Court Opinion

ID: 4653983
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-22 22:02:32.46932+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:57:37.066867
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

PAUL MORRIS, on behalf of all           §
similarly situated unitholders of       §        No. 489, 2019
SPECTRA ENERGY PARTNERS,                §
L.P.,                                   §        Court Below – Court of Chancery
                                        §        of the State of Delaware
      Plaintiff Below,                  §
      Appellant,                        §        Consolidated
                                        §        C.A. No. 2019-0097
      v.                                §
                                        §
SPECTRA ENERGY PARTNERS                 §
(DE) GP, LP,                            §
                                        §
      Defendant Below,                  §
      Appellee.                         §

                         Submitted: October 28, 2020
                         Decided:   January 22, 2021

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

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. REVERSED and REMANDED.

Michael J. Barry, Esquire (argued) and Rebecca A. Musarra, Esquire, GRANT &
EISENHOFFER P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Peter B. Andrews, Esquire, Craig J.
Springer, Esquire, and David M. Sborz, Esquire, ANDREWS & SPRINGER LLC,
Wilmington, Delaware; and Jeremy S. Friedman, Esquire, Spencer Oster, Esquire,
and David F.E. Tejtel, Esquire, FRIEDMAN OSTER & TEJTEL PLLC, Bedford
Hills, New York; Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant Paul Morris and all similarly
situated unitholders of Spectra Energy Partners, L.P.

Robert S. Saunders, Esquire, Ronald N. Brown, III, Esquire, Ryan M. Linsay,
Esquire, SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware; Noelle M. Reed, Esquire (argued) and Daniel S. Mayerfeld, Esquire,
SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM LLP, Houston, Texas;
Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee Spectra Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP.
SEITZ, Chief Justice:

      With limited exceptions, a merger extinguishes an equity owner’s standing

to pursue a derivative claim against the target entity’s directors or controller. But

the same plaintiff has standing to pursue a post-closing suit if they challenge the

validity of the merger itself as unfair because the controller failed to secure the

value of a material asset—like derivative claims that pass to the acquirer in the

merger. Given the difficulties of pursuing such claims, not the least of which is

proof that the equity owner received an unfair merger price for their ownership

interest, the plaintiff might not prevail on the merits, but they have sufficiently

alleged a direct claim to survive a motion to dismiss for lack of standing.

      After a $3.3 billion “roll up” of minority-held units involving a merger

between Enbridge, Inc. (“Enbridge”) and Spectra Energy Partners L.P. (“SEP”),

Paul Morris, a former SEP minority unitholder, lost standing to litigate an alleged

$661 million derivative suit on behalf of SEP against its general partner, Spectra

Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP (“SEP GP”). Morris reprised the derivative claim

dismissal by filing a new class action complaint that alleged the Enbridge/SEP

merger exchange ratio was unfair because SEP GP agreed to a merger that did

not reflect the material value of his derivative claims.

      The Court of Chancery granted SEP GP’s motion to dismiss the new

complaint for lack of standing. The court held that, to have standing to bring a

                                         2
post-merger claim, Morris had to allege a viable and material derivative claim

that the buyer would not assert and provided no value for in the merger. Focusing

on the materiality requirement, the court first discounted the $661 million

recovery to $112 million to reflect the public unitholders’ beneficial interest in

the derivative litigation recovery. Then, the court discounted the $112 million

further to $28 million to reflect what the court estimated was a one in four chance

of success in the litigation. After the discounting, the $28 million—less than 1%

of the merger consideration—was immaterial to a $3.3 billion merger.

       On appeal, Morris argues that the court should not have dismissed the

plaintiff’s direct claims for lack of standing. We agree with Morris and find that,

on a motion to dismiss for lack of standing, he has sufficiently pled a direct claim

attacking the fairness of the merger itself for SEP GP’s failure to secure value

for his pending derivative claims. Thus, we reverse the Court of Chancery’s

judgment and remand for further proceedings.

                                          I.

       The plaintiff, Paul Morris, owned common units of SEP, a master limited

partnership that traded on the New York Stock Exchange.1 Enbridge owned 83% of

1
 We take the facts from the complaint and the Court of Chancery’s decision. Morris v. Spectra
Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP, 2019 WL 4751521 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30, 2019).
                                               3
SEP’s outstanding units through a series of wholly-owned subsidiaries, including

SEP GP.2 Spectra Energy Corp (“SE Corp”) was Enbridge’s predecessor-in-interest.

       Prior to selling to Enbridge, SE Corp agreed to a 50-50 joint venture with

Phillips 66 whereby Phillips would contribute $1.5 billion and SE Corp would

contribute a one-third interest in two long haul natural gas pipelines, implying a $1.5

billion valuation of the contributed assets. Because SEP owned the assets, the parties

proposed a “reverse dropdown” to sell the assets from SEP to SE Corp. To purchase

the assets from SEP, SE Corp offered to “(i) surrender 20 million SEP limited partner

units to SEP for redemption . . . and (ii) waive its right to receive up to $4 million in

incentive distribution rights [] for twelve consecutive quarters . . . .”3 SEP GP

authorized a conflicts committee to evaluate the reverse dropdown.

       SEP’s limited partnership agreement required the general partner’s conflicts

committee to act in “subjective good faith.”4                According to the complaint’s

allegations, a financial advisor identified three ways the transaction would provide

value to SEP: the redeemed units, the waived distribution rights, and other reduced

cash flow due to the loss of assets. Later, however, the adviser included only the

first two components as consideration—valued at $946 million—and issued a

2
  Enbridge owned Spectra Energy Partners GP, LLC, which owned SEP GP.
3
  Morris, 2019 WL 4751521, at *3.
4
  Id. A “good faith” finding requires that “the person acting ‘must believe that the determination
or other action is in the best interests of the Partnership.’” Id. (citation omitted).
                                                4
fairness opinion. The conflicts committee recommended approval, and SEP GP’s

board approved the reverse dropdown.

