerse’s

proposal. See id. at ’498.

       Discussions between the parties continued, and by May 5, 2015, the parties had

agreed on a final term sheet that closely tracked Philippe’s counteroffer. See JX 517

at ’464–76; JX 518. In the subsequent weeks, the parties began drafting a definitive

transaction agreement. JX 550. But the parties differed over how to implement the

transaction. Eventually, Deutsche Böerse underwent a change in management, moved in a

different direction, and stopped communicating with the Company. See Philippe Tr. at 79–

81, 321–22, 327; Grandi Tr. 542–44, 548–49, 553.

       2.     FactSet

       In January 2015, while the Company was in discussions with Deutsche Böerse,

FactSet approached the Company. Grandi Dep. 24. Philippe sent FactSet an overview of

the Company and provided financial information. See JX 484. He also set a term sheet that

contemplated FactSet investing $70 million in exchange for Class B common stock

representing 30% of the Company’s equity value and carrying 30% of its total voting

power. JX 803 at ’671. The term sheet included an option for FactSet to acquire majority

control and another option to buy out the remaining stockholders. Id. at ’671–73.

       In May 2015, FactSet sent Philippe a letter representing that it was “excited to

participate in a potential transaction” and attaching an indication of interest. JX 531 at ’078.

                                              27
The indication of interest proposed an initial investment of $80 million for 46% of the

Company’s equity, with an option to purchase another 27% of the Company’s equity and

a second option to purchase its remaining equity, with each priced based on the Company’s

future performance. See id. at ’081–82. Philippe regarded the price as too low, and the

parties failed to reach a final agreement. Gross Tr. 475–76.

       3.     RealTick and Thomson Reuters

       In March 2015, while the discussions with Deutsche Böerse and FactSet were

ongoing, Trudeau received informal expressions of interest in the Company from RealTick

and Thomson Reuters. See JX 466 at 2–3. Trudeau passed the information along to the

Committee.

       Philippe did not want to engage with RealTick or Thompson Reuters because he

viewed them as competitors. See JX 824 at ’511. He wanted to concentrate on the offers

the Company already had received. Id.

       After considering Philippe’s response, the Committee considered the two

expressions of interest. The Committee harbored concern that TCV was trying to engineer

a sale, and Grandi cautioned Trudeau about any efforts in that direction:

              After having been marketed by bankers and shareholders,
              including TCV, for several years, further efforts to market the
              company at this time are likely to be counterproductive and
              harmful to the company and its shareholders. In order to secure
              the company’s viability as a going concern, the Board and
              management need to reassure its staff and its clients/customers,
              who have been severely destabilized by the continuous market
              rumors concerning the redemption and the long-term viability
              of the business. . . . I would therefore request that TCV refrain
              from suggesting [for RealTick or Thomson Reuters] or anyone
              else that the company is for sale. . . . Please do not hesitate to

                                             28
               provide my personal contact details to [RealTick and Thomson
               Reuters] so that they can contact me to ascertain if a desirable
               transaction may be available, thereafter the Committee and the
               entire Board can decide how to respond.

JX 466 at 1.

       Philippe informed a RealTick representative that he believed the Company needed

to focus on other opportunities. See JX 824 at ’511; Grandi Tr. 512. After that exchange,

no one from RealTick contacted the Company. Grandi Tr. 558.

       Thomson Reuters, however, made contact. In May 2015, a representative of

Thomson Reuters reached out to Philippe. See JX 543 at ’544. Discussions ensued, but

Philippe believed a transaction would be difficult because Thomson Reuters was a

competitor. Philippe Dep. 211–12.

       In December 2015, Thomson Reuters sent Philippe an indication of interest in

acquiring the Company for $175 million, subject to further diligence but without a

financing contingency. JX 810. The indication of interest expired on January 5, 2016. Id.

at 3. Philippe did not share it with the Board until January 8, 2016. See id.

       Although the indication of interest had expired, Philippe communicated with

Thomson Reuters regarding a potential transaction over the following weeks. See JX 610.

The Company uploaded documents to a data room, Thomson Reuters enlisted outside

counsel to advise them on a potential transaction, and the parties signed an NDA. See

JX 610 at ’516–17; JX 822 at 1. The Committee also considered the possibility of a

transaction and discussed the process with its advisors. See JX 820.

                                             29
       During the discussions, Trudeau told Grandi that Thomson Reuters had expressed

“some concern with having Philippe as the sole spokesperson on [the Company’s] side.”

JX 611 at ’519. Trudeau reported that Thomson Reuters nevertheless remained “very

interested.” Id.

       Other impediments, however, proved fatal. Thompson Reuters balked at the

implications of this litigation. JX 822 at 2. The Company worried about Thomson Reuters’

compliance with the European antitrust laws. See JX 611 at ’519; JX 822 at 1. The

Company also feared that Thomson Reuters was using the due diligence process to obtain

information about a competitor and was not seriously interested in a transaction. See JX

822 at 1. Ultimately, Thomson Reuters did not make a formal offer. See Trudeau Tr. 911–

12; Grandi Tr. 592–93.

J.     The Stay

       The case was tried on February 16–19, 2016. The parties agreed to a schedule to

govern post-trial briefing, and the court set post-trial argument for June 1, 2016.

       In April 2016, however, the Board received a demand letter from an attorney

representing an employee in the Company’s sales department who claimed that Philippe

had committed assault and battery against his client. Grandi and Schroeder asked the

Company’s outside counsel to investigate the claims. While the investigation was ongoing,

the Board instructed Philippe not to participate in daily sales meetings or to communicate

with the complaining employee.

                                             30
         Philippe failed to follow these instructions. During a meeting of the Board on

May 10, 2016, Schroeder, Grandi, Placenti, and Trudeau voted to place Philippe on paid

leave.

         In response, Philippe purposed to act by written consent on behalf of holders of a

majority of the common stock to remove Schroeder and replace him with Christophe

Roupie. After Philippe purported to take these actions, Philippe, Patrick, and Roupie left

the meeting. The remaining directors, including Schroeder, resolved to place Philippe on

leave for six months, to install Schroeder as Interim President and CEO, to remove Philippe

as Chairman, to remove Philippe as a director and officer of each of the Company’s

subsidiaries, and to create an executive committee of the Board consisting of Grandi,

Placenti, and Trudeau.

         That evening, the Board notified the Company’s employees of the actions it had

taken. Philippe responded by sending an email to all the Company’s employees asserting

that the Board’s actions were illegal and ineffective. The next day, Philippe sent a further

email to all the Company’s employees denying that any changes in the Company’s

leadership had occurred, except for his replacing Schroeder with Roupie.

