Court Opinion

ID: 6336978
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-02 17:02:57.430762+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:59.181829
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MARION COSTER,                           )
                                         )
              Plaintiff,                 )
                                         )
       v.                                )   C.A. No. 2018-0440-KSJM
                                         )   CONSOLIDATED
UIP COMPANIES, INC., STEVEN              )
SCHWAT, and SCHWAT REALTY                )
LLC,                                     )
                                         )
              Defendants.                )

                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

                            Date Submitted: November 8, 2021
                               Date Decided: May 2, 2022

Max B. Walton, Kyle Evans Gay, CONNOLLY GALLAGHER LLP, Newark, Delaware;
Michael K. Ross, Thomas Shakow, Serine Consolino, AEGIS LAW GROUP LLP,
Washington, D.C.; Counsel for Plaintiff Marion Coster.

Stephen B. Brauerman, Elizabeth A. Powers, BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware;
Deborah B. Baum, PILLSBURY WINTHROP SHAW PITTMAN LLP, Washington,
D.C.; Counsel for Defendants Steven Schwat, Schwat Realty, LLC, Peter Bonnell, Bonnell
Realty, LLC, and Stephen Cox.

Neal C. Belgam, Kelly A. Green, Jason Z. Miller, SMITH KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS
LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Counsel for Defendant UIP Companies, Inc.

McCORMICK, C.
         This case involves a dispute over the control and ownership of Defendant UIP

Companies, Inc. (“UIP” or the “Company”).1 Prior to the events that led to this litigation,

UIP’s common stock was owned equally by Plaintiff Marion Coster and Defendant Steven

Schwat. After unsuccessfully agitating for a buyout of her interest, Coster called two

special meetings of stockholders to elect directors to fill vacant board seats. Coster and

Schwat deadlocked at those meetings, and Coster filed suit in this court seeking the

appointment of a custodian to break the deadlock. In response, Schwat caused UIP to sell

a third of UIP’s outstanding but unissued voting equity to Defendant Peter Bonnell, a UIP

executive to whom equity had long been promised (the “Stock Sale”). Coster then brought

claims to invalidate the Stock Sale. In a post-trial decision, the court held that the Stock Sale

satisfied the entire fairness standard. Having found that the Stock Sale satisfied Delaware’s

most rigorous standard of review, the court entered judgment in favor of the defendants and

declined to reach Coster’s alternative arguments under intermediate standards of review.

         On appeal, the Delaware Supreme Court adopted this court’s post-trial factual

findings but concluded that the court committed a category error by evaluating the Stock

Sale under the entire fairness standard only. The high court stated that this court should have

also evaluated the Stock Sale under Schnell2 or Blasius,3 depending on whether the UIP

1
 See Coster v. UIP Cos., Inc., 2020 WL 429906 (Del. Ch. Jan. 28, 2020) [the “Post-Trial
Decision”], rev’d, 255 A.3d 952 (Del. 2021) [the “Appellate Decision”].
2
    Schnell v. Chris-Craft Indus., Inc., 285 A.2d 437 (Del. 1971).
3
    Blasius Indus., Inc. v. Atlas Corp., 564 A.2d 651 (Del. Ch. 1988).
board’s motives were impure or pure.4 The high court thus reversed the Post-Trial Decision

and remanded the action for further consideration.

          The Appellate Decision articulated this court’s remit on remand as follows:

          If the board approved the Stock Sale for inequitable reasons, the Court of
          Chancery should have cancelled the Stock Sale. And if the board, acting in
          good faith, approved the Stock Sale for the “primary purpose of thwarting”
          Coster’s vote to elect directors or reduce her leverage as an equal
          stockholder, it must “demonstrat[e] a compelling justification for such
          action” to withstand judicial scrutiny.

