Court Opinion

ID: 4308070
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-08-28 21:05:27.511267+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:42:38.160562
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

QC HOLDINGS, INC.,                       )
                                         )
      Plaintiff,                         )
                                         )
         v.                              )     C.A. No. 2017-0715-JTL
                                         )
ALLCONNECT, INC.,                        )
                                         )
      Defendant.                         )

                        MEMORANDUM OPINION

                        Date Submitted: June 11, 2018
                        Date Decided: August 28, 2018

S. Mark Hurd, Alexandra M. Cumings, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP,
Wilmington, Delaware; Danny David, Benjamin Sweet, Kelly Hanen, BAKER BOTTS
L.L.P., Houston, Texas, Counsel for Plaintiff.
A. Thompson Bayliss, Cameron T. Kirby, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware; Matthew L. DiRisio, WINSTON & STRAWN LLP, New York, New York;
Thomas G. Weber, WINSTON & STRAWN LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Counsel for
Defendant.
LASTER, V.C.
       Pursuant to a written put agreement,1 defendant Allconnect, Inc. (the “Company”)

granted plaintiff QC Holdings, Inc. the right to cause the Company to repurchase

18,604,071 shares of its common stock (the “Put Shares”) in return for a cash payment of

$5 million (the “Put Price”). The Put Agreement recognized that the Company could not

pay the Put Price unless it had sufficient funds legally available, including sufficient

surplus under Section 160 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”).2 The

Put Agreement also subordinated the Company’s obligation to pay the Put Price to any

amounts due on its “Senior Indebtedness,” which is a term defined in the Put Agreement.

       On November 16, 2015, QC Holdings exercised the Put Right. QC Holdings

delivered the original share certificate for the Put Shares to the Company, endorsed in favor

of the Company. QC Holdings also provided an executed assignment in favor of the

Company and represented in the exercise notice that it was transferring to the Company

good title to the shares. All of these steps were required by the Put Agreement.

       Under the Put Agreement, the Company’s obligation to pay the Put Price did not

mature until November 15, 2016. But when the time came to complete the purchase, the

Company had Senior Indebtedness outstanding and lacked sufficient funds legally

available to make payment. QC Holdings continued to wait for payment of the Put Price.

       1
        Compl. Ex. A (the “Put Agreement”). The Put Agreement refers to the put as the
“Put Right.”
       2
           8 Del. C. § 160.

                                             1
       In September 2017, non-party New Imagitas Inc. (“Imagitas”) acquired the

Company via a reverse triangular merger, with the Company surviving as a wholly owned

subsidiary of Imagitas (the “Merger”). Just before the effective time of the Merger, as part

of the transaction, the Company paid off all of its Senior Indebtedness. In the Merger, the

Company’s various classes and series of shares were converted into the right to receive

cash payments. Each share of common stock was converted into the right to receive

approximately two cents per share. The Company did not use any of the merger proceeds

to pay the Put Price, which equates to consideration for QC Holdings of approximately

twenty-seven cents per share. Imagitas insisted, however, that the Company’s preferred

stockholders place $5.1 million in escrow (the “Escrow Fund”) as a reserve against QC

Holdings’ claim to the Put Price.

       QC Holdings filed this lawsuit to recover the Put Price and has moved for summary

judgment. The Company opposes the motion and has cross moved for summary judgment.

This decision directs the Company to use the Escrow Fund to satisfy QC Holdings’ claims.

If the Escrow Fund is insufficient to pay the Put Price in full, then further proceedings will

be necessary to address the deficiency. Further proceedings also will be necessary to

quantify the amount of expenses (including attorneys’ fees) to which QC Holdings is

entitled under the prevailing-party provision in the Put Agreement.

                          I.        FACTUAL BACKGROUND

       The facts for purposes of this decision are drawn from the affidavits and documents

that the parties submitted in support of their cross motions for summary judgment. Neither

side has asserted that there are any disputes of material fact. For purposes of the issues
                                              2
presented on the cross motions, therefore, this matter is deemed to have been submitted for

decision on a written record under Court of Chancery Rule 56(h).

A.     The Asset Sale

       Pursuant to an asset purchase agreement dated October 28, 2013, the Company

acquired substantially all of QC Holdings’ assets (the “Asset Sale”).3 As consideration, the

Company paid QC Holdings $7.5 million at closing, assumed certain liabilities, and agreed

to pay QC Holdings an additional $2.5 million on the one-year anniversary of the closing.

The Company also issued the Put Shares to QC Holdings, and the parties

contemporaneously entered into the Put Agreement. The Asset Sale closed on November

15, 2013.

       Section 1(a) of the Put Agreement gave QC Holdings the right to put the Put Shares

to the Company in return for the Put Price.4 QC Holdings could exercise the Put Right

beginning on November 15, 2015, the second anniversary of the closing of the Asset Sale.

Under Section 1(b) of the Put Agreement, starting on that date, QC Holdings would have

       3
        At the time, QC Holdings had a different name. The old moniker is not relevant to
the analysis, so for simplicity this decision refers only to QC Holdings.
       4
         This is an oversimplification. The agreement that governed the Asset Sale
contemplated that the Company might claw back some of the Put Shares to satisfy
indemnification obligations, and Section 1(a) contained a formula to adjust the Put Price if
the number of Put Shares was reduced. No reductions became necessary. The Put
Agreement also authorized QC Holdings to transfer the Put Shares to “Permitted
Transferees” who would have succeeded to QC Holdings’ rights under the Put Agreement,
and the formula in Section 1(a) also accounted for the number of Put Shares that each
“Seller Party” exercising the Put Right might hold. QC Holdings never transferred any of
the Put Shares, so that aspect of the Put Right never became relevant either.