       After reviewing SEP’s books and records, the plaintiff filed a class action

derivative complaint on behalf of all owners of SEP public units against SEP GP and

SE Corp. The complaint alleged that SEP only received $946 million in the reverse

dropdown when SE Corp valued the assets at $1.5 billion. Morris pleaded three

derivative claims, including a claim for breach of the limited partnership

agreement’s “good faith” obligation in approving the reverse dropdown.5 The court

dismissed two of the claims for failure to state a claim, but declined to dismiss the

breach of the “good faith” obligation claim. The court found, after drawing all

reasonable inferences in Morris’s favor, that the complaint “made adequate

allegations showing that under reasonably conceivable circumstances a facially

unreasonable gap in consideration exists sufficient to infer subjective bad faith.”6

According to the court, “it was ‘reasonably conceivable that the General Partner

acted in subjective bad faith.’”7 The parties conducted discovery and SEP GP moved

for summary judgment.           During the litigation, and with the motion summary

5
  The plaintiff also pled breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing against SEP
GP and tortious interference with the limited partnership agreement against SEP Corp.
6
  Morris, 2019 WL 4751521, at *5 (quoting Morris v. Spectra Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP, 2017
WL 2774559, at *16 (Del. Ch. June 27, 2017)).
7
  Id.
                                                5
judgment pending, Enbridge acquired SE Corp in a stock-for-stock merger,

becoming SEP GP’s ultimate parent and controller of SEP.

       In March 2018, SEP’s stock price declined by twenty percent in reaction to

announcements from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”). SEP

recognized in its filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that

“[t]he change in FERC’s policy has had a negative impact on the MLP sector” and

that SEP “would attempt to mitigate the impact of the policy change.”8 In May,

Enbridge offered a stock-for-stock exchange to buyout SEP’s public unitholders.

SEP’s public unitholders would receive 1.0123 common shares of Enbridge in

exchange for each publicly held common unit of SEP based on the SEP common

units’ and Enbridge common shares’ closing price on the NYSE as of May 16, 2018.

SEP closed at a unit price of $33.10 and Enbridge common shares closed at $32.70.

According to the plaintiff, this was an opportunistic offer to squeeze out the public

unitholders due to an artificially depressed trading price. Another three-member

SEP GP conflicts committee went to work, two of whom were on the committee that

reviewed the reverse dropdown transaction.

8
  Id. at *6 (alteration in original). Later, however, and “contrary to initial expectations,” “it did
not ‘meaningfully limit an MLP’s ability to recover an income tax allowance in its cost of
service.’” Id. at *7. (quoting Compl. ¶ 57). “SEP’s public units realized a corresponding increase
in market price.” Id.
                                                 6
        Morris’s counsel sent a letter to the conflicts committee and told them that the

derivative claim was worth more than $500 million and must be taken into account

when negotiating the merger exchange ratio. Counsel also noted that the proposed

offer was “woefully inadequate” and “fail[ed] to provide SEP and its public

unitholders with any value associated with” the derivative claim.9 After Morris’s

counsel met with the conflicts committee’s legal and financial advisors, the conflicts

committee ultimately determined that the value of the derivative claim, net of

defense costs, “was less than $0.”10 The conflicts committee also found the value of

the reverse dropdown to SEP to be about $1.5 billion after adding back the reduced

distributions its advisor previously excluded.

       As the parties negotiated the buyout, the conflicts committee decided to give

no value to the derivative claim but attributed $4 million in saved litigation costs.

They also agreed to an exchange ratio “whereby Enbridge would acquire all publicly

held SEP units at an exchange ratio of 1.111 shares of Enbridge stock for each

publicly held unit of SEP.”11 On August 24, 2018, SEP announced a definitive

merger agreement with Enbridge and its wholly-owned subsidiaries where Enbridge

would acquire all publicly held SEP units at an exchange ratio of 1.111 shares of

Enbridge stock for each publicly held unit of SEP. The transaction was not subject

9
  Id. at *6 (quoting the record).
10
   Id. at *8.
11
   Id. at *9 (citation omitted).
                                            7
to approval by a majority of the minority unitholders. The transaction was approved

on December 13, 2018. At that time, Enbridge affiliates held about 83% of the

outstanding units. About 39% of publicly held units voted in favor of the transaction.

After the deal closed, the court dismissed the derivative claim by stipulation of the

parties.12

       After another books and records request, Morris filed this class action on

February 8, 2019 against SEP GP, as SEP’s general partner, for breaching SEP’s

limited partnership agreement and the implied covenant of good faith and fair

dealing. Morris claimed that the conflicts committee and SEP GP’s board of

directors failed to attribute appropriate value to the pre-merger derivative claim or

secure any value for the claim. SEP GP moved to dismiss for lack of standing and

failure to state a claim.

       The Court of Chancery dismissed Morris’s complaint for lack of standing

without reaching the arguments for failure to state a claim. The court applied the

three-part test from its decision in In re Primedia, Inc. Shareholders Litigation.13

The Primedia test applies to claims challenging a merger because the equity owners

are not being fairly compensated for the value of material derivative claims. To

establish standing the plaintiff must allege a viable derivative claim, that is material

12
   The Order dismissing the derivative claim “did not preclude the Plaintiff from prosecuting this
Action.” Id. at *9.
13
   67 A.3d 455 (Del. Ch. 2013).
                                                8
to the overall transaction, and will not be pursued by the buyer and is not reflected

in the merger consideration.14

       The court found Morris’s derivative claim viable because it had already

survived a motion to dismiss.15 Also, the parties did not dispute that SEP’s public

unitholders received no value for the derivative claim, Enbridge did not intend to

pursue the derivative claims post-merger, and Morris pled damages of $661 million.

But the court dismissed Morris’s two direct claims. First, the court discounted the

$661 potential recovery to $112 million to reflect the public unitholders’

proportionate share of the litigation recovery. And second, the court discounted the

$112 million further to about $28 million to reflect a one-in-four chance of prevailing

in the litigation. Finally, the court compared the $28 million to the $3.3 billion

merger transaction and found it immaterial. Thus, the court granted SEP GP’s

motion to dismiss for lack of standing without reaching SEP GP’s alternative

argument that Morris failed to state a claim for relief.

                                          II.