          After remand, if the court decides that the board acted for inequitable
          purposes or in good faith but for the primary purpose of disenfranchisement
          without a compelling justification, it should cancel the Stock Sale and decide
          whether a custodian should be appointed for UIP.5

          Toward the end of the Appellate Decision, the justices elaborated on how the above

analysis might resolve. The court stated that

          Coster alleged that an interested board approved the Stock Sale intending to
          interfere with her voting rights as a 50% stockholder and to entrench
          themselves in office by thwarting the Custodian Action. If that is the case,
          under Schnell, the court need not go any further to find a breach of fiduciary
          duty.6

The high court then identified factual findings that, in its view, supported a determination

that UIP’s board acted for inequitable purposes under Schnell.7 To quote the Appellate

Decision:

4
    Appellate Decision at 953–54.
5
    Id. (footnotes omitted).
6
    Id. at 963.
7
    Id.

                                                2
         On appeal we believe the following undisputed . . . facts found by the court
         support the conclusion, under Schnell, that the UIP board approved the Stock
         Sale for inequitable reasons:

         •      The Stock Sale occurred while buyout negotiations stalled between
                UIP’s two equal stockholders;

         •      The stockholders could not elect a new board because of the deadlock,
                which led to the Custodian Action;

         •      A majority of the board members approving the sale were interested
                in the Stock Sale;

         •      Schwat and Bonnell were friends and “from the inception of Wout’s
                transition planning negotiation, Schwat and Bonnell appeared to be
                aligned in negotiations against Wout;”

         •      Schwat and Bonnell “worked together to develop the plan to moot the
                Custodian Action and neutralize the threat of [Coster] controlling the
                Company;”

         •      The defendants were “in a rush for the [McLean] [V]aluation” until
                the defendants “determined to answer the [plaintiff’s] complaint and
                then subsequently amend the answer after the sale of stock to Bonnell
                was completed[,]” which permitted them to “file[ ] an amended
                answer, which stated an intention to move for judgment on the
                pleadings because the Custodian Action had been mooted by the
                Stock Sale;”

         •      The Stock Sale put UIP stock in the hands of fellow board member
                Bonnell, who was aligned with the holdover board;

         •      The Stock Sale entrenched the existing board in control of UIP; and

         •      “Defendants obviously desired to eliminate Plaintiff’s ability to block
                stockholder action, including the election of directors, and the
                leverage that accompanied those rights.”8

8
    Id. at 963–64 (footnotes and citations omitted).

                                               3
           It is tempting to end this opinion here, allowing the work of the Appellate Decision

to supply the analysis, and concluding based on the above bullet points that the Stock Sale

was approved for inequitable purposes and thus invalid under Schnell.

           But the bullet points do not capture the full picture. As the Appellate Decision went

on to acknowledge, the Post-Trial Decision “made other findings inconsistent with this

conclusion.”9 The Appellate Decision further gave this court the opportunity to “review all

of its factual findings in any manner it sees fit in light of its new focus on a Schnell/Blasius

review.”10 This decision takes that opportunity, beginning with a review of the court’s

factual findings, and then turning to the “Schnell/Blasius” analysis.

I.         FACTUAL FINDINGS

           This decision does not repeat all the factual findings of the Post-Trial Decision, on

which the Appellate Decision relied.11 Those findings are now the law of the case.12 What

follows are the facts that, on further review, bear on the UIP board’s purposes and

motivations for approving the Stock Sale.

           The Post-Trial Decision identified multiple purposes and motivations for the Stock

Sale. As the high court observed, the Post-Trial Decision found that the UIP board desired

9
    Id. at 964.
10
     Id.
11
  See id. at 954. This decision cites to: C.A. No. 2018-0440-KSJM docket entries (by
docket “Dkt.” number); trial exhibits (by “JX” number); and the trial transcript (Dkt. 123–
24) (“Trial Tr.”).
12
  See Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 884 A.2d 26, 38 (Del. 2005) (“It is well-settled that
when an appellate court remands for further proceedings, the trial court must proceed in
accordance with the appellate court’s mandate as well as the law of the case established on
appeal.” (footnote omitted)).

