Court Opinion

ID: 4247343
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-02-22 18:10:38.652095+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:44:23.482260
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

KT4 PARTNERS LLC,                        :
                                         :
                        Plaintiff,       :
                                         :
               v.                        :     C.A. No. 2017-0177-JRS
                                         :
PALANTIR TECHNOLOGIES, INC.              :
                                         :
                        Defendant.       :

                        MEMORANDUM OPINION

                     Date Submitted: December 12, 2017
                      Date Decided: February 22, 2018

Bartholomew J. Dalton, Esquire and Andrew C. Dalton, Esquire of Dalton &
Associates, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware and Barry S. Simon, Esquire and
Jonathan B. Pitt, Esquire of Williams & Connolly LLP, Washington, DC, Attorneys
for Plaintiff.

Blake Rohrbacher, Esquire, Kevin M. Gallagher, Esquire and Kelly L. Freund,
Esquire of Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware and Kevin J.
Orsini, Esquire and Rory A. Leraris, Esquire of Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP,
New York, New York, Attorneys for Defendant.

SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor
         Actions to enforce a stockholder’s right to demand inspection of a

corporation’s books and records under Section 220 of the Delaware General

Corporation Law (“Section 220”) are summary proceedings, until they aren’t.1 This

Section 220 action has been anything but summary.

         In 2003, Marc Abramowitz invested in a new company called Palantir

Technologies, Inc. (“Palantir” or “Defendant”), through one of his investment

vehicles, Plaintiff, KT4 Partners LLC (“KT4” or “Plaintiff”). Initially, Abramowitz

enjoyed a close relationship with executives at Palantir. That changed, however,

after senior Palantir executives accused Abramowitz of misappropriating Palantir

trade secrets.         Soon after the falling out, on August 16, 2016, Abramowitz

(through KT4) requested information from Palantir under the parties’ Investors’

Rights Agreement (the “IRA”). KT4 did not respond.

         Two weeks later, on September 1, 2016, Palantir sued Abramowitz for theft

of trade secrets in California state court.        On September 20, 2016, KT4

supplemented its request for information under the IRA with a formal demand for

inspection under Section 220. In its demand, KT4 stated that its purpose for

inspection was “to investigate fraud, mismanagement, abuse, and breach of

fiduciary duty by [Palantir], its officers, its directors, its agents, and its majority

1
    8 Del. C. § 220.

                                            1
shareholders.” On September 28, 2016, Palantir responded with a formal rejection

of KT4’s demand. KT4 filed its Verified Complaint Against Defendant Palantir

Technologies, Inc. for Inspection of Books and Records Pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 220

(the “Complaint”) approximately six months later, on March 8, 2017.

       When it became clear during discovery that Plaintiff intended to build his

case for inspection on hearsay, double hearsay and, at times, triple hearsay, the

Court was drawn into protracted in limine motion practice to determine the bounds

of the admissible trial evidence. 2 At trial, Abramowitz previewed at length a

tortious interference with contract or prospective business relations case he intends

to bring against principals and associates of Palantir, while Palantir was eager to lay

out its misappropriation of trade secrets against Abramowitz. When the Court

questioned whether the investigation of Abramowitz’s personal tortious

interference claim, or his defense of a misappropriation claim, were proper subjects

of a Section 220 trial, KT4 responded in its post-trial submissions and arguments

2
  While this court generally will consider hearsay evidence in Section 220 proceedings,
there are limits to how far the court will extend this allowance. See, e.g., Thomas & Betts
Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 685 A.2d 702, 710 (Del. Ch. 1995) (rejecting plaintiff’s
suspicions of mismanagement that were premised on the company’s former employee’s
statements as hearsay that was not “sufficiently reliable to create a credible inference of
waste and mismanagement”) (emphasis in original), aff’d, 681 A.2d 1026 (Del. 1996);
Haque v. Tesla Motors, Inc., 2017 WL 448594, at *7 (Del. Ch. Feb. 2, 2017) (rejecting
excerpts from an unauthorized biography as “classic hearsay” that did not satisfy any
applicable hearsay exception); Mattes v. Checkers Drive-In Rests., Inc., 2001 WL 337865,
at *2 n.2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 28, 2001) (“This hearsay testimony proferred by plaintiff himself
cannot create a credible inference of mismanagement.”).

                                            2
by focusing on other aspects of the demand where it identified more conventional

purposes for inspection. As discussed below, that strategic pivot was well founded

and supported by the evidence when viewed under the “credible basis” standard of

proof.

         After carefully reviewing the evidence presented at trial and the arguments

of counsel, I conclude in this post-trial Memorandum Opinion that KT4 has

demonstrated, by a preponderance of the evidence, a proper purpose of investigating

potential wrongdoing and a credible basis to justify further investigation into three

areas: (1) Palantir’s serial failures to hold annual stockholder meetings,

(2) Palantir’s IRA amendment in 2016 and (3) Palantir’s compliance with its

stockholder agreements. Judgment is entered for KT4. Palantir shall produce for

inspection the books and records designated herein as essential to KT4’s pursuit of

its proper purpose of investigating this possible wrongdoing.

                          I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

         Trial of this matter occurred on June 28, 2017, with live testimony from

Abramowitz. The Court received one lodged deposition and 325 trial exhibits. The

parties presented post-trial arguments on December 12, 2017. I have drawn the

facts from admitted allegations in the pleadings, stipulated facts, trial testimony and

                                          3
exhibits along with those matters of which the Court may take judicial notice.3

Unless otherwise indicated, the following facts were proven by a preponderance of

the evidence. I assign the evidence the weight and credibility I find it deserves in

accordance with my post-trial motion in limine ruling, which I incorporate herein.

         A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties

         Plaintiff KT4 is a Delaware limited liability company and Marc Abramowitz

is its managing member.4 KT4 is the record holder of 5,696,977 shares of Palantir

common and preferred stock.5

         Defendant Palantir is a privately held Delaware corporation with its principal

place of business in Palo Alto, California.6 Non-party Alexander Karp is Palantir’s

co-founder and CEO.7 Karp and Abramowitz know each other through a nonprofit

organization where Karp was an employee and Abramowitz served as a board

member.8

3
  Citations to the Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order are “PTO ¶ [ ],” to the joint exhibits at
trial are “JX #” and to the trial transcript are “Tr. #.”
4
    PTO ¶ 3.
5
  JX 194 (Palantir Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017) at 222. Palantir does not dispute
that KT4 is and has been a stockholder at all relevant times.
6
    PTO ¶ 2; JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 9.
7
    JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 39.
8
    Tr. 27–28.

                                             4
           Non-party Disruptive Technology Advisers LLP (“DTA”) is allegedly

Palantir’s broker.9 Non-party Brooklands Capital Strategies (“Brooklands”) is a

division of TPG Capital. 10 Brooklands allegedly represents the interests of a

Chinese entity identified by the parties as CDH.11 In 2015, KT4 attempted to sell

its entire Palantir position to CDH indirectly through Brooklands.12

           B. KT4 Invests in Palantir

           In approximately 2003, after a meeting with Karp, Abramowitz made an

initial investment of $100,000 in Palantir (through KT4).13 Thereafter, KT4 made

several more investments in Palantir to a point where Abramowitz estimates KT4’s

current Palantir holdings are worth at least $60 million.14 Abramowitz was a trusted

advisor to Palantir and was afforded unique access to Palantir’s executives.15 Over

the course of fifteen years as a Palantir investor, Abramowitz visited Palantir at least

9
    Tr. 53.
10
     JX 89 (E-mail) at 4214; Tr. 56.
11
     Id.
12
     Tr. 55–56.
13
     Tr. 28.
14
     JX 182 (Complaint) ¶ 1.
15
  Tr. 118–121; JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 1; Pl. KT4 P’rs LLC’s Post-Trial Br.
(“Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br.”) 13.

                                           5
a dozen times.16 Abramowitz met with Karp almost every time he visited Palantir,17

and the two maintained a cordial and amicable relationship.18 During this time,

Abramowitz did not make formal requests for information from Palantir,

presumably         because    he    was    in    regular     contact    with     Palantir

executives.19 As discussed below, Abramowitz’s unique access to Palantir ended

after a phone call with Karp in the summer of 2015.20

         C. Palantir’s Stockholder Agreements

         In connection with KT4’s investments in Palantir, KT4 and Palantir executed

the IRA dated June 15, 2006 (the “June 2006 IRA”) and the Amended IRA dated

February 15, 2008 (the “February 2008 IRA”). 21 Palantir and certain investors

(excluding KT4) entered into an Amended and Restated IRA dated July 8, 2015

(the “July 2015 IRA”). 22 The July 2015 IRA was amended in two separate

16
     Tr. 118.
17
     Tr. 118–19.
18
     Tr. 88.
19
     Tr. 132–33.
20
     Tr. 121–22.
21
   JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 12; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA). JX 3 appears to be an
unexecuted version of the June 2006 IRA. Palantir does not dispute the authenticity of
JX 3; therefore, I treat JX 3 as a true and correct copy of the June 2006 IRA. See Def.
Palantir Techs. Inc.’s Post-Trial Br. (“Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br.”) 11 (including JX 3
in a list identifying various stockholder agreements).
22
     JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 7; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA).