       On appeal the parties have focused their attention on the Court of Chancery’s

application of its Primedia decision to assess standing.              To reiterate, under

Primedia’s three-part test, which applies to claims alleging an unfair merger because

14
  Morris, 2019 WL 4751521, at *11.
15
  Id. at *12 (“Primedia asks whether the claim has ‘survived a motion to dismiss.’ The answer
for the Derivative Claim is in the affirmative. That is the end of the viability inquiry.”).
                                                9
the price does not reflect the value of derivative claims, the plaintiff must allege a

viable derivative claim assessed by a motion to dismiss standard.16 The plaintiff

must also allege that the derivative claim was material to the overall merger

transaction, will not be pursued by the buyer, and is not reflected in the merger

consideration.17

       According to Morris, the Court of Chancery should not have dismissed his

complaint for lack of standing because he pled in detail a direct claim that satisfied

the Primedia factors. The parties and the court agreed that the derivative claim was

viable because it had survived a motion to dismiss. They also agreed that Enbridge

would not assert the claim and provided no value for the claim in the exchange ratio.

And, as Morris alleged, the $112 million potential recovery was material to the $3.3

billion transaction. According to Morris, if the Court of Chancery had accepted his

well-pleaded factual allegations as true and drawn all reasonable inferences in his

favor, it would not have discounted the potential value of the claim such that it

became immaterial to the merger value.

       The defendants counter that Morris supposedly did not challenge the fairness

of the exchange ratio, undermining the claim that SEP GP did not negotiate fair

16
   Primedia, 67 A.3d at 477 (“First, the plaintiff must plead an underlying derivative claim that
has survived a motion to dismiss or otherwise could state a claim on which relief could be
granted.”).
17
   Id.
                                               10
consideration for the public unitholders’ SEP units. For the litigation discount issue,

the defendants contend that Morris conceded in the Court of Chancery that the

derivative claim should be discounted for litigation risk. The defendants also argue

that discounting for litigation risk is consistent with prior cases.18 And, according to

the defendants, the “fraud exception to the continuous ownership rule” is the proper

method to assess the plaintiff’s standing to assert post-merger claims.19

       We review de novo the Court of Chancery’s finding that the plaintiff lacked

standing to pursue his post-merger claims challenging the fairness of the merger

consideration for failure to recoup some or all of the value of the derivative claims.20

                                                 A.

       The Court of Chancery dismissed Morris’s complaint for lack of standing.

Standing “refers to the right of a party to invoke the jurisdiction of a court to enforce

a claim or redress a grievance.”21 Standing is required to “ensure that the litigation

before the tribunal is a ‘case or controversy’ that is appropriate for the exercise of

the court’s judicial powers.”22 It allows Delaware courts, “as a matter of self-

18
   As they argue, “the legal principle of whether a court should adjust for risk when valuing a
derivative claim does not turn on the nature and degree of that risk. It is either appropriate to risk
adjust or it is not.” Answering Br. at 32. And they assert Delaware law supports their position in
other contexts. Id. at 32–33 (citing ONTI, Inc. v. Integra Bank, 751 A.2d 904 (Del. Ch. 1999);
Bomarko, Inc. v. Int’l Telecharge, Inc., 794 A.2d 1161 (Del. Ch. 1999), aff’d, 766 A.2d 437 (Del.
2000)).
19
   Answering Br. at 35.
20
   El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C. v. Brinckerhoff, 152 A.3d 1248, 1256 (Del. 2016).
21
   Stuart Kingston, Inc. v. Robinson, 596 A.2d 1378, 1382 (Del. 1991) (citation omitted).
22
   Dover Historical Soc’y v. City of Dover Planning Comm’n, 838 A.2d 1103, 1110 (Del. 2003).
                                                 11
restraint,” to “avoid the rendering of advisory opinions at the behest of parties who

are mere intermeddlers.”23 “[S]tanding is properly a threshold question that the

Court may not avoid.”24

       The standing inquiry “has assumed special significance in the area of

corporate law.”25 Classifying a claim as either direct or derivative bears directly on

standing and is in many ways outcome-determinative in post-merger litigation. 26 If

a plaintiff alleges a direct claim, it means that the equity owner has alleged that they

have suffered the injury, and will receive the benefit of any recovery.27 Thus, at least

at the pleading stage, the plaintiff has met the injury-in-fact requirement and

properly invoked the court’s jurisdiction to redress an injury.

       In contrast, for a derivative action, the equity owner acts in a representative

capacity on behalf of an entity. In that representative capacity, the plaintiff steps

into the shoes of the entity and asserts the injury on its behalf.28 If the equity holder

has successfully jumped over 8 Del. C. § 327 of the Delaware General Corporation

23
   Ala. By-Prods. Corp. v. Cede & Co. on Behalf of Shearson Lehman Bros., Inc., 657 A.2d 254,
264 (Del. 1995) (quoting Stuart Kingston, 596 A.2d at 1382).
24
   Gerber v. EPE Hldgs. LLC, 2013 WL 209658, at *12 (Del. Ch. Jan. 18, 2013) (“If there is no
standing, there is no justiciable substantive controversy.”).
25
   Ala. By-Prods., 657 A.2d at 264.
26
   See Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., 845 A.2d 1031, 1036 (Del. 2004) (“The
decision whether a suit is direct or derivative may be outcome-determinative.”).
27
   Parnes v. Bally Entm’t Corp., 722 A.2d 1243, 1245 (Del. 1999) (“Stockholders may sue on their
own behalf (and, in appropriate circumstances, as representatives of a class of stockholders) to
seek relief for direct injuries that are independent of any injury to the corporation.”).
28
   Id. (“A derivative claim is one that is brought by a stockholder, on behalf of the corporation, to
recover for harms done to the corporation.”).
                                                12
Law, Court of Chancery Rule 23.1, and our decisional law hurdles, standing exists

to pursue a derivative claim on behalf of the entity.29 But, under Lewis v. Anderson,30

the equity owner no longer has standing to pursue derivative claims post-merger

except in two instances—when the merger itself is the subject to a fraud claim,

perpetrated to deprive shareholders of their standing to bring or maintain a derivative

action; and when the merger is essentially a reorganization that does not affect the

equity owner’s relative ownership in the post-merger enterprise.31

       The Supreme Court and the Court of Chancery are frequently called upon to

draw the dividing line between direct and derivative claims following a merger. Our

recent decision in El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C. v. Brinckerhoff32 is particularly

relevant here, as it addressed standing following a merger in the context of a master

limited partnership. In El Paso, the plaintiff filed derivative claims on behalf of the

limited partnership against the general partner claiming that the limited partnership

substantially overpaid for the assets in a transaction. While the derivative suits were