                                             3
sixty days in which to exercise the Put Right. If QC Holdings did not exercise the Put Right

within the sixty-day period, then it would terminate.

         Assuming that QC Holdings exercised the Put Right, the Company’s obligation to

pay the Put Price did not mature immediately upon exercise. Section 1(c) of the Put

Agreement did not require that the Company pay the Put Price until November 15, 2016,

the third anniversary of the Closing Date of the Asset Sale. The payment obligation thus

did not mature until approximately one year after QC Holdings could exercise the Put

Right.

         Section 1(b) of the Put Agreement provided that QC Holdings’ ability to exercise

the Put Right would terminate early if one of several events occurred that would give QC

Holdings an alternative path to liquidity. The Put Agreement referred to these events as

“Deemed Liquidation Events,” and they included: (i) an initial public offering, (ii) a third-

party acquisition in which the Company’s common stock was fully exchanged for cash or

publicly traded securities, (iii) a sale of more than 50% of the Company’s assets, or (iv) a

transaction in which a third party acquired control of a majority of the Company’s voting

power. If any of the first three events occurred, and if the consideration that QC Holdings

received was less than the Put Price, then the Company would owe QC Holdings a make-

whole amount sufficient to enable QC Holdings to receive the Put Price. If the last of these

events occurred—defined as a “Partial Liquidation Event,” then the Company was

obligated to require the acquirer to assume the Company’s obligations under the Put

Agreement or to allow the Put Right to become immediately exercisable.

                                             4
B.     Impediments To The Payment Of The Put Price

       Even after the Company’s obligation to pay the Put Price matured on November 15,

2016, the ensuing payment was not automatic. The Put Agreement recognized that the

Company could comply only if it had sufficient funds legally available to make a

redemption. Section 1(d) of the Put Agreement stated:

              Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this
              Section 1, the Company’s obligation to repurchase any Put
              Shares under this Section 1 is subject to the General
              Corporation Law of Delaware and any other applicable local,
              state or federal law, statute or rule and, without limiting the
              effect of any other provision of this Agreement, including
              Section 3, the Company shall have no obligation to repurchase
              the Put Shares to the extent that doing so would conflict with
              the General Corporation Law of Delaware or other applicable
              law.

By early 2015, it had become highly unlikely that the Company would have sufficient funds

legally available to pay the Put Price.

       QC Holdings was not the only stockholder that held a redemption right. The holders

of the Company’s Series F and F-1 preferred stock (“Series F Preferred”) also had the right

to have their shares redeemed. In their case, it was for total redemption consideration of

$64.8 million, and the Company was obligated to redeem one third of the shares on each

of three dates: April 5, 2015, April 5, 2016, and October 5, 2016. Any redemption amounts

that were not paid on the specified date would bear interest at a rate of 15% per annum.

       The Company finished 2014 with cash flow of negative $10 million and adjusted

EBITDA of negative $1 million. At the beginning of 2015, the Company’s board of

directors formed a special committee to evaluate whether the Company had sufficient funds

                                            5
legally available to make the Series F Preferred redemption payment. In March 2015, the

special committee concluded that the Company lacked sufficient funds. On April 1, the

special committee informed the holders of the Series F Preferred that the Company would

be unable to redeem the Series F shares until it possessed sufficient funds. The holders of

the Series F Preferred exercised their redemption right anyway.

       Nor was a lack of legally available funds the only potential impediment to QC

Holdings’ receipt of the Put Price. Section 3(c) of the Put Agreement subordinated all of

the Company’s “Obligations” to QC Holdings under the Put Agreement, including its

obligation to pay the Put Price, to any outstanding Senior Indebtedness.5 The provision

further stated that QC Holdings “will not demand or receive from the Company (and the

Company will not pay to [QC Holdings]) all or any part of the Obligations, by way of

payment, prepayment, setoff, lawsuit, or otherwise . . . for so long as any Senior

Indebtedness remains outstanding.”6 The Put Agreement defined “Senior Indebtedness” as

                 the principal of (and premium, if any), unpaid interest on and
                 amounts reimbursable, fees, expenses, costs of enforcement
                 and other amounts due in connection with, (i) indebtedness for
                 borrowed money of the Company, to banks, commercial
                 finance lenders or other lending institutions regularly engaged
                 in the business of lending money, and (ii) any extension,
                 refinance, renewal, replacement, defeasance or refunding of
                 any indebtedness described in clause (i).7

       5
           See Put Agreement § 3(c).
       6
           Id.
       7
           Id. § 3(a).

                                               6
These amounts would constitute Senior Indebtedness unless “expressly subordinated to, or

made on a parity with, the amounts due by the Company under this Agreement.”8

       In March 2015, Covestco-Seteura, LLC loaned the Company $3 million in exchange

for a promissory note collateralized by certain accounts receivable (the “Covestco Loan”).

The Company used the proceeds for working capital. The Covestco Loan originally had a

maturity date of April 2015, but the parties extended it until January 2018.

       In December 2015, the Company obtained a revolving credit facility from Heritage

Bank that authorized borrowings of up to $7 million (the “Heritage Loan”). The Heritage

Loan required interest-only payments through its original maturity date in November 2017,

which the parties subsequently extended. In December 2015, the Company drew

approximately $3 million for working capital.

