Court Opinion

ID: 9893727
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-30 14:03:49.163666+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:05:17.915841
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

   DIANA ALLEN and D. ALLEN                )
   ENTERPRISES, LLC, Individually          )
   and On Behalf of All Others Similarly   )
   Situated,                               )
                                           )
                      Plaintiffs,          )
                                           )
                 v.                        )     C.A. No. 2022-0248-MTZ
                                           )
   CLAIRE R. HARVEY, WILLIAM D.            )
   ANDERSON, ERIK C. BELZ,                 )
   BRYAN C. GUNDERSON, MARK                )
   C. HENLE, ALAN J. HIRSHBERG,            )
   ADAM M. JENKINS, STEVEN R.              )
   JONES, FALCON MINERALS                  )
   CORPORATION, DPM HOLDCO,                )
   LLC, INC., and FALCON                   )
   MINERALS OPERATING                      )
   PARTNERSHIP, LP,                        )
                                           )
                      Defendants.          )
                         MEMORANDUM OPINION
                         Date Submitted: July 13, 2023
                        Date Decided: October 30, 2023

Peter B. Andrews, Craig J. Springer, David M. Sborz, Andrew J. Peach, Jackson E.
Warren, ANDREWS & SPRINGER LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Joshua Fruchter,
WOHL & FRUCHTER LLP, Monsey, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiffs Diana
Allen and D. Allen Enterprises, LLC.

Tammy L. Mercer, James M. Yoch, Jr., Michael A. Laukaitis II, YOUNG
CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Craig
Zieminski, Andy Jackson, Jeremy Gonzales, VINSON & ELKINS, LLP, Dallas,
Texas, Attorneys for Defendants.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor.
          This opinion resolves a dispute over the corporate benefit afforded by, and the

fee inspired by, supplemental disclosures in advance of a stockholder vote.

Delaware law offers recent guidance on the standard for gauging the benefit from

those disclosures and the fee that should be awarded. This case presents the

opportunity to gauge what amounts to an “extraordinary” supplemental disclosure

warranting a proportionately extraordinary fee.           This opinion concludes that

disclosures identifying conflicts held by a special committee’s chair and advisors

are, without more, not extraordinary. But the disclosures of those conflicts in

response to these plaintiffs’ suit are meaningfully beneficial and warrant a

proportionate fee.

          I.    BACKGROUND1

          Defendant Falcon Minerals Corporation (“Falcon”) is the product of a 2018

transaction in which Osprey Energy Acquisition Corporation merged with

subsidiaries of a subsidiary of The Blackstone Group L.P. (“Blackstone”).2

Blackstone “became Falcon’s largest stockholder”3 and entered into a shareholders’

1
  I draw all facts from the plaintiffs’ pleadings and documents integral thereto. Citations
in the form of “Compl.” refer to the plaintiffs’ Verified Class Action Complaint, available
at docket item (“D.I.”) 1. Citations in the form of “Proxy” refer to Falcon’s Schedule 14A,
filed February 9, 2022, available at D.I. 1, Ex. A. Citations in the form of “Amended
Proxy” refer to Falcon’s Schedule 14A, filed March 25, 2022, available at D.I. 15, Ex. 1.
2
    Compl. ¶¶ 25–26.
3
    Id. ¶ 27.
                                             1
agreement with Falcon that gave Blackstone a right to designate six out of nine

members of Falcon’s board (“the Falcon Board”).4 Initially, Blackstone held a 47%

voting interest in Falcon;5 by 2021, Blackstone owned a 40.4% voting interest in

Falcon, and had direct relationships with five of the eight members of the Falcon

Board.6         Falcon’s March 2021 Form 10-K disclosed that “Blackstone [has]

significant influence over [Falcon]” and that “as long as our Sponsor [Blackstone]

and the Contributors own or control a significant percentage of [Falcon’s]

outstanding voting power, subject to the terms of the Shareholders’ Agreement, they

will have the ability to influence corporate actions requiring stockholder approval.”7

          In August 2021, Falcon began evaluating a merger transaction with “certain

affiliates of Blackstone.”8 The Falcon Board “approved the engagement of Citi as

Falcon’s financial advisor in connection with its ongoing evaluation . . . aimed at

maximizing stockholder value.”9          Citi advised Falcon in evaluating several

transactions and opportunities.10

4
    Proxy at 114.
5
    Compl. ¶ 27.
6
    Id. ¶ 29.
7
    Id. ¶ 28 (quoting Falcon Annual Report (Form 10-K) at 25 (March 12, 2021)).
8
    Proxy at 119.
9
    Id. at 116.
10
     See id. at 115–19.
                                             2
          Desert Peak, LLC submitted a proposal to merge with Falcon. Blackstone had

acquired a 20% ownership interest in Desert Peak in June.11 Desert Peak and Falcon

would eventually merge (the “Merger”). Falcon’s disclosures to its stockholders

about its negotiations with Desert Peak, and the extent to which those negotiations

were independent of Blackstone, are at the heart of this case.

          When negotiations began with Desert Peak, “[g]iven Blackstone’s ownership

interests in Desert Peak, the Falcon Board . . . deemed it prudent to reactivate [its]

Transaction Committee to assess any potential acquisition of the Company . . . and

the business combination proposal received from Desert Peak.”12 According to the

Proxy, the “special committee [was] comprised solely of disinterested directors,”13

and specifically “consist[ed] of Claire Harvey, William Anderson and Steven Jones,

each of whom were independent and disinterested directors.”14 Falcon stated nine

times in the Proxy that Transaction Committee members were “disinterested.”15

Falcon also told its stockholders that “each of the members of the Transaction

11
     Compl. ¶ 32.
12
     Proxy at 121.
13
     Id. at 4; see id. at 8; see also id. at 15, 145, 241.
14
     Id. at 119.
15
     See id. at 4, 8, 15, 119, 130, 145, 436.
                                                   3
Committee is a disinterested member of the Falcon Board, which allows for an

independent evaluation” of the Merger.16

          The Transaction Committee engaged financial advisors other than Citi for the

Desert Peak transaction. The Proxy explained, “[g]iven Citi’s role as financial

advisor to [Desert Peak], the Transaction Committee discussed potential additional

financial advisors to assist the Transaction Committee and selected Barclays Capital,

Inc. (‘Barclays’).”17 The Transaction Committee “retained Houlihan Lokey Capital,

Inc. (‘Houlihan Lokey’) to provide its opinion as to the fairness, from a financial

point of view, to Falcon of the Merger consideration,”18 and to provide an

“evaluation of Desert Peak’s proposal.”19

          On January 11, 2022, Falcon entered into an agreement to merge with Desert

Peak.20 The Merger would result “in Desert Peak equity holders, plus affiliates of

Blackstone that own interests in both Falcon and Desert Peak, owning 86% of the

post-Merger company.”21

16
     Id. at 130.
17
     Id. at 119.
18
     Id. at 29.
19
     Id. at 121.
20
     Id. at 1.
21
     Compl. ¶ 37.
                                            4
          Falcon filed the Proxy on February 9. The Proxy outlines the “Reasons for

the Transaction Committee’s Recommendation” to approve the Merger, providing a

list of fifteen factors and six procedural safeguards that the Transaction Committee

believed “weighed in favor of the Merger.”22           The Transaction Committee

highlighted “the fact that the holders of approximately 40.4% of the outstanding

Falcon Common Stock were willing to enter into the Support Agreement committing

such holders to vote to approve the Proposals, which significantly reduces deal

uncertainty.”23 Blackstone owned 40.4% of Falcon’s outstanding common stock at

the time.24         The Proxy next highlighted two procedural safeguards: the

disinterestedness of the Transaction Committee, and that committee’s selection of

“its own legal and financial advisors.”25

          On March 15, plaintiffs Diana Allen and D. Allen Enterprises, LLC

(collectively, “Plaintiffs”) sued to enjoin the Merger on the basis that Falcon’s Proxy

was materially misleading.26 The Complaint alleged three omissions.27 The first

pertains to the failure to disclose Harvey’s affiliation with Blackstone. The Proxy