29
   Ala. By-Prods., 657 A.2d at 264 (“For example, in order to have standing to initiate a shareholder
derivative suit, a plaintiff must have been a shareholder at the time of the challenged transaction,
as well as at the commencement of suit. In addition, this Court has held that a plaintiff must also
maintain his shareholder status throughout the derivative litigation.”); see also Urdan v. WR
Capital Partners, LLC, --- A.3d ----, 2020 WL 7223313, at *8 (Del. Dec. 8, 2020) (recognizing
that a stockholder who is involuntarily forced to sell their stock in a merger maintains the right to
assert post-merger direct claims as an exception to the continuous ownership rule).
30
   477 A.2d 1040 (Del. 1984).
31
   Feldman v. Cutaia, 951 A.2d 727, 731 & n.20 (Del. 2008) (“It is now well established that a
plaintiff may avoid dismissal of his derivative claims following a merger in only two distinct
circumstances: where the claims asserted are direct, rather than derivative, or where one of the
exceptions recognized in Lewis v. Anderson applies.”).
32
   152 A.3d 1248 (Del. 2016).
                                                13
pending, the limited partnership was acquired in a merger. Although the Court of

Chancery recognized that a merger typically results in the plaintiff losing standing

to pursue pending derivative claims, it characterized the plaintiff’s claims as both

direct and derivative, circumventing the post-merger standing impediment. The

court also held that, even if the plaintiff’s claims were purely derivative, they

survived the merger because dismissal would leave the minority equity owners

without a remedy for the general partner’s unfair dealing.

       On appeal, this Court reversed. First, we noted that standing in corporate

cases is a threshold inquiry because it implicates the exercise of the court’s

jurisdiction.33 We observed that derivative standing is a “creature of equity” that

allows a court of equity to hear claims by equity owners “to prevent a complete

failure of justice on behalf of the corporation.”34 We also viewed standing as a fluid

concept, that can change as a result of “a myriad of subsequent legal or factual causes

that occur while the litigation is in progress” such as the loss of the plaintiff’s status

33
   El Paso, 152 A.3d at 1256 (“Standing is therefore properly viewed as a threshold issue to ‘ensure
that the litigation before the tribunal is a “case or controversy” that is appropriate for the exercise
of the court’s judicial powers.’”) (quoting Dover Historical Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1110).
34
   Id. (quoting Schoon v. Smith, 953 A.2d 196, 202, 208 (Del. 2008)).
                                                 14
as an equity holder.35 If standing is lost, “the court lacks the power to adjudicate the

matter, and the action will be dismissed as moot unless an exception applies.”36

       Second, we held that the plaintiff brought his claims as derivative claims, and

his claims remained derivative claims throughout the litigation. Even though the

plaintiff’s derivative claims involved a limited partnership, where most rights are

governed by agreement rather than fiduciary duties, our Court held that Tooley v.

Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc.,37 and its two-part test for drawing a line between

direct and derivative claims, applied.38 Under Tooley, the court must answer two

questions: “[w]ho suffered the alleged harm—the corporation or the suing

stockholder individually,” and “who would receive the benefit of the recovery or

other remedy?”39 In El Paso, we found under Tooley that the limited partnership

35
   Id. (quoting Gen. Motors Corp. v. New Castle Cty., 701 A.2d 819, 824 (Del. 1997)). As we
recognized in Lewis v. Anderson, with limited exception, “[a] plaintiff who ceases to be a
shareholder, whether by reason of a merger or for any other reason, loses standing to continue a
derivative suit.” 477 A.2d at 1049; see also El Paso, 152 A.3d at 1265 (“This rule flows from the
fact that, following a merger, ‘the derivative claim—originally belonging to the acquired
corporation—is transferred to and becomes an asset of the acquiring corporation as a matter of
statutory law.’”) (citation omitted).
36
   El Paso, 152 A.3d at 1256–57.
37
   845 A.2d 1031 (Del. 2004).
38
   El Paso, 152 A.3d at 1260 (“Because Brinckerhoff’s claim sounds in breach of a contractual
duty owed to the Partnership, we employ the two-pronged Tooley analysis to determine whether
the claim ‘to enforce the [Partnership’s] own rights must be asserted derivatively’ or is dual in
nature such that it can proceed directly.”) (alteration in original) (quoting Loral Space &
Commc’ns, Inc. v. Highland Crusader Offshore Partners, L.P., 977 A.2d 867, 868 (Del. 2009)).
39
   845 A.2d at 1035. It is worth noting that under Tooley, a claim can—in certain circumstances—
be considered a dual-natured claim, i.e., one that is both direct and derivative. El Paso, 152 A.3d
at 1262 (“In unique circumstances, this Court has recognized that some claims can be dual-
natured—that is, both direct and derivative.”).
                                               15
suffered the harm and would benefit from any recovery. Thus, the plaintiff’s claims

were purely derivative, and under Lewis v. Anderson the derivative claims passed to

the buyer following the merger. The plaintiff no longer had standing to pursue the

derivative claims.

         Finally, and directly relevant to this appeal, we recognized in El Paso that,

even though the plaintiff lost standing to pursue derivative claims post-merger, a

narrow avenue of relief was still available to the plaintiff—a direct claim challenging

the validity of the merger when the general partner failed to secure the value of

material derivative claims in the merger for the minority equity owners:

         Under our law, equity holders confronted by a merger in which
         derivative claims will pass to the buyer have the right to challenge the
         merger itself as a breach of the duties they are owed. In many cases, it
         might be difficult to allege that the value they are receiving in the
         merger is unfair simply as a result of the failure to consider value
         associated with their derivative suit. But that reality may also suggest
         that, even according full value to the potential recovery in the derivative
         suit (rarely a guarantee), the plaintiffs still received fair value in the
         merger. . . . The derivative plaintiff’s recourse was to file a money
         damages challenge to the merger and prove that the failure to accord
         value to the limited partnership in the merger was somehow violative
         of his rights.40

         In reaching this conclusion, we relied on our decision in Parnes v. Bally

Entertainment Corp.41 In Parnes, the plaintiff alleged that in negotiations between