C.     QC Holdings Exercises The Put Right.

       On November 16, 2015, QC Holdings exercised the Put Right. Section 1(c) of the

Put Agreement specified the procedure that QC Holdings needed to follow:

                 To exercise the Put Right, after the Exercise Date but no later
                 than the Exercise Period End Date, [QC Holdings] shall deliver

                 [1] a written notice to the Company in the form attached hereto
                 as Exhibit A and in accordance with Section 4(g) hereof
                 indicating its election to exercise this Put Right with respect to
                 all of the Put Shares along with

                 [2] an executed Assignment Separate from Certificate in the
                 form attached as an exhibit to the Asset Purchase Agreement
                 and

       8
           Id.

                                                 7
               [3] the original stock certificate representing the Put Shares.9

As required by the Put Agreement, QC Holdings sent the exercise notice, the original share

certificate for the Put Shares, and an assignment of shares. The Company confirmed receipt

and acknowledged that it would “conduct a payout according to the Terms of the Put

Agreement.”10

      Although it did not matter at the time because the obligation to pay had not yet

matured, the Company lacked sufficient funds legally available to satisfy the Put Right in

November 2015. The Company also could not have paid the Put Price because that

obligation was subordinated to the Heritage Loan and the Covestco Loan.

      By letter dated November 2, 2016, the Company informed QC Holdings that it

would not be paying the Put Price on November 15, 2016, because it had taken on Senior

Indebtedness and the obligation to pay the Put Price was subordinated to that debt. The

November 2, 2016 letter informed QC Holdings that the Senior Indebtedness was likely to

continue past its stated maturity date on December 4, 2017.

D.    The Merger

      In mid-2017, the Company told QC Holdings that it was exploring strategic

alternatives. The Company proposed that in lieu of the Put Price, QC Holdings should

accept the per-share consideration that any sale generated for the common stockholders.

QC Holdings declined.

      9
          Formatting added.
      10
           Compl. Ex. D, at 2.

                                               8
      The Company subsequently entered into a merger agreement with Imagitas dated

September 7, 2017 (the “Merger Agreement”). The Merger closed that same day. Under

the Merger Agreement, a wholly owned acquisition subsidiary of Imagitas merged with

and into the Company, with the Company surviving the Merger as a wholly-owned

subsidiary of Imagitas.

      The Merger ascribed an enterprise value to the Company of approximately $83

million. Of this amount, $10.8 million was used at closing to pay off all of the Company’s

outstanding debt, including its Senior Indebtedness. Imagitas required that another $5.1

million be used to establish the Escrow Fund as a reserve to address QC Holdings’ claim

under the Put Agreement. Any amounts not used to satisfy QC Holdings’ claim would be

distributed to certain former preferred stockholders. The remaining $67 million was

allocated to the Company’s stockholders, with the bulk going to preferred stockholders.

The holders of the Series F Preferred withdrew their claim for redemption and received

their liquidation preference of approximately seventeen cents per share.

      Given the liquidation preferences and other rights of the preferred stock, the

common stockholders would not have received any consideration in the Merger. With the

consent of the preferred stockholders, the parties reallocated some consideration to the

common stockholders. As a result, the common stock was converted into the right to

receive approximately two cents per share.

      After paying off the Senior Indebtedness, during the moment before the

stockholders’ shares were converted into the right to receive the merger consideration, the

Company did not pay the Put Price to QC Holdings. The Company contends that it still
                                        9
lacked legally available funds to do so. The Company maintains that the merger

consideration itself cannot be regarded as legally available funds.

E.     This Litigation

       On October 9, 2017, QC Holdings filed this action to recover the Put Price and its

reasonable attorneys’ fees. The Company filed an answer in which it raised defenses under

the Put Agreement and Section 160 of the DGCL. The parties subsequently filed cross

motions for summary judgment.

                                     II.     ANALYSIS

       Under Court of Chancery Rule 56(c), summary judgment may be granted when

“there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and the “moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law.”11 “The role of a trial court . . . is to identify disputed factual

issues whose resolution is necessary to decide the case, but not to decide such issues. In

discharging this function, the court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to

the non-moving party.”12 “Summary judgment is particularly appropriate in a dispute over

an unambiguous contract because there is no need to resolve material disputes of fact.”13

       11
            Del. Ct. Ch. R. 56(c).
       12
            Merrill v. Crothall-American, Inc., 606 A.2d 96, 99 (Del. 1992) (citation omitted).
       13
         XO Commc’ns, LLC v. Level 3 Commc’ns, Inc., 948 A.2d 1111, 1124 (Del. Ch.
2007) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting NBC Universal, Inc. v. Paxson
Commc’ns Corp., 2005 WL 1038997, at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 29, 2005)); see also The HC
Cos., Inc. v. Myers Indus., Inc., 2017 WL 6016573, at *2, 9 (Del. Ch. Dec. 5, 2017)
(granting motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s breach of contract claim); West
Willow-Bay Court, LLC v. Robino-Bay Court Plaza, LLC, 2007 WL 3317551, *9, *13 (Del.
Ch. Nov. 2, 2007) (same).

                                               10
       The parties agree that when the Company’s obligation to pay the Put Price matured

on November 15, 2016, the Company (i) lacked sufficient funds legally available to pay

the Put Price and (ii) could not have used any funds to make the payment because the

Heritage Loan and the Covestco Loan constituted outstanding Senior Indebtedness. After

that, the parties’ positions diverge.

       The Company contends that its obligation to pay the Put Price was extinguished

when it could not make the redemption payment on November 15, 2016. QC Holdings

disagrees and says that the obligation to pay the Put Price continued to exist, although it

was suspended until just before the effective time of the Merger, when the Company paid

off the Senior Indebtedness. Once that happened, QC Holdings says that the Company was

required to pay the Put Price before the Merger closed.