                                                 4
to eliminate Plaintiff’s ability to block stockholder action.13 Plaintiff had wielded those

rights to create leverage in buyout negotiations.

           The Post-Trial Decision found that “as much as anything, the Stock Sale was

motivated by [Schwat and Cox’s] desire to keep their promise to Bonnell” and that

“Bonnell was viewed as essential to the Company’s survival.”14

           The Post-Trial Decision further found that “the Stock Sale was significantly

motivated by a desire to moot the Custodian Action,” because the appointment of a

custodian “was deleterious to UIP for reasons unrelated to Plaintiff.”15 Specifically, the

appointment of a custodian would have “constituted an event of default under various SPE

contracts” and therefore “threatened to cut off a substantial amount of UIP’s revenue

streams, justifying Defendants’ efforts to moot the Custodian Action.”16

           Beyond these prior factual findings, there is more to the story. Recall that the

precipitating event to this litigation was the death of Plaintiff’s husband.17 Given the delicate

emotional setting for the parties’ dispute, the Post-Trial Decision elided some aspects of

Plaintiff’s conduct. That drafting decision resulted in an opinion that presented the high

court with a somewhat incomplete narrative when evaluating the case on appeal.

13
     Post-Trial Decision at *12.
14
     Id.
15
     Id.
16
     Id.
17
     Id. at *5.

                                               5
           To dramatically understate matters, Wout’s passing was hard on many people in

many ways. At UIP, Wout was one of two rain makers and a driving force in the business.

He was a mentor and a friend to many of the witnesses, several of whom expressed their

fondness for him during trial.18 He worked hard to build UIP and continued working hard

until his death.19 Of course, no one was more affected than Plaintiff. Beyond her enormous

grief, Wout’s death left her in a financially precarious position. She faced the threat of

losing the material comforts of a life that she and her beloved husband had built together.

           The sad reality is that Plaintiff’s husband made her promises of future income,

including immediate income upon his death, but he died before he could finalize a plan to

deliver on those promises. Plaintiff would receive the benefits of her husband’s share of

the real estate investments that UIP managed, and Schwat estimated that those investments

would generate approximately $12 million in payments to Plaintiff over time.20 But

Plaintiff would receive those funds over the ensuing years.21 And Plaintiff wanted liquidity

sooner. For this reason, Plaintiff wanted Defendants to buy out her interest in UIP. She

18
   See, e.g., Trial Tr. at 437:20–24 (Bonnell) (“[H]e was more of a father to me in many
ways than my own father. So [his death] was very . . . distressing. I . . . hung up the phone
and I fell to the floor on my knees. I was very upset. And I pulled myself together and
went to work”); id. at 14:22–15:4 (Pace) (“I remember Mr. Schwat gave what I recall to be
a very nice eulogy for Wout Coster. . . . [T]he message I received from the eulogy was that
Mr. Schwat had strong feelings for Mr. . . . Wout Coster.”).
19
     Post-Trial Decision at *5.
20
  JX-217 at 3 (“As you know, over the next 8 – 10 years, we expect those interests to pay
you something like $12 Million.”).
21
     Id.

                                              6
demanded a buy-out roughly equal to thirty times the Company’s total equity value as

found in the Post-Trial Decision.22

           The problem for Plaintiff is that she had no right to a buyout. The founders

contemplated an owner-operated business that served to minimize risks associated with

real estate investments made through special purpose entities (“SPEs”).23 They did not

include buyout rights in any formative agreements.            Indeed, when UIP co-founder

Cornelius Bruggen resigned from UIP in 2011, he tendered his shares back to UIP for no

consideration.24

           Although no agreement entitled Plaintiff to a buyout, Defendants desired to provide

for their late colleague’s widow.25 They offered a generous buyout price when compared

to the value of the Company as found in the Post-Trial Decision.26 They also offered

multiple compromise positions.27 Plaintiff declined these offers. Ultimately, Defendants

declined to sacrifice the health of the Company and, indirectly, their own financial position

to deliver a buyout at a size that Plaintiff would find acceptable.

