Court Opinion

ID: 4567803
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-22 20:02:43.796275+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:44:51.082873
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

 CARLOS EDUARDO LOREFICE                         )
 LYNCH and GRUPO BELLEVILLE                      )
 HOLDINGS, LLC, a Delaware Limited               )
 Liability Company,                              )
                                                 )
                         Plaintiffs,             )   C.A. No. 2019-0356-MTZ
       v.                                        )
 R. ANGEL GONZALEZ GONZALEZ,                     )
 TELEVIDEO SERVICES, INC., a                     )
 Florida Corporation, JUAN PABLO                 )
 ALVIZ, and FERNANDO GUIDO                       )
 CONTRERAS LOPEZ,                                )
                                                 )
                         Defendants.

             ORDER VACATING STATUS QUO ORDER AND
           DENYING STATUS QUO ORDER PENDING APPEAL

      WHEREAS, upon review of Defendants’ Emergency Motion to Lift and

Vacate the Status Quo Order (the “Motion to Vacate”) and Plaintiffs’ Cross-Motion

Pursuant To Court Of Chancery Rule 62(c) To Maintain The Status Quo Order (the

“Motion to Maintain”), as briefed, it appears:

      A.     Plaintiffs Carlos Eduardo Lorefice Lynch (“Lynch”) and Grupo

Belleville Holdings, LLC (“Belleville” or the “Company”), filed their complaint in

May 2019 (the “Complaint”), seeking a declaratory judgment as to the Company’s

rightful management pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 18-110, as well as a declaratory

judgment as to the Company’s rightful management and ownership pursuant to 10
Del. C. § 6501.1 The Complaint’s primary contention was that Lynch owns a 65%

interest in Belleville, a Delaware company that holds a number of Argentine media

assets.2 Ultimately, Lynch waived the Section 18-110 claim, and focused on

ownership.3 Defendants Televideo Services, Inc. (“Televideo”) and its owner and

president, R. Angel Gonzalez Gonzalez (“Gonzalez”), contended Lynch held that

interest in name only, but that it belonged to Televideo.4

          B.     On July 5, 2019, the Court entered a status quo order (the “SQO”)

regarding Belleville’s operations during the pendency of this litigation.5 The SQO

placed Lynch at Belleville’s helm based on the parties’ stipulated terms, taking

Lynch’s allegations in his Complaint as true, and following the practice of retaining

the apparent incumbent in managerial control pending resolution of a control

dispute.6

1
    Docket Item (“D.I.”) 1 [hereinafter “Compl.”].
2
    Id.
3
  See Lynch v. Gonzalez, 2020 WL 4381604, at *49 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2020) [hereinafter
“Post-Trial Op.”] (concluding that “[i]n the final chapter of this litigation, Lynch waived
his ostensibly motivating core claim under Section 18-110, as well as his primary
affirmative defenses”).
4
    D.I. 39.
5
    D.I. 33 [hereinafter “SQO”].
6
  See Pharmalytica Servs., LLC v. Agno Pharm., LLC, 2008 WL 2721742, at *3 n.6 (Del.
Ch. July 9, 2008) (“As the label suggests, status quo orders, in the usual case, provide
for incumbents to continue in office.”).

                                              2
          C.        Paragraph 1 of the SQO permits Lynch “and the current management

under Lynch” to serve as Belleville’s manager and legal representative “during the

pendency of the Litigation, or until otherwise ordered by the Court.”7 When this

Court enters its final judgment, this term will expire.8 The rest of the SQO provided

bumper rails for Belleville’s operation in the ordinary course of business, stopped

the flurry of competing regulatory filings, and permitted Lynch to represent

Belleville before Argentine regulators.9 By its terms, the entire SQO was to remain

in full force and effect until this Court specifically orders otherwise,10 such that it

would terminate upon entry of a final judgment.11 The Court intends to enter a final

judgment shortly upon resolving the pending fee dispute, which will terminate the