                                            6
documents, both dated September 1, 2016 (individually, the “September 2016 IRA

Amendment-A” and “September 2016 IRA Amendment-B,” and together, the

“September 2016 IRA Amendments”).23

      The IRA (as amended and restated from time to time) grants Major Investors,

including KT4, a right of first offer (“ROFO”) with respect to future stock offerings

by Palantir.24 Specifically, Section 2.4 of the IRA provides that if Palantir seeks to

offer shares of its stock to new investors, it must first provide notice and an

opportunity to Major Investors to participate in the offering in proportion to the

investor’s ownership of certain Palantir stock, or beyond its ownership proportion

in the event shares designated for the offering are not all sold to existing or new

investors.25

      The June 2006 IRA and February 2008 IRA define Major Investor as an

investor that holds at least 500,000 shares of Registrable Securities.26 The July

2015 IRA, however, executed without KT4’s involvement, re-defined Major

23
  JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 7; JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A);
JX 166 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-B).
24
  JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 2.4; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 2.4; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA)
§ 2.4. “Major Investor” is defined in the respective stockholder agreements at § 2.1.
25
  JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 2.4; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 2.4; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA)
§ 2.4.
26
   JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 2.1; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 2.1. “Registrable Securities”
is defined in the respective stockholder agreements at § 1.1(g).

                                          7
Investor as an investor that holds at least five million shares of Registrable

Securities.27 The September 2016 IRA Amendment-A increased the Major Investor

threshold once again, this time to ten million shares of Registrable Securities.28

Under the September 2016 IRA Amendment, KT4’s 5,696,977 shares of Palantir

stock fails to meet the Major Investor threshold required to qualify for the ROFO.

         Aside from implicating who receives the ROFO, the Major Investor

definition also affects stockholders’ right to request information from Palantir.

Only Major Investors can request access to, and “inspection” of, Palantir’s financial

information as defined in the IRA.29 After the September 2016 IRA Amendment-

27
     JX 87 (July 2015 IRA) § 2.1. “Registrable Securities” is defined in JX 87 § 1.1(k).
28
   JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A) ¶ 1. Palantir relied on IRA Section 3.7
to enact the September 2016 IRA Amendments. IRA Section 3.7 states, in relevant part:

         Section 2.1, Section 2.2, Section 2.3 and Section 2.4 may be amended or
         waived (either generally or in a particular instance and either retroactively or
         prospectively) only with the written consent of [Palantir] and the holders of
         a majority of the Registrable Securities that are held by Major Investors.

JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 3.7; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 3.7; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA)
§ 3.7. IRA Section 3.7 does not require Palantir to give notice to investors for amendments
to Sections 2.1 through 2.4, and expressly states that any amendment or waiver under IRA
Section 3.7 is binding upon each holder of Registrable Securities, each future holder of
such Registrable Securities and Palantir. JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 3.7; JX 6 (February
2008 IRA) § 3.7; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA) § 3.7.
29
   JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 87 (July
2015 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2. “Inspection” includes the right “to visit and inspect [Palantir’s]
properties, to examine its books of account and records and to discuss [Palantir’s] affairs,
finances and accounts with its officers . . .” JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 6
(February 2008 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA) §§ 2.1, 2.2.

                                               8
A changed the Major Investor threshold above KT4’s holdings, KT4 lost its

contractual right to request Palantir’s information or seek inspection.30

         The September 2016 IRA Amendment-B restricts a Major Investor’s access

to information in two additional ways. First, it permits Palantir to deny a request

for Palantir’s financial information or inspection if Major Investors holding a

certain percentage of Registrable Securities and Palantir consider the request to be

made in bad faith or for an improper purpose.31 Second, specific to Major Investors’

inspection rights, the September 2016 IRA Amendment-B states that Palantir is not

obligated to provide access to any information that it “reasonably considers to be a

trade secret or similar confidential information.”32

         In addition to the IRA, Palantir executed First Refusal and Co-Sale

Agreements (“FRCSA”) with its investors, including KT4. Specifically, Palantir

and KT4 executed a FRCSA dated June 15, 2006 (the “June 2006 FRCSA”) and

the Amended and Restated FRCSA dated February 5, 2008 (the “February 2008

FRCSA”).33 Several years later, Palantir and certain investors (excluding KT4)

30
     JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A) ¶ 1.
31
     JX 166 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-B) ¶ 1(a).
32
     JX 166 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-B) ¶ 1(b).
33
  JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 17–18; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA). JX 1 appears
to be an unexecuted version of the June 2006 FRCSA. Palantir does not dispute the
authenticity of this version of the June 2006 FRCSA; therefore, I treat JX 1 as a true and
                                            9
entered into the Amended and Restated FRCSA dated July 8, 2015 (the “July 2015

FRCSA”).34 The FRCSA gives Palantir a right of first refusal (“ROFR”) when

specific investors (each a “Selling Investor” and together, the “Selling Investors”)35

seek to sell Palantir stock.36 The FRSCA also gives certain investors (“Investors”),

including KT4, a ROFR (second to Palantir’s ROFR)37 and a co-sale right.38 The

ROFR and co-sale mechanism operates such that Palantir has the first option to

purchase any or all of the block of shares that a Selling Investor seeks to sell, then

the Investors get the option to purchase their pro rata share of the unsold shares

within the block.39 If shares remain unsold after Palantir and the Investors have

correct copy of the June 2006 FRCSA. See Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 11 (including
JX 1 in a list of stockholder agreements).
34
     JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA).
35
  The Selling Investors are five individuals (including Karp) under the June 2006 FRCSA
and the February 2008 FRCSA. JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) at 1; JX 7 (February 2008
FRCSA) at 1. Under the July 2015 FRCSA, the Selling Investors are holders of Class A
common stock and/or Class B common stock as identified on the July 2015 FRCSA
Schedule A, which includes the aforementioned five individuals. JX 86 (July 2015
FRCSA) at 1, § 2.1(b), Schedule A. KT4 is not a Selling Investor.
36
  JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 2.1; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 2.1; JX 86 (July 2015
FRCSA) § 2.1.
37
  JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 2.1; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 2.1; JX 86 (July 2015
FRCSA) § 2.1.
38
  JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 2.2; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 2.2; JX 86 (July 2015
FRCSA) § 2.2.
39
  JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) §§ 2.1, 2.2; JX 86
(July 2015 FRCSA) §§ 2.1, 2.2.

                                          10
exercised their ROFR, subject to notice requirements, an Investor may sell a

percentage of its stock equal to the Investor’s pro rata share of the unsold shares of

the block.40

         Under the June 2006 FRCSA and February 2008 FRCSA, ROFO and co-sale

rights do not apply for the first 500,000 shares that a Selling Investor seeks to sell.41

The July 2015 FRCSA changed that provision to state that ROFO and co-sale rights

do not apply to transfers by Selling Investors that are “approved by a disinterested

majority of the Board of Directors of [Palantir]” and do not exceed the exemption

levels identified in Schedule B. 42 Karp has zero shares exempted from transfer

restrictions.43

40
  JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 2.2; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 2.2; JX 86 (July 2015
FRCSA) § 2.2.
41
     JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 2.4; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 2.4.
42
  JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) § 2.4. Section 10 of the June 2006 FRCSA and February
2008 FRCSA provides the agreement may be amended and the observance of any term of
the agreement may be waived (either generally or in a particular instance and either
retroactively or prospectively) only with the written consent of [Palantir], the Founders
(as defined in the respective agreements) holding at least a majority of the common stock
and Investors holding at least a majority of the common stock. JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA)
§ 10; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 10. Section 10 further provides “that in the event
such amendment or waiver materially and adversely affects the obligations or rights of
any Investor in a different manner than the other Investors, such amendment or waiver
shall also require the written consent of such materially and adversely affected Investor.”
JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 10; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 10.
43
     JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) § 2.4, Schedule B.

                                            11
         D. KT4’s Efforts to Sell Palantir Stock to Brooklands

         In the summer of 2015, KT4 and Palantir’s relationship was fractured after

Abramowitz received a phone call from Karp during which Karp “verbally abused

[him] in a manner that [he] thought was irrational, somewhat unhinged, and

completely contradictory to any relationship [he] had had with [Karp] in the past.”44

During this conversation, Karp accused Abramowitz of stealing Palantir’s

intellectual property.45 Following this conversation, Abramowitz sought to sell his

entire Palantir position to Brooklands.46 Abramowitz teamed up with other Palantir

stockholders who also sought liquidity because Brooklands was interested in

purchasing more Palantir shares than Abramowitz had to sell. 47 According to

Abramowitz, Brooklands did not go through with the transaction because principals

at Palantir got wind of the deal and offered Brooklands new shares instead. 48

44
     Tr. 11.
45
     Tr. 11, 121.
46
     Tr. 55–56.
47
  Tr. 56–57; JX 109 (E-mail). In keeping with my September 5, 2017 bench ruling on
Palantir’s motion in limine, where applicable, I note the parties’ evidentiary objections
and my ruling when referencing certain exhibits or testimony. During that hearing, I ruled
that certain E-mails concerning various transactions would be inadmissible hearsay if
offered for the truth of the matter asserted. To the extent those documents are cited in this
Memorandum Opinion, they are cited only for some non-truth purpose. Mot. in Limine
Tr. 72–74 (Sept. 5, 2017).
48
     Tr. 70.