22
   See Post-Trial Decision at *22, *26 (finding the Company’s total equity value to be
$123,869); id. at *7 (stating that Plaintiff would be willing to sell her UIP interests at 50%
of the valuation price arrived at by Scott Valuation, LLC (citing JX-227)); JX-225 (finding
valuation of $7,362,000 via Scott Valuation, LLC).
23
     Post-Trial Decision at *2.
24
     Id.
25
  See id. at *7 (“Bonnell offered to buy out Plaintiff’s interests in UIP while Plaintiff would
retain her interests in the promotes.” (citation omitted)); JX-221 at MC0008261–62
(proposing three offers to Coster).
26
     Compare JX-221 at MC0008261–62, with Post-Trial Decision at *22, *26.
27
     See, e.g., Post-Trial Decision at *7; see also JX-221 at MC0008261–62.

                                                7
          It was only after Defendants refused Plaintiff’s buyout demand that she decided to

explore her legal options, including exercising her rights as a UIP stockholder. In a candid

moment, when Plaintiff was evaluating her legal options, Plaintiff’s friend Anne Pace

asked Plaintiff’s attorney whether Plaintiff could seek to dissolve the Company. She then

stated

          While this might not be in the long-term best interests of the company,
          frankly, Marion doesn’t care about the long-term best interests of the
          company. She cares about having to pay her monthly bills, expenses that are
          already forcing her to sell the house she and [Wout] built. She cares about
          receiving the benefits promised her by her husband.28

          Plaintiff’s initial legal play was to demand books and records.29 The next year, she

called for a special meeting of UIP stockholders to elect directors.30 After Plaintiff and

Schwat deadlocked, she called for another special meeting.31 Plaintiff and Schwat again

deadlocked. Schwat was concerned that Coster’s board nominees lacked any relevant

experience. Following the second meeting, Schwat remained willing to negotiate with

Plaintiff over the board’s composition. He testified that if Plaintiff nominated someone

with experience, he would have voted his stock in favor of that candidate.32

28
     JX-331 at MC0069535 (5/1/2016 email).
29
     Post-Trial Decision at *7; JX-45.
30
     Post-Trial Decision at *8.
31
     Id. at *9.
32
     Trial Tr. at 356:2–357:3 (Schwat).

                                               8
         Without making any meaningful effort to negotiate board composition, Plaintiff

filed a complaint in this Court seeking the appointment of a custodian pursuant to 8 Del.

C. § 226(a)(1) (the “Custodian Action”).33

         Until Plaintiff filed the Custodian Action, the UIP board had engaged with her. As

discussed above and in the Post-Trial Decision, Plaintiff’s request for custodial relief was

extremely broad. Plaintiff did not present a tailored request for relief that targeted the

stockholder deadlock. Rather, she asked the court to empower a custodian to “exercise full

authority and control over the Company, its operations, and management.”34 The threat of

a court-appointed custodian so broadly empowered posed new risks to the Company. The

appointment of a custodian with these powers would have given rise to broad termination

rights in SPE contracts and threatened UIP’s revenue stream, as UIP’s business model is