22
     Proxy at 129–30.
23
     Id. at 130.
24
     Id. at 114, 130, 238.
25
     Id. at 130.
26
     Compl. ¶¶ 40–42.
27
     Id. ¶ 6.
                                            5
characterized Harvey as disinterested in and independent of Blackstone. It disclosed

that “[f]rom May 2019 to August 2020 . . . , she led Gryphon Oil and Gas, LLC

(“Gryphon”), a private equity-sponsored company.”28 Plaintiffs complained the

Proxy failed to disclose that “[1] Blackstone was the sole private equity sponsor of

Gryphon, which Harvey not only led but founded and that [2] three members of

Gryphon’s management team serving under Harvey’s leadership were Blackstone

executives, including Falcon director Erik C. Belz.”29

           Plaintiffs also addressed the Proxy’s failure to disclose the Transaction

Committee’s financial advisors’ affiliation with Blackstone.30 The Proxy disclosed

the Transaction Committee retained Barclays and Houlihan Lokey for the Desert

Peak transaction as replacements for Citi because of Citi’s relationship with Desert

Peak and Blackstone. Plaintiffs claim these statements required Falcon to further

disclose that (1) “Barclays was providing services to Blackstone while advising the

Transaction Committee,”31 (2) “from January 1, 2018 through November 22, 2021,

Barclays received approximately $224.8 million in investment banking fees from

Blackstone,”32 (3) “around two weeks after the Board issued the Proxy, Blackstone

28
     Proxy at 229.
29
     Compl. ¶ 6.
30
     Id.
31
     Id. ¶ 48 (emphasis added).
32
     Amended Proxy at 158; see Compl. ¶ 49.
                                              6
announced the pricing of a $547 million collateralized loan obligation via

Barclays,”33 and (4) Houlihan Lokey received significant fees from Blackstone

engagements.34

         On March 25 and April 14, Falcon filed four corrective disclosures:

         [1] From May 2019 to August 2020, [Harvey] led Gryphon Oil and
         Gas, LLC (“Gryphon”), a Blackstone-sponsored company focused on
         acquiring non-operated interests in the Permian Basin. [2] From May
         2019 to August 2020, [Harvey] led Gryphon Oil and Gas, LLC
         (“Gryphon”), a Blackstone-sponsored company focused on acquiring
         non-operated interests in the Permian Basin, whose management
         included two senior Blackstone executives and fellow Falcon director
         and Blackstone Managing Director Erik C. Belz. [3] During the two
         years preceding the date of Houlihan Lokey’s written opinion,
         Houlihan Lokey has been engaged by or otherwise performed services
         for certain affiliates of Falcon and Desert Peak . . . . For
         these . . . services, in the previous two years, Houlihan Lokey has
         received, fees of approximately $14.2 million in the aggregate. . . .
         [4] In connection with the proposed transaction, Barclays advised the
         Falcon Board that it and its affiliates have provided, currently are
         providing and in the future expect to provide, investment banking
         services for Blackstone and certain of its affiliates and portfolio
         companies . . . . Barclays has received approximately $224.8 million in
         investment banking fees from Blackstone.35

33
     Compl. ¶ 48.
34
     Id. ¶¶ 44–45.
35
     Amended Proxy at 115, 155–56, 247.
                                           7
The corrective disclosures mooted Plaintiffs’ claims, and they dismissed their claims

but requested a $600,000 fee award. The parties were not able to agree on a fee

award and have submitted it for my consideration.

         II.    ANALYSIS

         Litigants are generally responsible for paying their own attorneys’ fees and

expenses. But Delaware courts recognize certain exceptions to that American Rule,

such as the corporate benefit doctrine.36 Under the corporate benefit doctrine, “the

Court may order the payment of counsel fees and related expenses to a plaintiff

whose efforts result in the . . . conferring of a corporate benefit.”37 Before doing so,

the plaintiff must demonstrate: “(1) the suit was meritorious when filed, (2) the

defendants took an action that produced a corporate benefit before the plaintiffs

obtained a judicial resolution, and (3) the suit and the corporate benefit were causally

related.”38

         One application of the corporate benefit doctrine, the mootness exception to

the American Rule, permits awarding attorney’s fees “when claims have been

mooted . . . because of action taken by the defendants, and the action taken by the

defendants that rendered the claim moot simultaneously created the corporate benefit

36
  San Antonio Fire & Police Pension Fund v. Bradbury, 2010 WL 4273171, at *7 (Del.
Ch. Oct. 28, 2010).
37
     Tandycrafts v. Initio P’rs, 562 A.2d 1162, 1164 (Del. 1989).
38
     EMAK Worldwide v. Kurz, 50 A.3d 429, 432 (Del. 2012).
                                              8
that the plaintiff had [sought] and for which the plaintiff was entitled to have its

attorney’s fees paid.”39 “Under the ‘mootness rule,’ when a defendant took an action

after the suit was filed that mooted a claim, there is a rebuttable presumption the suit

and the benefit were causally related . . . .”40 Defendants have the burden of

“rebutting the presumption by demonstrating that the lawsuit did not in any way

cause their action.”41

         This Court has carefully addressed fees for mooting disclosure claims over

the past several years, with its focus heightened by the observation that “seeking to

resolve disclosure claims in deal litigation through a Court-approved settlement” is

a “suboptimal path” that threatens divergence from the purpose of the “historically

trodden” corporate benefits exception and risks payment for settlements that do not

obtain real stockholder value.42 As recently enunciated in Anderson v. Magellan

Health, in order to support a mootness fee, the disclosures must be “plainly material”

to stockholders, meaning whether “there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable

39
     Crothall v. Zimmerman, 94 A.3d 733, 738 (Del. 2014).
40
     EMAK Worldwide, 50 A.3d at 433.
41
     United Vanguard Fund v. TakeCare, Inc., 693 A.2d 1076, 1080 (Del. 1997).
42
   In re Trulia, Inc. S’holder Litig., 129 A.3d 884, 898 (Del. Ch. 2016); see id. at 895–96
(citations omitted).
                                            9
shareholder would consider [the information] important in deciding how to vote”43

“should not [even] be a close call.”44

         “In addition to determining a movant’s entitlement to a mootness fee, the court

must make an independent determination of reasonableness of the amount

requested.”45 In so doing, I am guided by the well-known factors set out in

Sugarland Industries, Inc. v. Thomas46 and by precedent awards concerning the

value of the supplemental disclosures.47

         Here, the parties do not dispute that Plaintiffs’ suit and the supplemental

disclosures were causally related. They dispute the disclosures’ materiality and the

fee to be awarded if they are material. For the following reasons, I find the

disclosures were plainly material, and I grant Plaintiffs’ petition for an award of

attorneys’ fees, but not in the full amount requested.