       In my view, neither theory is correct. Rather, in my judgment, the outcome turns on

the status of the Put Shares at the effective time. If they remained outstanding, then they

were converted into the right to receive the merger consideration. In this case, however,

the Put Shares had been transferred to the Company, and the resulting contractual

commitment to pay the Put Price survived the Merger as an obligation of the surviving

corporation under Section 259 of the DGCL.14

A.     The Company’s One-Day-Only Argument

       The Company contends that the obligation to pay the Put Price existed only on

November 15, 2016, after which it terminated. From the Company’s standpoint, if it could

       14
            8 Del. C. § 259.

                                            11
not pay the Put Price on that date, then QC Holdings was left with nothing. Under this

view, the Put Agreement was the equivalent of a baseball ticket without any protection for

cancellations or postponements. If the game could not go forward on the date scheduled,

the ticket holder would be out of luck: no rainchecks, refunds, or exchanges. In my view,

that interpretation would result in a forfeiture, rendering it suspect and disfavored. Under

the only reasonable reading of the agreement, the obligation to pay the Put Price continued,

subject to the Company’s ability to pay.

       Although the Company’s argument is extreme, it has some textual support. Section

1(c) of the Put Agreement specifies that “the Company shall pay to [QC Holdings] on the

third anniversary of the Closing Date the Put Price in cash (by cashier’s check or wire

transfer) . . . .” It does not speak in terms of an ongoing obligation to pay if the Company

could not make the payment on November 15, 2016.

       There are also provisions in the Put Agreement which recognize that the Company

might not be able to pay the Put Price on November 15, 2016. Section 1(d) states that “the

Company shall have no obligation to repurchase the Put Shares to the extent that doing so

would conflict with the General Corporation Law of Delaware or other applicable law.” It

goes on to provide that if the Company lacks sufficient funds legally available to pay the

Put Price in full, then the Company will redeem as many shares as it can and, if multiple

stockholders had exercised the Put Right, allocate the repurchases pro rata among those

stockholders. In the language of the Put Agreement,

              [i]f the funds legally available for repurchase of the Put Shares
              shall be insufficient to permit the payment of the full Put Price,
              the Company shall effect any repurchase pro rata among each
                                              12
                Seller Party exercising their respective put rights pursuant to
                this Agreement such that each Seller Party shall receive a
                payment equal to a fraction of the aggregate amount available
                for repurchase the numerator of which shall be based on such
                Seller Party’s Put Shares, and the denominator of which shall
                be the aggregate number of Put Shares exercised pursuant to
                this Agreement.15

This section of the Put Agreement does not contain any language that expressly

contemplates an ongoing payment obligation or the treatment of any deficiency.

       The Company points out that when sophisticated parties negotiate redemption

rights, they frequently include language specifying that the obligation to redeem the shares

will be ongoing. The redemption rights addressed in other cases illustrate this point.16

Closer to home, the redemption right enjoyed by the holders of the Series F Preferred

established an ongoing redemption obligation, stating:

       At any time and from time to time thereafter when additional funds of the
       Corporation are legally available for redemption of shares of Preferred Stock,
       such funds immediately will be used to redeem the balance of the shares of
       Preferred Stock which the Corporation has become obligated to redeem on
       any Redemption Date but which it has not redeemed . . . .17

No analogous provision appears in the Put Agreement.

       Although the Company has a linguistically plausible position, the text of Section

1(d) does not state explicitly that the obligation to pay the Put Price terminates. Nor does

       15
            Put Agreement § 1(d).
       16
         See, e.g., Frederick Hsu Living Tr. v. ODN Hldg. Corp., 2017 WL 1437308, at
*4 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017) (describing preferred stock redemption right which specified
that redemption obligation was ongoing); SV Inv. P’rs, LLC v. Thoughtworks, Inc., 7 A.3d
973, 978-79 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d, 37 A.3d 205 (Del. 2011) (same).
       17
            Picchi Aff. Ex. B, § 8(e).

                                              13
it say that the Company shall have no further obligation to make any payment if it cannot

redeem all of the Put Shares on November 15, 2016. Instead, the language states that the

Company has no obligation to repurchase the Put Shares “to the extent that doing so would

conflict with the General Corporation Law of Delaware or other applicable law.”18 The use

of “to the extent” implies a partial carving back of the obligation, consistent with a

suspension rather than termination. The Put Agreement uses similar language when

addressing the subordination of the redemption obligation to any Senior Indebtedness.

Section 3(f) of the Put Agreement provides that all “Obligations” established by the Put

Agreement are subordinated to any Senior Indebtedness “for so long as the Company owes

any amounts under the Senior Indebtedness.” The use of “for so long as” implies that the

obligation to pay the Put Price continued and did not terminate if it could not be fulfilled

on November 15, 2016.

       When the Put Agreement is read as a whole and in context, the Company’s

interpretation is unreasonable. If adopted, it would result in a commercially irrational

forfeiture. “Generally, the law does not favor a forfeiture. For a condition to effect a

forfeiture, it must be unambiguous.”19 If the language does not clearly provide for a

forfeiture, then a court will construe the agreement to avoid causing one.20

       18
            Put Agreement § 1(d) (emphasis added).
       19
Mart. v. Hopkins, 2006 WL 1915555, at *6 (Del. Super. June 27, 2006) (citations
omitted).
       20
          McDowell v. Greenfield, 2008 WL 1952169, at *8 (Del. Ch.) (master’s report),
aff’d, 2008 WL 3021032 (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 2008).

                                            14
       The language of the Put Agreement does not clearly provide for a forfeiture. As

discussed, it is silent as to either an abrupt termination or a continuing obligation. The

phrases “to the extent that” and “for so long as” both imply a continuing obligation.