dependent on the continued viability of those contracts.35

33
     Post-Trial Decision at *10.
34
   Id.at *16. On remand, Plaintiff narrowed her request for relief, stating: “Plaintiff seeks
appointment of a custodian with narrowly-prescribed powers: to serve only as a neutral
tiebreaker in the election of a new board and other shareholder deadlocks. Plaintiff thus
no longer seeks appointment of a custodian with the broad power to ‘exercise full authority
and control over the Company, its operations, and management.’” Dkt. 166 (“Pl.’s Post-
Remand Opening Br.”) at 8 (emphasis in original) (quoting Post-Trial Decision at *10
n.165). Plaintiff’s belated request to narrow the requested relief does not eliminate the
business risks posed by the Custodian Action at the time the UIP board approved the Stock
Sale. Those risks inform the court’s below finding that the UIP board acted for the primary
purpose of mooting the Custodian Action when approving the Stock Sale.
35
  Post-Trial Decision at *12 n.190 (citing Trial Tr. at 358:2–5 (Schwat testifying that “if
somebody were to appoint a custodian to come in and manage the company in place of
Pete and I, our [equity] partners would likely terminate the agreements they have with
[UIP]”); id. at 457:10–19 (Bonnell testifying that “the primary investor . . . has broad
authority to terminate . . . those agreements”)). Defendants’ expert Zell testified that such
                                             9
         Facing this threat to the Company, UIP’s board thus identified a solution that the

Post-Trial Decision found was entirely fair. They would issue the equity that they had long

promised to Bonnell. By doing so, they would implement the succession plan that Wout

and Schwat developed on a clear day before any deadlock loomed, and where the only

aspects of the plan left unaddressed when Wout died were the terms of the sale to Bonnell.36

At the same time, they would moot the Custodian Action and eliminate the risks that the

appointment of a custodian posed to UIP. They would also eliminate the stockholder

leverage that Plaintiff was using to try to force a buyout at a price detrimental to the

Company.

         The UIP board’s desire to reward and retain an essential employee, implement an

agreed-upon succession plan, and avoid value-destructive litigation were not, in the words

of Blasius, “pretexts for entrenchment for selfish reasons.”37 Nor were they, in the words

of Plaintiff, “post-hoc justifications.”38 At trial, Defendants proved that these were genuine

termination provisions are typical within the real estate industry. Trial Tr. at 496:20–
497:19 (Zell).
36
  Trial Tr. at 134:17–24 (Coster) (“Q: Did there come a point in time when Mr. Coster told
you that Peter Bonnell was trying to purchase his shares of the company? A: Yes, but . . .
Q: And what did he tell you about that? A: He said he wanted Peter to be part, part owner,
and -- yes, that was eventually his objective, yes.”); id. at 135:23–136:2 (Coster) (testifying
that she believed that, two weeks before Wout passed, he “wanted [the sale to Bonnell] to
happen,” but disagreed on the financial terms proposed at the time (“he wanted to be paid
for it”)). Bonnell enjoyed a particularly close relationship with Wout, who mentored
Bonnell and groomed him to take his position in the Company. See Post-Trial Decision at
*2 (finding that “[o]ver the years, Bonnell grew under the mentorship of the principals, in
particular Wout” (citation omitted)); see also Trial Tr. at 417:6–420:5 (Bonnell).
37
     Blasius, 564 A.2d at 658.
38
     Pl.’s Post-Remand Opening Br. at 2.

                                              10
motivations for their actions that stood alongside the more problematic purposes that the

Post-Trial Decision identified and the Appellate Decision collected.

II.      LEGAL ANALYSIS

         Having painted a fuller factual background, this decision returns to the Schnell- and

Blasius-inspired questions presented by the Appellate Decision. Did the UIP board

approve the Stock Sale for “inequitable purposes” under Schnell?39 Or, did the UIP board,

“acting in good faith,” approve the Stock Sale for the “primary purpose of thwarting

Coster’s vote to elect directors or reduce her leverage as an equal stockholder” and without

a “compelling justification” under Blasius?40

         A.     Schnell

         In Schnell, the incumbent directors caused the defendant corporation to change the

date and location of an annual stockholders’ meeting by more than a month. Dissident

stockholders engaged in a proxy contest sued to enjoin the change in the date and location.