         On May 12, 2016, Schroeder, Grandi, Placenti, and Trudeau filed an action under

Section 225 of the DGCL against Philippe, Patrick, and Roupie. The plaintiffs sought

determinations that the actions Philippe had taken by consent were invalid and that the

actions they took as a Board majority were valid. See C.A. No. 12328-VCL, Dkt. 1.

                                             31
       In light of these developments, the plaintiffs moved to stay proceedings in this

action pending resolution of the Section 225 action. By order dated May 23, 2016, the court

granted the motion. Dkt. 275.

K.     Continental Revives The Litigation.

       For the next four years, the case remained stayed. During this period, the Board

removed Philippe permanently from his positions with the Company, and litigation broke

out on multiple fronts between Philippe, his former colleagues, and the Company. See

Dkt. 344. Philippe sought to lift the stay for limited purposes, and the court addressed a

motion by Philippe to compel Morris Nichols to produce its litigation file. See Dkts. 306,

317, 323. Otherwise, however, the stay remained in place. See Dkt. 307.

       In June 2020, Continental moved to lift the stay, observing that the Section 225

proceeding had concluded. Dkt. 344. That was true, but it was not why Continental sought

to lift the stay. The Section 225 action had wrapped up years earlier, in February 2017, and

no one had sought to resuscitate this litigation.

       The real reason that Continental sought to lift the say was because the Company had

entered into an agreement to sell a subsidiary to Singapore Exchange Limited. That

transaction would result in the Company having sufficient funds legally available to

redeem all the outstanding shares of Preferred Stock, plus the ability to pay any interest

that was due.

       On June 26, 2020, the Board approved a payment of $5,485,947 to Continental to

settle its redemption claim. Continental rejected the offer. See Dkt. 367.

       As of July 7, 2020, the Company had at least $6,454,504.86 in legally available

                                              32
funds that could be used for redemptions. On August 27, 2020, the Company paid

Continental the full redemption price of $6,454,504.86 in exchange for its 386,266 shares.

The Company also paid Continental $17,593.26 in interest, which represented the amount

of interest that accrued on the full redemption amount less the settlement offer, assuming

that interest began to run on July 7 at an annual rate of 13%. See Dkt. 369.

       Although this court had rejected a similar argument years before, Continental

maintained that it was entitled to 13% interest per year on the full redemption price because

the Company had defaulted when it failed to redeem one-third of Continental’s shares on

each of the redemption dates. Continental claimed that it was entitled to interest of

approximately $6 million, or 93% of the redemption amount. See Dkt. 348.

       The TCV Funds did not join Continental in seeking to lift the stay. The TCV Funds

and all other holders of Preferred Stock (except Continental) settled their dispute with the

Company over the redemption. They accepted the redemption price plus a premium equal

to approximately 23% of the redemption amount. See Dkt. 348 ¶ 10. Having resolved their

dispute with the Company, the TCV Funds sought and obtained an order dismissing them

from the case. See Dkts. 347, 360.

       Even though Continental only sought relief in the form of an amount of money it

claimed to be due, Continental moved to expedite the remaining post-trial proceedings.

Dkt. 348. The court granted the motion to lift the stay but denied the motion to expedite.

See Dkts. 358, 359. The parties completed post-trial briefing on a non-expedited schedule,

and the court heard post-trial argument.

                                             33
                              II.      LEGAL ANALYSIS

       Continental sought to prove that the Company breached the redemption obligation

found in Section 7 of the Charter (the “Redemption Provision”) by not fully redeeming its

shares of Preferred Stock. Continental maintains that the Company had a contractual

obligation to make three equal payments of $2,370,942.91 to Continental in

September 2014, March 2015, and September 2015. Continental asserts that because the

Company did not make those payments, interest began to accrue at a rate of 13% on each

payment (the “Default Rate”). Recognizing that the Company redeemed some of

Continental’s shares in 2014 and 2015, and recognizing that the Company has now paid

the full redemption price plus some interest, Continental seeks a monetary judgment equal

to the additional interest that Continental contends is due.

       According to Continental, all it needed to do to prove a prima facie case of breach

of contract was point out that the Company did not redeem all of its shares and pay the full

redemption amounts on the dates contemplated by the Charter. At that point, Continental

says that the burden shifted to the defendants to prove that spending a single dollar more

on redemptions would have rendered the Company insolvent.

       Continental’s position runs contrary to binding Delaware Supreme Court precedent,

which holds that the party seeking to enforce a mandatory redemption provision has the

burden of proof. SV Inv. P’rs, LLC v. ThoughtWorks, Inc. (ThoughtWorks II), 37 A.3d 205,

211 (Del. 2011). “When a board decides on the amount of surplus available to make

redemptions, its decision is entitled to deference absent a showing that the board: (1) acted

in bad faith, (2) relied on unreliable methods and data, or (3) made determinations so far

                                             34
off the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud.” Id. This court previously said

precisely that in a ruling that remains law of the case. See TradingScreen I, 2015 WL

1598045, at *7.

       In a fallback argument, Continental seeks to prove its case within the confines of

binding precedent by showing that when determining the amount of funds that could be

used for redemptions, the individual defendants relied on unreliable methods and data,

made determinations so far off the mark as to constitute constructive fraud, and acted in

bad faith. Continental failed to carry its burden. Contrary to Continental’s assertions, the

individual defendants determined appropriately that the Company needed $20 million in

cash to operate as a going concern, and the individual defendants properly used all of the

funds in excess of that amount for redemptions.

       Continental thus failed to prove that the defendants’ breached the redemption right.

Notwithstanding that fact, Continental maintains that it is entitled to eight years of interest

at the Default Rate. This court previously held that under the plain meaning of the

Redemption Provision, interest only accrues at the Default Rate if the Company defaults

under the Redemption Provision, meaning that the Company had the ability to redeem

additional shares and failed to do so.

       Continental did not prove that the Company had additional funds that it could deploy

legally for redemptions in 2014 and 2015, so Continental is not entitled to interest from

that period. Continental did prove that it is entitled to interest at the Default Rate for the

period from July 7, 2020, when the Company had funds that it could deploy legally for the

redemption, until August 27, 2020, when the Company made the redemption payment plus

                                              35
some interest. Continental also is entitled to pre- and post-judgment interest at the Default

Rate on the additional amount of interest to which Continental was entitled as of August 27,

2020, which shall accrue until the date of payment.20

A.     Continental’s Arguments About The Burden Of Proof

       Continental asserts that it established a prima facie case for breach of the

Redemption Provision merely by showing that the Company failed to redeem its shares in

2014 and 2015. Continental claims that once it demonstrated that simple fact, the burden

of proof shifted to the defendants to prove that they were unable to redeem Continental’s

shares. Those contentions misstate Delaware law.