43
     Trulia, 129 A.3d at 899.
44
  Anderson v. Magellan Health, 298 A.3d 734, 746 (Del. Ch. 2023) (quoting Trulia, 129
A.3d at 898).
45
     Id. at 740 (quotation marks omitted).
46
   Id. (“To assess the reasonableness of a fee award, this Court follows the Sugarland
factors.”).
47
  Id. at 744 (cautioning that pre-Trulia precedent is less useful in determining the value of
otherwise comparable benefits and that pre-Trulia precedent pricing corporate benefits
often reflects inflated valuations).
                                             10
                   A.   Materiality

          When considering whether the plaintiff successfully demonstrated “the suit

was meritorious when filed,”48 I review the disclosures with a “defendant-friendly”

perspective.49 “A claim is meritorious . . . if it can withstand a motion to dismiss on

the pleadings.”50 To obtain a mootness fee, the plaintiff must also demonstrate the

action “specifically and substantially benefit[ted] the corporation and its

stockholders to warrant fees.”51

          The same materiality standard governs both the merit of the claim and the

corporate benefit from mooting it.52 Supplemental disclosures that are not plainly

material will be “screen[ed] out.”53 Information is material “if there is a substantial

likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important in deciding how

to vote.”54 A reasonable stockholder would find supplemental information to be

48
     Id. at 740.
49
     Id. at 746–47.
50
     In re Cox Commc’ns, Inc. S’holders Litig., 879 A.2d 604, 636 (Del. Ch. June 6, 2005).
51
  Garfield v. Boxed, Inc., 2022 WL 17959766, at *10 (Del. Ch. Dec. 27, 2022) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
52
     Magellan, 298 A.3d at 746.
53
     Id. at 749.
54
     Trulia, 129 A.3d at 899 (quoting Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil, 493 A.2d 929, 944 (Del. 1985)).
                                               11
important when “it significantly alters the total mix of information made

available.”55

         “When a document ventures into certain subjects, it must do so in a manner

that is materially complete and unbiased by the omission of material facts.”56

Omitted facts may become material when a partial and incomplete disclosure of

otherwise immaterial information chances obstructing “the stockholders [from]

draw[ing] the complete picture.”57 In other words, if disclosures “traveled down the

road of partial disclosure,” the authors had “an obligation to provide the stockholders

with an accurate, full, and fair characterization” of the transaction landscape.58 “If

55
     Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
56
     In re Pure Res., Inc., S’holders Litig., 808 A.2d 421, 448 (Del. Ch. Sept. 27, 2002).
57
  In re Om Group, Inc. S’holders Litig., 2016 WL 5929951, at *12 (Del. Ch. Oct. 12, 2016)
(“[A] partial and incomplete disclosure of arguably immaterial information regarding the
history of negotiations leading to a merger might result in a materially misleading
disclosure if not supplemented with information that would allow the stockholders to draw
the complete picture.”); see also Arnold v. Soc’y for Sav. Bancorp, Inc., 650 A.2d 1270,
1281 (Del. 1994) (agreeing with the Vice Chancellor that, “as an abstraction, Delaware law
does not require disclosure of inherently unreliable or speculative information which would
tend to confuse stockholders or inundate them with an overload of information” but
disagreeing with the Vice Chancellor’s holding that such information was immaterial,
“under the circumstances of this case, which involve[d] a partial and incomplete disclosure
of historical information”).
58
  Arnold, 650 A.2d at 1281; see also Lynch v. Vickers Energy, 383 A.2d 278, 281 (Del.
1977) (holding defendants violated their disclosure obligations when they partially
disclosed a reliable “floor” asset valuation but did not disclose an equally reliable “ceiling”
value); Freedman v. Rest. Assoc. Indus., 1990 WL 135923, at *8 (Del. Ch. Feb. 27, 1990)
(holding that while management has “no general obligation to disclose its purposes or
motivation, once it undertook to disclose its purpose in revising the offer, it had an
obligation to do so truthfully and candidly.”).
                                               12
[the board] believed that one [perspective] was more accurate or realistic than

another, it was free to endorse that [perspective] and to explain the reason for doing

so; but full disclosure . . . was a prerequisite.”59

         In soliciting stockholder votes on the Merger, the Proxy repeatedly touted the

transaction’s independence from Blackstone, and painted the Merger as having been

negotiated and advised by wholly independent fiduciaries and advisors. The Proxy

explained that the Transaction Committee’s existence and its retention of advisors

other than Citi were designed to ensure independence from Blackstone.60 But the

Proxy failed to tell the full story about the independence of the Transaction

Committee’s chair and advisors.61

59
     Lynch, 383 A.2d 278 at 281.
60
   Proxy at 16 (“Falcon’s directors and officers may have interests in the Merger that are
different from your interests as a stockholder. For instance, half of the members of the
Falcon Board were designated by and are affiliated with Royal Resources, an affiliate of
Blackstone, Inc., and Rock Ridge, another affiliate of Blackstone, Inc., is a current equity
holder in Desert Peak.”); id. at 121 (“Given Blackstone’s ownership interests in Desert
Peak, the Falcon Board . . . deemed it prudent to reactivate [its] Transaction Committee to
assess any potential acquisition of the Company . . . and the business combination proposal
received from Desert Peak.”); id. at 130 (“[T]he Transaction Committee considered a
number of factors relating to the procedural safeguards involved in the negotiation of the
Merger Agreement, including . . . [e]ach of the members of the Transaction Committee is
a disinterested member of the Falcon Board, which allows for an independent evaluation
of potential strategic transactions, [and] [t]he Transaction Committee selected and retained
its own legal and financial advisors . . . .”).
61
   The obligation to tell the whole truth in the Proxy stems, at a minimum, from its partial
truths about independence from Blackstone and the confidence that independence should
inspire in the Merger. I do not reach whether Blackstone was a controller.
                                            13
         After promoting the disinterestedness of the Transaction Committee and its

members, and then declaring it as a reason for voter confidence, any undisclosed

information weighing against the disinterestedness of the committee, its members,

and its advisors “was extremely relevant to a reasonable stockholder’s”

decisionmaking.62 Having been assured of their independence from Blackstone, a

reasonable stockholder would have wanted to know about the connections of

Harvey, Barclays, and Houlihan Lokey to Blackstone in deciding how to vote on the

Transaction.

                    1. The Transaction Committee Chair

         The Proxy states that Falcon created the Transaction Committee because

Blackstone may sit on both sides of the deal and because several Falcon board

members were potentially conflicted due to their ties to Blackstone.63 It repeatedly

held out each member of the special committee as disinterested and independent.64

62
  Zirn v. VLI Corp., 681 A.2d 1050, 1057 (Del. 1996) (“In light of the partial disclosure,
the undisclosed [information] was extremely relevant to a reasonable stockholder’s
valuation of the corporation.”).
63
   Proxy at 121 (“Given Blackstone’s ownership interests in Desert Peak, the Falcon
Board . . . deemed it prudent to reactivate the Transaction Committee to assess any
potential acquisition of the Company . . . .”); see also id. at 27 (“Falcon’s directors and
officers may have interests in the Merger that are different from your interests as a
stockholder. For instance, half of the members of the Falcon Board were designated by
and are affiliated with Royal Resources, an affiliate of Blackstone, Inc., and Rock Ridge,
another affiliate of Blackstone, Inc., is a current equity holder in Desert Peak.”).
64
     See id. at 4, 8, 15, 119, 130, 145, 436.
                                                14
It characterized Harvey, the chair of the Transaction Committee, as independent of

Blackstone.65 It also provided the stockholders with a sketch of her qualifications.66

Finally, the Proxy identified the Transaction Committee’s independence as an

implied, if not explicit, justification for stockholder approval.67

      Having been told Harvey was independent from Blackstone, Falcon’s

stockholders were entitled to know of her ties to Blackstone. This Court has found

that a chair’s conflicts can render her unfit for service on a special committee

intended to assure independence.68

      Where omitted information goes to the independence or disinterest of
      directors who are identified as the company’s “independent” or “not
      interested” directors, the relevant inquiry is not whether an actual
      conflict of interest existed, but rather whether full disclosure of
      potential conflicts of interest has been made.69

65
  Id. at 4 (“[The] special committee [was] comprised solely of disinterested directors.”);
see id. at 130 (“[The special committee] consist[ed] of Claire Harvey, William Anderson
and Steven Jones, each of whom were independent and disinterested directors.”).
66
  Id. at 229 (“From May 2019 to August 2020 . . . , she led Gryphon Oil and Gas, LLC, a
private equity-sponsored company.”).
67
   Id. at 4 (“The board of directors of Falcon upon the unanimous recommendation and
approval of a special committee comprised solely of disinterested directors . . .
recommends that [the stockholders] vote or give instruction to vote ‘FOR’ each of those
proposals.”).
68
   In re Loral Space & Commc’ns, 2008 WL 4293781, at *22 (Del. Ch. Sep. 19, 2008)
(finding the chairperson’s friendship with the Company’s large stockholder and interested
acquirer prevented him from being disinterested and independent, and that those
relationships “were too substantial to make him a fit member of the Special Committee,
much less Chairman”).
69
   In re Orchard Enters., Inc. S’holder Litig., 88 A.3d 1, 22 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2014)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (finding special committee members’

                                           15
         Information pertaining to Harvey’s potential conflicts, given her role as the

purportedly independent chair of the Transaction Committee, is material. The

Proxy’s sketch of Harvey’s leadership role in Gryphon was incomplete: it failed to

detail that Blackstone was the sole private equity sponsor of Gryphon, which Harvey

not only led but founded.70 It further failed to disclose that “three members of

Gryphon’s management team serving under Harvey’s leadership were Blackstone

executives, including Falcon director Erik C. Belz.”71 The failure “to disclose or

describe [Harvey’s] relationship to [Blackstone] renders the proxy statements

materially misleading and incomplete.”72

                    2. The Transaction Committee’s Advisors

         Plaintiffs also asserted the Proxy failed to disclose the Transaction

Committee’s chosen advisors had relationships with Blackstone and the advisors’

revenue from those relationships.