       In my view, it would have been commercially irrational for QC Holdings to accept

the type of one-day-only payment obligation that the Company now suggests. The

limitations on a Delaware corporation’s ability to redeem its shares are widely known and

well understood.21 The Put Agreement itself mentioned these limitations and added a

contingency based on the existence of Senior Indebtedness. The likelihood that QC

Holdings would receive the Put Price on November 15, 2016, was therefore highly

contingent. Moreover, the Senior Indebtedness contingency was something that the

Company could largely control. If the obligation to pay the Put Price lasted only one day,

the Company could defeat it by taking on some amount of debt for a legitimate business

purpose. Although an egregious manipulation might violate the implied covenant of good

faith and fair dealing, the Company would not have to go very far to extinguish the payment

obligation.

       The Put Shares represented one-third of the total consideration that QC Holdings

received in the Asset Sale. As a holder of common stock, QC Holdings faced the risk of a

downside loss but also enjoyed the prospect of upside gain. It seems rational for QC

        See Thoughtworks, 7 A.3d at 991 (noting the “venerable and widely recognized
       21

impediments to mandatory redemptions,” surveying other methods that investors have
developed “to protect themselves and secure exit opportunities,” and citing National
Venture Capital Association’s recognition of limitations on mandatory redemptions).

                                            15
Holdings to swap an illiquid equity security without a readily ascertainable market value

for a contractual entitlement to $5 million, even if the timing of the payout depended on

the Company’s access to sufficient funds legally available and the absence of Senior

Indebtedness. To my mind, it would have been irrational for QC Holdings to wager

everything on the Company’s ability to pay $5 million on a particular date one year in the

future, particularly given the legal strictures on satisfying a redemption obligation and the

ability of the Company to manipulate the pertinent metrics. Interpreting the Put Agreement

to impose that bargain on QC Holdings would constitute an absurd reading of the contract.

       The Company’s conduct supports this interpretation. Until this litigation, the

Company acted as if the obligation continued. In its November 2, 2016, letter regarding

the Put Right, the Company informed QC Holdings about the Senior Indebtedness and

stated that its “obligation to otherwise pay the Put Right is subordinate to the Company’s

obligations to holders of Senior Indebtedness for so long as any Senior Indebtedness

remains outstanding.”22 The Company noted that its Senior Indebtedness had a maturity

date of December 4, 2017, but would likely be extended or replaced with a substitute credit

facility that would “qualify as Senior Indebtedness pursuant to the terms and conditions of

the Put Right Agreement and would continue to result in the deferral of any Company

obligation to pay the Put Right.”23 These statements are inconsistent with a one-day-only

payment obligation that terminated on November 15, 2016. The Company also carried the

       22
            Cumings’ Aff. Ex. F.
       23
            Id.

                                             16
$5 million redemption obligation on its books in 2016 and 2017, after the one-day-only

obligation ostensibly terminated.

       Under the plain language of the Put Agreement, the Company had an ongoing

obligation to pay the Put Price. Although the obligation matured on November 15, 2016,

the Put Agreement contemplated that the Company might not be able to make the payment

on that date. The obligation remained outstanding, subject to the Company’s ability to pay

under the terms of the Put Agreement and the strictures of Delaware law.

B.     QC Holdings’ Pay-Before-The-Merger Claim

       QC Holdings argues that because the Put Right was merely suspended, the Company

had to pay the Put Price as soon as its Senior Indebtedness was paid off, which happened

just before the effective time of the Merger. This argument fails because QC Holdings has

not pointed to any evidence that the Company had sufficient funds legally available to

satisfy its redemption obligation, and the merger consideration cannot be treated as “funds

legally available.”

       Before it could pay the Put Price, the Company had to have sufficient funds legally

available to make the payment. The Company has explained persuasively that as a

standalone entity, it did not have any legally available funds. Among other things, at the

time of the Merger, the Company had still not made any redemption payments to the Series

F Preferred, and their redemption claim had priority over QC Holdings’ Put Right. It is true

that in connection the Merger, the holders of the Series F Preferred gave up their

redemption claim and accepted the merger consideration, but that only happened as a result

of the Merger. There was no moment in time, independent of the Merger, when the
                                            17
Company had the ability to pay the Put Price. QC Holdings has not offered any evidence

that might create a dispute of fact to the contrary.

       Implicitly recognizing that the Company did not have sufficient funds reasonably

available, QC Holdings argues that the merger consideration that went to the Company’s

equity holders constituted a pool of legally available funds that should have been used to

pay the Put Price before any amounts went to the various equity holders. At oral argument,

QC Holdings’ counsel explained his view of a merger as creating a pool of capital that

becomes available to the acquired company, which is then allocated according to the

priority of the investors’ claims. Although intuitively attractive and historically grounded

in the principal predecessor to the merger (a sale of assets followed by a liquidation), the

Delaware Supreme Court rejected the use of functional analogies in the Havender case,24

laying the groundwork for the doctrine of independent legal significance.25 Instead, the

Havender court discussed and gave effect to the concept of a conversion of shares under

the merger statute as a transmutation that operates at the stockholder level without any

attendant entity-level effect.26 Subsequent Delaware decisions have adhered to the distinct