Bally Entertainment Corp. and Hilton Hotels Corp., the CEO’s actions—requiring a

40
     El Paso, 152 A.3d at 1251–52.
41
     722 A.2d 1243 (Del. 1999).
                                             16
bribe of “several substantial cash payments and asset transfers” before consenting to

a merger—resulted in the stockholders receiving an unfair price.42 After the merger

closed, the Court of Chancery found the claim derivative and dismissed the

complaint for lack of standing. We reversed, finding that the complaint “directly

challenges the fairness of the process and the price in the Bally/Hilton merger.” 43

       We distinguished the direct claim attacking the merger itself from the

derivative claim in Kramer v. Western Pacific Industries.44 In Kramer, the plaintiff

alleged “wrongful transactions associated with the merger (such as the award of

golden parachutes) [that] reduced the amount paid to [the target’s] stockholders,”

but “did not allege that the merger price was unfair or that the merger was obtained

through unfair dealing.”45 Our Court held that the complaint stated only a derivative

claim for mismanagement.46         Although the plaintiff alleged that wrongful

transactions associated with the merger reduced the amount paid to the target’s

stockholders, “it did not allege that the merger price was unfair or that the merger

was obtained through unfair dealing.”47 That “such a claim is asserted in the context

of a merger does not change its fundamental nature.”48

42
   Id. at 1246.
43
   Id. at 1245.
44
   546 A.2d 348 (Del. 1988).
45
   Parnes, 722 A.2d at 1245.
46
   See Kramer, 546 A.2d at 353.
47
   Parnes, 722 A.2d at 1245.
48
   Id.
                                         17
       Thus, in Kramer what the plaintiff failed to plead was a challenge to the

merger itself rather than attack the side benefits secured by some merger

participants. After Parnes, “to state a direct claim with respect to a merger, a

stockholder must challenge the validity of the merger itself, usually by charging the

directors with breaches of fiduciary duty resulting in unfair dealing and/or unfair

price.”49 Finally, in Parnes we separated the standing inquiry from whether the

complaint states a claim for relief.50 After reversing the court on standing, we also

reversed the court’s conclusion that the complaint failed to state a claim under Rule

12(b)(6) because the complaint alleged sufficient facts of unfairness to overcome

business judgment rule review.51

                                               B.

       As noted in Parnes, “it is often difficult to determine whether a stockholder is

challenging the merger itself, or alleged wrongs associated with the merger . . . .” 52

After Parnes, the Court of Chancery was left to fill in the details. It was not an easy

assignment. In Golaine v. Edwards,53 the plaintiff challenged a $20 million payment

to Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., L.P. (“KKR”) made in connection with a merger

49
   Id.
50
   See id. at 1246 (“Although we conclude that the Parnes complaint directly challenges the Bally
merger, it does not necessarily follow that the complaint adequately states a claim for relief.”).
51
   See id. 1247 (“Using [the pleadings stage] standard, we find that the complaint states a claim
challenging the fairness of the Bally/Hilton merger and challenging the Bally directors’ approval
of the merger as having lacked a rational basis.”).
52
   Id. at 1245.
53
   1999 WL 1271882 (Del. Ch. Dec. 21, 1999).
                                               18
between The Gillette Company and Duracell International, Inc. KKR’s affiliate,

KKR Associates, L.P., owned 34% of Duracell’s outstanding common stock. The

defendants filed a motion to dismiss and claimed that Golaine’s challenge to the $20

million payment was a derivative rather than direct claim because the plaintiff failed

to allege that the merger terms were tainted by the $20 million fee. In granting the

defendants’ motion to dismiss, the court concluded that the fee did not taint the

merger negotiation process or the merger terms. Thus, the transaction was not unfair

to Duracell’s non-KKR stockholders, and the plaintiff failed to state an individual

claim. It also held that the complaint failed to plead facts rebutting the business

judgment rule’s presumptive applicability to the Duracell board’s decision to award

KKR the fees or plead facts to support a waste claim.

      In applying Parnes, the court in Golaine focused less on standing and more

on the merits of a post-merger direct claim, and remarked about how the two

inquiries overlap at times:

      the derivative-individual distinction as articulated in Parnes is revealed
      as primarily a way of judging whether a plaintiff has stated a claim on
      the merits. . . . Parnes can be straightforwardly read as stating the
      following basic proposition: a target company stockholder cannot state
      a claim for breach of fiduciary duty in the merger context unless he
      adequately pleads that the merger terms were tainted by unfair dealing.
      If the plaintiff cannot meet that pleading standard, then he has simply
      not stated a claim under Rule 12(b)(6). This merits focus of Parnes is,
      in my view, a more candid approach that places primary emphasis on
      whether compensable injury to the target stockholders is alleged rather
      than on whether the target stockholder’s complaint has articulated only

                                         19
        a waste or mismanagement claim for which there is likely no proper
        plaintiff on earth.54

        In In re Massey Energy Co. Derivative & Class Action Litigation,55

stockholders of a coal mining corporation filed derivative suits against the board and

company officers for lack of oversight and to hold them responsible for the financial

harm from a tragic mine disaster. While the derivative suits progressed, Massey’s

board entered into a merger agreement with another mining company. The plaintiffs

sought a preliminary injunction to prevent the merger from closing, claiming that

the Massey Board should have negotiated to have the derivative claims transferred

into a litigation trust for the benefit of Massey stockholders. According to the

plaintiffs, the merger was unfair because it allowed the buyer to acquire Massey

without paying fair value for the value of the derivative claims.

        While the merger had not yet closed and the court viewed the case through a

preliminary injunction lens, the court had to grapple with the value of derivative

claims and the loss of standing to pursue them once the merger closed.56 First, the

court found the Caremark57 claims against the defendants viable. Second, and fatal

54
   Id. at *7 (footnotes omitted).
55
   2011 WL 2176479 (Del. Ch. May 31, 2011).
56
   In Massey, the plaintiffs sought to enjoin the merger or create a litigation trust pre-closing to
hold the derivative claims.
57
   In re Caremark Int’l. Inc. Deriv. Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). Caremark claims govern
director oversight liability, which require a plaintiff to show that “(a) the directors utterly failed to
implement any reporting or information system or controls; or (b) having implemented such a
system or controls, consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations thus disabling
themselves from being informed of risks or problems requiring their attention.” Stone ex rel.
                                                  20
to the plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction claim, the court found that a best-case

successful recovery of $95 million was immaterial to an $8.5 billion merger. Thus,

given the relative immateriality of the derivative claims, the court was not persuaded

on a preliminary injunction record that the merger would likely be found to be

economically unfair to the Massey stockholders for failing to capture the value of

the derivative claims. Importantly, the court did not couch its ruling on standing

grounds. Instead, the court found that the plaintiff had failed to demonstrate a

likelihood of success on the merits to earn a preliminary injunction enjoining the

merger.