SQO.12

7
 SQO ¶ 1 (“Lynch and the current management under Lynch . . . shall remain as the
manager and legal representative in Argentina of Belleville during the pendency of the
Litigation, or until otherwise ordered by the Court.”).
8
  See Frankino v. Nat’l Auto Credit, Inc., 1999 WL 959188, at *1 (Del. Ch. Sept. 28, 1999)
(concluding that a status quo order naming the incumbent as manager pendente lite would
operate “until this Court entered a final judgment in the § 225 action”).
9
    SQO ¶¶ 2–6.
10
     See id. ¶ 1.
11
   See Eagle Force Hldgs., LLC v. Campbell, 2020 WL 3866620, at *11 & n.85 (Del.
July 8, 2020) (holding that, despite a pending appeal, an action had “conclu[ded]” to
terminate a status quo order upon entry of a final judgment; stating “[t]his reading is also
more consistent with the commonly understood duration of a preliminary injunction[;]”
and collecting cases).
12
     See D.I. 272 at 21.

                                             3
         D.      While this litigation was pending, Lynch tested the boundaries of the

SQO. Lynch pursued an opportunity to sell his personal interest in HFS Media S.A.

(“HFS”), an Argentine Belleville subsidiary, which he purported to hold through a

paper trail similar to the one by which he purported to hold an interest in Belleville.13

Defendants contended that the proposed sale violated the SQO and would adversely

affect Belleville’s deliberately crafted corporate structure, considering its nature as

a holding company. While prohibiting the sale was beyond my jurisdiction,14

Defendants’ concerns were subsequently substantiated by the trial record.15

         E.      On July 31, 2020, the Court issued a post-trial memorandum opinion

(the “Opinion”) finding, among other things, that Defendant Televideo is

Belleville’s majority member, and that documents purporting to show Lynch held a

majority stake were fabricated to satisfy regulators.16 The Opinion also concluded

that by, inter alia, bringing this litigation based on documents Lynch knew to be

false, Lynch engaged in bad faith litigation.17

13
   See D.I. 224, 227, 228, 234, 236, 240; JX 117 at 161 (noting that Lynch “owns” his
interest in HFS subject to a “[s]worn declaration stating that the true owner of the shares is
[Gonzalez]”).
14
     See D.I. 240.
15
     See, e.g., JX 117 at 161.
16
     See, e.g., Post-Trial Op. at *5, *13–14, *48–49.
17
     See, e.g., id. at *48–49.

                                               4
         F.      On August 3, Defendants filed the Motion to Vacate, seeking to lift or

vacate the SQO in light of the post-trial findings.18 On August 28, Plaintiffs opposed

Defendants’ motion and filed the Motion to Maintain, seeking to maintain the SQO

pending appeal.19 The parties fully briefed the motions by September 8.20

         G.      “Once [a] status quo order is in place, the party seeking modification

bears the burden of showing why it should be modified.”21 The SQO binds the

parties until this Court enters a final judgment in the matter or specifically orders

otherwise upon good cause shown.22 As with the decision to enter a status quo order,

the decision to order otherwise is “within the discretion of the trial judge.”23

         In deciding whether to modify or vacate a status quo order, it is proper
         for the court to assess whether the facts or circumstances justifying the
         initial restraint have changed. This includes whether there is a basis to
         reconsider the court’s initial determination that the plaintiff
         demonstrated . . . a . . . likelihood of success on the merits.24

18
     D.I. 243.
19
     D.I. 262.
20
     D.I. 243, 259, 262, 265, 269.
21
  R&R Capital LLC v. Merritt, 2013 WL 1008593, at *8 (Del. Ch. Mar. 13, 2013) (citing
Conn. Gen. Life Ins. Co. v. Pinkas, 2010 WL 4925832, at *2 (Del. Ch. Nov. 18, 2010)).
22
  See Eagle Force Hldgs., 2020 WL 3866620, at *11 & n.85; R&R Capital LLC, 2013 WL
1008593, at *8; Frankino, 1999 WL 959188, at *1.
23
     R&R Capital LLC, 2013 WL 1008593, at *8.
24
  Germaninvestments AG v. Allomet Corp., 2019 WL 2236844, at *10 (Del. Ch.
May 23, 2019) (citing United Bhd. of Carpenters Pension Plan v. Fellner, 2014 WL
1813280, at *1 & *2 (Del. Ch. May 1, 2014)), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds
and remanded, 225 A.3d 316 (Del. 2020).