       When bringing a claim for a breach of a mandatory redemption provision, the

plaintiff must prove that the corporation had additional funds that it could deploy legally

for redemptions (commonly called “funds legally available”), yet failed to deploy the funds

for that purpose. SV Inv. P’rs, LLC v. ThoughtWorks, Inc. (ThoughtWorks I), 7 A.3d 973,

988–89 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d, ThoughtWorks II, 37 A.3d at 211. The existence of funds

legally available operates as a condition precedent to the enforcement of a mandatory

       20
          In addition to its claim for breach of the Redemption Provision, Continental
asserted a claim for breach of fiduciary duty. That claim is meritless. The Redemption
Provision was a special contractual right held by the Preferred Stockholders. Thus, the
directors did not owe fiduciary duties to the Preferred Stockholders in connection with the
Redemption Provision. See Frederick Hsu Living Tr. v. ODN Hldg. Corp., 2017 WL
1437308, at *21 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017) (collecting authorities). The claim for breach of
fiduciary duty also would not support the existence of a default, which is a prerequisite for
award of interest at the Default Rate. The claim for breach of fiduciary duty is thus
irrelevant to the only issue remaining in the case.

                                             36
redemption right. Brevan Howard Credit Catalyst Master Fund Ltd. v. Spanish Broad. Sys.,

Inc., 2014 WL 2943570, at *6 (Del. Ch. June 27, 2014); see Harbinger Cap. Master P’rs

Master Fund I, Ltd. v. Granite Broad. Corp., 906 A.2d 218, 221 (Del. Ch. 2006) (holding

that the existence of funds legally available was a condition precedent to the right to a

dividend). Thus, a preferred stockholder like Continental that seeks to enforce a mandatory

redemption right bears the burden of proving the existence of funds legally available. See,

e.g., 11 William Meade Fletcher et al., Fletcher's Cyclopedia of the Law of Private

Corporations § 5310 (perm. ed., rev. vol. 2011) (“[T]he burden rests upon the preferred

shareholder to show that redemption can be accomplished without prejudicing the rights of

creditors.”).

       Whether the corporation had funds that could have been deployed legally to redeem

more shares is not a valuation exercise that the court decides as if the case were a mini-

appraisal. ThoughtWorks I, 7 A.3d at 988. A board’s determination as to the amount of

funds legally available is a judgment-laden exercise entitled to deference. See

ThoughtWorks II, 37 A.3d at 211. “In the absence of bad faith or fraud on the part of the

board, courts will not substitute our concepts of wisdom for that of the directors” as to the

amount of funds available for redemptions. Klang v. Smith’s Food & Drug Ctrs., Inc., 702

A.2d 150, 156 (Del. 1997) (cleaned up). Therefore, to establish that a corporation failed to

comply with a mandatory redemption right, the party seeking to enforce the right must

prove that the board “(1) acted in bad faith, (2) relied on unreliable methods and data, or

(3) made determinations so far off the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud.”

ThoughtWorks II, 37 A.3d at 211; accord. TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *7.

                                             37
       To argue for a different rule under which the defendants would have the burden of

proof, Continental relies on two Delaware cases from different contexts. Both cases applied

the hornbook principal of contract law that a party who contends that its contractual

obligation was excused bears the burden of proving the grounds for excusal. But neither

case involved a mandatory redemption obligation; both involved traditional third-party

contracts under which a counterparty could gain a judgment entitling it to exercise creditors

rights.21 Special considerations apply to mandatory redemption provisions because of the

junior position that equity holders occupy in the capital structure. Both the DGCL and the

common law impose restrictions on redemption rights that other contract claimants do not

face. See 8 Del. C. § 160(a)(1); ThoughtWorks I, 7 A.3d at 986–87 (collecting authorities).

       Continental disputes these realities, asserting that “[i]t makes no sense to tell one

class of contract holders—with a contract right to a specific payment on a specific day—

that its contract right can’t be reduced to judgment because a judgment creditor sits higher

in the ‘stack’ than a stockholder.” Dkt. 255 at 6 n.3. But an equity investor is not like other

contractual claimants: The equity investor purchased equity, which is presumptively

       21
          See Hexion Specialty Chems., Inc. v. Huntsman Corp., 965 A.2d 715, 755 (Del.
Ch. 2008); In re IBP, Inc. S’holders Litig., 789 A.2d 14, 53 (Del. Ch. 2001). In its reply
brief, Continental cited additional cases for the proposition that a party to a contract who
seeks to excuse its non-performance on the basis of illegality bears the burden of proving
that affirmative defense. Those cases did not involve mandatory redemption rights either,
nor did they involve comparable issues. See Fonds de Regul. et de Controle Cafe Cacao v.
Lion Cap. Mgmt., LLC, 2007 WL 315863, at *4–5 (Del. Ch. Jan. 22, 2007) (considering
contention that shares were void for lack of consideration); Rothenberg v. Santa Fe Pac.
Corp., 1992 WL 111206, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 18, 1992) (assessing court’s ability to
consider an exculpatory provision at the pleading stage).

                                              38
permanent capital. See ODN, 2017 WL 1437308, at *18. Black-letter law recognizes that

“the shareholder's right to compel a redemption is subordinate to the rights of creditors.”

11 Fletcher et al., supra, § 5310.

       As against creditors of the corporation, preferred shareholders have no
       greater rights than common shareholders. They have no preference over
       them, either in respect to dividends or capital, and have no lien upon the
       property of the corporation, except if a statute provides otherwise. On the
       contrary, their rights, both in respect to dividends and capital are subordinate
       to the rights of such creditors, and consequently they are not entitled to any
       part of the corporate assets until the corporate debts are fully paid. Nor can
       the corporation give them any preference, either in respect to the payment of
       principal or dividends, which will be superior to the rights of creditors, unless
       by virtue of express statutory authority.