       24
            Fed. United Corp. v. Havender, 11 A.2d 331, 337-43 (Del. 1940).
       25
           See id. at 338; see also Orzeck v. Englehart, 195 A.2d 375, 378 (Del. 1963)
(explaining that “action taken under one section of [the DGCL] is legally independent, and
its validity is not dependent upon, nor to be tested by the requirements of other unrelated
sections under which the same final result might be attained by different means”). See
generally C. Stephen Bigler & Blake Rohrbacher, Form or Substance? Past, Present, and
Future of the Doctrine of Independent Legal Significance, 63 Bus. Law 1, 4-5 (2007)
(tracing the history of the doctrine to the reasoning in Havender).
       26
         See Havender, 11 A.2d at 338-39 (explaining that under the merger statute, shares
can be “converted” in a merger: “A well understood meaning of the word ‘convert’, is to
                                          18
concept of stockholder-level conversion by merger and refused to equate it with other

corporate events.27 Section 251(b)(5) of the DGCL recognizes that shares need not be

converted into consideration from one of the constituent corporations; the merger

alter in form, substance or quality. Substantial rights of shareholders, as is well known,
may include rights in respect of voting, options, preferences and dividends. The average
intelligent mind must be held to know that dividends may accumulate on preferred stock,
and that in the event of a merger of the corporation issuing the stock with another
corporation, the various rights of shareholders, including the right to dividends on
preference stock accrued but unpaid, may, and perhaps must, be the subject of
reconcilement and adjustment.”); Warner Commc’ns, Inc. v. Chris-Craft Indus., Inc., 583
A.2d 962, 967-68 (Del. Ch. 1989) (Allen, C.) (holding that adverse effect on preferred
stock in merger was caused by conversion into different security and not by any
amendment, alteration, or repeal of a provision in the certificate of incorporation); Shields
v. Shields, 498 A.2d 161, 167 (Del. Ch. 1985) (Allen, C.) (“When duly effectuated, [a
merger] effects by operation of law a transmutation of the stock interest in a constituent
corporation.”); id. at 168 (explaining that at the effective time, “the stock in a constituent
corporation (other than the surviving corporation) ceases to exist legally . . . and its place
is taken by a stock interest in another, distinct corporation”).
       27
          See, e.g., Rothschild Int’l Corp. v. Liggett Gp., 474 A.2d 133, 136 (Del. 1984)
(holding that conversion of shares by merger was not a liquidation that triggered a
liquidation preference); Union Chem. & Mat’ls Corp. v. Cannon, 148 A.2d 348, 352 (Del.
1959) (holding that “conversion of shares by merger is not a transfer or assignment”);
Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corp., 93 A.2d 107, 112 (Del. 1952) (rejecting argument that
merger was a sale of assets; holding that a merger is “something quite distinct” and that the
merger “is not merely one of form”); Dart v. Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co., 1985 WL
21145, at *6 (Del. Ch. May 9, 1985) (holding that conversion of shares by merger was not
an involuntary dissolution, liquidation, or winding up); see also, e.g., Elliott Assocs., L.P.
v. Avatex Corp., 715 A.2d 843, 849 (Del. 2002) (requiring an explicit reference to “merger”
in a protective provision before it would apply to changes to the corporate structure effected
by a merger accompanied by the conversion of shares); Benchmark Capital P’rs IV, L.P.
v. Vague, 2002 WL 1732423, at *7 (Del. Ch. July 15, 2002) (interpreting Delaware
precedents to hold, “in general terms . . . that protective provisions drafted to provide a
class of preferred stock with a class vote before those shares’ rights, preferences and
privileges may be altered or modified do not fulfill their apparent purpose of assuring a
class vote if adverse consequences flow from a merger and the protective provisions do not
expressly afford protection against a merger”).

                                             19
agreement can specify that shares will be converted into the right to receive “cash, property,

rights or securities of any other corporation or entity . . . , which cash, property, rights or

securities of any other corporation or entity may be in addition to or in lieu of shares or

other securities of the surviving or resulting corporation.”28 There is no necessary

connection between the consideration provided for shares in a merger agreement and the

existence of funds legally available for a redemption.

       In this case, Imagitas was the source of the consideration. The Company never had

the consideration, so the consideration could not have constituted legally available funds.

The Company therefore did not have any obligation to pay the Put Price before the Merger

closed.

C.     The Status Of QC Holdings’ Shares

       In my view, the central issue in this case is the status of the Put Shares at the time

of the Merger. If QC Holdings still held the Put Shares, then they were converted into the

right to receive the merger consideration. Delaware cases indicate that under those

circumstances, the existence of the Put Right would not give QC Holdings the right to

receive the Put Price; instead, the Merger would render the right to receive the Put Price

moot, because the Merger would have caused the Put Shares to vanish and be replaced with

something else (the right to receive the merger consideration).29 If, however, QC Holdings

       28
            8 Del. C. § 251(b)(5).
       29
         See Shields, 498 A.2d at 168 (explaining that at the effective time, the stock of
the merged corporation “ceases to exist legally” and “[t]he subject matter of the
stockholders’ agreement thus vanishes, so to speak”); id. at 168 (“[T]he effect of the merger
was not so much the abolishment of a contract right but the mooting of it, since as a result
                                            20
had transferred the Put Shares to the Company when it exercised the Put Right, then that

analysis no longer applies. Instead, from that point on, QC Holdings held a contractual

redemption right that continued under Section 259 of the DGCL as an obligation of the

surviving corporation.

       Section 201 of the DGCL states that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this chapter,

the transfer of stock and the certificates of stock which represent the stock . . . shall be

governed by Article 8 of [the Delaware Uniform Commercial Code (the ‘UCC’)].”30 Under

Section 8-103(a) of the UCC, “[a] share or similar equity interest issued by a corporation .