“prior . . . relationships” with a controller “should have been disclosed” because of the
committee’s “role as negotiators on behalf of the minority stockholders”).
70
     See D.I. 12 at Op. Br. [hereinafter “Op. Br.”] 7, 12.
71
     See id.
72
  Millenco L.P. v. meVC Draper Fisher Jurvetson Fund I, 824 A.2d 11, 15 (Del. Ch. Dec.
19, 2002).
                                               16
         Financial advisor conflicts are material and must be disclosed to

stockholders.73 “The financial advisor’s opinion of financial fairness for a proposed

transaction is one of the most important process-based underpinnings of a board’s

recommendation of a transaction to its stockholders and, in turn, for the

stockholders’ decisions on the appropriateness of the transaction.”74 “Because of

the central role played by investment banks in the evaluation, exploration, selection,

and implementation of strategic alternatives, [stockholders are entitled to] full

disclosure of investment banker compensation and potential conflicts.”75 In Rodden

v. Bilodeu, this Court found that “the omitted fact that [the target] and [the acquirer]

paid Barclays north of $9 million in the two years before the merger” was “material

73
  David P. Simonetti Rollover IRA v. Margolis, 2008 WL 5048692, at *8 (Del. Ch. June
27, 2008) (describing information about potentially conflicting influences on financial
advisors’ analytical efforts as “imperative for the stockholders to be able to understand
what factors might influence the financial advisor’s [analysis]”); see also In re PAETEC
Hldg. Corp. S’holders Litig., 2013 WL 1110811, at *7 (Del. Ch. Mar. 19, 2013) (“The
materiality of a disclosure of a conflicted financial advisor does not necessarily depend on
whether the conflict actually harmed the sales process.”); In re John Q. Hammons Inc.
S’holder Litig., 2009 WL 3165613, at *16 (Del. Ch. Oct. 2, 2009) (“There is no rule . . .
that conflicts of interest must be disclosed only where there is evidence that the financial
advisor’s opinion was actually affected by the conflict.”); In re Saba Software, Inc.
S’holder Litig., 2017 WL 1201108, at *11 (Del. Ch. Mar. 31, 2017) (declaring that potential
conflicts of financial advisors must be disclosed: “the Board was obliged to disclose
potential conflicts of interest of its financial advisors’ so that stockholders could decide for
themselves what weight to place on a conflict faced by the financial advisor this has not
been, and cannot be, disputed.”) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
74
   Margolis, 2008 WL 5048692, at *8; see also Proxy at 29 (“[The Transaction Committee]
retained Houlihan Lokey Capital, Inc. to provide its opinion as to the fairness, from a
financial point of view, to Falcon of the Merger consideration.”).
75
     PAETEC, 2013 WL 1110811, at *7 (internal quotation marks omitted).
                                              17
because its disclosure helped [target] stockholders to contextualize the magnitude of

Barclays’ potential conflict of interest.”76

           Like the assurances that the Transaction Committee’s chair was independent,

the Proxy communicated that the Transaction Committee was “adequately

empowered” “to freely select its own advisors,” and that those advisors were

disinterested and independent.77       It disclosed that the Transaction Committee

replaced Citi because it was Desert Peak’s financial advisor, and went on to retain

Barclays and Houlihan Lokey.78 It touted these actions as procedural safeguards for

ensuring a disinterested and independent evaluation of the Merger.79 The Proxy

identified Citi’s potential conflict, then assured stockholders of the neutrality of the

Transaction Committee’s replacement advisors.

           Omitting those advisors’ conflicts was materially misleading. The Proxy

failed to disclose that “Barclays was providing services to Blackstone while advising

the Transaction Committee,” and that Barclays’ services to Blackstone netted it

76
   Rodden v. Bilodeu, C.A. No. 2019-0176-JRS, at 21 (Del. Ch. Jan. 27, 2020)
(TRANSCRIPT).
77
     Kahn v. M & F Worldwide, 88 A.3d 635, 644, 645 (Del. 2014).
78
  Proxy at 119 (“Given Citi’s role as financial advisor to [Desert Peak], the Transaction
Committee discussed potential additional financial advisors to assist the Transaction
Committee and selected Barclays Capital, Inc. (‘Barclays’).”).
79
     Id.
                                            18
hundreds of millions of dollars.80 It also failed to disclose that Houlihan Lokey,

retained to provide a fairness opinion, received $14.2 million in fees from

Blackstone engagements.81           This information would certainly help Falcon

stockholders contextualize the financial advisors’ potential conflict of interest.82 “A

more balanced disclosure . . . would have significantly altered the total mix of

information available to the individual . . . stockholder.”83

         Having established that the omitted disclosures were plainly material, it

follows that Falcon’s four supplemental disclosures, filling in the Proxy’s

misleading omissions regarding the independence of the Transaction Committee’s

chair and advisors, conferred a corporate benefit. The “stockholders were entitled

to know the omitted information in order to judge for themselves [Harvey’s and the

financial advisors’] independence and disinterestedness.”84 The four disclosures

fulfilled that entitlement and provided information that materially informed the

stockholder vote on a potentially conflicted transaction. The disclosures conferred

a meaningful benefit on the Company and its stockholders.

80
     Op. Br. 7, 16.
81
     See Compl. ¶¶ 44–45; see also Amended Proxy at 158.
82
     Op. Br. 19.
83
     Zirn, 681 A.2d at 1057 (internal quotation marks omitted).
84
     Millenco, 824 A.2d at 18.
                                              19
              B. Reasonableness Of Amount Requested

           Because Plaintiffs’ lawsuit was meritorious when filed, and Falcon’s actions

in response to the lawsuit conferred a substantial corporate benefit, “the Court should

award reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred by the plaintiff in achieving

the benefit.”85 Plaintiffs request a fee and expense award of “at least $600,000,”86

including reimbursement for $5,742.95 in expenses.87

           “The amount of attorneys’ fees award in a corporate benefit case is a

discretionary determination for this Court.”88 As guidance, “the Court considers the

factors set forth in Sugarland.”89 Of the seven factors, “the size [or value] of the

benefit conferred”90 is the most determinative factor.91 “Precedent awards from

85
  Ams. Mining Corp. v. Theriault, 51 A.3d 1213, 1255 (Del. 2012) (“When the efforts of
a plaintiff on behalf of a corporation result in the creation of a common fund, the Court
should award reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred by the plaintiff in achieving
the benefit.”) (citation omitted).
86
     Op. Br. 22.
87
   Id. at 29 (calculating “a total lodestar of $106,065.70” and “an approximate multiplier
of 5.6 on Plaintiffs’ counsel’s . . . total lodestar amount”).
88
 Ind. Elec. Workers Pension Tr. Fund, IBEW v. Covetrus [hereinafter Covetrus Tr.], C.A.
No. 2020-0923-PAF, at 64 (Del. Ch. Jun. 15, 2021) (TRANSCRIPT).
89
     Id.
90
   In re Plains Res., 2005 WL 332811, at *3 (“The factors are: (i) the amount of time and
effort applied to the case by counsel for the plaintiffs; (ii) the relative complexities of the
litigation; (iii) the standing and ability of petitioning counsel; (iv) the contingent nature of
the litigation; (v) the stage at which the litigation ended; (vi) whether the plaintiff can
rightly receive all the credit for the benefit conferred or only a portion thereof; and (vii) the
size of the benefit conferred.”).
 Ams. Mining Corp., 51 A.3d at 1255 (finding the benefit achieved to be “the first and
91

most important of the Sugarland factors”).
                                               20
similar cases may be considered for the obvious reason that like cases should be

treated alike.”92

                    1.     Value of the Benefit Conferred
         “All supplemental disclosures are not equal. To quantify an appropriate fee

award, this Court evaluates the qualitative importance of the disclosures obtained.”93