                                             5
         H.    Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief pending appeal in the form of an

extension of the status quo order that installed Lynch as Belleville’s manager

pendente lite. “The purpose of an injunction pending appeal is to preserve the status

quo until the Supreme Court has an opportunity to rule on the matter.” 25 Plaintiffs’

Motion under Court of Chancery Rule 62(c)26 and Supreme Court Rule 32(a)27

requires this Court to exercise its discretion under four factors set forth in Kirpat,

Inc. v. Delaware Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission:28 (1) the likelihood of

success on the merits of the appeal; (2) whether Plaintiffs would suffer irreparable

harm if the injunction is not granted; (3) whether Defendants would suffer

25
   Vanderbilt Income & Growth Assoc’s v. Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., 1996 WL 652773,
at *3 (Del. Ch. Nov. 4, 1996), rev’d on other grounds, 691 A.2d 609 (Del. 1996).
26
    Ct. Ch. R. 62(c) (“Injunction Pending Appeal. When an appeal is taken from an
interlocutory or final judgment granting, dissolving, or denying an injunction, the Court in
its discretion may suspend, modify, restore, or grant an injunction during the pendency of
the appeal upon such terms as to bond or otherwise as it considers proper for the security
of the rights of the adverse party.”).
27
   Supr. Ct. R. 32(a) (“Stay or injunction pending appeal. . . . [A] motion for stay must be
filed in the trial court in the first instance. The trial court retains jurisdiction over the initial
motion and must rule on the initial motion regardless of whether the case is on appeal to
this Court. A stay or an injunction pending appeal may be granted or denied in the
discretion of the trial court, whose decision shall be reviewable by this Court. The trial
court or this Court, as a condition of granting or continuing a stay or an injunction pending
appeal, may impose such terms and conditions, in addition to the requirement of indemnity,
as may appear appropriate in the circumstances.”).
28
     741 A.2d 356 (Del. 1998).

                                                 6
substantial harm if the injunction is granted; and (4) whether the injunction would

serve the public interest.29

         IT IS ORDERED this 22nd day of September, 2020:

         1.     At the beginning of this case, relying on the parties’ stipulated terms

and taking Plaintiffs’ allegations as true, it appeared that to preserve Belleville’s

status quo was to keep Lynch at Belleville’s helm. But the crucible of trial has

revealed that Lynch never truly held a majority stake in Belleville, and was only ever

its manager under the terms of the SQO. In view of my post-trial finding that Lynch

has no rightful claim to Belleville’s ownership or management,30 Defendants

contend there is good cause to vacate the SQO before entry of a final judgment. 31 I

29
   Homestore, Inc. v. Tafeen, 886 A.2d 502, 504 (Del. 2005) (citing Kirpat, Inc. v. Del.
Alcoholic Bev. Control Comm’n, 741 A.2d at 357). Plaintiffs contend their Motion does
not invoke Supreme Court Rule 32(a). I disagree. Plaintiffs move pursuant to Court of
Chancery Rule 62(c) for an injunction pending appeal. Supreme Court Rule 32(a) offers a
corollary for the same. Based on the plain text of that Rule, it addresses a “[s]tay or
injunction pending appeal,” and states that “[a] stay or an injunction pending appeal may
be granted or denied in the discretion of the trial court, whose decision shall be reviewable
by this Court.” Supr. Ct. R. 32(a). The relationship between the rules is evident: when
the parties “make their motion pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 62[,] Supreme Court
Rule 32(a) mandates that this Court consider the motion in the first instance even after
appeal.” Bond Purchase, L.L.C. v. Patriot Tax Credit Props., L.P., 1999 WL 669358, at
*1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 16, 1999). Accordingly, Delaware courts address the rules in tandem.
See, e.g. Miles v. Cookson, 1995 WL 214400, at *1 (Del. Mar. 31, 1995); Jagodzinski v.
Silicon Valley Innovation Co., LLC, 2011 WL 4823569, at *3 (Del. Ch. Aug. 16, 2011);
Bond Purchase, L.L.C., 1999 WL 669358, at *1; Matter of State Insur. Dep’t v. Remco Ins.
Co., 1986 WL 3419, at *1 (Del. Ch. Mar. 18, 1986).
30
     See generally Post-Trial Op.
31
     See D.I. 243 ¶¶ 3–7.