The trial court denied the stockholders’ motion for a preliminary injunction, observing that

the DGCL and the company’s bylaws permitted the board to set the time and place of the

meeting, and that “principles of corporate democracy . . . are not violated merely because

[the plaintiffs] may have less time than they would like to have to present their views to

fellow stockholders.”41

39
     Appellate Decision at 954.
40
     Id. at 953–54 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
41
     285 A.2d 430, 436 (Del. Ch. 1971), rev’d, 285 A.2d 437 (Del. 1971).

                                               11
         The Delaware Supreme Court reversed on appeal in a decision exceptionally modest

in length. The greater part of the court’s analysis is captured in the below two paragraphs:

         [M]anagement has attempted to utilize the corporate machinery and the
         Delaware Law for the purpose of perpetuating itself in office; and, to tht [sic]
         end, for the purpose of obstructing the legitimate efforts of dissident
         stockholders in the exercise of their rights to undertake a proxy contest
         against management. These are inequitable purposes, contrary to established
         principles of corporate democracy. . . .

         Management contends that it has complied strictly with the provisions of the
         new Delaware Corporation Law in changing the by-law date. The answer to
         that contention, of course, is that inequitable action does not become
         permissible simply because it is legally possible.42

These two paragraphs of Schnell have done a lot of work in Delaware jurisprudence. Most

importantly, as noted in the Appellate Decision, this passage of Schnell reaffirmed

Delaware’s adherence to Adolf Berle’s “twice tested” framework.43               The Delaware

Supreme Court articulated the essence of this general rule in a recent decision as follows:

“Under Delaware law, director actions are ‘twice-tested,’ first for legal authorization, and

second for equity.”44

42
     285 A.2d at 439 (emphasis added).
43
  See Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Corporate Power as Powers in Trust, 44 HARV. L. REV. 1049,
1049 (1931).
44
   Bäcker v. Palisades Growth Cap. II, L.P., 246 A.3d 81, 96 (Del. 2021)) (cleaned up).
Some have interpreted the twice-tested framework to mean that board action would be
tested only twice—once for legal validity and once under the appropriate equitable
standard. The Appellate Decision clarified that, at least in the unique circumstances of this
case, board action may be tested “for equity” under multiple equitable standards and thus
potentially tested thrice (or more).

                                               12
         Schnell has also been cited as a standard that may be employed by a court of equity

to rectify inequitable conduct violating a clear right.45 As a seminal decision securing the

role of equity in corporate accountability, Schnell has been widely praised.46 As a standard,

Schnell has been widely criticized.         As one commentator has observed, Schnell is

insufferably vague in the sense that it supplies a judge with no real “boundaries or

guideposts[] to invalidate otherwise legal conduct.”47

         Schnell has further been interpreted as creating a per se rule of illegality that directs

an inflexible form of relief when its application is triggered. That is, if a purpose is deemed

inequitable under Schnell, then it is per se illegal and void. In this case, as the Appellate

Decision directs, if the board approved the Stock Sale for inequitable purposes under

Schnell, then this court should “cancel” the Stock Sale.48

         By making a board’s purpose outcome-determinative, Schnell stands in contrast to

modern, two-part equitable standards that evaluate both the subjective and objective

45
  See Appellate Decision at 962–63. The “clear right” language comes from Ala. By-
Prods. Corp. v. Neal, 588 A.2d 255, 258 n.1 (Del. 1991).
46
  See, e.g., Leo E. Strine, Jr. et al., Loyalty’s Core Demand: The Defining Role of Good
Faith in Corporation Law, 98 GEO. L.J. 629, 642 (2010).
47
  Mary Siegel, The Illusion of Enhanced Review of Board Actions, 15 U. PA. J. BUS. L.
599, 644 (2013) (footnote omitted) [hereinafter “The Illusion”].
48
     Appellate Decision at 953–54 & n.2.