In re Sauer-Danfoss Inc. Shareholders Litigation divided mootness fee awards for

disclosures of material information into three strata:               minimally beneficial

disclosures, meaningfully beneficial disclosures, and exceptionally beneficial

disclosures.94 While the numerical fees awarded for the top two categories have

been ratcheted downward after Trulia, the categories Sauer-Danfoss established

remain relevant.95 As observed in Anderson v. Magellan Health, post-Trulia, the

92
     Olson v. ev3, 2011 WL 704409, at *8 (Del. Ch. Feb. 21, 2011).
93
  In re Compellent Techs., 2011 WL 6382523, at *26 (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2011) (quoting
In re Sauer-Danfoss Inc. S’holders Litig., 65 A.3d 1116, 1136 (Del. Ch. May 3, 2011)).
94
     65 A.3d at 1141–43.
95
   See Hao Jiang, Enforcing the Bargain v. Materiality Requirement the Future of
Disclosure Only Settlements Post-Trulia, 38 Pace. L. Rev. 569, 597 (2018) (“The
Sugarland factors do not provide an effective tool for the Chancery Court to quantify an
appropriate award given the fact that disclosure is ‘an intangible, non-quantifiable benefit.’
Nevertheless, the Court has developed a three-scale system in Sauer-Danfoss that measures
the benefits conveyed by the disclosures and places each case on a scale based on the
quality of the disclosures and looks to ‘fee awards granted for similar disclosures.’”
(quoting In re Sauer-Danfoss Inc. S’holder Litig., 65 A.3d 1116, 1136 (Del. Ch. 2011));
see also Sean J. Griffith, Anthony A. Rickey, Objections to Disclosure Settlements: A How-
To Guide, 70 Okla. L. Rev. 281, 313 (2017) (“[A]nother good source for context in
disclosure fee awards is Vice Chancellor Laster’s opinion in In re Sauer-Danfoss Inc.
Shareholders Litigation . . . , [which] collects many disclosure settlements, separating them

                                             21
“high end” or upper bound for material disclosures is $450,000, 96 but disclosures

that are exceptionally valuable or obtained in “[e]xceptional circumstances” can

draw $600,000.97 Both before and after Trulia, minimally beneficial disclosures

have consistently been valued at $75,000.98 Plaintiffs here seek an award of

$600,000, on the grounds that, under Magellan, the disclosures they obtained are

exceptionally beneficial.99

                     a.    Exceptionally Beneficial Disclosures

         Magellan offers Indiana Electrical Workers Pension Trust Fund, IBEW v.

Covetrus as an example of a disclosure made in “exceptional circumstances”

warranting a $600,000 fee.100 In Covetrus, “the company sold $250 million of

convertible stock to a third party” who would hold “25% of the voting power in

into three categories based upon the value of the supplemental disclosures to stockholders,
the degree of investigation and litigation conducted in the case, and the fee award.”).
96
   Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 (quoting Bednar v. Cleveland Biolabs, 2023 WL 3995121,
at *5 (Del. Ch. June 13, 2023)).
97
  Id. at 750 n.81 (citing the $600,000 fee award in Indiana Electrical Workers Pension
Trust Fund, IBEW v. Covetrus, C.A. No. 2020-0923-PAF, at 70 (Del. Ch. Jun. 15, 2021)
(TRANSCRIPT), as being based on exceptional circumstances).
98
     Id. at 750 (pegging “marginally helpful” disclosures post-Trulia at $75,000).
99
  D.I. 24 at 6, 29–31 (arguing the disclosures Plaintiffs caused are more beneficial than
those Magellan identified as “exceptional”).
100
    Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 n.81 (citing the disclosures earned in Covetrus as
exceptionally valuable); Covetrus Tr. at 63–64 (finding “the supplemental disclosure
removed a potential[ly] coercive aspect of the disclosure,” without which removal
“stockholders may have been deterred from participating in a vote in which the outcome
was already heavily weighted one way”).
                                              22
Covetrus” if all the stock was converted.101 But “granting 25% voting power in one

step would have required a prior stockholder vote under NASDAQ rules.” 102 To

comply with NASDAQ rules, the company had to pause conversion at 19.99% and

seek stockholder approval to convert the rest, and the third party could not vote its

converted 19.99% to approve the rest of its conversion.103 The disclosures in

connection with a vote on converting the remainder of the third party’s stock made

it appear as if the third party was voting its previously converted stock, against

NASDAQ rules. And so, the stockholders were left to assume “the deal was already

heavily weighted one way,” which chanced chilling voter participation.104 Thus, the

omission had a “coercive aspect.”105          Supplemental disclosures “corrected the

proxy’s allegedly materially misleading disclosure that the previously converted

shares would be eligible to vote on the second conversion proposal.”106            These

disclosures decreased the “portrayal of a largely inevitable outcome,” and thereby

increased stockholders’ “incentive to participate in the vote.”107 This supplemental

101
      Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 n.81.
102
      Id.
103
      Covetrus Tr. at 56, 61.
104
      Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 n.81.
105
   Covetrus Tr. at 63 (finding “the supplemental disclosure removed a potentially coercive
aspect of the disclosure,” without which removal “stockholders may have been deterred
from participating in a vote in which the outcome was already heavily weighted one way”).
106
      Id. at 63.
107
      Id. at 63–64, 68; Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 n.81.
                                              23
disclosure was exceptional because it vindicated the stockholder franchise not only

by providing more information, but also by eliminating coercion.108

         From Magellan’s treatment of Covetrus, I conclude that a supplemental

disclosure offers exceptional value when it not only provides additional information

to stockholders, but also removes real or perceived restrictions on voter

participation. Such a disclosure does more than simply tell stockholders the material

information they deserve in order to vote: it restores meaning and autonomy to that

vote. Like any other measure restoring voter participation or eliminating obstacles

to meaningful participation, such a disclosure is exceptionally valuable.