                                             12
Following the unsuccessful transaction with Brooklands, Abramowitz consulted

with attorneys to explore a tortious interference suit against Palantir for blocking

the sale of KT4’s shares to Brooklands.49

         E. KT4 Requests Information and Inspection Pursuant to the February
            2008 IRA

         After Abramowitz’s attempt to sell KT4’s entire Palantir position to

Brooklands failed, on August 16, 2016, KT4 sent Palantir an information request

pursuant to the February 2008 IRA (the “Information Request”).50 Notably, at the

49
     Tr. 129–30.
50
   JX 163 (KT4’s Information Request). Relying on Section 2.1 of the February 2008
IRA, KT4 requested that Palantir produce: (1) year-end financial reports for each fiscal
year from 2011 through 2015; (2) unaudited income statement, statement of cash flows
and unaudited balance sheet as of September 30, 2016; (3) a budget and business plan for
fiscal year 2017 and (4) any notice sent to investors pursuant to February 2008 IRA
subsection 2.4(a) from February 2008 through present day. Id. at 1–2. In addition to its
production request, pursuant to Section 2.2 of the February 2008 IRA, KT4 requested
inspection of Palantir’s books of account and records and a meeting with Palantir’s Chief
Executive Officer (“CEO”), Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer and Chief
Technology Officer about various topics. Id. The discussion topics included:
(1) Palantir’s financial performance; (2) compensation of Palantir’s officers and directors;
(3) travel and expense records/reports for expenses incurred by Palantir’s officers and
directors; (4) all communications, meetings, discussions, and conversations over the last
five years regarding dividends and an initial public offering (“IPO”) of Palantir stock;
(5) concerns and complaints from stockholders about their ability vel non to sell their
Palantir stock; (6) the reasons underlying Palantir’s decision over the last five years to
repurchase Palantir common stock; (7) agreements concerning nondisclosure,
confidentiality, interactions with the press, and/or litigation releases entered into in
connection with Palantir’s repurchase of common stock; (8) each actual and potential
offering or sale by anyone of shares of Palantir stock during the last five years;
(9) whether, how, and to what extent Palantir or its common holders complied with
Section 2.4(a) of the February 2008 IRA; (10) commissions or payments made to DTA
and (11) Palantir’s practices and polices concerning sales of Palantir shares. Id. at 2–3.

                                            13
time of the Information Request, KT4 still had information rights under the IRA

because its Palantir holdings were sufficient to allow it to qualify as a Major

Investor.51 Palantir wrote to KT4 on August 21, 2016, stating that it was reviewing

the request and would respond soon. 52 When Palantir did not respond, KT4

reiterated its request on August 30, 2016.53

           F. Palantir Amends the July 2015 IRA and Files a California Lawsuit

           Palantir did not respond to KT4’s Information Request.           Instead, on

September 1, 2016, Palantir executed the September 2016 IRA Amendments,54 and

then, on that same day, filed a lawsuit against KT4 in the Superior Court of the State

of California, alleging, inter alia, misappropriation of Palantir’s trade secrets (the

“California Action”).55

51
  The investment threshold was not raised beyond KT4’s holdings until September 2016.
JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A) ¶ 1.
52
     JX 164 (E-mail Chain).
53
     Id.
54
  JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 7; JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A);
JX 166 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-B). Palantir asserts that “the September 2016
IRA Amendments were among the ways that Palantir sought to fulfill its obligations to its
other stockholders and protect itself from [] Abramowitz’s misuse of sensitive business
information.” JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 41.
55
     JX 167 (Complaint in California Action).

                                            14
       G. KT4 Makes a Section 220 Demand

       On September 20, 2016, KT4 sent a Books and Records Demand (the

“Demand”) to Palantir seeking 22 categories of documents (individually,

“Request [#]”, and collectively, the “Requests”). 56 KT4 stated its purpose in

making the Demand was “to investigate fraud, mismanagement, abuse, and breach

of fiduciary duty committed by [Palantir], its officers, its directors, its agents, and

its majority shareholders” relating to the following issues: (1) interference with

KT4’s efforts to sell its Palantir shares; (2) Palantir’s practice of improperly

favoring certain stockholders; (3) corporate waste; (4) Palantir’s actions that

deprived certain investors of the full value of their investments; (5) Palantir’s

actions that deprived certain investors of their ROFR to purchase Palantir shares

56
  The Demand is similar, but not identical, to the Information Request. The Demand asks
for: (a) Requests 1–2: Palantir’s stock ledger and list of stockholders; (b) Requests 3–4:
identification of directors and officers, and their dates of service; (c) Request 5: board of
director and sub-committee minutes; (d) Requests 6–7, 15: financial statements and other
books and records regarding the value of Palantir’s equity; (e) Requests 8–9: officer and
director compensation and Karp’s travel and expense reports; (f) Requests 10–11, 13, 14,
18, 21 and 22: Palantir’s share repurchase(s), any actual or potential sales of Palantir
shares effectuated by Palantir or its stockholders, Palantir’s “practices and policies”
concerning sales of Palantir shares, notice sent to Palantir investors regarding a sale of
Palantir shares, offers or potential offers to purchase Palantir stock, any agreement or
proposed agreement to permit Karp to sell or dispose of his Palantir shares and books and
records relating to whether certain stockholders are favored to the detriment of others;
(g) Request 12: payments made to DTA; (h) Requests 16–17: books and records
regarding dividends and an IPO of Palantir stock; (i) Request 19: books and records
relating to the September 2016 IRA Amendments and (j) Request 20: books and records
relating to each Palantir annual stockholder meeting. JX 170 (Demand) at 1–3. Most of
these Requests are qualified by “all” or “any” and span a time range of approximately
2011 through the present. Id.

                                             15
and (6) securities fraud.57 Of note, KT4’s demand did not raise either valuation or

communicating with other stockholders as purposes supporting the Demand. 58

On September 28, 2016, Palantir rejected the Demand on four grounds:

(1) Abramowitz’s primary purpose is improper; (2) the Demand fails to set forth a

credible basis from which to infer mismanagement or breach of duty; (3) KT4 did

not articulate what it intends to do with the information it seeks; and (4) KT4 did

not show that specific documents are necessary and essential to KT4’s stated

purpose.59

         KT4 did not amend its Demand to address Palantir’s objections. Instead, on

March 8, 2017, six months after serving its Demand, KT4 filed the Complaint in

this Court.60 In its Complaint, KT4 alleges its purpose for asserting inspection

rights is “to allow KT4 to investigate whether and to what extent Palantir . . . [has]

prevented disfavored investors such as KT4 from realizing the value of their

investment.”61 The Complaint also restates the six issues that KT4 seeks to

57
     JX 170 (Demand) at 4.
58
     See JX 170 (Demand).
59
     JX 171 (Palantir’s Demand Rejection Letter) at 2.
60
     PTO ¶ 8; JX 182 (Complaint).
61
     JX 182 (Complaint) ¶ 3.

                                             16
investigate identified in the Demand.62 Importantly, however, where the Demand

did not state a valuation purpose, the Complaint states that KT4 seeks to inspect

books and records to value its Palantir stock holdings.63

          H. Palantir Offers KT4 Some Books and Records

          Prior to KT4 filing the Complaint, Palantir offered to produce certain books

and records in response to the Demand.64 Palantir renewed its offer during the

pendency of this litigation.65 First, on February 14, 2017, Palantir offered KT4:

          (i) [Palantir’s] most recent audited consolidated financial statements
          of operations, comprehensive loss, changes in convertible preferred
          stock and stockholders’ deficit and cash flows for the years then ended,
          and the related notes to the consolidated financial statements and
          (ii) [Palantir’s] summary capitalization table as of a recent date,
          aggregated by share class and series.66

62
     Id. ¶ 88.
63
     Id. ¶ 87.
64
     JX 122 (Palantir’s First Offer to Produce Books and Records).
65
  JX 193 (Palantir’s Second Offer to Produce Books and Records). I do not view these
exchanges as offers to compromise, and neither party has suggested that their dialogue to
address the Demand pre- and post-litigation would be inadmissible under Delaware
Uniform Rules of Evidence 408.
66
     JX 122 (Palantir’s First Offer to Produce Books and Records).