Id. § 5297 (footnotes omitted). The Bankruptcy Code implements these principles by

providing that if a preferred stockholder has obtained a money judgment for the amount of

an unsatisfied redemption obligation, then that money judgment has a special, subordinated

status, junior to all other creditors, that prevents the preferred stockholder from exercising

the full rights that a true creditor would possess.22 An action for a money judgment based

on a mandatory redemption right is different precisely because the plaintiff seeks to

transform itself from a holder of equity into a creditor. See QC Hldgs., Inc. v. Allconnect,

Inc., 2018 WL 4091721, at *10 (Del. Ch. Aug. 28, 2018) (explaining that, after exercising

       22
          See 11 U.S.C. § 510(b) (providing that a claim “for damages arising from the
purchase or sale of . . . a security . . . shall be subordinated to all claims or interests that are
senior to or equal the claim or interest represented by such security”); In re Telegroup, Inc.,
281 F.3d 133, 142 (3d Cir. 2002) (explaining policy underlying Section 510(b) of
“prevent[ing] disaffected equity investors from recouping their investment losses in parity
with general unsecured creditors in the event of bankruptcy”).

                                                39
its redemption right, “QC Holdings became a contractual claimant, albeit one that could

not enforce the traditional rights of a creditor because of the statutory and common law

limitations on redemption”).

       As further support for its contention that the defendants should bear the burden of

proof, Continental relies on decisions from other jurisdictions that addressed mandatory

redemption rights. “[T]here is no consensus among the state courts as to who bears the

burden of proof in an action to enforce a stock redemption agreement. Some courts have

placed the burden upon the plaintiff shareholder. Other courts have placed the burden on

the corporation.” In re Jobs.com, Inc., 283 B.R. 209, 215 n.3 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2002)

(citations omitted). Continental found four cases from two jurisdictions that placed the

burden of proof on the defendants, but they do not accurately describe Delaware law. See

Richards v. Ernst Wiener Co., 100 N.E. 592 (N.Y. 1912); Nakano v. Nakano McGlone

Nightingale Advert., Inc., 377 N.Y.S.2d 996 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1975); Borst v. E. Coast

Shipyards, Inc., 105 N.Y.S.2d 228 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1951); Stockbridge v. Gemini Air Cargo,

Inc., 611 S.E.2d 600 (Va. 2005).

       In yet another effort to argue that the defendants should bear the burden of proof,

Continental asserts that a party seeking to enforce a mandatory redemption right should

only have to prove the existence of legally available funds if the phrase “funds legally

available” or some variant appears explicitly in the redemption provision. As the court has

already held in this case, whether the phrase appears expressly or not does not affect the

allocation of the burden because in its absence, “a comparable limitation [is] implied by

law.” See TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *5–6 (quoting ThoughtWorks I, 7 A.3d

                                            40
at 990). The phrase “funds legally available” or some similar variant does not appear in the

Redemption Provision, but that does not alter the allocation of the burden of proof. The

party seeking to enforce the mandatory redemption right first must prove a condition

precedent by establishing that the corporation had funds that it could deploy legally for

redemptions.

       Finally, Continental argues that the defendants should bear the burden of proving

illegality because they pled that defense affirmatively in their answer. The defendants’

assertion of that defense does not dictate the allocation of the burden of proof on the

underlying claim. As part of its affirmative claim, Continental must prove that in

determining the amount of funds that could be legally deployed for a redemption, the board

acted in bad faith, relied on methods and data that were unreliable, or made determinations

so far off the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud. See ThoughtWorks II, 37

A.3d at 211; TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *7.

       The fact that Continental currently resists the limitations that the law imposes on its

redemption right is nothing new.

       Parties seeking to enforce redemption rights regularly chafe against these
       limitations, but they confer substantial benefits on both issuers and capital
       providers during other phases of the corporate life cycle. For example, the
       limitations on redemption enable preferred stock with debt-like features to
       be classified as equity for tax purposes, thereby avoiding the problem of
       imputed interest and lowering the cost of capital for [companies issuing
       preferred stock]. The same ability to treat preferred stock with debt-like
       features as equity also carries benefits for companies operating in regulated
       industries, such as financial institution that have to meet capital
       requirements.

                                             41
QC Holdings, 2018 WL 4091721, at *10 n.39 (citations omitted). A sophisticated investor

that opts to purchase preferred stock, as Continental did, must take the bitter with the sweet.

B.     The Assertion That The Directors Had A Duty To Redeem Shares Until The
       Brink Of Insolvency

       Continental next theorizes that to defeat a claim for breach, the defendants had to

prove that if they had deployed any more funds for redemptions, then they would have

rendered the Company insolvent.23 For the reasons discussed previously, the burden of

proof did not shift to the defendants; it remained with Continental. Equally important, a

mandatory redemption right does not obligate directors to spend on redemptions to the

brink of insolvency. The directors are entitled to retain sufficient funds to ensure that the

corporation remains a going concern. See ODN, 2017 WL 1437308 at *14; see also In re

Int’l Radiator Co., 92 A. 255, 255 (Del. Ch. 1914) (Curtis, C.) (“A corporation cannot

purchase its own shares of stock when the purchase diminishes the ability of the company

to pay its debts, or lessens the security of its creditors.”).

       When facing a mandatory redemption obligation, a corporation’s directors must

determine the amount of funds that the corporation can legally deploy for redemptions.

       23
         See Dkt. 255 at 2–3 (“Plaintiffs’ position is simple: if Defendants are able to prove
a Redemption payment would, in fact, cause insolvency (either balance sheet or cash flow),
then TradingScreen has a valid excuse to postpone that payment until it can be made (in
whole or in part) without causing insolvency.”); id. at 9 (“Stated differently, TradingScreen
was obligated to redeem Preferred Stock from any and all cash available, and
TradingScreen did not have discretion to deploy cash for other purposes unless such
diversion of cash was necessary to avoid insolvency.”); id. at 14–15 (“TradingScreen must
show that there were no viable options it could exercise to allow it to timely perform (in
whole or part) without disastrous financial consequences.”).

                                               42
One limitation on the corporation’s ability to deploy funds stems from Section 160 of the

DGCL. That section authorizes a Delaware corporation to redeem its shares, then

immediately qualifies the grant of authority by providing that “no corporation shall . . .

[p]urchase or redeem its own shares of capital stock for cash or other property when the

capital of the corporation is impaired or when such purchase or redemption would cause

any impairment of the capital of the corporation.” 8 Del. C. § 160(a)(1). There is also an

exception to the exception: A corporation “may purchase or redeem out of capital any of

its own shares which are entitled upon any distribution of its assets, whether by dividend

or in liquidation, to a preference over another class or series of its stock . . . if such shares

will be retired upon their acquisition and the capital of the corporation reduced in

accordance with §§ 243 and 244 of this title.” Id.