. . is a security.”31 Under Section 8-104(a)(1), a person “acquires a security” if “the person

is a purchaser to whom a security is delivered pursuant to Section 8-301.”32 Under Section

8-301(a)(1), delivery of a certificated security occurs when “the purchaser acquires

possession of the security certificate.”33 Under Article 8, “[t]he concept of delivery refers

to the implementation of a transaction.”34

of the merger the stock to which the right related disappeared by operation of law.”); see
also Union Chem., 148 A.2d at 352 (holding that by virtue of conversion of shares by
merger, the shares that supported jurisdiction under the sequestration statute ceased to exist
and the Court of Chancery lost jurisdiction to proceed, notwithstanding the existence of a
valid attachment lien against the shares).
       30
            8 Del. C. § 201.
       31
            6 Del. C. § 8-103(a).
       32
            6 Del. C. § 8-104(a)(1).
       33
            6 Del. C. § 8-301(a)(1).
       34
            Id. cmt. 1.

                                             21
       In this case, QC Holdings’ shares were represented by a stock certificate, making

them a certificated security for purposes of Article 8.35 When QC Holdings properly

exercised the Put Right in November 2015, it tendered the original stock certificate (duly

endorsed for transfer), provided the required assignment, and represented in the exercise

notice that it was transferring to the Company good title to all economic and voting interests

in the stock.36 The Company took possession of the certificate, the notice of exercise, and

the assignment. As a result, the Company acquired the securities for purposes of title under

Article 8, subject to an obligation to pay the Put Price. Because the Company never paid

the Put Price, QC Holdings can now sue to enforce that contractual obligation. Presumably

QC Holdings could have cancelled the transfer if it wished, but this decision need not

grapple with that issue.

       In light of these steps, QC Holdings was no longer a stockholder after November

2015. Instead, it held a contractual claim against the Company for a redemption payment

in the amount of the Put Price, subject to the terms of the Put Agreement and Section 160

of the DGCL.

       Under Section 259 of the DGCL, a contractual claim against a constituent

corporation survives a merger as a claim against the surviving entity. Section 259(a) states:

       35
         See 6 Del. C. § 8-102(a)(4) (“‘Certificated security’ means a security that is
represented by a certificate.”).
       36
           See Cumings’ Aff. Ex. C (“The performance by Holder of his or her obligations
hereunder will be effective to transfer good title to the Company of all economic and voting
interests in the Holder Shares . . . .”).

                                             22
       When any merger or consolidation shall have become effective under this
       chapter, for all purposes of the laws of this State the separate existence of all
       the constituent corporations, or of all such constituent corporations except
       the one into which the other or others of such constituent corporations have
       been merged, as the case may be, shall cease and the constituent corporations
       shall become a new corporation, or be merged into 1 of such corporations, as
       the case may be, possessing all the rights, privileges, powers and franchises
       as well of a public as of a private nature, and being subject to all the
       restrictions, disabilities and duties of each of such corporations so merged or
       consolidated; and all and singular, the rights, privileges, powers and
       franchises of each of said corporations, and all property, real, personal and
       mixed, and all debts due to any of said constituent corporations on whatever
       account, as well for stock subscriptions as all other things in action or
       belonging to each of such corporations shall be vested in the corporation
       surviving or resulting from such merger or consolidation; and all property,
       rights, privileges, powers and franchises, and all and every other interest shall
       be thereafter as effectually the property of the surviving or resulting
       corporation as they were of the several and respective constituent
       corporations, and the title to any real estate vested by deed or otherwise,
       under the laws of this State, in any of such constituent corporations, shall not
       revert or be in any way impaired by reason of this chapter; but all rights of
       creditors and all liens upon any property of any of said constituent
       corporations shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and
       duties of the respective constituent corporations shall thenceforth attach to
       said surviving or resulting corporation, and may be enforced against it to the
       same extent as if said debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or
       contracted by it.37

This section makes clear that the Company’s contractual obligations under the Put

Agreement survived the Merger and remained obligations of the Company in its capacity

as the surviving corporation.38

       37
            8 Del. C. § 259(a).
       38
         See, e.g., Del. Ins. Guar. Ass’n v. Christiana Care Health Servs., Inc., 892 A.2d
1073, 1078 (Del. 2006) (“[A] merger does not allow a predecessor corporation to avoid its
pre-merger obligations. Rather, the ‘liabilities and duties of the respective constituent
corporations shall thenceforth attach to . . . [the] surviving . . . corporation, and may be
                                             23
       This decision does not hold that whenever a party exercises a redemption right, the

party loses its status as a stockholder and becomes a contractual claimant. Redemption

rights can be drafted in any number of ways. It would be possible for the stockholder to

continue to hold its shares and exercise the right to vote and other rights associated with

stock ownership until the redemption was complete. It also would be possible for a contract

to address explicitly whether the party that exercised the redemption right continued as a

stockholder or became a contractual claimant. In this case, the parties did not address the

issue explicitly, but the terms of the Put Agreement called for delivery of an endorsed stock

certificate, plus an assignment, plus representations regarding the transfer of title. Having

complied with those terms, QC Holdings became a contractual claimant, albeit one that

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

law limitations on redemption.39 QC Holdings’ contractual rights survived the Merger and

continued as an obligation of the Company in its capacity as the surviving corporation.