                                             17
Palantir conditioned its offer on KT4’s agreement to execute Palantir’s Non-

Disclosure Agreement.67 KT4 rejected Palantir’s offer on February 22, 2017.68

           On April 26, 2017, one month after KT4 filed its Complaint, Palantir again

offered KT4 books and records to resolve this litigation.69 Specifically, Palantir

offered six categories of documents responsive to the Demand:

                  a list of Palantir stockholders (Request 2);

                  a list of all directors and officers, and their dates of service, from 2011

                    through the present (Requests 3 and 4);

                  Palantir’s audited consolidated financial statements for the years

                    ended December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2015, the most recent

                    audited statements available (Request 6);

                  the July 2015 IRA and the September 2016 IRA Amendments

                    (Request 22); and

                  the FRCSA, as amended and restated (Request 22).70

67
     Id.
68
     JX 123 (E-mail) at 1.
69
     JX 193 (Palantir’s Second Offer to Produce Books and Records).
70
     Id. at 1.

                                                18
Palantir again conditioned its offer on KT4 executing a “standard Section 220

confidentiality stipulation.”71 On May 2, 2017, KT4 again rejected Palantir’s offer,

disagreeing that the proposed books and records represent a “complete response to

each of the referenced demands” and stating that Palantir’s proposed confidentiality

stipulation is “not appropriate or reasonable.”72 Palantir has not produced books

and records in response to KT4’s Demand, but has produced a stocklist and the

September 2016 IRA Amendments as discovery in this litigation.73

                                   II. ANALYSIS

          Section 220 permits a stockholder of a corporation to inspect the

corporation’s books and records for any proper purpose.74 The stockholder bears

the burden of proof to demonstrate a proper purpose for each item sought by a

preponderance of the evidence.75 A plaintiff seeking inspection must also prove

that each category of the books and records requested is essential to fulfill the stated

71
     Id. at 1, 3–11.
72
   JX 195 (KT4’s Rejection of Palantir’s Second Offer to Produce Books and Records)
at 1.
73
  JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A); JX 166 (September 2016 IRA
Amendment-B); JX 194 (Palantir’s Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017).
74
     8 Del. C. § 220.
75
  Seinfeld v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc., 909 A.2d 117, 121 (Del. 2006). The burden of
proof rests with the corporation to demonstrate an improper purpose when resisting
demands to inspect stocklists and stock ledgers. 8 Del. C. § 220(c).

                                          19
purpose.76 A proper purpose is one that is reasonably related to the stockholder’s

interests as a stockholder.77

           The stockholder’s purpose must be a means to some end. 78              Stated

 differently, the stockholder “must do more than state, in a conclusory manner, a

 generally accepted proper purpose.” 79 A reason for the purpose must also be

 stated, i.e., what the stockholder will do with the information it seeks, or an end to

 which its demand may lead. 80           “Further, once a proper purpose has been

 established, any secondary purpose or ulterior motive of the stockholder becomes

 irrelevant.”81

           KT4 contends that two overarching purposes can be extracted from its

 lengthy Demand: valuing its shares and investigating wrongdoing. For the

 reasons that follow, I find KT4 has failed properly to advance a valuation purpose

 but has properly stated a purpose to investigate possible wrongdoing (albeit not to

 the extent alleged).

76
     Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 681 A.2d 1026, 1035 (Del. 1996).
77
     8 Del. C. § 220(b).
78
  W. Coast Mgmt. & Capital, LLC, v. Carrier Access Corp., 914 A.2d 636, 646 (Del. Ch.
2006).
79
     Id.
80
     Id.
81
     CM & M Gp., Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 792 (Del. 1982).

                                            20
       A. The Valuation Purpose

       It is settled Delaware law that a desire to value one’s stock is a proper purpose

for inspection under Section 220. 82 To advance that purpose, or any purpose,

Section 220 requires that a stockholder follow certain steps in making its demand

to inspect books and records, including that the stockholder clearly state the

purpose(s) for its desired inspection.83 Indeed, our Supreme Court has made clear

that “[a] Section 220 plaintiff’s compliance with the statutorily mandated

procedures is a precondition to having the propriety of its purpose for inspection

82
  Id. (citing State ex rel. Rodgers v. Sherman Oil Co., 117 A. 122, 125 (Del. Super. Ct.
1922)). See also Thomas & Betts Corp., 685 A.2d at 713 (“Valuation of a stockholder’s
investment in a corporation, particularly where the corporation is privately held, has long
been recognized as a proper purpose under 8 Del. C. § 220. Because they do not receive
the mandated, periodic disclosures associated with a publicly held corporation, minority
shareholders in a privately held corporation face certain risk. Such shareholders may,
therefore, have a legitimate need to inspect the corporation’s books and records to value
their investment, in order to decide whether to buy additional shares, sell their shares, or
take some other action to protect their investment.”) (citation omitted).
83
  Seinfeld v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc., 873 A.2d 316, 317 (Del. Ch. 2005), aff’d, 909 A.2d
117 (Del. 2006); 8 Del. C. § 220(b) (“Any stockholder . . . shall, upon written demand
under oath stating the purpose thereof . . . to inspect for any proper purpose . . .”)
(emphasis added). See also 8 Del. C. § 220(c) (“Where the stockholder seeks to inspect
the corporation’s books and records, other than its stock ledger or list of stockholders,
such stockholder shall first establish that: . . . (2) Such stockholder has complied with this
section respecting the form and manner of making demand for inspection of such
documents.”).

                                             21
addressed.”84 KT4 failed to state its valuation purpose in the Demand, and there

are consequences for this deficiency.85

           KT4 argues that notwithstanding the “quibble over the wording,”86 the Court

should find that the Demand states a valuation purpose for any of three reasons.

First, the Demand requests Palantir’s year-end financial statements, quarterly

financial statements, and internal valuations; therefore, Palantir should have been

able to discern that valuation was one of KT4’s purposes in making the Demand.87

Second, any doubt over the wording of the Demand should be resolved in favor of

KT4’s statutory right to inspection. 88 Finally, if the Demand lacked specificity

about KT4’s valuation purpose, any arguable technical deficiency was cured when

KT4 stated that purpose in its Complaint.89

84
  Cent. Laborers Pension Fund v. News Corp., 45 A.3d 139, 141 (Del. 2012). See also
Quantum Tech. P’rs IV, L.P. v. Ploom, Inc., 2014 WL 2156622, at *7 (Del. Ch. May 14,
2014) (“To satisfy Section 220’s procedural requirements, i.e., its ‘form and manner’
requirements, demand must be made in writing, under oath, and must state the
stockholder’s purpose for making it.”).
85
     See JX 170 (Demand).
86
     Pl. KT4 P’rs LLC’s Post-Trial Reply Br. (“Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br.”) 12.
87
     Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 25–26.
88
     Id.
89
     Id.

                                             22
         In response, Palantir points out the obvious; the Demand makes absolutely

no mention of valuation as a proffered purpose. Rather, the only identified purposes

are investigative purposes. 90       Palantir further asserts that KT4’s attempt to

circumvent this deficiency by lashing its eleventh-hour valuation purpose to the

suspected wrongdoing it identified in its Demand is unavailing because

investigating wrongdoing and valuation are two distinct purposes. I agree with

Palantir.

         “The requirement that the corporation receive an inspection demand in proper

form recognizes the importance of striking an appropriate balance between the

rights of stockholders and corporations.”91 And the language of Section 220 setting

forth the inspection prerequisites is unambiguous.92 “Accordingly, Delaware courts

require strict adherence to the Section 220 inspection demand procedural

requirements” and the demand must be in “proper form before litigation is

initiated.” 93 “Delaware law does not permit section 220 actions based on an

90
     Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 38.
91
     Cent. Laborers Pension Fund, 45 A.3d at 144.
92
  Weingarten v. Monster Worldwide, Inc., 2017 WL 752179, at *1 (Del. Ch. Feb. 27,
2017).
93
     Cent. Laborers Pension Fund, 45 A.3d at 144, 146 (emphasis in original).

                                             23
ephemeral purpose, nor will this court impute a purpose absent the plaintiff stating

one.”94

         In Seinfeld, this court held that a stockholder failed strictly to comply with

Section 220 because the stockholder’s demand omitted certain key words that were

deemed necessary to ensure that the demand clearly communicated what the

stockholder was looking for and why.95 Similarly, the Demand is missing certain

key words—a stated valuation purpose—and KT4’s request for financial materials

in furtherance of other stated purposes cannot fill the gap. I cannot infer a valuation

purpose from an item in a list of document requests that KT4 states are necessary

to advance its investigative purpose simply because KT4 now seeks to slap a Band-

Aid on a glaring defect in its Demand.

         KT4’s two additional theories for why the Demand has stated a valuation

purpose fail as a matter of law. First, KT4 calls upon Compaq Computer Corp. v.