       “A repurchase impairs capital if the funds used in the repurchase exceed the amount

of the corporation’s ‘surplus,’ defined by 8 Del. C. § 154 to mean the excess of net assets

over the par value of the corporation’s issued stock.” Klang, 702 A.2d at 153. “Net assets

means the amount by which total assets exceed total liabilities.” 8 Del. C. § 154. Under

Section 160, therefore, “unless a corporation redeems shares and retires them to reduce its

capital, ‘a corporation may use only its surplus for the purchase of shares of its own capital

stock.’” ThoughtWorks II, 37 A.3d at 210 (quoting Int’l Radiator Co., 92 A. 2 at 256).

       Other sources of law can also constrain a corporation’s ability to deploy funds to

redeem shares. As a matter of common law, a corporation “cannot purchase its own shares

of stock when the purchase diminishes the ability of the company to pay its debts, or lessens

the security of its creditors.” ThoughtWorks I, 7 A.3d at 987. “The corporation [must] be

                                               43
able to continue as a going concern and not be rendered insolvent by the distribution.” Id.

at 988 (emphasis added). “To continue as a going concern, a corporation needs sufficient

resources to operate for the foreseeable future without the threat of liquidation.”

TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *6 (internal quotation marks omitted); accord.

Klang, 702 A.2d at 154.

       A redemption payment that renders a corporation insolvent is thus unlawful, but

insolvency is not a bright-line demarcation. As the foregoing authorities show, the

corporation must be able to continue as a going concern. The directors are not obligated to

redeem shares up to the brink of insolvency. The directors are entitled to (and must) use

their judgment to retain sufficient resources to operate for the foreseeable future without

the threat of liquidation.

       Implicitly anticipating this result, Continental falls back to the concept of the

“foreseeable future” and argues that it cannot mean two years. Instead, Continental claims

that “the applicable insolvency tests permit forward-looking consideration of solvency for

one year.” Dkt. 366 at 11–15. The authorities do not establish a bright-line, one-year rule.

Instead, this court’s precedents refer to the foreseeable future generally, and that concept

recognizes that companies are different and that directors must have discretion when

evaluating the appropriate time horizon and the resources required for their particular

corporation to continue as a going concern. See ODN, 2017 WL 1437308, at *14–15 & n.7

(collecting authorities); TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *7 n.41 (agreeing that it is

appropriate to look to “a reasonable period of time in the future” when assessing a

company’s ability to continue as a going concern); cf. Webster’s Third New International

                                            44
Dictionary (1976) (defining “foreseeable” as “to see (as a future occurrence or

development) as certain or unavoidable”). In this case, the directors engaged in a

meaningful process and determined that because of factors associated with the Company’s

business, they needed to account for a two-year period. That determination is one of the

many judgment-laden issues that directors must confront when determining how much of

the corporation’s cash can be deployed to redeem equity.

       A mandatory redemption obligation does not obligate the directors to jeopardize the

corporation’s status as a going concern. Nor does a mandatory redemption obligation

impose a one-year, rolling event horizon on a company’s use of cash. Continental’s

arguments are contrary to law.

C.     The Claim Of Breach Under The Governing Standard

       Having devoted much of its rhetorical firepower to arguing for changes in the law,

Continental finally seeks to show that the Company breached its redemption obligation

under the governing standard. As explained previously, to establish a breach of a

mandatory redemption right, Continental had the burden to prove that the Committee acted

in bad faith, relied on methods and data that were unreliable, or made determinations so far

off the mark as to constitute actual or constructive fraud. See ThoughtWorks II, 37 A.3d

at 211; TradingScreen I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *7. As on other issues, when determining

the amount of funds available for redemptions, directors may rely in good faith on the

records of the corporation, reports from management, advice from experts, and input from

advisors. See Klang, 702 A.2d at 156 & n.12 (citing 8 Del. C. §§ 141(e), 160, 172).

                                            45
       1.     Unreliable Methods And Data

       Continental contends that the Committee used unreliable methods and data when

determining the amount of funds that the Company could use for redemptions. Continental

specifically attacks the Committee’s judgments regarding the amount of capital that the

Company needed to show on its balance sheet to demonstrate its financial strength to

counterparties, the degree to which capital was required to comply with foreign regulatory

requirements, and the amount the Company would owe in repatriation taxes.24 Continental

failed to carry its burden on this issue.

       Continental first challenges the Committee’s judgment regarding the amount of

capital that the Company needed to show on its balance sheet to demonstrate to

counterparties that it was financially sound, which everyone called “show capital.”

Continental points out that (i) management provided recommendations on show capital and

that (ii) the Committee’s financial advisors did not create their own, independent

calculation of show capital. Continental concludes that the record contained insufficient

evidence to support the need for show capital.

       24
          In its reply brief, Continental argues that the Company’s failure to implement
Pearl Meyer’s compensation recommendation means that the Committee unreasonably
relied on it. Continental waived this argument by failing to raise it in its opening brief. See
Franklin Balance Sheet Inv. Fund v. Crowley, 2006 WL 3095952, at *4 (Del. Ch. Oct. 19,
2006) (explaining that, “under the briefing rules, a party is obliged in its motion and
opening brief to set forth all of the grounds, authorities and arguments supporting its
motion” and “should not hold matters in reserve for reply briefs,” which “should consist of
material necessary to respond to the answering brief”).

                                              46
       There is nothing wrong with management providing a recommendation on show

capital. The record shows that management engaged in a good faith process that resulted

in an estimated range and recommendation regarding show capital. Gross led the process,

and he enlisted the help of Tom Mahoney, the Company’s COO, in gathering for the

Committee documentation “as to either clients, potential clients, and/or suppliers who have

requested/required financial information on the Company.” JX 386 at ’635; see Gross Dep.

249–50. Mahoney sent Gross examples of requests from counterparties for the Company’s

financial statements, and he expressed his view that counterparties wanted to see an amount

of cash equal to “some percentage of [the Company’s] annual expense [in] total and at a

minimum a multiple of the projected revenue from [the counterparty].” JX 386 at ’634.

Gross also knew that counterparties had raised the issue of show capital. See Gross Tr.

461–62. Management ultimately recommended a capital reserve of $20–30 million based

on their interactions with counterparties and their perception of the market. See JX 330

at 13; Dudney Dep. 178–83, 217–18.