                                             7
agree. It would be improper to permit Lynch to retain power he only obtained by

bad faith false allegations before this Court.

         2.     Accordingly, even though the SQO will expire on its own terms in a

matter of days, the Motion to Vacate is GRANTED. Post-trial, I have concluded

that Lynch’s allegations underpinning the SQO were false and were brought in bad

faith in an effort to steal what was not his. Lynch was never the incumbent: he filed

this litigation as an attempt to seize ownership, not retain it.

         3.     The record to date, including the proposed HFS transaction,32 also

supports a fear that that Lynch may seek to monetize his purported interest in

Belleville pending appeal. Allowing Lynch to remain in control of Belleville risks

irreparable harm to Belleville, rewards his bad faith litigation, and flies in the face

of my post-trial findings.

         4.     Lynch’s assertions of irreparable harm if the SQO is vacated are

speculative. He contends that if Defendants manage Belleville and represent it

before Argentine regulators, those regulators would not approve the transfer of

media licenses to Defendants’ regime because Defendants misrepresented to those

regulators that Lynch held Televideo’s ownership stake. Those licenses are issued

to Belleville subsidiaries. Lynch’s assertions that Belleville would suffer irreparable

harm from its subsidiaries’ lost licenses depend on certain swift and irreversible

32
     See D.I. 240.

                                            8
actions by Argentine regulators, which are far from guaranteed or predictable, at

least by this Court. And by Lynch’s logic, it is not clear that the regulators would

approve the licenses with Lynch at the helm, as Lynch also participated in deluding

those regulators.

          5.      Further, Plaintiffs’ argument is undermined by and inconsistent with

their positions on other motions in this litigation. When the parties tussled over the

breadth of the SQO and the propriety of the HFS sale, Plaintiffs contended, and I

agreed, that actions taken at the subsidiary level were too far removed to demonstrate

harm to the Company, and that this Court lacked jurisdiction over Belleville’s

foreign subsidiaries.33 Based on how the Motion to Maintain characterized the

alleged harm from lost licenses, that potential harm is cabined to Belleville’s

subsidiaries—most of which are foreign. I cannot maintain the SQO to prevent harm

to Belleville’s subsidiaries when that “SQO is limited to Belleville’s operations and

does not reach Belleville’s subsidiaries.”34

          6.      For similar reasons, as framed by the Kirpat factors, the Motion to

Maintain is DENIED. The Motion to Maintain mentions the first factor, likelihood

of success on appeal, only in passing and does not point to any particular flaws in

33
  See Lynch v. Gonzalez, 2020 WL 3422399, at *2–3 (Del. Ch. June 22, 2020) [hereinafter
“SQO Op.”].
34
     Id. at *3.

                                             9
the Opinion. While likelihood of success on appeal can only be known by the

Supreme Court, in my view the case does not present much grist for the mill of

additional litigation or investigation.35 And much of the post-trial opinion was based

on credibility determinations, which are only subject to reversal if clearly

erroneous.36

      7.       The Motion to Maintain makes two arguments with respect to the

second and third Kirpat factors. First, it contends that reinstalling Gonzalez as

Belleville’s manager would harm the Company through loss of licensure. As

explained, Lynch has not established the Company would suffer irreparable harm by

losing licenses if Defendants resume its ownership and control.

      8.       Second, Lynch contends the absence of a status quo order keeping him

in charge of Belleville will harm Plaintiffs’ appellate rights. Lynch points to the fact

35
  See Wynnefield P’rs Small Cap Value L.P. v. Niagara Corp., 2006 WL 2521434, at *1
(Del. Ch. Aug. 9, 2006) (“When considering the appeal’s likelihood of success on the
merits, this Court is called upon not to second guess its decision, but to assess, as
objectively as possible, whether the case presents a fair ground for litigation and more
deliberative investigation.” (quotation omitted)).
36
  See, e.g., Eagle Force Hldgs., LLC, 2020 WL 3866620, at *5 (“After a trial, findings of
historical fact are subject to the deferential ‘clearly erroneous’ standard of review. That
deferential standard applies not only to historical facts that are based upon credibility
determinations but also to findings of historical fact that are based on physical or
documentary evidence or inferences from other facts. Where there are two permissible
views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly
erroneous. When factual findings are based on determinations regarding the credibility of
witnesses, the deference already required by the clearly erroneous standard of appellate
review is enhanced.” (quoting CDX Hldgs., Inc. v. Fox, 141 A.3d 1037, 1041 (Del.
2016))).