Horton for the proposition that if I doubt (as I do) whether the Demand states a

valuation purpose, I must resolve my doubt in favor of KT4’s statutory right to

inspection.96 KT4’s reliance on Compaq is misplaced. There, the only question

94
     W. Coast Mgmt. & Capital, LLC, 914 A.2d at 646.
95
  Seinfeld, 873 A.2d at 317 (noting that the “statute is both clear and commanding” and
that “it is not too much to ask of a stockholder or his lawyers to read the statute and comply
with its plain provisions when making a demand”).

 Compaq Computer Corp. v Horton, 631 A.2d 1, 3 (Del. 1993) (“Under Section 220,
96

when a stockholder complies with the statutory requirements as to form and manner of
                                             24
before this court and ultimately appealed to the Supreme Court was whether the

stockholder’s stated purpose was a proper purpose.97 The stockholder in Compaq

had complied with the statutory requirements under Section 220.98 Indeed, KT4’s

selective citation to Compaq ignores that the Court had already recognized that the

stockholder had complied with Section 220’s form and manner requirements and,

therefore, focused its analysis on whether the stockholder had stated a proper

purpose.99 Here, I cannot reach the propriety of KT4’s purported valuation purpose

because it did not express that purpose in its Demand as required.

           KT4’s final proffered basis upon which I may read a valuation purpose into

the Demand is likewise flawed. KT4 argues the Demand’s lack of specificity about

KT4’s valuation purpose was “cured” when it expressly stated a valuation purpose

in the Complaint, and then reiterated that stated purpose in Abramowitz’s

deposition and trial testimony.100 To support its contention, KT4 cites numerous

Delaware cases where this Court granted inspection after a stockholder offered

making a demand, then the corporation bears the burden of proving that the demand is for
an improper purpose. If there is any doubt, it must be resolved in favor of the statutory
right of the stockholder to have an inspection.”) (citations omitted).
97
     Id.
98
     Id.
99
     Id.
100
      Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 26.

                                           25
evidence to support its stated purposes.101 These precedents are inapposite. As

Palantir aptly points out, in every case KT4 cites, the stockholder stated a purpose

in its initial demand for inspection and then supplemented or clarified the stated

purpose during the course of litigation.102 KT4 missed step one; it failed to state a

valuation purpose in any form in its Demand.

         For these reasons, I conclude that KT4 has not stated a valuation purpose.

Having found KT4 has not stated a valuation purpose, I do not reach the issue of

whether KT4’s valuation purpose, had it been stated, is a pretext.

         B. The Investigative Purpose

         It is well established that a stockholder’s desire to investigate waste,

wrongdoing or mismanagement is a proper purpose.103 But stockholders are only

permitted to investigate wrongdoing to the extent that wrongdoing affects their

interests as stockholders.104 If that connection exists, then the stockholder meets its

burden of proof when he presents a credible basis from which the court can infer

that waste or wrongdoing may have occurred.105 This “credible basis” is “some

101
      Id. at 26–27.
102
      Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 39.

  Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 121; La. Mun. Police Empls.’ Ret. Sys. v. Lennar Corp., 2012
103
WL 4760881, at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct. 5, 2012).
104
      La. Mun. Police Empls.’ Ret. Sys., 2012 WL 4760881, at *2.
105
      Thomas & Betts Corp., 681 A.2d at 1031.

                                            26
evidence” of possible wrongdoing as would warrant further investigation of the

matter.106 In other words, a stockholder “must make a credible showing, through

documents, logic, testimony or otherwise, that there are legitimate issues of

wrongdoing.”107 “The ‘credible basis’ standard sets the lowest possible burden of

proof.” 108 “The only way to reduce the burden of proof further would be to

eliminate any requirement that a stockholder show some evidence of possible

wrongdoing.”109

         The Demand states KT4 seeks books and records “to investigate fraud,

mismanagement, abuse, and breach of fiduciary duty,” 110 an accepted proper

purpose if it is the primary purpose and not a pretext.111 In this regard, Palantir

argues that investigating wrongdoing is not KT4’s primary purpose. Rather,

106
  Sec. First Corp. v. U.S. Die Casting & Dev. Co., 687 A.2d 563, 568 (Del. 1997) (citing
Helmsman Mgmt. Servs. v. A & S Consultants, Inc., 525 A.2d 160, 165–66 (Del. 1987)).
107
   La. Mun. Police Empls.’ Ret. Sys., 2012 WL 4760881, at *3 (citing Norfolk Cty. Ret.
Sys. v. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc., 2009 WL 353746, at *6 (Del. Ch. Feb. 12, 2009), aff’d,
977 A.2d 899 (Del. 2009) (citations omitted)).
108
      Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 123.
109
    La. Mun. Police Empls.’ Ret. Sys., 2012 WL 4760881, at *2 (citing Seinfeld, 909 A.2d
at 123).
110
      JX 170 (Demand) at 4.
111
   Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 121; Thomas & Betts Corp., 681 A.2d at 1030 n.1 ([T]he
shareholder’s primary purpose must be proper; any secondary purpose, whether proper or
not, is irrelevant.”); La. Mun. Police Empls.’ Ret. Sys., 2012 WL 4760881, at *2.

                                            27
Palantir urges the Court to conclude that KT4’s inspection demand is motivated by

Abramowitz’s personal interests unrelated to KT4’s interests as a stockholder—i.e.,

obtaining leverage against Palantir in the California Action and obtaining pre-suit

discovery on his breach of contract and tortious interference claims against

Palantir. 112    According to Palantir, Abramowitz “disavowed any interest in

contacting other shareholders”113 and testified at trial that he is not going to hold

onto KT4’s Palantir shares to pursue fiduciary duty litigation against Palantir

managers. 114 It is also telling, according to Palantir, that Abramowitz never

requested any of the information he now seeks when he enjoyed unique access to

Palantir offices and executives.

          I agree with Palantir that some of KT4’s stated purposes reflect

Abramowitz’s personal desire to gain either litigation leverage or advanced

discovery in litigation that he intends to pursue on his own behalf unrelated to his

interests as a stockholder. These are not proper purposes. With that said, KT4 has

sustained its burden of demonstrating a credible basis of wrongdoing in certain

respects that do affect its interests as a Palantir stockholder. I explain the distinction

below.

112
      Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 26–37.
113
      Id. 34.
114
      Tr. 87–88; Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 41.

                                             28
         At the outset, I find unpersuasive Palantir’s argument that KT4’s

investigative purpose is not its primary purpose simply because Abramowitz has

“disavowed” any interest in contacting other stockholders or bringing a breach of

fiduciary duty suit against Palantir managers. At his deposition, Abramowitz

testified that he had not discussed the allegations in the Complaint with any Palantir

investors outside of individuals affiliated with the company. 115 This is a far cry

from acknowledging that he has no plans to communicate with other stockholders

about any of the alleged wrongdoing for which he has requested inspection should

he receive those documents.

         I also find no merit in Palantir’s argument that KT4’s investigative purpose

is not its primary purpose because Abramowitz did not commit to pursue breach of

fiduciary duty litigation after he received the books and records he seeks here.116

In this regard, Palantir’s reliance upon West Coast Management & Capital, LLC v.

Carrier Access Corp. is puzzling.117 In West Coast Management, this court denied

inspection to investigate breaches of fiduciary duty because the plaintiff was

precluded from taking a second bite at derivative litigation, and plaintiff’s sole

purpose for launching the Section 220 action was to obtain additional information

115
      D.I. 59 (Tr. of Dep. of Abramowitz) at 62.
116
      Tr. 86–88.
117
      914 A.2d 636 (Del. Ch. 2006).

                                             29
to re-plead demand futility.118 In contrast, as best I can tell, KT4 is not precluded

from bringing claims against Palantir; it has simply not committed to do so at this

time. In one sense, KT4 could be commended for not committing to launch

litigation against Palantir before it sees the documents it has requested. While I am

by no means ascribing this degree of forethought to KT4’s ambivalence, I cannot

conclude that KT4 must commit to initiate litigation as a precondition to receiving

Section 220 documents. It is enough that it will consider doing so if evidence of

wrongdoing is discovered.119

         Finally, I reject the notion that KT4’s desire for information must be

pretextual because KT4 never requested the information it now seeks when

Abramowitz enjoyed unique access to Palantir. 120 In part, at least, Palantir’s

argument reveals its own fallacy—there was no need to demand inspection when

the information from Palantir was free-flowing. Now that the information stream

has dried up, KT4 must resort to more formal methods to obtain information.

118
      W. Coast Mgmt. & Capital, 914 A.2d at 646.
119
   Elow v. Express Scripts Hldg. Co., 2017 WL 2352151, at *6 n.73 (Del. Ch. May 31,
2017) (noting plaintiff’s testimony that he is “merely ‘considering’ derivative litigation as
an option” and rejecting the premise that a “stockholder would need to know prior to an
inspection whether he or she definitively will pursue litigation no matter what the
documents revealed”).
120
      Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 10–11.