       There is nothing suspicious about the Company’s financial advisors not generating

their own, independent calculation of show capital. Financial advisors regularly rely on

information provided by management, usually in the form of financial projections. 25 The

       25
          See, e.g., Nguyen v. Barrett, 2015 WL 5882709, at *3–4 (Del. Ch. Oct. 8, 2015)
(acknowledging that financial advisor relied on management’s projections in developing
its DCF valuation); In re Riverbed Tech., Inc. S’holders Litig., 2015 WL 5458041, at *7
(Del. Ch. Sept. 17, 2015) (noting that financial advisors relied on management’s inputs to
the free cash flow projections and capital expenditure projections in connection with
fairness opinion); In re BioClinica, Inc. S’holder Litig., 2013 WL 673736, at *5 (Del. Ch.
Feb. 25, 2013) (acknowledging that financial advisor relied on management projections in
                                            47
fact that the financial advisor has relied on management’s projections and has not prepared

an independent valuation is a standard disclosure in fairness opinions.26 The record shows

that AlixPartners worked closely with Gross to understand the Company’s cash forecast

and its need for cash.27 Through its presentation, AlixPartners synthesized management’s

views and presented the information to the Committee.

          The Committee was entitled to consider management’s views when exercising its

judgment on the amount of capital that the Company needed to retain. The Committee did

not blindly adopt management’s assessment. The Committee deliberated, discussed the

level of capital that the Company needed with its advisors, reviewed a detailed cash

forecast for the Company, and determined that $20 million was the appropriate figure.

preparing its fairness opinion); In re CheckFree Corp. S’holders Litig., 2007 WL 3262188,
at *2 (Del. Ch. Nov. 1, 2007) (same); In re Topps Co. S’holders Litig., 926 A.2d 58, 75
(Del. Ch. 2007) (“According to counsel, Lehman will not base a fairness opinion on
projections that have not been prepared entirely by management.”); Sean J. Griffith &
Anthony A. Rickey, Objections to Disclosure Settlements: A How-To Guide, 70 Okla. L.
Rev. 281, 305 (2017) (indicating that financial advisors commonly rely upon free cash flow
figures generated by management when preparing fairness opinions); Stephen A. Radin,
The Director’s Duty of Care Three Years After Smith v. Van Gorkom, 39 Hastings L.J.
707, 740–41 (1988) (discussing financial advisors reliance on management projections).

           See, e.g., In re Netsmart Techs., Inc. S’holders Litig., 924 A.2d 171, 202 (Del. Ch.
          26

2007) (“[I]n keeping with the industry norm, William Blair’s fairness opinion devotes most
of its text to emphasizing the limitations on the bank’s liability and the extent to which the
bank was relying on representations of management.”); In re Pure Res., Inc. S’holder Litig.,
808 A.2d 421, 449 (Del. Ch. 2002) (indicating that fairness opinions are often “qualified
by a gauze of protective language designed to insulate the banker from liability”).
          27
               See JX 302 at 12; JX 310 at 12; see also JX 281 at 11; JX 298 at 12; JX 330 at
12, 43.

                                                48
       The Committee also had other sources of information that it considered, such as the

Company’s historic cash balance and the levels of capital maintained by the Company’s

peers. The Company’s historic cash balance ranged from $30 to $50 million. See JX 186

at ’207. The Company’s peers maintained cash balances at similar or greater levels. See

JX 260 at ’988; Gross Tr. 440. The Committee exercised its judgment in selecting a

significantly lower figure of $20 million.

       At trial, Trudeau testified as the plaintiffs’ principal witness. He agreed that the

Committee followed appropriate steps when determining the amount of funds available for

redemptions. Trudeau Tr. 859–60. He agreed that the Company prepared a proper cash

forecast, and he had no dispute with the projections. Id.at 860–61. He also agreed that the

Company needed to maintain at least $10–15 million in working capital. Id. 790–94. And

he agreed that the Company needed “at least $10 million to demonstrate financial strength”

to its counterparties. Id. 838–39; see also Purcell Dep. 77–79. An internal TCV

presentation stated that the Company needed $15 million “to stay in business.” JX 15 at 3.

TCV’s figure of $15 million was sufficiently close to the Committee’s figure of $20 million

to support the reliability of the latter amount. The Committee made a judgment-laden

decision using appropriate inputs. Continental did not prove otherwise.

       Continental also disputes whether there were regulatory restrictions on the

Company’s use of capital and the extent to which the Company faced repatriation taxes.

Neither issue affected the Committee’s determination of the amount of funds available for

redemptions. The Committee did not consider those potential restrictions because they did

not have sufficient information about them. Grandi Tr. 564; Schroeder Tr. 650. When

                                             49
AlixPartners presented the range of funds legally available for redemptions, AlixPartners

treated the restricted cash attributable to regulatory capital and the reserve for repatriation

taxes as co-extensive with show capital. See, e.g., JX 330 at 12 (noting that “show capital”

was “inclusive of the restricted cash”). Eliminating the entire amount allocated to

regulatory capital and repatriation taxes thus would not have reduced the $20 million in

capital that the Committee determined was necessary for the Company to remain a going

concern. See Gross Tr. 497–98; Schroeder Tr. 650. Continental’s attacks on these

components do not provide a basis to question the Committee’s judgment.

       Continental failed to prove that the Committee used unreliable data or

methodologies when determining the amount of funds that could be deployed legally for

redemptions. The Committee followed an appropriate process.

       2.     Constructive Fraud

       Continental next argues that the Committee’s determinations of surplus and

available cash were so off the mark as to amount to constructive fraud. Because the

Company’s available cash was less than its surplus, the former served as the binding

constraint on redemptions. This decision therefore only evaluates whether the Committee

reached a determination regarding available cash that was so off the mark as to constitute

constructive fraud.

       To support its claim of constructive fraud, Continental argues that during the

redemption process, the Company’s directors and officers manipulated the Company’s

discretionary spending to make it seem like the Company would less cash available for

redemptions. As evidence, Continental points out that management recommended

                                              50
increasing employee compensation and paying bonuses in cash. Continental relies heavily

on a December 2014 email from Grandi to the other members of the Committee in which

he wrote: “If we use stock rather than cash as retention, then we will have to pay the cash

they [sic] we had earmarked for that purpose to the redeemers. We lose the argument that

we have used to justify retention of cash. . . .” JX 828 at ’522.

       Continental failed to carry its burden on this issue. The Committee approved

increases in employee compensation after receiving a report from Pearl Meyer, an outside

compensation consultant, which advised that the Company’s employee compensation

ranked below the 25th percentile of peer companies and that to attract and retain talent, the

Company needed to increase base compensation to the 75th percentile. JX 263 at 1, 3.

When using the Company’s cash forecast to determine the amount of cash that the

Company needed to retain, the Committee notably did not use full amount of

management’s proposal. The Committee only included the additional $2.6 million in base

compensation. The Committee excluded the additional $2.9 million for bonus

compensation because the bonuses were tied to performance targets. See JX 327 at ’590;

JX 330 at 22.