                                            10
that Belleville is a named plaintiff, and contends that giving Gonzalez, a defendant,

control of Belleville would deprive Belleville of its right to appeal this Court’s

decision. Plaintiffs did not provide any law in support of this contention, and

Defendants did not respond to it.

           9.   “[A] movant pursuant to Rule 62(c) must point to some injury other

than compliance with this Court’s Order and mootness of its appeal in order for this

factor to weigh in the movant’s favor.”37 The Court may deny a motion pursuant to

Rule 62(c), and enforce its judgment against the party seeking appeal, even if doing

so may harm that party by “undermin[ing] its opportunity for Supreme Court review

of the judgment.”38 Here, even if removing Lynch as a manager would compromise

Belleville’s right to appeal as a named plaintiff, I conclude that potential harm does

not carry the day. With Lynch as a co-plaintiff, there has been no concrete showing

that putting Belleville back in the hands of his adversary would bar meaningful

appellate review. When weighed against this Court’s interest in enforcing its

orders,39 Plaintiffs’ proposed harm to Belleville’s appeal rights succumbs to the

37
  Jagodzinski, 2011 WL 4823569, at *3 (quoting Bond Purchase, L.L.C., 1999 WL
669358, at *8).
38
     Id.
39
  See Aveta Inc. v. Bengoa, 986 A.2d 1166, 1183 (Del. Ch. 2009) (“Courts have inherent
authority to enforce their own orders and judgments.”).

                                         11
conclusion that the Company is best served by having its rightful managers and

owners—as adjudicated through trial—in control.

         10.   Furthermore, I conclude that procedural harm based on Belleville’s

purported right to appeal is illusory. At bottom, Belleville does not have standing to

pursue any of the claims in this action. Although this case made it this far without

this issue crystallizing, standing is jurisdictional in nature and may be raised sua

sponte.40

         11.   Lynch brought Count I under 6 Del. C. § 18-110(a) individually, based

on his allegation that he is a Belleville manager.41 Section 18-110(a) specifies that

such claims are considered “[u]pon the application of any member or manager.”42

As I have previously explained in this case, a Section 18-110 action is one in rem.43

Belleville is not before the Court as a party in personam, but rather as the LLC whose

40
  See, e.g., Mills v. Trans Caribbean Airways, Inc., 272 A.2d 702, 704 (Del. 1970); Friends
of Sandbar Vill. v. Sandcap, LLC, 2019 WL 2024380, at *1 n.1 (Del. Ch. May 8, 2019).
41
  See Compl. ¶ 93 (quoting 6 Del. C. § 18-110(a)); id. ¶ 95 (bringing claim on basis that
“Lynch is the sole manager and legal representative of Belleville”).
42
   6 Del. C. § 18-110(a). While the corporate analogue to Section 18-110 “grant[s] standing
to the corporation to seek relief under the statute with respect to stockholder votes other
than those conducted for the purposes of electing directors or officers[,] [t]he alternative
entity statutes, in contrast, do not confer such standing upon the . . . limited liability entity
itself, only on the partners, members, or managers, as the case may be.” Donald J. Wolfe,
Jr. & Michael A. Pittenger, Corporate and Commercial Practice in the Delaware Court
Chancery § 9.09[a], at 9-201 (comparing 8 Del. C. § 225(b), with 6 Del. C. § 18-110(a)).
43
     See SQO Op. at *5–6.

                                               12
managerial roles are the res to be adjudicated.44 It is precisely for that reason that

the entity is typically named as a “nominal” defendant,45 a party over which

jurisdiction “must be asserted in order to enforce any subsequent judicial ruling,”

even though it “has no ‘interest’ in the outcome of judicial review.”46 The Company

will necessarily remain present in that limited capacity if Lynch decides to appeal

my conclusion that he waived his Section 18-110 claim. Accordingly, denying the

Motion to Maintain does not irreparably or substantially harm Belleville on any

forthcoming appeal of my determination of Count I.