                                             30
      Having set aside Palantir’s “pretext purpose” arguments, I turn next to the

evidence KT4 has presented to determine whether credible bases of wrongdoing

exist to warrant further inspection. KT4 presents seven allegations of wrongdoing

that it seeks to investigate: (1) Palantir’s failure to hold annual stockholder

meetings; (2) the adoption of the September 2016 IRA Amendments; (3) violations

of the FRCSA and IRA; (4) DTA’s compensation; (5) interference with the

Brooklands transaction; (6) failure to return liquidity to stockholders and

(7) excessive CEO compensation. I address the sufficiency of Plaintiff’s proffered

evidence in support of each allegation in turn.

          1.   Failure to Hold Annual Stockholder Meetings

      KT4 seeks to investigate Palantir’s routine failure to hold annual stockholder

meetings, in contravention of the Delaware General Corporation Law and Palantir’s

bylaws.121 This investigation is reasonably related to KT4’s (and others’) interests

as a Palantir stockholder for the obvious reason that stockholders need and are

entitled to receive information about their investment. Stockholders of privately

held corporations, such as Palantir, cannot turn to mandated public filings to obtain

information about the companies in which they invest. Normally, a corporation

121
   Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 29; 8 Del. C. § 211; JX 204 (Palantir Bylaws) § 2 (“The
annual meeting of stockholders shall be held each year on a date and a time designated by
the Board of Directors.”).

                                           31
shares information about its current and projected operations and performance with

stockholders, if not at other times, at least at the company’s annual stockholder

meeting.122

         Palantir’s serial failure to convene annual stockholder meetings is

problematic. Palantir admits that it has not held stockholder meetings, but states

that there is no wrongdoing because stockholders have elected to act, instead, by

written consent.123 Even so, the questions remain whether and to what extent KT4

and other stockholders have been (or have not been) provided an opportunity to

participate in decision making by written consent and whether all stockholders have

been provided with the kind of basic information they could expect to receive from

Palantir at an annual stockholder meeting.124 Accordingly, I find that KT4 has met

its low burden of demonstrating a credible basis to suspect wrongdoing as to

Palantir’s failure to hold annual stockholder meetings.

122
   Marmon v. Arbinet-Thexchange, Inc., 2004 WL 936512, at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 28, 2004)
(holding that a company’s failure to convene an annual stockholder meeting for over three
years alone constitutes a violation of Delaware statutory law and provides a credible basis
that mismanagement may have occurred).
123
      JX 183 (Answer to Complaint) at 35.
124
   See JX 170 (Demand) (Requests 3 and 4 seek basic information such as the identities
and positions of Palantir’s officers and directors).

                                            32
            2.   The September 2016 IRA Amendments

         Not only does Palantir not provide its stockholders with information at annual

stockholder meetings, it appears from the evidence that Palantir has both

prospectively and retroactively foreclosed certain stockholders’ contractual rights

to obtain information about Palantir. Palantir’s September 2016 IRA Amendments

eviscerated KT4’s (and other similarly situated stockholders’) contractual

information rights after KT4 sought to exercise those rights.125 Investigating this

potential wrongdoing is undeniably related to KT4’s interest as a stockholder.

         I find there is a credible basis to suspect wrongdoing in connection with the

September 2016 IRA Amendments. In Marmon, this Court dealt with an analogous

situation. There, the company did not convene an annual stockholder meeting for

over three years, yet during this period, the company engaged in several rounds of

financing and purposefully withheld this information from the plaintiff and certain

other stockholders.126 The company explained that its certificate of incorporation

and other agreements contractually barred it from disclosing information to

125
   See JX 163 (Information Request); JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A) ¶ 1;
JX 166 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-B) ¶ 1(a)–(b); Def.’s Post-Trial Opening
Br. 17–18.
126
      Marmon, 2004 WL 936512, at *5.

                                           33
stockholders who held less than specified levels of equity in the company.127 Given

these facts, the court held:

            The directors of a Delaware corporation have a duty to disclose material
            facts to all of the corporation’s shareholders. The directors are not free
            arbitrarily to pick and choose the shareholders to whom they will or
            will not make disclosure. Nor can the corporation be heard to defend
            such a practice on the basis that it has bound itself contractually not to
            make such disclosures.128

Credible basis is a low standard. The similarities between the facts here and in

Marmon support KT4’s contention that a credible basis exists to suspect

wrongdoing with respect to the September 2016 IRA Amendments.

            Moreover, the circumstantial evidence surrounding the September 2016 IRA

Amendments provides a further credible basis to infer potential wrongdoing.

Palantir explains it executed the September 2016 IRA Amendments because

Abramowitz requested broad swaths of confidential information after Palantir

accused him of theft of trade secrets.129 Had Palantir been primarily concerned with

Abramowitz obtaining confidential information, it could have denied certain

requests and at least made an effort to provide information regarding the non-

sensitive topics. Instead, Palantir led KT4 to believe that it was considering KT4’s

127
      Id.
128
      Id. (emphasis in original).
129
      Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 12.

                                               34
information request, and then pulled the rug out from under KT4 (and other

similarly situated stockholders) eleven days later by eviscerating its contractual

right to seek information. To be clear, I am not reaching the merits of KT4’s

allegations regarding Palantir’s conduct in amending the IRA.130 That question is

not before me here. I am simply finding that KT4 has demonstrated a credible basis

to suspect wrongdoing that merits investigation.

          3. Notice of Stock Transactions and the Opportunity to Exercise
             ROFR, Co-Sale and ROFO Rights Under the FRCSA and IRA

       KT4 seeks to investigate possible wrongdoing in connection with Palantir’s

alleged violation of certain stockholders’ contractual rights under the FRCSA and

IRA.    KT4 and other Palantir stockholders are signatories to the FRCSA.

Accordingly, wrongdoing relating to contractual rights as set forth in the FRCSA

and IRA are matters reasonably related to KT4’s interests as a stockholder.

       The FRCSA gives KT4 and other stockholders a right to receive notice when

a Selling Investor sells shares.131 The notice requirement gives stockholders the

opportunity to exercise a ROFR over the Selling Investor’s shares and the right to

130
   I am aware of Palantir’s position that Section 3.7 of the IRA permits Palantir to amend
or waive generally or in particular instances, either retroactively or prospectively, certain
other IRA provisions. JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 3.7; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 3.7; JX 87
(July 2015 IRA) § 3.7.
131
   JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(a), 2.1(c); JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(a),
2.1(c); JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(a), 2.1(c); Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 32.

                                             35
sell its shares alongside the Selling Investor.132 KT4 has established a credible basis

that Palantir may have violated the FRCSA. Karp, a Selling Investor, owned

61 million shares of common stock in 2009.133 As of January 2017, however, Karp

owns approximately 40 million shares. 134             Although this difference remains

unexplained in the record, the difference alone is at least some evidence that Palantir

allowed Karp to sell his shares without allowing parties to the FRCSA to exercise

their ROFR or sell their shares along with Karp. Additionally, three other Selling
                                                                                         135
Investors also transferred substantial shares between 2009 and 2017.

Abramowitz testified that KT4 did not receive notice of these stock transactions,

nor was KT4 provided the opportunity to exercise its ROFR and co-sale right.136

         Palantir argues that KT4 has not provided evidence that the shares Karp sold

are subject to a co-sale right, especially given that the July 2015 FRCSA excludes

132
   JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(d), 2.2; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(d), 2.2;
JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) §§ 2.1(d), 2.2; Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 32.
133
  JX 404 (Palantir Series D Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, Dated November 17,
2009) at 1731.
134
      JX 194 (Palantir Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017) at 209.
135
   In addition to Karp: (1) one individual held 46.5 million shares in 2009, but zero shares
in 2017; (2) another individual held 21.6 million shares in 2009 and 18.5 million shares
in 2017; and (3) a third individual held 49 million shares in 2009 and 16 million shares in
2017. JX 404 (Palantir Series D Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, Dated
November 17, 2009) at 1731; JX 194 (Palantir Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017) at 224–
25, 228.
136
      Tr. 105; Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 36.

                                                36
KT4.137 Like a ship passing in the night, in response to Palantir’s arguments, KT4

cites to the February 2008 FRCSA instead of, and without acknowledging, the July

2015 FRCSA.138 Even so, Palantir’s position is flawed for two reasons.

         First, Palantir is challenging the merits of KT4’s FRCSA claim even though,

at this stage, “I cannot analyze the strength of the potential underlying claim[].”139

Second, even if the July 2015 FRCSA governs KT4’s rights, as Palantir argues, that

agreement does not definitively shut down KT4’s allegation of wrongdoing.