enforced against it . . . as if . . . [the] debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or
contracted by it.’” (footnote omitted) (quoting 8 Del. C. § 259(a))).
       39
          A party holding an unsatisfied right to have its shares redeemed is not a creditor
of the corporation that bears the redemption obligation. See, e.g., ODN, 2017 WL 1437308,
at *13; Harbinger Capital P’rs Master Fund I, Ltd. v. Granite Broad. Corp., 906 A.2d 218,
225 (Del. Ch. 2006); HB Korenvaes Invs., L.P. v. Marriot Corp., 1993 WL 205040, at *5
(Del. Ch. June 9, 1993) (Allen, C.). Both Section 160 of the DGCL and longstanding
common law doctrine constrain a corporation’s ability to purchase its own shares. See
Thoughtworks, 7 A.3d at 985. Parties seeking to enforce redemption rights regularly chafe
against these limitations, but they confer substantial benefits on both issuers and capital
providers during other phases of the corporate life cycle. For example, the limitations on
redemption enable preferred stock with debt-like features to be classified as equity for tax
purposes, thereby avoiding the problem of imputed interest and lowering the cost of capital
for VC-backed startups. See Ronald J. Gilson & David M. Schizer, Understanding Venture
Capital Structure: A Tax Explanation for Convertible Preferred Stock, 116 Harv. L. Rev.
                                             24
D.     An Order Of Specific Performance Regarding The Escrow Fund

       Having determined that the Company remains bound by the Put Agreement post-

Merger, the question becomes whether there are any disputes of material fact that would

prevent a grant of summary judgment requiring the Company to perform its obligation

under the Put Agreement. Without the Escrow Fund, the motion for summary judgment

would have to be denied so that the parties could develop a record regarding whether the

Company currently has sufficient funds legally available to pay the Put Price. With the

Escrow Fund, the analysis is straightforward. Under the Merger Agreement, the Company

designated the Escrow Fund as funds legally available to satisfy QC Holdings’ claims.

Although QC Holdings cannot obtain a money judgment that would give it creditor status,

QC Holdings is entitled to a decree of specific performance compelling the Company to

use the Escrow Fund to fulfill its obligations under the Put Agreement.

       “A claim for specific performance is a specialized request for a mandatory

injunction, requiring a party to perform its contractual duties.”40 Its purpose “is to place the

874, 902-04 (2003) (explaining the tax benefits of preferred stock relative to debt); see also
George W. Dent, Jr., The Role of Convertible Securities in Corporate Finance, 21 J. Corp.
L. 241, 261-62 (1996) (citing advantages of convertible preferred for unseasoned
companies). The same ability to treat preferred stock with debt-like features as equity also
carries benefits for companies operating in regulated industries, such as financial institution
that have to meet capital requirements. See Mark P. Gergen & Paula Schmitz, The Influence
of Tax Law on Securities Innovation in the United States: 1981-1997, 52 Tax L. Rev. 119,
132-33, 155-56 (1998) (discussing tax implications of various securities).
       40
         CertainTeed Corp. v. Celotex Corp., 2005 WL 217032, at *6 (Del. Ch. Jan. 24,
2005) (Strine, V.C.).

                                              25
aggrieved party in the position that it would have been in but for the breach.”41 “[S]pecific

performance is a matter of grace that rests in the sound discretion of the court.” 42 Its

proponent

       must prove by clear and convincing evidence that he or she is entitled to
       specific performance and that he or she has no adequate legal remedy. A
       party seeking specific performance must establish that (1) a valid contact
       exists, (2) he is ready, willing, and able to perform, and (3) that the balance
       of equities tips in favor of the party seeking performance.43

A decree of specific performance is the appropriate form of relief to compel the release of

funds from an escrow account.44

       In this case, all of the requirements for a decree of specific performance are met.

The Put Agreement is a valid and binding contract, QC Holdings has performed fully under

its terms, and the balance of the equities favors an order of specific performance. The

decree will enable QC Holdings to receive payment for its shares, nearly three years after

       41
         Moore Bus. Forms, Inc. v. Cordant Hldgs. Corp., 1998 WL 71836, at *9 (Del.
Ch. Feb. 4, 1998).
       42
            Peden v. Gray, 886 A.2d 1278 (Del. 2005) (TABLE).
       43
            Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1158 (Del. 2010) (footnotes
omitted).
       44
          See Sparton Corp. v. O’Neil, 2018 WL 3025470, at *4 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2018);
Haney v. Blackhawk Network Hldgs., Inc., 2017 WL 543347, at *4 (Del. Super. Feb. 8,
2017) (holding that a claim for the release of escrow funds was equitable in nature because
any damage award would require plaintiff to seek specific performance or an affirmative
injunction); see also East Balt LLC v. East Balt US, LLC, 2015 WL 3473384, at *2-4 (Del.
Ch. May 28, 2015) (holding that this court had jurisdiction over an action for “an order
requiring Defendants to provide joint written instructions directing the Escrow Agent to
release the remaining Escrow Amount” because money judgment alone would not be an
adequate remedy).

                                             26
exercising the Put Right. Using the Escrow Fund for this purpose will not harm the

Company, because the amounts in the Escrow Fund have been set aside to satisfy QC

Holdings’ claims under the Put Agreement.

       If the Escrow Fund is not sufficient to satisfy QC Holdings’ claims, then further

proceedings may be necessary. If the deficiency involves an amount due for redemption,

then the parties will need to develop a record regarding the extent to which the Company

has sufficient funds legally available. If the deficiency only involves amounts due under

the prevailing-party provision for attorneys’ fees found in Section 4(i) of the Put

Agreement, then discovery into funds legally available should not be necessary, because

the statutory and common law limitations on redemption would not apply to the contractual

fee-shifting obligation. Further proceedings would remain necessary to quantify the

amount of the fee award.

                                III.     CONCLUSION

       Summary judgment is granted in favor of QC Holdings. A decree of specific

performance will issue that orders the Company to use the Escrow Fund to satisfy QC

Holdings’ claims under the Put Agreement. If the parties cannot agree on the form of the

decree, then they shall submit competing orders within ten days. Within thirty days, the

parties shall submit a joint letter identifying any remaining issues that must be addressed

to bring this matter to a conclusion at the trial level. If further proceedings are necessary,

then the parties shall propose a schedule.

                                             27