         12.    Count II seeks a declaratory judgment under 10 Del. C. § 6501,

focusing on Defendants’ alleged attempts to remove Lynch as Belleville’s manager

and legal representative, and to divest Lynch of an ownership stake.47 Count II

reiterated a request to determine Belleville’s rightful manager; that request was

duplicative of Count I and unnecessary in view of this Court’s statutory power under

44
   See id. at *6 (“Consistent with the limited scope of a Section 18-110 proceeding, the res
is limited to Belleville’s management and control.”).
45
   Cf., e.g., A & J Capital, Inc. v. Law Office of Krug, 2019 WL 367176, at *2 (Del. Ch.
Jan. 29, 2019) (naming entity as the nominal defendant in an action pursuant to Section 18-
110); Obeid v. Hogan, 2016 WL 3356851, at *1 (Del. Ch. June 10, 2016) (same); Facchina
v. Malley, 2006 WL 2328228, at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 2006) (same).
46
     Hackett v. Bd. of Adjustment of City of Rehoboth Beach, 794 A.2d 596, 599 (Del. 2002).
47
   See Compl. ¶¶ 107 (“Defendants took steps to wrongfully remove Lynch from his role
as sole manager and legal representative of Belleville and to divest Lynch of his 65 percent
ownership interest in Belleville, without Lynch’s knowledge or consent.”), 109
(“Defendants’ asserted interests in the management and ownership of Belleville are adverse
to Lynch’s interests in the management and ownership of Belleville.”).

                                             13
Section 18-110. Count II’s primary purpose was to ask the Court to declare that

Televideo transferred its 65% stake in Belleville to Lynch.48 While that request

invokes “Plaintiffs’” allegations, it focuses on whether Lynch rightly holds an

interest that Televideo, through Gonzalez, allegedly divested.49

         13.    Whether Belleville can, as a plaintiff, properly prosecute and appeal

Count II invokes fundamental principles of standing and injury. “Standing is a

threshold question that is jurisdictional in nature, and may be raised sua sponte. In

order to have standing, a plaintiff must (among other attributes) have suffered an

injury-in-fact, which, per the Complaint, the Plaintiff [Belleville] (as opposed to its

members) has not.”50 In order to have standing under the Declaratory Judgment Act,

a plaintiff must be interested and its rights must be affected:

         Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment pursuant to 10 Del. C. §[]
         6501 . . . that give[s] the Court the power to “declare rights.” When an
         interested person’s rights are affected by a statute, ordinance, contract
         or franchise, that person “may have determined any question of
         construction or validity arising under [it], and obtain a declaration of
         rights, status or other legal relations thereunder.”51

48
     See id. ¶¶ 105, 107, 108.
49
     See id. ¶¶ 103, 107.
50
  Friends of Sandbar Vill., 2019 WL 2024380, at *1 (footnote omitted) (citing Mills, 272
A.2d at 704, and Thornton v. Bernard Techs., Inc., 2009 WL 426179, at *4 (Del. Ch.
Feb. 20, 2009)).
51
  Del. State Sportsmen’s Ass’n v. Garvin, 196 A.3d 1254, 1260 (Del. Super. Ct. 2018)
(emphasis added) (footnotes omitted) (citing 10 Del. C. §§ 6501, 6502, and quoting 10
Del. C. § 6502).

                                            14
The Declaratory Judgment Act further memorializes this principle by stating who

shall be named as a party to a declaratory judgment action: “When declaratory relief

is sought, all persons shall be made parties who have or claim any interest which

would be affected by the declaration.”52 This standing requirement echoes through

and fortifies the mandate that a declaratory judgment address an actual controversy

between parties with affected rights:

52
  10 Del. C. § 6511 (“Parties”); see also id. § 6513 (stating that the term “person” “mean[s]
any person, partnership, joint stock company, unincorporated association or society, or
municipal or other corporation of any character whatsoever”).
        Belleville is not a proper party under the Declaratory Judgment Act because it is not
a person that “ha[s] or claim[s] any interest which would be affected by the declaration.”
10 Del. C. § 6511. Accordingly, Belleville cannot be a real party in interest to properly
prosecute Count II. Under Court of Chancery Rule 17(a), “[e]very action shall be
prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” Ct. Ch. R. 17(a). Tethered to the
rights of the parties affected, such a “claim generally must be maintained by a party who
has legal title to the claim; that party is known as a ‘real party in interest.’” Kier Const.,
Ltd. v. Raytheon Co., 2005 WL 628498, at *12 (Del. Ch. Mar. 10, 2005) (applying New
York law, but offering insights that this Court finds persuasive and consistent with
Delaware law). “Stated another way, a real party in interest is the person who is entitled
to the fruits of the action.” SolarReserve CSP Hldgs., LLC v. Tonopah Solar Energy, LLC,
2020 WL 4251968, at *4 (Del. Ch. July 24, 2020) (quoting 59 Am. Jur. 2d Parties § 38 (2d
ed. 2020)). Where a supposed party does not hold any rights at issue in the dispute, and
therefore is not a real party in interest, that party also lacks standing to prosecute a claim.
See id. at *4 n.55; Appriva S’holder Litig. Co., LLC v. EV3, Inc., 937 A.2d 1275, 1293
(Del. 2007) (“[A] real party in interest objection closely resembles the defense of failure to
state a claim for relief because it presupposes that the plaintiff does not have the substantive
right [standing] to enforce the claim he is making.” (quoting 6A Wright, Miller & Kane,
Federal Practice and Procedure § 1554 (3d ed. 2004)). The Court may address real parties
in interest sua sponte. See Diner Foods, Inc. v. City of Dover, 229 A.2d 495, 496 (Del.
1967). At bottom, Count II turned on whether Televideo agreed to, in fact, transfer 65%
of Belleville’s ownership to Lynch. Belleville itself was not a party to the purported
transfer: the Company had no entitlement to the fruits of the purported bargain, and
accordingly has suffered no injury from that transfer that would give it claim “to the fruits
of the action.” SolarReserve CSP Hldgs., LLC, 2020 WL 4251968, at *4.

                                              15
       (1) It must be a controversy involving the rights or other legal relations
       of the party seeking declaratory relief; (2) it must be a controversy in
       which the claim of right or other legal interest is asserted against one
       who has an interest in contesting the claim; (3) the controversy must
       be between parties whose interests are real and adverse; (4) the issue
       involved in the controversy must be ripe for judicial determination.53

       14.    Thus, a declaratory judgment must be pursued by the interested person

whose rights are affected, and must address a controversy between parties with real

and adverse interests. Under these requirements, Belleville has not been a proper

party to Count II and, therefore, holds no rights to appeal that count.54 Count II seeks

a narrow declaration of the rights of Lynch on the one hand, and Televideo on the

other, based on Televideo’s purported transfer of 65% of Belleville to Lynch.

Indeed, Count II was resolved under contractual principles based on the give and

53
  Rollins Int’l, Inc. v. Int’l Hydronics Corp., 303 A.2d 660, 662–63 (Del. 1973) (emphasis
added).
54
   This conclusion has jurisdictional consequences. “An actual controversy must exist for
declaratory judgment jurisdiction.” Energy P’rs, Ltd. v. Stone Energy Corp., 2006 WL
2947483, at *6 (Del. Ch. Oct. 11, 2006). Delaware courts are devoid of jurisdiction where
there is no actual controversy “between parties having adverse legal interests.” Id.
Belleville has no legal interest in the ownership dispute that could give rise to an actual
controversy under Count II. The actual controversy exists only between the parties to the
purported transfer: Lynch and Televideo. I do not have jurisdiction over a declaratory
judgment with respect to the ownership dispute sought by Belleville as a named plaintiff.
       Plaintiffs’ Motion to Maintain raised this issue for the first time. To be clear, the
Opinion did not issue a declaratory judgment addressing any rights belonging to Belleville.
I entered a declaratory judgment that (1) Televideo owns 95% of Belleville because there
was never a valid transfer of 65% of Televideo’s ownership stake to Lynch, (2) that Lynch
owns 0% of Belleville, and (3) that Gonzalez owns 5% of Belleville. See Post-Trial Op. at
*32, *39; see also id. at *3 n.13 (“At all times, Televideo acted through Gonzalez. To the
extent that Gonzalez took any action with respect to the disputed 65% membership interest
in Belleville, . . . he did so on Televideo’s behalf.”).