         Post-Trulia cases have also awarded attorneys’ fees over $450,000 where

transaction disclosures provide stockholders with supplemental information about

process problems resulting from side-straddling controllers.109 In In re Medley

108
      Covetrus Tr. at 62–64, 67.
109
    E.g., Hollywood Firefighters’ Pension Fund v. Malone, 2021 WL 5179219, at *8 (Del.
Ch. Nov. 8, 2021) (considering disclosures of “conflicts regarding financial advisors as
well as special committee members,” where those conflicts manifested in personal benefits
to the conflicted directors and diminished minority shareholder merger consideration); In
re Medley Cap. Corp. S’holders Litig., C.A. No. 2019-0100-KSJM, at 63 (Del. Ch.
Nov. 19, 2019) (TRANSCRIPT) (awarding $500,000 in attorneys’ fees for five disclosures
regarding conflicted controllers and an infected special committee and transaction
process); In re Del Monte Foods Co. S’holders Litig., 2011 WL 2535256, at *5 (Del. Ch.
June 27, 2011) (disclosing that an advisor secured a “sell-side advisory business and a
lucrative buy-side financing role,” then “secretly and selfishly manipulated the sale process
to engineer a transaction” to its own benefit); In re ArthroCare S’holder Litig., C.A. No.
9313-VCL, at 28 (Del. Ch. Nov. 6, 2014) (TRANSCRIPT) (considering disclosures that
J.P. Morgan negotiated a deal between ArthroCare, in which it held a 17% equity stake and

                                             24
Capital Corporation Shareholders Litigation,110 this Court found the proposed

transactions triggered entire fairness review because the “special committee was

beholden to [the conflicted controllers],” the conflicted controllers set an aggressive

timeline and “dominated . . . the board with respect to the proposed transaction,” and

“the deal protections of the merger agreement . . . fail[ed] enhanced scrutiny.”111 But

facially, “the process appeared arm’s-length,” and the “proxy recommending that

the stockholders approve the proposed transactions certainly made it seem that

way.”112 “[C]ritical fact[s]”113 were omitted from the proxy, other disclosures were

incomplete, and one was “outright false.”114 And so, the Court declared that for the

stockholder vote to have any meaning, “the stockholders must know the reality.”115

two board seats, and Smith & Nephew, to whom it was an advisor, at a low premium to
stockholders but for a substantial fee, and noting that “the disclosure claims were much
stronger than the usual case and related to conflicts on the part of the acquirer’s financial
advisor and financing source” that went “beyond what [was seen] in . . . Del Monte”) (citing
In re Del Monte Foods Co. S’holders Litig., 2011 WL 2535256 (Del. Ch. June 27, 2011)).
110
   This case was tried under the name FrontFour Cap. Grp. v. Taube and was consolidated
post-trial under In re Medley Capital Corporation Shareholders Litigation. The post-trial
memorandum opinion retains the former case name, and the transcript ruling for the award
of attorneys’ fees retains the latter. Collectively, I reference the action under its
consolidated name.
111
      FrontFour Cap. Grp. v. Taube, 2019 WL 1313408, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 11, 2019).
112
      Id.
  Id. at *29 (describing one of the several proxy omissions as a “critical fact” that would
113

impact the voter assessment of the quality of the transaction process).
114
      Id. at *3.
115
      Id.
                                             25
The Court enjoined defendants from consummating the transaction pending

corrective disclosures.116

          In post-trial negotiations, the plaintiffs obtained the desired disclosures. An

August 30 settlement notice disclosed: (1) “the existence of proposals for an

alternative transaction” from three outside bidders, (2) “that the special committee

had not been made aware of the existence of the standstills prior to the execution of

the original merger agreement,” (3) “that plaintiffs proved that half of the special

committee was beholden to the [controllers],” (4) “that plaintiffs proved the

[controllers] dominated . . . the board,” and (5) “that [the Court] found the enjoined

transactions were not entirely fair to Medley Capital’s stockholders.”117 The Court

approved the settlement and also awarded attorneys’ fees in the exceptional range

for such disclosures,118 concluding that “$500,000 is [a] reasonable [award] for the

corrective disclosures negotiated by plaintiffs’ counsel.”119

          Plaintiffs cite Hollywood Firefighters’ Pension Fund v. Malone as support for

their requested fee award.120 In Malone, merger consideration was structured to give

116
      Id. at *33.
117
   In re Medley Cap. Corp. S’holders Litig., C.A. No. 2019-0100-KSJM, at 30–31 (Del.
Ch. Nov. 19, 2019).
118
      Id. at 31.
119
      Id. at 63.
120
      See D.I. 17 at Reply Br. 26–28.
                                            26
outsized voting authority to the company’s chairman and its CEO, and a stockholder

vote was sought to afford MFW cleansing.121 The negotiations resulted in an unfair

price: “the Merger consideration for minority stockholders was inadequate while

[the chairman] and [CEO] received unfair special benefits.”122 The stockholders

were uninformed: the proxy failed to disclose management’s voting power in the

post-merger company.123 And a member of the special committee, and its advisor,

labored under undisclosed conflicts.124                  The plaintiffs obtained supplemental

disclosures on those issues, as well as reorganization of the voting power carried by

the merger consideration that “stripped [the company’s chairman and its CEO] of

[the] unique consideration they were to receive following the Merger.”125 The Court

noted the disclosure benefits “dovetail[ed] with the overall ‘gravamen’ of the

litigation: ‘that the Merger consideration for minority stockholders was inadequate

while [the chairman] and [the CEO] received unfair special benefits.’”126 “The

additional disclosure provided stockholders, whose majority-of-the-minority vote

was still being sought, with pertinent information—regarding the process by which

121
      2021 WL 5179219, at *2–3.
122
      Id. at *8.
123
      Id. at *3.
124
      Id. at *5.
125
      Id. at *5, *8.
126
      Id. at *8 (quoting the plaintiffs’ reply brief).
                                                  27
Merger consideration was set—for their contemplation before casting their votes.”127

The disclosure benefits were valued at $800,000, citing pre-Trulia authority, to

reflect that the claims were “related to conflicts regarding financial advisors as well

as special committee members.”128 The Court “adjusted to the low end of the scale”

pre-Trulia because “the plaintiffs still viewed the revised disclosures as insufficient

to fully inform [the company’s] stockholders ahead of the vote.”129 That award was

exceptional even pre-Trulia.130

            In contrast, the disclosures Plaintiffs obtained are not exceptionally valuable.

While stockholders were given more material information to guide their vote,

nothing about these disclosures ameliorated any coercion, or altered the perception

of whether the vote was a foregone conclusion.131 Nor did they inform stockholders

that the disclosed conflicts had any effect on the process. The disclosures did not

expose an infected special committee or an unfair process that was dominated by

127
      Id.
128
      Id.
129
      Id. (citing In re ArthroCare Corp. S’holder Litig., C.A. No. 9131-VCL, at 28).
130
  See Sauer-Danfoss, 65 A.3d at 1141 (including $800,000 fee awards and $1 million fee
awards in the exceptionally valuable category, Appendix C).
131
   See Proxy at 130 (stating that “40.4% of the outstanding Falcon Common Stock” entered
the Support Agreement and committed their “vote to approve the Proposals, which
significantly reduces deal uncertainty,” and, unlike in Covetrus, providing an accurate
representation of deal certainty to stockholders).
                                               28
Blackstone.132 And, despite resolving informational gaps regarding the two financial

advisors, the supplemental disclosures did not inform the stockholders that these

advisors aided and abetted any breach of fiduciary duty.133 While the stockholders

plainly deserved to know about the potential conflicts held by the Transaction

Committee’s chair and advisors, the omitted conflicts are not alleged to have

manifested in any deficiencies in the Merger’s price or process, and the only alleged

injury is that stockholders were deprived of their right to cast a fully informed

vote.134 The disclosures Plaintiffs achieved were material, but not exceptional.