       The Committee also appropriately decided to continue paying bonuses in cash, as

the Company had done during the preceding two years. That rational business judgment

addressed legitimate concern about employee retention given both the Company’s below-

market levels of compensation and the questionable value of stock awards in light of the

redemption obligation. See Gross Tr. 459; Grandi Tr. 479–89; Held Tr. 918–19. At the

valuation of $120 million established for purposes of the redemption process, the common

                                             51
stock had no value. An outside compensation consultant recommended the use of cash to

pay bonuses, and the Committee agreed. Grandi wrote his email after the Committee made

that determination. On its face, the email suggests only that Grandi wanted to remain

consistent with the Committee’s earlier determination.

       Continental also claims that the defendants engaged in constructive fraud because

they did not adequately explore the availability of debt and equity financing. On the debt

front, Continental focuses on Philippe’s reluctance to provide confidential information to

financial sources and his eventual instruction to Gross to stop pursuing debt financing. The

record shows that Philippe did not withhold confidential information to interfere with debt

financing; he was generally obsessed with confidentiality and reluctant to share financial

information with anyone. The record also shows that despite Philippe’s instruction, Gross

continued to search for financing. Gross Tr. 341–46, 401–03. The record establishes that

the Company’s credit profile was so risky that it could not obtain a meaningful amount of

financing without an equity infusion. See JX 263 at ’579–80; JX 327 at ’588; Grandi Tr.

569–70; Schroeder Tr. 673–74; Romanelli Tr. 1074–76; Canning Tr. 1212–14. Moreover,

no lender would provide a loan to fund a partial redemption in the context of on-going

litigation. See Gross Tr. 403–35.

       On the equity front, Continental again takes issue with Philippe’s involvement in

the process, but the record shows that his interactions with Deutsche Böerse, FactSet, and

RealTick were appropriate. Philippe and Deutsche Böerse exchanged multiple term sheets,

but discussions broke down after Deutsche Böerse experienced a change in management

and moved in a different direction. Philippe and FactSet could not agree on a valuation for

                                            52
the Company. Finally, Philippe legitimately resisted negotiating with RealTick given its

status as a competitor and the Company’s ongoing negotiations with two other bidders.

       Philippe’s interactions with Thomson Reuters were initially problematic. Thomson

Reuters sent Philippe an expression of interest with a specific expiration date, and Philippe

did not alert the Board until three days after that date. But despite Philippe’s failure to alert

the Board, the Company engaged with Thomson Reuters and began the diligence process.

Trudeau believed that Philippe interfered with the negotiations, but as Trudeau

acknowledged, there were other issues that proved fatal to a deal, including the existence

of this litigation. It is more likely than not that a bid from Thomson Reuters would have

failed in any event.

       Continental failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the Company

could have executed on any of the equity transactions such that they could provide a source

of readily accessible funds that the Company could use for redemptions. None of the

transactions were simple equity investments. Each contemplated a multi-step transaction

that would, over time, result first in a change of control of the Company and later in the

acquisition of the Company. Given their complexity, the Committee properly did not view

any of the transactions as providing a source of legally available funds that could be used

for redemptions.

                                               53
       3.     Bad Faith

       Last, Continental seeks to show that the Committee acted in bad faith. To carry its

burden, Continental focuses on Philippe, Grandi, and Schroeder.28

       Under Delaware law, a board acts in “bad faith” when it acts for a purpose other

than a genuine attempt to advance the interests of the corporation. In re Rural/Metro Corp.

S’holders Litig., 102 A.3d 205, 253 (Del. Ch. 2014), aff’d sub nom. RBC Cap. Mkts., LLC

v. Jervis, 129 A.3d 816 (Del. 2015); see In re Dole Food Co., Inc. S’holder Litig., 2015

WL 5052214, *39 n.31 (“[G]ood faith encompasses a director’s ‘honest, non-pretextual

use of power’”) (quoting Leo E. Strine, Jr. et al., Loyalty’s Core Demand: The Defining

Role of Good Faith in Corporation Law, 98 Geo. L.J. 629, 665 (2010)). Bad faith also

encompasses an “intentional dereliction of duty” or “a conscious disregard for one’s

responsibilities” or acting “with the intent to violate positive law.” See In re Walt Disney

Co. Deriv. Litig., 907 A.2d 693, 755 (Del. Ch. 2005), aff’d, 906 A.2d 27 (Del. 2006).

       The record evidence shows that the defendants acted in good faith. They did not

disregard their responsibilities. They determined the amount of funds legally available for

redemptions and declared those payments while seeking to protect the Company’s ability

to continue as a going concern. They subjectively believed they were acting in the best

interests of the Company, and they did not act with an intent to violate positive law.

       28
         In its reply brief, Continental added Patrick to the mix, but that addition came too
late. Any claim as to Patrick was waived. See Crowley, 2006 WL 3095952, at *4.

                                             54
       In reaching this conclusion, the court has paid particularly close attention to

Philippe’s role in the process. He viewed himself as being at war with the Preferred

Stockholders, and that orientation affected his actions. He also was an unreliable witness.

If Philippe had determined the amounts of the redemptions unilaterally, then this would be

a different case.

       Grandi and Schroeder did not suffer from those problems. They were independent

directors, and they sought to corral Philippe and constrain his excesses. They also ensured

that the Committee did not bow to Philippe’s wishes. Philippe originally maintained that

based on its historical cash balances, the Company needed to maintain $30–$35 million on

its books to operate. See JX 190 at ’846; Philippe Tr. 242. The materials that AlixPartners

initially prepared for the Company reported that management presented a range of $25–30

million in cash as necessary for the Company to stay in business. See JX 324 at 12, 21.

Grandi and Schroeder challenged those assertions. See JX 327 at ’590–91; Schroder Tr.

678–80; Grandi Tr. 490, 563–64, 577. The Committee ultimately decided on a cash floor

of $20 million, between $10 and $15 million less than Philippe’s starting position and

between $5 and $10 million less than the range that AlixPartners initially presented. Based

on the cash forecast, the Company would have $27.2 million in cash at the low point in its

cash cycle. See JX 330 at 43. The Committee properly deducted the $20 million and used

the remaining $7.2 million for redemptions. See Grandi Tr. 502.

       Grandi and Schroeder thus acted in good faith in determining the amount available

for redemptions. Later, they worked cooperatively with Trudeau and Placenti to remove

Philippe from his positions and steer the Company to health. Their efforts contributed to

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the transaction that generated the funds that enabled the Company to redeem the Preferred

Stock.