                                            16
take between Gonzalez and Lynch. As parties to the purported 65% transfer—and,

therefore, to any dispute arising therefrom—Lynch and Televideo were the

purported interestholders, not Belleville. Lynch and Televideo alone have rights

affected by any claim of ownership in this action.

         15.    In the game of keep-away between Lynch and Televideo, Belleville was

the ball, not a player. Belleville has no rights that are relevant to any declaration of

ownership under Count II, and Belleville is not and will not be the beneficiary of

any declaratory relief that has been fashioned in this action. And Plaintiffs have not

demonstrated how Belleville suffered any cognizable harm from the purported

private transfer between Televideo and Lynch—in which the Company had no

involvement—that would give Belleville standing to pursue a declaratory judgment

under Count II. Belleville cannot prosecute Count II for a declaratory judgment as

to Televideo and Lynch’s respective ownership stakes in the Company because it

does not have standing as a proper party with a real and affected interest in the

claim.55

         16.    Count III, for injunctive relief, seeks a remedy and does not state a

cause of action.56 To the extent it is duplicative of Count I, denying the Motion to

55
     The final judgment and order in this matter shall reflect this determination.
56
  See Compl. ¶¶ 114–27; Simplexity, LLC v. Zeinfeld, 2013 WL 5702374, at *1 (Del. Ch.
Oct. 17, 2013) (noting that a count that is “merely a request for injunctive relief” is “not a
cause of action in its own right”).

                                               17
Maintain does not harm Belleville on appeal, as it is before the Court in rem. To the

extent Count III is duplicative of Count II in that it requests injunctive relief with

respect to Lynch’s alleged ownership interest in Belleville, denying the Motion to

Vacate does not pose substantial or irreparable harm to Belleville, as it does not have

standing to prosecute an appeal from my determination that Lynch has no rightful

ownership of the Company. Count IV, for conversion, is brought only by Lynch.57

         17.    Thus, of the Complaint’s three claims for relief, Belleville never had

standing to pursue declaratory judgments in Counts I and II, and was not a plaintiff

for Count IV’s conversion claim. Where a litigant lacked standing to pursue an

action, the litigant lacks standing to take an appeal from a loss.58 Because Belleville

had no standing to pursue Counts I, II, or IV, it has no appellate rights. If Belleville

proceeds on appeal, it will only be in its capacity as the res before the Court for

Count I.

         18.    Because Belleville has no appellate rights, restoring Belleville to

Gonzalez’ control cannot diminish or harm any proper plaintiff’s ability to pursue

an appeal. Lynch retains his personal appellate rights, and has not argued or

otherwise demonstrated that denying the Motion to Maintain would substantially or

irreparably impair those rights. More generally, both sides of the dispute over the

57
     See Compl. ¶¶ 128–37; Post-Trial Op. at *24.
58
     See Walls v. Del. State Police, 648 A.2d 426 (Del. 1994).

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65% stake are adequately represented by the factions who seek to hold that stake.

The third and fourth Kirpat factors weigh in favor of denying the Motion to

Maintain.

      19.    In contrast, under the third and fourth Kirpat factors, Defendants face

substantial and real irreparable harm if Lynch is installed as manager:59 as

explained, Lynch has no rightful claim to Belleville’s ownership or management,

and the risk of his irreversibly monetizing what he wrongfully possesses pending

appeal is real.

      20.    Finally, the public interest is best served by permitting the rightful

manager of a company to manage it, and the rightful owner to own it, pending

appeal, rather than a plaintiff who sought to wrest an ownership interest via bad faith

litigation. Lynch’s doomsday predictions for the company and its workforce are

speculative and attenuated.

                                               /s/ Morgan T. Zurn
                                                 Vice Chancellor

59
  See Bond Purchase, L.L.C., 1999 WL 669358, at *8 (considering, under Kirpat, whether
the non-moving party would suffer harm from the relief requested).

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