                   b.    Meaningfully Beneficial Disclosures

       And so, the disclosures Plaintiffs secured sink to the next stratum: the less

defined space between a minimally beneficial $75,000 disclosure and a

132
    See, e.g., D.I. 17 at Reply Br. 11–12 (addressing defendants’ arguments that plaintiffs
failed to show actual conflicts of interest existed or that there was any wrongdoing in the
process by arguing the test for materiality does not require such a showing).
133
   See, e.g., Compl. ¶¶ 44–50 (explaining the need to disclose the financial advisors’
involvement with Blackstone so the stockholders may subjectively evaluate how much
weight to place on such involvement).
134
    See, e.g., D.I. 15 at Ans. Br. 10–11 (“Plaintiffs do not contend that the Merger was
unfair to Falcon’s stockholders; nor do Plaintiffs contend that the Merger was not in the
best interests of Falcon’s stockholders. Plaintiffs take no issue with any of the work
conducted by Houlihan, Barclays, or Falcon’s many other advisors; nor do Plaintiffs even
quibble with any of Houlihan’s fairness analyses or its conclusion that the transaction was
fair from a financial perspective to Falcon. The Complaint alleges only that the directors
breached their fiduciary duties by failing to disclose all material information, and the only
alleged injury is that stockholders were deprived of their right to cast a fully informed
vote.”).
                                             29
meaningfully beneficial disclosure capped at $450,000.135 One post-Trulia data

point in this space is In re Ebix Shareholder Litigation, in which this Court found

that “substantial” and “material,” but “standard” and “not remarkable,” disclosures

merited a $400,000 award.136 The disclosure issues in In re Ebix began with multiple

instances of underreporting of bloated director compensation.137 Those issues were

mooted when the company terminated its compensation plan and replaced it with a

new agreement; but the Form 8–K disclosure of that new agreement was allegedly

deficient.138 That agreement was amended further in settlement, and the disclosures

drawing the fee award described those amendments.139 Those disclosures did not

concern any matter put to stockholder approval.140 The Court stated that the

135
   Sauer-Danfoss, 65 A.3d at 1136 (articulating a fee range for meaningful disclosures
“such as previously withheld projections or undisclosed conflicts faced by fiduciaries or
their advisors”); Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 (identifying post-Trulia fee ranges for
supplemental disclosures, with $75,000 to $125,000 serving as a benchmark for marginal
disclosures, $450,000 serving as the high end for “material disclosures,” and $600,000
being reserved for exceptional ones); Bednar, 2023 WL 3995121, at *5.
136
   In re Ebix, Inc., S’holder Litig. [hereinafter “Ebix Tr.”], C.A. No. 8526-VCS, at 101
(Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2019) (TRANSCRIPT) (addressing plaintiffs’ argument that the
disclosures were substantial and deserved more than the standard range and declining to
award above the standard $400,000 range).
137
      See id. at 84–86.
138
      Id. at 87; see id. at 88–89.
139
      See id. at 25; see also id. at 90; id. at 92.
140
    See id. at 93–94; see also Op. Br. 26, In re Ebix, Inc., S’holder Litig., C.A. No. 8526-
VCS (D.I. 70) (Del. Ch. Feb. 27, 2015) (“These five pages of disclosure ensure that
stockholders will be provided with accurate information about the Settlement and operation
of the Amended SARA.”).
                                                      30
disclosures were “commendable,” but they did not “justify a departure” from the

typical fee award, which the parties agreed was $400,000.141

         Here, Plaintiffs achieved four material supplemental disclosures informing a

stockholder vote on what Falcon described as a potentially controlled transaction.142

These multiple disclosures were more valuable than the Ebix disclosure.143            And

while the Ebix disclosure provided “more precise information about the incentive

compensation” that the CEO may have received, the information disclosed was “not

of massive proportions.”144      Here, the supplemental disclosures involved very

141
      Ebix Tr. at 101.
142
   See Proxy at 119–21 (explaining that the Transaction Committee was established where
Blackstone was deemed to sit on both sides of the deal: “the Falcon Board had been made
aware that certain affiliates of Blackstone may also be pursuing a potential transaction”;
“the Transaction Committee suspended its activities, having been informed that there were
no longer any active discussions relating to strategic transactions in which affiliates of
Blackstone may have a conflict”; and “[g]iven Blackstone’s ownership interests in Desert
Peak, the Falcon Board then deemed it prudent to reactivate the Transaction Committee”).
143
   Continuum Cap. v. Nolan [hereinafter “Continuum 1”], C.A. No. 5687-VCL, at 42, 100–
101 (Del. Ch. Feb. 3, 2011) (TRANSCRIPT) (discussing appropriateness of a greater fee
award where plaintiffs obtain multiple good disclosures while balancing “the incremental
value of the disclosure” and “the fact that [counsel] only had to litigate the case
once . . . .”); Continuum Cap. v. Nolan [hereinafter “Continuum II”], C.A. No. 5687-VCL,
at 40 (Del. Ch. Feb. 15, 2011) (“[I]f one meaningful quanta of information is obtained, the
fee should be in the four to 500,000 range. And if there are two or more, the Court dials
up.”).
144
      Ebix Tr. at 93.
                                            31
important potential conflicts of the committee chair145 and financial advisors.146 The

disclosures concerned a merger transaction subject to a stockholder vote, which is a

“fundamental [and] substantive” stockholder right.147 And the disclosures were

145
   See In re Loral Space & Commc’ns, 2008 WL 4293781, at *22 (explaining that the role
of a special committee chair, when done well, requires the chair to push back against the
potential acquirer and controlling stockholder, and finding that the composition and
effective functioning of the Special Committee was flawed because the selected chair was
conflicted, and so poorly situated, to be a special committee chair); see also In re Orchard
Enters., 88 A.3d at 21 (“In controller transactions, the effective functioning of the Special
Committee as an informed and aggressive negotiating force is of obvious importance to
the public stockholders.”).
146
    See PAETEC, 2013 WL 1110811, at *7 (classifying a “disclosure concerning the
existence of a possible conflict for [company’s] financial advisor” within meaningfully
beneficial fee range “because of the central role played by investment banks in the
evaluation, exploration, selection, and implementation of strategic alternatives [that
entitled stockholders to] full disclosure of investment banker compensation and potential
conflicts”); see also Del Monte Foods, 25 A.3d at 832 (“[T]his Court has required full
disclosure of investment banker compensation and potential conflicts.”); John Q.
Hammons Hotels, 2009 WL 3165613, at *16 (emphasizing importance of disclosure of
potential banker conflicts and explaining that “[t]here is no rule . . . that conflicts of interest
must be disclosed only where there is evidence that the financial advisor’s opinion was
actually affected by the conflict”).
147
   See Williams Co. S’holders Litig., 2021 WL 754593, at *20 (Del. Ch. Feb. 26, 2021)
(“Modern corporate law recognizes that stockholders have three fundamental, substantive
rights: to vote, to sell, and to sue.”); see also EMAK Worldwide, 50 A.3d at 433
(“Shareholder voting rights are sacrosanct.”); In re MultiPlan Corp. S’holders Litig., 268
A.3d 784, 802 (Del. Ch. Jan. 3, 2022) (“Delaware courts regard a wrongful impairment by
fiduciaries of the stockholders’ voting power or freedom as causing a personal injury to the
stockholders . . . .” (citing Trenwick Am. Litig. Tr. v. Ernst & Young, 906 A.2d 168, 212
(Del. Ch. Aug. 10, 2006) (“For this reason, our law has treated claims by stockholders that
corporate disclosures in connection with a stockholder vote or tender were materially
misleading as direct claims belonging to the stockholders who were asked to vote or
tender.”)).
                                                32
acquired against the backdrop of misleading partial disclosures.148 While the Ebix

plaintiffs achieved meaningful but “standard disclosures,” the plaintiffs here

achieved meaningful and “remarkable” disclosures, justifying a fee higher than

Ebix’s $400,000.149

          Another data point in this tier is Bednar v. Cleveland Biolabs, in which the

Court found that two supplemental proxy disclosures relevant to fairness of price,

paid in acquirer stock, warranted an aggregate fee of $450,000.150 Bednar received

$175,000 for correcting false statements that stated the acquirer had conducted

certain clinical trials, when no such trials had occurred.151          These disclosures

“provided a material benefit to [company] stockholders deciding whether to approve

a transaction in which they would receive [the acquirer’s] stock.”152 That award was