Specifically, at Section 2.4, the July 2015 FRCSA states that ROFO and co-sale

rights do not apply to transfers by Selling Investors that are “approved by a

disinterested majority of the Board of Directors of [Palantir]” and do not exceed the

exemptions identified in Schedule B. 140 Schedule B explicitly indicates “zero”

when referencing Karp’s common stock that is excluded from the ROFR and co-

137
   Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 54. I acknowledge Palantir’s position that Section 10 of
the FRCSA permits Palantir to amend or waive the FRCSA both retroactively or
prospectively. JX 1 (June 2006 FRCSA) § 10; JX 7 (February 2008 FRCSA) § 10. KT4
has not raised the issue of whether the FRCSA was properly amended so I need not reach
the merits of this argument.
138
      See Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 37.
139
    Elow, 2017 WL 2352151, at *6; Marmon, 2004 WL 936512, at *6 (“The pretext under
which the company sought to litigate a ‘merits’ defense to this claim to inspect books and
records in order to investigate possible mismanagement, is that there can be no ‘credible’
evidence of mismanagement if, in fact, no mismanagement ever occurred. This gambit,
if allowed, would turn on its head both § 220 and the case law upholding a books and
records inspection for the purpose of investigating mismanagement.”).
140
      JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) § 2.4.

                                           37
sale right.141 Thus, the ROFR and co-sale right could apply to Karp’s Palantir stock.

Also, Schedule B exempts 3.5 million shares of another Selling Investor’s stock,

but the record suggests that this Selling Investor may have transferred far more than

3.5 million shares.142

         Establishing a credible basis merely requires some evidence. With this

standard in mind, I find some evidence of wrongdoing with respect to the FRCSA.

Karp appears to have transferred shares of Palantir stock. Even if Karp’s transfer(s)

were permissible, one of the other Selling Investors’ transfer(s) appears to have

exceeded the exemptions established in the July 2015 FRCSA.

         KT4 also seeks to investigate wrongdoing as relates to its notice right and the

ROFO under the IRA. The IRA obligates Palantir to give KT4 and certain other

stockholders notice and the ROFO on subsequent rounds of financing. 143

Accordingly, this investigation, similar to the FRCSA investigation, is reasonably

related to KT4’s interest as a stockholder.

141
      JX 86 (July 2015 FRCSA) § 2.4, Schedule B.
142
    Id. JX 404 (Palantir Series D Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, Dated
November 17, 2009) at 1731; JX 194 (Palantir Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017) at 224–
25, 228.
143
   JX 3 (June 2006 IRA) § 2.4; JX 6 (February 2008 IRA) § 2.4; JX 87 (July 2015 IRA)
§ 2.4; Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 33.

                                            38
         Abramowitz testified that he last received notice of a round of financing when

Palantir issued its Series E shares.144 As of the date of the July 2015 IRA, however,

Palantir had issued up to at least Series J preferred stock.145 One need not strain to

divine that several letters of the alphabet have gone missing between the last

financing of which KT4 received notice and Palantir’s most recent funding rounds.

         Palantir again responds with the “merits” defense that KT4 has not

demonstrated that its rights were not waived or amended by the September 2016

IRA Amendment, whereby the Major Investor threshold was increased from

5 million to 10 million shares.146 According to Palantir, following the September

2016 IRA Amendment, KT4 no longer qualifies as a Major Investor and therefore

no longer is entitled to receive notice of Palantir stock offerings.147 That defense

may ultimately carry the day should KT4 assert a breach claim relating to the IRA.

For now, however, KT4 has established a credible basis to investigate Palantir’s

compliance with the IRA in regard to providing stockholders with notice and the

opportunity to exercise the ROFO.

144
      Tr. 73–74.
145
      JX 87 (July 2015 IRA) at 85.
146
      JX 165 (September 2016 IRA Amendment-A) ¶ 1; Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br 55.
147
      Def.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 55.

                                           39
            4. DTA’s Compensation

         KT4 next states it requires books and records to investigate wrongdoing in

connection with Palantir’s relationship with DTA. Specifically, KT4 seeks to

investigate whether Palantir has committed waste in its compensation of DTA.

Investigating potential waste that impacts a corporation’s bottom line is reasonably

related to one’s interest as a stockholder. Therefore, I am satisfied that KT4’s

interest in investigating this issue is not personal to KT4 nor otherwise pretextual.

         KT4 points to evidence that DTA holds over 19 million shares of Palantir

stock, “worth roughly ‘$100 to $250 million’ on the secondary market,” as a

credible basis to suspect potential waste.148 KT4 also highlights six Securities and

Exchange Commission filings (“Form Ds”) where Palantir reports significant

“Sales Compensation” to S F Sentry Securities, Inc. (“S F Sentry”) and another

broker.149 KT4 proffers (with no corroboration) that DTA is a firm operating under

the license of S F Sentry and, on that basis, seeks to attribute the sales compensation

identified on the Form Ds to DTA.150 Even under the credible basis standard, KT4’s

148
   JX 194 (Palantir Stocklist, Dated January 31, 2017) at 215–16; Tr. 70–71; Pl.’s Post-
Trial Br. 34.
149
      JX 314–19 (Form Ds); Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 34–35.

  Tr. 53. KT4 erroneously harps on Palantir’s admission that the Form Ds disclosed the
150

amount of compensation to DTA working under the license of S F Sentry. Pl.’s Post-Trial
Reply Br. 45. Palantir made no such admission. Defendant’s Post-Trial Opening Brief
merely states, “Palantir publicly disclosed the value of sales commissions and finders’
                                            40
evidence of waste falls short of the mark. Abramowitz testified that he had no basis

to support the contention that the 19 million shares held by DTA were obtained as

compensation from Palantir, and yet that is precisely what KT4 seeks to

investigate.151 The lack of any evidence on this issue is reflective of the kind of

speculation and idle curiosity that cannot form a credible basis to investigate.152

            5. Interference with the Brooklands Transaction

         Most of KT4’s trial presentation related to its contention that Palantir and its

agents wrongfully interfered with the Brooklands transaction. Abramowitz has

made no bones about the fact that he intends to bring a tortious interference claim

(at least) against those allegedly responsible for blocking the sale of KT4’s Palantir

stock to Brooklands.153 Any wrongdoing relating to the Brooklands transaction

would arise out of a contract that Abramowitz allegedly formed with a prospective

purchaser of KT4’s Palantir stock, and the damages would be uniquely KT4’s (or

fees associated with offerings of its stock on its Form D filings.” Def.’s Post-Trial
Opening Br. 60.
151
      Tr. 70–71.
152
    Sec. First Corp., 687 A.2d at 565 (holding that Section 220 is not a vehicle from which
to launch a fishing expedition).
153
      Tr. 125–31.

                                            41
Abramowitz’s).154 This is quintessentially a claim personal to Abramowitz that is

not related to KT4’s interests as a stockholder.155 It cannot form the basis of a

proper purpose to assert inspection rights under Section 220. 156

          6. Lack of Liquidity to Stockholders

       KT4 seeks to investigate Palantir’s failure to return liquidity to stockholders

via dividend issuance, an IPO or a merger. Obtaining liquidity is related to one’s

interests as a stockholder. The evidence KT4 has presented to support a credible

154
    Notably, KT4’s demand specifically states it seeks to investigate “whether
Palantir . . . improperly interfered with KT4’s efforts to sell its Palantir shares.”) JX 170
(Demand) at 4 (emphasis added).
155
   KT4 argues that it “seeks to investigate the possibility that Palantir and its agents have
breached the contractual rights that [Palantir] provides to [KT4] and other shareholders
and the possibility that [Palantir] has abused the position it has over shareholder
transactions in their shares.” Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 45. KT4’s attempt to broaden
the scope of the claims that Abramowitz intends to bring against Palantir by purporting to
advance the cause of other stockholders rings hollow and finds no support in the evidence.
156
   Pogue v. Hybrid Energy, Inc., 2016 WL 4154253, at *3 n.16 (Del. Ch. Aug. 5, 2016)
(determining plaintiff’s purpose of using “the tools at hand to properly bring a 205 action”
or to “pursue a breach of contract issue . . . both relate to an individual interest,” neither
of which is a proper purpose) (emphasis in original); Highland Select Equity Fund, L.P.
v. Motient Corp., 906 A.2d 156, 165 (Del. Ch. 2006) (“Section 220 is also not a way to
circumvent discovery proceedings, and is certainly not meant to be a forum for the kinds
of wide-ranging document requests permissible under Rule 34.”); Berkowitz v. Legal Sea
Foods, Inc., 1997 WL 153815, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 24, 1997) (denying inspection where
plaintiff’s primary purpose for seeking inspection was to facilitate the prosecution of an
action that enforces and vindicates plaintiff’s individual interests); Cent. Laborers
Pension Fund v. News Corp., 2011 WL 6224538, at *1 (Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2011)
(“Section 220 was not adopted as a substitute for litigation discovery.”). See also Post-
Trial Oral Arg. Tr. 52–53 (KT4’s counsel concedes tortious interference claim likely not
a proper purpose under Section 220).

                                             42
basis to infer wrongdoing in this respect is thin, however, and does not meet the low

credible basis standard. KT4 offers no evidence of Palantir’s wrongdoing as to a

lack of dividends; it stands on its bald accusation that Palantir’s failure to return

dividends is per se wrong. I am aware of nothing in the evidentiary record (e.g.,

stockholder agreements, etc.) or in Delaware law that would support that position.