       After Golaine and Massey, the Court of Chancery in Primedia gathered the

strands of these and other post-Parnes cases and knitted them together into a three-

part test. In Primedia, the plaintiffs filed a derivative action on Primedia Inc.’s

behalf and alleged that KKR traded on inside information in a 2002 preferred stock

purchase. They sought disgorgement of KKR’s profits under Brophy v. Cities

Service Co.58 While they litigated the derivative case, Primedia, Inc. merged with a

AmSouth Bancorp. v. Ritter, 911 A.2d 362, 370 (Del. 2006) (emphasis in original). “Because of
the difficulties in proving bad faith director action, a Caremark claim is ‘possibly the most difficult
theory in corporation law upon which a plaintiff might hope to win a judgment.’” City of
Birmingham Ret. & Relief Sys. v. Good, 177 A.3d 47, 55 (Del. 2017) (quoting In re Caremark,
698 A.2d at 967).
58
   70 A.2d 5 (Del. Ch. 1949). Brophy and its progeny recognize a cause of action for a plaintiff to
recover for misuse of confidential corporate information, which requires a plaintiff to demonstrate
that “1) the corporate fiduciary possessed material, nonpublic company information; and 2) the
corporate fiduciary used that information improperly by making trades because she was motivated,
in whole or in part, by the substance of that information.” In re Oracle Corp. Deriv. Litig., 867
                                                 21
private equity entity. The plaintiffs then filed a class action suit and alleged that the

merger terms were unfair because the Primedia directors failed to obtain any value

for the Brophy claim. They also argued that the merger conferred a special benefit

on KKR because KKR knew any acquirer was unlikely to pursue the Brophy claim

post-merger. The special benefit, according to the plaintiffs, required court review

of the merger under entire fairness.

       Recognizing that the post-merger class action complaint required application

of the Parnes decision, on a motion to dismiss the Court of Chancery read Parnes to

require first an inquiry into standing, and second, an evaluation of the merits of the

claims.59 Drawing from the court’s Golaine and Massey decisions, the court distilled

the standing inquiry into a three-part test:

       A plaintiff claiming standing to challenge a merger directly under
       Parnes because of a board’s alleged failure to obtain value for an
       underlying derivative claim must meet a three part test. First, the
       plaintiff must plead an underlying derivative claim that has survived a

A.2d 904, 934 (Del. Ch. 2004), aff’d, 872 A.2d 960 (Del. 2005) (TABLE); see also Kahn v.
Kolberg Kravis Roberts & Co., L.P., 23 A.3d 831, 840 (Del. 2011) (“Brophy focused on the public
policy of preventing unjust enrichment based on the misuse of confidential corporate
information.”).
59
   Primedia, 67 A.3d at 477 (“As I understand the framework established by Parnes, a plaintiff
wishing to assert such a claim must first establish standing to sue. If standing exists, then the
plaintiff must still plead a viable claim.”); see also In re Straight Path Commc’ns Inc. Consol.
S’holder Litig., 2018 WL 3120804, at *14 (Del. Ch. June 25, 2018) (“Having held that the
Plaintiffs have standing to sue under Parnes, I next consider whether the Complaint states viable
claims for breach of fiduciary duty.”), aff’d sub nom. IDT Corp. v. JDS1, LLC, 206 A.3d 260 (Del.
2019) (TABLE); In re Ply Gem Indus., Inc. S’holders Litig., 2001 WL 755133, at *6 (Del. Ch.
June 26, 2001) (“Thus, by putting fairly before the Court the contention that [the plaintiffs] are
challenging the fairness of the merger price or the merger process, Plaintiffs can survive the
derivative-individual obstacle yet still fail to assert a claim that would allow them to move beyond
a Rule 12(b)(6) confrontation.”).
                                                22
         motion to dismiss or otherwise could state a claim on which relief could
         be granted. Second, the value of the derivative claim must be material
         in the context of the merger. Third, the complaint challenging the
         merger must support a pleadings-stage inference that the acquirer
         would not assert the underlying derivative claim and did not provide
         value for it.60

         The Court of Chancery found the Brophy derivative claim viable because it

would survive a motion to dismiss. For the materiality requirement, the court found

potential recoverable damages of $190 million plus substantial prejudgment interest,

which was material when compared to the $330 million merger. The court also

noted that the amounts were material even if discounted to reflect the minority

stockholders’ beneficial interest in the litigation recovery. Primedia’s minority

stockholders owned 42% of its outstanding stock. Their pro rata share of the merger

consideration was $133 million. Their pro rata share of a $190 million recovery on

the Brophy claim would be $80 million.

         In a parting comment illustrating the materiality of the derivative claims, the

court risk-adjusted the potential recovery and found it material in relation to the

proceeds the minority would receive in the merger:

         Clearly there is risk in the litigation, and to succeed, plaintiffs will have
         to prove materiality and scienter. These challenges, however, are not
         similar to those that led Chancellor Strine in Massey Energy to discount
         so heavily the value of the derivative claims. If I assume prevailing on
         the Brophy claim was a toss-up, or even a 1–in–5 proposition, the risk-
         adjusted, pre-interest recoveries for the minority of $40 million and $16

60
     Primedia, 67 A.3d at 477.
                                              23
       million, respectively, remain material when compared to their $133
       million share of the proceeds from the Merger.61

       After finding that the derivative claims were viable and material, the court

also found that the acquirer would not assert the Brophy claim post-merger and

provided no value for it in the merger consideration. Turning to whether the

plaintiffs stated a claim for relief, the court held that it was reasonably conceivable

that KKR received a special benefit in the merger because no acquirer likely would

have pursued the Brophy claim post-merger, and the defendants did not extract value

for or take steps to preserve the Brophy claim. Thus, the entire fairness standard of

review applied to the merger, and the plaintiffs alleged sufficient grounds that the

merger was not entirely fair.62

                                             C.