         If Grandi and Schroeder had been Philippe’s pawns or had otherwise acted in bad

faith, then they likely would have accepted management’s initial estimate of the cash

balance that the Company needed to maintain. Or they could have considered the

Company’s poor record of meeting its projections and adjusted anticipated revenue

downward. Those and other paths easily could have led to the Company not making any

redemptions. Grandi and Schroeder did not do those things. They ensured that the

Committee made a good faith determination regarding the amount of funds available for

redemptions.

         Continental once again failed to carry its burden of proof. Continental did not show

that the Committee acted in bad faith when determining the amount of funds available for

redemptions.

D.       The Implied Covenant

         In its opening brief, Continental argued tersely that the defendants breached the

implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing by failing to redeem its shares. Courts

applying Delaware law invoke the implied covenant sparingly, and that principle applies

all the more forcefully to preferred stock, where preferences must be express. See 8 Del. C.

§ 151; In re Sunstates Corp. S’holder Litig., 788 A.2d 530, 535 (Del. Ch. 2001) (declining

to apply implied covenant in context of preferred stock agreement). Here, the Redemption

Provision establishes the full measure of Continental’s rights.

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       The implied covenant also should not be used to create rights that a party failed to

secure “at the bargaining table.” Allen v. El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C., 113 A.3d 167,

183–84 (Del. Ch. 2014), aff’d, 2015 WL 803053 (Del. Feb. 26, 2015) (TABLE). The

record established that TCV intentionally declined to seek stronger rights because TCV

knew it was competing with other providers of capital and thought it would lose the deal if

it insisted on them. See Trudeau Tr. 811. Continental opted to participate on the terms that

TCV extracted. Continental cannot now use the implied covenant to obtain greater rights.

E.     Interest

       Section 7.1.2 provides that “[i]n the event the Corporation defaults on any payments

due pursuant to this [Section 7.1.2], interest shall accrue on all amounts then owed pursuant

to this [Section 7.1.2] equal to an annual percentage rate of thirteen percent (13%).”

Charter § 7.1.2. Continental argued originally that interest began to accrue at the Default

Rate in September 2014, when the Company did not make the full payment called for by

the Redemption Provision. Continental subsequently argued that interest began to run at

the Default Rate from the dates that the three equal redemption payments were due.

       This court has already held that interest did not begin to run because the Company

was not in default. In ruling on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, this court

explained: “Section 7 of the Charter provides that interest shall only accrue on amounts

owed pursuant to that section if TradingScreen defaults on any payments that are due. A

default is ‘[t]he omission or failure to perform a legal or contractual duty.’” TradingScreen

I, 2015 WL 1598045, at *8 (alteration in original) (quoting Default, Black’s Law

Dictionary (6th ed. 1990)). The court noted that if Delaware law prevented the

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redemptions, then the Company was not in default. Id. The court concluded that interest

would begin to run at the Default Rate only if the Company had the ability to comply with

the Redemption Provision and nevertheless did not, thereby defaulting. Id. If the parties

wanted interest to start accruing whenever a redemption payment was not made, even if

the non-payment resulted from the Company having insufficient funds that could be

deployed legally for redemptions, then they could have drafted language that turned on the

fact of non-payment rather than the existence of a default.

       “[A] trial court’s previous decision in a case will form the law of the case for the

issue decided.” State v. Wright, 131 A.3d 310, 321 (Del. 2016). “The ‘law of the case’ is

established when a specific legal principle is applied to an issue presented by facts which

remain constant throughout the subsequent course of the same litigation.” Hoskins v. State,

102 A.3d 724, 729 (Del. 2014) (quoting Kenton v. Kenton, 571 A.2d 778, 784 (Del. 1990)).

The purpose of the doctrine is “to promote efficiency, finality, stability and respect for the

judicial system.” Wright, 131 A.3d at 321 (internal quotation marks omitted). Earlier

rulings of a case control unless “(1) the prior ruling was clearly wrong; (2) there has been

an important change of circumstances; or (3) equitable concerns render application of the

law of the case doctrine inappropriate.” Forsythe v. ESC Fund Mgmt. Co. (U.S.), 2012 WL

1655538, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 9, 2012).

       Continental argues that the court’s holding was “clearly wrong” because it

interpreted “default” as a noun rather than as a verb and “failed to consult multiple

dictionaries to compare definitions.” Dkt. 366 at 41. Black’s Law Dictionary’s defines the

verb form of “default” as “to fail to perform a contractual obligation”—a definition that is

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nearly identical to the noun form cited in TradingScreen I. See Default, Black’s Law

Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). The court appropriately relied on Black’s Law Dictionary, a

leading dictionary in the legal profession, as the basis for its interpretation. The court’s

analysis was not clearly wrong.

       Continental also argues that the record was not fully developed at the pleading stage,

such that adopting the court’s previous ruling would “produce[] an injustice.” See

Frederick–Conaway v. Baird, 159 A.3d 285, 296 (Del. 2017). Although the factual record

was not fully developed, the parties agreed that the relevant language was unambiguous,

so the court only needed to consider the four corners of the Charter. See, e.g., GMG Cap.

Invs., LLC v. Athenian Venture P’rs I, L.P., 36 A.3d 776, 779 (Del. 2012). There was no

injustice in the court ruling on this issue.

       Based on the court’s prior ruling, the Company only owes interest on funds that

could be deployed legally for redemptions but which were not used for that purpose.

Because the Company did not have additional funds that it could deploy for redemptions

in 2014 and 2015, the Company did not breach the Charter with respect to those redemption

payments, and interest did not begin to accrue then.

       Continental is, however, entitled to interest on the redemption payment that the

Company made on August 27, 2020. Those funds were available on July 7, 2020, when the

Company offered to pay $5,485,947 to resolve Continental’s claims. The defendants

maintain that they made this offer as a settlement proposal. That is true, but it does not

change the fact that the Company had legally available funds as of that date. By not making

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the redemption when it had the funds legally available to do so, the Company breached the

Redemption Provision, and interest began to accrue at the Default Rate.

       Accordingly, interest at the Default Rate was due on $5,485,947 for the period from

July 7, 2020 until August 27, 2020. The resulting amount was $99,648.85.

                               III.     CONCLUSION

       Judgment will be entered in favor of Continental in the amount of $99,648.85. Pre-

and post-judgment interest at the contract rate of 13% per annum, compounded annually,

is due on the deficiency from August 27, 2020 until the date of payment. Otherwise,

judgment will be entered in favor of the defendants. The parties will present a final order

that has been agreed upon as to form.

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