The evidence surrounding wrongdoing related to Palantir’s failure to conduct an

IPO is likewise missing. On this point, KT4 claims the wrongdoing lies in Karp

and Palantir’s other founders’ self-interested decision to keep Palantir private to

preserve their own stake in the “lucrative state of affairs.”157 As evidence, KT4

relies on a news article that states a reason Palantir is competitive is because it

“refuses to go public.”158 This “evidence” is insufficient to establish a credible basis

of any wrongdoing.

         KT4 points to Abramowitz’ testimony regarding a potential merger

opportunity and four emails as a credible basis to infer that Palantir wrongfully

bypassed an opportunity to be acquired.159 That “evidence” is really no evidence at

all. Rather, the “evidence” of the purported merger opportunity is nothing more

157
      Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 54.
158
      JX 41 (News Article).
159
  Tr. 78–79, 153–54; JX 135 (E-mail); JX 138 (E-mail); JX 143 (E-mail); JX 159 (E-
mail).

                                          43
than Abramowitz’s testimony that he arranged a meeting between Palantir

management and Oracle’s CEO to discuss a potential deal, but Abramowitz

acknowledged that he was not involved in any further discussions beyond the initial

meet and greet lunch.160 He cannot say, therefore, what happened from there and

certainly cannot point to any evidence that Palantir did anything improper to avoid

the transaction.

         The four E-mails upon which Abramowitz relies as evidence of wrongdoing

fare no better. Two of the E-mails are vague and non-descript communications

between Abramowitz and another Palantir stockholder. 161 The third E-mail is

equally cryptic and appears simply to confirm the lunch meeting.162 The fourth E-

mail makes reference to “our project” but makes no reference to merger

negotiations in any manner.163 None of this “evidence” provides a credible basis to

suspect wrongdoing regarding any aspect of Palantir’s alleged failure to return

liquidity to stockholders.

160
      Tr. 153–54.
161
      JX 135 (E-mail); JX 159 (E-mail).
162
      JX 138 (E-mail).
163
      JX 143 (E-mail).

                                          44
         7. Palantir’s CEO Compensation

      Finally, KT4 seeks to investigate potential wrongdoing as to KT4’s

compensation of its officers and directors and, in this regard, specifically singles

out Karp’s compensation. Waste, such as excessive executive compensation,

impacts a corporation’s bottom line and therefore is reasonably related to one’s

interest as a stockholder. Nevertheless, here again, KT4 has failed to establish a

credible basis to infer wrongdoing as relates to Palantir’s executive compensation.

      KT4 suspects wrongdoing because Karp worked at a nonprofit before joining

Palantir, yet he now owns 60 million shares of Palantir stock and allegedly has a

net worth of $1.6 billion. 164 KT4’s evidence of Karp’s net worth is, at best,

questionable and, standing alone, hardly amounts to a credible basis to suspect

waste.165 Abramowitz and Karp have fallen out; that is not a reason to investigate

Karp’s compensation.

      C. Scope of Inspection

      Where a stockholder seeks to inspect a corporation’s stock ledger or stocklist,

and the stockholder has complied with the required form and manner of making a

demand for inspection of these documents, the corporation bears the burden of

164
  JX 404 (Palantir Series D Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, Dated November 17,
2009) at 1731.
165
  Tr. 89–91; JX 179 (Video); JX 404 (Palantir Series D Preferred Stock Purchase
Agreement, Dated November 17, 2009) at 1731; Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 55–56.

                                         45
proving that the stockholder seeks these documents for an improper purpose. 166

Because I have found KT4 has a proper investigative purpose, albeit limited to

certain alleged wrongdoing, KT4 is entitled to inspect the stock ledger and stocklist.

            I have determined that the Demand states a proper purpose and demonstrated

a credible basis to investigate potential wrongdoing concerning Palantir’s failure to

hold annual stockholder meetings, the September 2016 IRA Amendments, and

breach of the ROFR, co-sale right and ROFO in the FRCSA and IRA. Accordingly,

KT4 is entitled to inspect books and records that are essential to fulfill those

investigative purposes.167

            As to the scope of inspection, “the trial court has wide latitude in determining

the proper scope of inspection,” and “[u]ndergirding this discretion is a recognition

that the interests of the corporation must be harmonized with those of the inspecting

stockholder.” 168 Accordingly, this Court must order inspection that is carefully

tailored and “circumscribed with rifled precision.”169 Documents sought must be

unavailable from any other source and integral—necessary and essential—to KT4’s

166
      8 Del. C. § 220(c).
167
      Thomas & Betts Corp., 681 A.2d at 1035.
168
      Id.
169
   Sec. First Corp., 687 A.2d at 565, 570. See also Thomas & Betts Corp., 681 A.2d at
1035 (“The responsibility of the trial court to narrowly tailor the inspection right to a
stockholder’s stated purpose is well established.”).

                                               46
proper purpose(s).170 A document is “essential” if “it addresses the crux of the

shareholder’s purpose.” 171       “The Court may, in its discretion, prescribe any

limitations or conditions with reference to the inspection, or award such other or

further relief as the Court may deem just and proper.”172

         KT4 made 22 Requests in its Demand. I am satisfied that, of those Requests,

Palantir must allow inspection with respect to the following information that relate

directly to the proper purposes for inspection advanced by KT4.

             1. Lack of Annual Stockholder Meetings

         KT4 has set forth a credible basis to suspect wrongdoing as to Palantir’s

failure to hold annual stockholder meetings. Palantir stockholders, KT4 included,

deserve basic information about their investments. To that end, KT4 is entitled to

books and records responsive to its Requests, as modified here: (a) the identities of

directors and officers, and their dates of service from 2011 through the present

(Requests 3 and 4) and (b) books and records relating to Palantir’s annual

stockholder meetings, as described in Request 20. Palantir will also provide

information responsive to Request 6, from 2011 through the present. I decline to

170
  See Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Indiana Elec. Workers Pension Trust Fund IBEW, 95 A.3d
1264, 1277–78 (Del. 2014).
171
      Espinoza v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 32 A.3d 365, 371 (Del. 2011) (citations omitted).
172
      8 Del. C. § 220(c).

                                             47
grant KT4 inspection of the document(s) sought in Request 13 because the record

evidence does not identify what this document is or how it relates to KT4’s stated

purpose of investigating wrongdoing relating to annual stockholder meetings.173

           2. September 2016 IRA Amendments

        KT4 has established a credible basis to suspect wrongdoing to investigate the

September 2016 IRA Amendments. Accordingly, KT4 is entitled to books and

records related to the September 2016 IRA Amendments as identified in

Request 19.174 To be clear, KT4 is not entitled to books and records relating to

“any” IRA amendment since 2011. Those documents, if they exist, are not at issue

here.

           3. ROFR, Co-Sale Right and ROFO Under the FRCSA and IRA

        Finally, KT4 has established a credible basis to suspect wrongdoing relating

to Palantir’s alleged violations of its stockholder agreements by failing to provide

KT4 (and similarly situated stockholders) with notice and an opportunity to exercise

ROFR and co-sale rights under the FRCSA and ROFO under the IRA. KT4 is thus

173
   Request 13 states, in full: “all books and records relating to the Corporation’s
‘practices and policies’ concerning sales of Palantir shares, as referenced in an email from
Kevin Kawasaki to Stephen Brown dated January 11, 2016.” JX 170 (Demand) at 2.
174
   In the event Palantir chooses not to re-produce the September 2016 IRA Amendments
that it produced in this litigation, KT4 may use the September 2016 IRA Amendments as
produced in this litigation, but subject to the confidentiality agreement that will govern
the books and records KT4 receives as a result of this Memorandum Opinion.

                                            48
entitled to inspect (a) Palantir’s stock ledger (Request 1); (b) Palantir’s stocklist that

is as current as reasonably possible (Request 2); (c) books and records relating to

each Founder’s (as that term is defined in JX 1 and JX 7) actual and potential sales

of shares of, or securities convertible into or exchangeable for any shares of, Palantir

capital stock from 2011 through the present (Request 11, with modifications) and

(d) each notice that Palantir sent to any person or entity who was then a Major

Investor for each offering or sale of shares of, or securities convertible into or

exchangeable or exercisable for any shares of, Palantir capital stock subsequent to

its Series E Preferred Stock issuance (as defined in JX 87) (Request 14, with

modifications).

         D. Confidentiality Treatment

         It is customary for a final order under Section 220 to be conditioned upon a

reasonable confidentiality agreement.175 The parties are to confer in good faith to

negotiate a confidentiality order. The documents to be produced in response to the

Demand shall be subject to the terms of that order.

                                  III. CONCLUSION

         For the foregoing reasons, judgment shall be entered in favor of KT4 that

directs Palantir to allow inspection of books and records in accordance with this

175
      Pershing Square, L.P. v. Ceridian Corp., 923 A.2d 810, 820 (Del. Ch. 2007).

                                             49
Memorandum Opinion, subject to a confidentiality order. The parties shall confer

and submit an implementing order and final judgment within ten (10) days.

                                       50