       In this appeal the procedural issues do not warrant lengthy discussion. After

a review of the record, we are satisfied that Morris preserved for appeal a challenge

to the fairness of the merger itself, and SEP GP disputed how the court should

consider litigation risk when assessing materiality. Morris alleged that former public

unitholders were harmed because “SEP GP has allowed Enbridge to engineer the

Roll-Up Transaction on terms that were patently unfair and unreasonable to SEP and

61
  Id. at 483 (emphasis in original).
62
  The Court of Chancery has since followed Primedia in the context of post-merger challenges.
See In re Riverstone Nat’l, Inc. S’holder Litig., 2016 WL 4045411, at *8 (Del. Ch. July 28,
2016); Houseman v. Sagerman, 2014 WL 1600724, at *10–13 (Del. Ch. Apr. 16, 2014).
                                             24
its public unitholders, and that could not have been approved in good faith by the

New Conflicts Committee or the SEP GP Board.”63 Specifically, Morris pled that

“the New Conflicts Committee and the SEP GP Board utterly failed to attempt to (i)

appropriately value the Derivative Claim, or (ii) secure any value for the Derivative

Claim in its negotiations concerning the Roll-Up Transaction.”64 SEP GP also

argued that Morris’s chance of prevailing on the derivative claims was a “toss-up”

or a “one-in-five” chance, essentially copying the odds from the Primedia decision.65

Thus, the parties preserved their appellate arguments about materiality.

       The main issue on appeal is whether the Court of Chancery stayed true to the

standard of review on a motion to dismiss for lack of standing. In other words, did

the court accept as true all reasonable factual allegations in the complaint and

consider whether it was reasonably conceivable that Morris asserted a direct claim

that could lead to a $661 million recovery on the derivative claims? After our review

of the complaint, we find that the court strayed from the proper standard of review,

and Morris had standing to pursue his post-merger complaint.

63
   App. to Opening Br. at A077 (Compl. ¶ 105).
64
   Id.
65
   See id. at A0122 (Defendant Spectra Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP’s Opening Br. in Support of
its Mot. to Dismiss the Verified Class Action Compl. at 31 n.12) (“For instance, if the derivative
claim were considered a toss-up, a theoretical $47 million recovery (without interest) would
represent just 1.4% of the $3.3 billion merger consideration. If instead the claim had a one-in-five
shot, the potential recovery of $19 million (without interest) for the unaffiliated unitholders would
be just 0.57% of the total merger value.”).
                                                 25
         As discussed earlier, to have standing, the plaintiff must plead a direct claim.

Under Parnes, to plead a direct claim, the plaintiff must allege that the merger itself

was unfair, “by charging the directors with breaches of fiduciary duty resulting in

unfair dealing and/or unfair price.”66 When the court is faced with a post-merger

claim challenging the fairness of a merger based on the defendant’s failure to secure

value for derivative claims, we think that the Primedia framework provides a

reasonable basis to conduct a pleadings-based analysis to evaluate standing on a

motion to dismiss.

         First, the court must decide whether the underlying derivative claims were

viable, meaning they would survive a motion to dismiss. Meritless derivative claims

would have no impact on the merger price. Second, the derivative claim recovery

as pled must be material in relation to the merger consideration. An immaterial

derivative claim would have little or no impact on the merger price. For example, a

$10 million derivative claim could not reasonably be expected to be material to a $1

billion merger value. The same derivative claim would be material to a $20 million

merger. And finally, the court should also assess whether the complaint alleges that

66
     Parnes, 722 A.2d at 1245.
                                            26
the acquirer would not assert the underlying derivative claim and did not provide

value for it.67

       When assessing standing at the motion to dismiss stage of the proceedings,

the court must accept the plaintiff’s factual allegations as true and draw all

reasonable inferences in his favor. This does not mean that the court is bound by

unreasonable, unsupported, or speculative derivative suit damages claims. But if it

is reasonably conceivable that the plaintiff could recover the damages claimed in the

complaint, the court must accept that allegation as true for purposes of the motion to

dismiss for lack of standing.

       Here, the parties do not dispute the viability of the derivative claim. Morris’s

derivative claim survived a motion to dismiss. The parties also did not dispute that

SEP GP secured no value for the derivative claim, and Enbridge would not assert

the claim post-merger. Regarding materiality, Morris alleged that his derivative

claim could lead to a more than $660 million damages award, including prejudgment

interest, which was material when compared to a $3.3 billion merger.68 The court

could reasonably infer that if Morris prevailed on his challenge to the reverse

dropdown transaction, Morris could recover at least $660 million.

67
   Primedia, 67 A.3d at 483. The rationale for this prong is that “[w]ithout such allegations and
the resulting inferences, the merger consideration logically would incorporate value for the
litigation, and the merger would not have harmed the sell-side stockholders.” Id.
68
   App. to Opening Br. at A0023 (Compl. ¶ 1 & n.3) (describing the derivative claim that survived
the motion to dismiss as “potentially worth more than $660 million to SEP (and more than $110
million to SEP’s public unitholders)”).
                                               27
       The court, however, discounted the potential $660 million recovery to $112

million to reflect the minority unitholders’ 17% beneficial interest in the derivative

litigation recovery. The Court of Chancery then reduced the $112 million further to

account for litigation risk because it was still “a litigable question whether Reduced

GP Cash Flow represented value to the Partnership in the Reverse Dropdown, which

would vindicate the Defendant’s approval of the transaction objectively.”69 The

court also held that even if SEP GP’s valuation was incorrect, it would not breach

the limited partnership agreement because Morris would still have to prove “the

work of the Defendant’s advisor, Simmons, on the Reverse Dropdown did not fit in

the parameters of Section 7.10(b) of the Second A&R LPA.”70 The court observed

that Morris would have to demonstrate that “SEP GP did not ‘reasonably believe’

that the valuation of the transaction was within Simmons’ competence, negating any