148
    See FrontFour Cap., 2019 WL 1313408, at *29 (“Defendants violated their duties of
disclosure” in part because they owed a duty to “provide the stockholders with an accurate,
full and fair characterization of the events” once they “traveled down a road of partial
disclosure”); see also Clements v. Rogers, 790 A.2d 1222, 1242 (Del. Ch. Aug. 14, 2001)
(“When a Proxy Statement details the functioning of [the Special Committee], it must do
so in a fair and balanced manner that does not create a materially misleading impression of
how the Committee actually operated in fact.”).
149
    Ebix Tr. at 101 (finding the disclosures achieved to be “standard disclosures” that
warranted “the standard $400,000 fee for disclosures” and indicating that “remarkable”
disclosures would “justify a departure from the fee typically awarded”).
150
      2023 WL 3995121, at *5.
151
   Id. at *2 (“[T]he supplemental disclosures deleted disclosures incorrectly stating that
“three double-blind placebo-controlled Phase II clinical trials had been conducted of
[acquirer’s] drug candidate . . . .”).
152
      Id. at *5.
                                            33
set in view of the award in the related Litwin v. Cleveland Biolabs action, in which

the plaintiffs were awarded $275,000 for corrective disclosures as to the acquirer’s

free cash flow for the same transaction.153 These cash flows were “the primary input

that drives value” and were “the most important determinant” for the stockholder to

make “an independent determination of fair value.”154 There was no allegation that

the Bednar or Litwin omissions were connected to any depression in the deal price.155

The Bednar Court concluded by noting “that the aggregate fee of $450,000

($275,000 in the Litwin Action and $175,000 to Plaintiff here) [was] . . . on the high

end of . . . the negotiated going rate for similar material disclosures post-Trulia.”156

            The disclosures in Bednar concerned information necessary for a stockholder

to conduct an independent evaluation of the fairness of price. Here, the disclosures

concern information necessary for a stockholder to conduct an independent

evaluation of the fairness of process. With fair process and fair price being as

intertwined as they are,157 I believe the aggregate $450,000 fee award in Bednar and

153
      Id.
154
  Litwin v. Cleveland Biolabs, C.A. No. 2021-0242-SG, at 5–6 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2021)
(TRANSCRIPT).
155
   Id. (explaining that the stockholders deserved to know the acquirer’s omitted cash flow
data provided by the acquirer; and determining that, while the company and financial
advisor “deemed [the data] sufficiently reliable,” the stockholders had a right to make an
independent evaluation, especially when they were being offered the acquirer’s stock).
156
      Bednar, 2023 WL 3995121, at *5.
157
      Ams. Mining Corp., 51 A.3d at 1244.
                                             34
Litwin is a helpful data point for process-related supplemental disclosures that are

meaningfully beneficial.

            And so, assessing the benefit supporting a fee award, without yet considering

the other Sugarland factors, I value the multiple meaningfully beneficial disclosures

of potential conflicts plaguing the purportedly independent Transaction Committee

chair and advisors at a fee award of $450,000.

                       c.   Minimally Beneficial

            To round out the tour of the three tiers of material supplemental disclosures,

this Court explored the minimally beneficial range in Rodden v. Bilodeau, where a

disclosure told stockholders what the target’s advisor had earned working for the

acquirer in past engagements.158 The disclosed fees were fair and unremarkable.159

The Court concluded the supplemental disclosure was “material because its

disclosure helped . . . stockholders to contextualize the magnitude of [the advisor’s]

potential conflict of interest,” and awarded $75,000.160 It concluded the disclosures

were less valuable than those in In re Art Technologies, where there was an

imbalance between the acquirer and seller in their previous engagements with, and

corresponding compensation to, the financial advisor.161 It concluded its disclosures

158
      C.A. No. 2019-0176-JRS, at 21, 24–25.
159
      Id.
160
      Id. at 16, 21.
161
      Id. at 25.
                                              35
were more valuable than those drawing $50,000 in In re Xoom Corporation

Stockholder Litigation, where there was a second, unconflicted advisor—there was

no second advisor in Rodden.162

          The disclosures obtained here were certainly more valuable than those in

Rodden, In re Art Technologies, and Xoom. They colored the touted independence

of a special committee’s chair and advisors, on which stockholders were told they

could rely. One of those advisors provided the committee with its fairness opinion;

the other was simultaneously working for Blackstone in a relationship worth

hundreds of millions of dollars. Those disclosures were more than minimally

beneficial.

                   2.        Secondary Factors

          The secondary Sugarland factors “are comparatively straightforward to

address.”163

                        a.    The Time And Effort Of Counsel

          While “the real measure of a fee award lies in the results achieved,”164 hours

worked serves as a crosscheck to guard against windfall awards, “particularly in

  Id. at 23 (discussing In re Xoom Corp. S’holder Litig., 2016 WL 4146425 (Del. Ch.
162

Aug. 4, 2016)).
163
      Malone, 2021 WL 5179219, at *11.
164
      Id. at *6.
                                            36
therapeutic benefit cases.”165 “This factor has two separate but related components:

(i) time and (ii) effort.”166 As Plaintiffs acknowledge, their 155.53 hours of work

was de minimis, and their effort in identifying and pursuing supplemental

disclosures, in the absence of a hearing, discovery, or depositions, is not

remarkable.167 This factor does not contribute to any additional fee.168

                      b.   The Complexity Of The Litigation

         This case was not complex. There are no groundbreaking topics.169 The

straightforward nature of this case “does not merit adjusting the fee relative to deal

litigation precedents.”170

165
    In re Dell Techs. Inc. Class V S’holders Litig., 300 A.3d 679, 692 (Del. Ch.
July 31, 2023) (calculating the award by quantifiable benefit achieved and recognizing the
hours worked cross-check is particularly helpful with therapeutic benefits: “if the results
are quantifiable, then Sugarland calls for an award of attorneys’ fees based upon a
percentage of the benefit. Hours worked are considered as a crosscheck to guard against
windfall awards, particularly in therapeutic benefit cases.”); Sciabacucchi v. Salzberg,
2019 WL 2913272, at *1, *6 (Del. Ch. July 8, 2019).
166
      Sciabacucchi, 2019 WL 2913272, at *6 (citing Sauer-Danfoss, 65 A.3d at 1138).
167
    Compare Op. Br. 29, with Magellan, 298 A.3d at 750 n.81 (explaining that “the
substantial work invested by the plaintiff’s counsel” in Covetrus stood out as exceptional),
and with Covetrus Tr. at 65 (finding plaintiffs spent a significant amount of time
“research[ing] the facts and the issues of the case,” filing a motion to expedite and
reviewing “over 8,000 pages of documents in expedited discovery”).
168
   See, e.g., Continuum II at 5 (noting that disclosures obtained after approximately a week
of work and a month of work warranted the same fee range, but that the Court can exercise
discretion when plaintiffs had done more work).
169
      Magellan, 298 A.3d at 751.
170
      Sauer-Danfoss, 65 A.3d at 1140.
                                            37
                        c.   The Extent Of The Contingency Risk

         Plaintiffs assert that “the contingent nature of the representation is the ‘second

most important factor considered by this Court’ in awarding attorneys’ fees”171 and

that “it is consistent with the public policy of Delaware to reward . . . risk-taking in

the interests of shareholders.”172 Plaintiffs are not incorrect. But this coin has two

sides. “Plaintiffs’ counsel technically pursued this case on a contingent basis, but

disclosure claims are relatively safe in terms of forcing a settlement.”173 I will not

penalize Plaintiffs for picking a low-hanging fruit. I also will not reward them for

it.174

         Having filtered this case through the Sugarland factors, I find that Plaintiffs

achieved meaningfully beneficial disclosures, without remarkable time, effort, or

complexity that would warrant more compensation. And so, I find a reasonable fee

for the benefits that Plaintiffs have conferred amounts to an award of $450,000.

         III.    CONCLUSION
         Plaintiffs’ counsel are entitled to a $450,000 fee award.

171
  Op. Br. 27 (citing Dow Jones & Co. v. Shields, 1992 WL 44907, at *2 (Del. Ch.
Mar. 4, 1992)).
172
      Id. at 28 (citing In re Plains Res. Inc. S’holders Litig., 2005 WL 332811, at *6).
173
      Sauer-Danfoss, 65 A.3d at 1140 (internal quotation marks omitted).
174
   Id. (finding the lack of risk does not provide any reason to depart from precedent awards,
because the disclosure precedents involved comparable levels of contingency risk).
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