‘safe harbor’ for the Defendant.”71 Finally, Morris would also “have to demonstrate

the Defendant’s subjective bad faith to recover damages on behalf of SEP . . . .” 72

Taking these difficulties into account, the court concluded:

       I find that the chance of success of the Derivative Claim was slim, and
       certainly less than one-in-four. Twenty-five percent of $112,370,000
       is $28,092,500. This represents less than one percent of the total value
       of the Roll-Up. One percent is not material in the context of the Roll-

69
   Morris, 2019 WL 4751521, at *13.
70
   Id.
71
   Id.
72
   Id. at *14.
                                         28
       Up. The Plaintiff consequently does not have standing to pursue his
       claims.73

       We see two errors in the court’s materiality analysis at the motion to dismiss

stage of the proceedings. First, as discussed earlier, the court must accept Morris’s

factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in his favor.74 In its

prior decision the court found that Morris’s complaint “made adequate allegations

showing that under reasonably conceivable circumstances a facially unreasonable

gap in consideration exists sufficient to infer subjective bad faith.”75 Thus, “it was

‘reasonably conceivable that the General Partner acted in subjective bad faith.’”76 It

was also reasonably conceivable that, had Morris succeeded in the derivative suit

challenging the reverse drop down transaction, the recovery could have been at least

$660 million. Applying a further litigation risk discount at the pleading stage was

inconsistent with the court’s standard of review on a motion to dismiss for lack of

standing.

       Second, even if it was proper to discount the $660 million in damages alleged

in the complaint to reflect the public unitholders’ interest in the derivative recovery,

73
   Id. (footnotes omitted).
74
   See Parnes, 722 A.2d at 1247 (finding that, after taking all pleaded facts as true and drawing
reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor, the plaintiff’s claim was direct and withstood
dismissal); Primedia, 67 A.3d at 479 (“Assuming these allegations are true, as I must at this
procedural stage, . . . .”).
75
   Morris, 2019 WL 4751521, at *5 (quoting Morris v. Spectra Energy Partners (DE) GP, LP,
2017 WL 2774559, *16 (Del. Ch. June 27, 2017)).
76
   Id.
                                               29
to maintain equivalence, the court should have compared the $112 million pro rata

interest in the derivative claim recovery to the public unitholders’ proportional

interest in the merger consideration. The public unitholders had a 17% interest in

SEP. The merger consideration was valued at $3.3 billion. An apples-to-apples

comparison would have compared $112 million to $561 million.77 Under this

calculation, the derivative claim was material at the motion to dismiss stage.

       Neither Massey nor Primedia require a different result. As discussed earlier,

in Massey the plaintiffs alleged in their complaint Caremark damages equal to the

damages that the company suffered from the mining disaster—estimated to be $900

million to $1.4 billion. Even though the plaintiffs pled a viable Caremark claim, the

court refused to equate the value of the Caremark claim with the damages suffered

from the mine explosion.          Unlike here, where Morris is entitled to certain

presumptions in his favor, the court made its assessment as part of a preliminary

injunction motion, where likelihood of success is one of the requirements. The court

properly took into consideration the substantive difficulties confronting the plaintiff

in proving and collecting on their Caremark claims. On an extensive record before

the court, it predicted that the best-case recovery was $95 million, based not on the

77
   See Primedia, 67 A.3d at 482–83 (after finding the $190 million Brophy claim material to the
$316 million merger, the court also discounted the Brophy claim’s recovery to $80 million to
reflect the stockholders’ beneficial interest in the litigation recovery and compared it to the
stockholders’ $133 million pro rata share of the merger consideration).
                                              30
full damages caused the company by the mine disaster but on the policy limits for

directors’ and officers’ insurance coverage. The plaintiff did not show a likelihood

that it would succeed on its challenge to the fairness of the merger for failing to

secure value for a $95 million derivative claim recovery as part of a $8.5 billion

merger.78 Importantly, the court did not apply a percentage reduction based on

litigation risk. Instead, on a substantial record, the court gave the plaintiffs the

benefit of their realistic, best-case recovery.

         Primedia is also distinguishable. The court in Primedia found that the

plaintiffs’ Brophy claim was material and did not face the same impediments to

recovery as the plaintiffs faced in Massey. It was only after the court found that the

plaintiffs had a strong and material derivative case that the court concluded its

analysis with what can be best characterized as confirmation of its materiality

conclusion. The court stated that even if the Brophy claim “was a toss-up, or even a

1–in–5 proposition, the risk-adjusted, pre-interest recoveries for the minority of $40

million and $16 million, respectively, remain material when compared to their $133

million share of the proceeds from the Merger.”79 As we interpret the court’s

percentage risk adjustment, it served only as a hypothetical to illustrate the strength

and materiality of the plaintiffs’ claims even if there were obstacles to recovery.

78
     In re Massey Energy Co., 2011 WL 2176479, at *28–29.
79
     Primedia, 67 A.3d at 483.
                                              31
       In any event, on a motion to dismiss for lack of standing, we are not addressing

the likelihood of success on a preliminary injunction record. A percentage-based

risk reduction should not be applied at this stage of the proceedings. If the plaintiff

has alleged a viable derivative claim, where it is reasonably conceivable that the

claim is material when compared to the merger consideration and could result in the

damages pled in the complaint, the plaintiff has satisfied the materiality requirement

at the motion to dismiss stage for standing purposes. Morris has met this standard

and his claims should not be dismissed for lack of standing.

                                             III.

       Standing is concerned “only with the question of who is entitled to mount a

legal challenge and not with the merits of the subject matter in controversy.”80 If the

court finds that the plaintiff has standing, on the defendant’s motion the court should

also consider a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. For the first time on

appeal, SEP GP has asked us to consider its motion to dismiss for failure to state a

claim. Because the record is complex and it is not clear what has been incorporated

by reference, we think that the Court of Chancery should consider the motion first.

It also might be a better use of the court’s scarce resources to consider a motion for

summary judgment, after the completion of discovery, rather than a motion to

80
  Dover Historical Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1110 (emphasis in original) (quoting Stuart Kingston, 596
A.2d at 1382).
                                              32
dismiss. But we leave it to the Court of Chancery’s discretion. We reverse the Court

of Chancery’s judgment and remand for further proceedings. Jurisdiction is not

retained.

                                        33