                                                13
aspects of a board’s action.49 Compared to modern standards, Schnell’s vagueness and

relative inflexibility render it an inferior tool for addressing fiduciary misconduct.50

       The Schnell decision predated, by a decade, the Delaware Supreme Court’s

landmark decisions on intermediate standards of review. Had Schnell been litigated after

the creation of intermediate standards, the high court easily could have applied an

intermediate standard, rather than an elliptical and seemingly per se rule. The elusive

nature of Schnell as a standard and the potentially harsh consequences of its application

provide good reasons to limit Schnell’s application. These aspects of Schnell have led the

Delaware Supreme Court to instruct that Schnell be invoked sparingly.51

49
   See, e.g., Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co., 493 A.2d 946, 955 (Del. 1985)
(establishing a two part test that asks, first, whether the board acted in good faith to achieve
a legitimate corporate objective, and second, whether the board’s actions fell within the
range of reasonableness); Blasius 564 A.2d at 658, 661–63 (establishing a two-part test
that asks, first, whether the board acted “for the primary purpose of impeding the exercise
of stockholder voting power,” and second, whether the board establishes “a compelling
justification for such action”).
50
   Some have suggested that Schnell’s primary purpose is as a gap-filling standard applied
to fact patterns beyond the reach of existing equitable standards. See, e.g., Rosenbaum v.
CytoDyn Inc., 2021 WL 4775140, at *14–15, *22 (Del. Ch. Oct. 13, 2021) (holding that
the Schnell standard could theoretically apply to a challenge to a board’s enforcement of
an advance notice bylaw that does not trigger Blasius review, but concluding that the facts
of the case left “no room for Schnell-inspired equitable principles to override the decision
by the Board”); but see Mary Siegel, Why Delaware Courts Should Abolish The Schnell
Doctrine, 5 AM. U. BUS. L. REV. 159, 186–87 (2016) (arguing that fiduciary duty
jurisprudence makes Schnell unnecessary). This decision’s observations on the
awkwardness of Schnell focus mainly on its application in factual scenarios where the court
could just as easily employ a modern intermediate standard.
51
   Ala. By-Prods., 588 A.2d at 258 n.1 (“While the doctrine of Schnell v. Chris–Craft
Industries, Inc., . . . is an important part of our jurisprudence, its application, or that of
similar concepts, should be reserved for those instances that threaten the fabric of the law,
or which by an improper manipulation of the law, would deprive a person of a clear right.”);
see also Wyser-Pratte v. Smith, 1997 WL 153806, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 18, 1997) (same);
                                              14
       With these idiosyncrasies of Schnell and cautionary words atop of mind, this

decision returns to the task of determining whether the UIP board approved the Stock Sale

for “inequitable purposes.”

       As discussed above, Schnell provides little guidance as a standard. Although it

prohibits board action taken for “inequitable purposes,” it does not define the universe of

“inequitable purposes.”

       Chancellor Allen’s Blasius decision arguably informs the scope of Schnell where

the challenged board action impedes the stockholder franchise. There, plaintiff Blasius

Industries, Inc. (“Blasius”) owned approximately 10% of Atlas Corporation (“Atlas”) and

proposed a leveraged recapitalization of Atlas. After the company issued a press release

rejecting the proposal, Blasius delivered a form of stockholder consent that, if successful,

would have increased the size of the board from seven to fifteen members and elected eight

new directors nominated by Blasius. The Atlas board responded by adding two new

members to the board, thereby depriving Blasius of the ability to elect a majority. Blasius

sued under Schnell to enjoin the board’s expansion.

       The Blasius decision found that the Atlas board acted “in a good faith effort to

protect its incumbency, not selfishly, but in order to thwart implementation of the

In re WeWork Litig., 250 A.3d 976, 996 (Del. Ch. 2020) (providing that “‘case law is
indicative of a healthy inclination on the part of the judiciary to employ the Schnell
principle of ‘legal but inequitable’ only sparingly,’ and typically does so only when
‘inequitable conduct has occurred but is not plainly remediable under conventional
fiduciary doctrines’”) (quoting 1 David A. Drexler et al., Delaware Corporation Law and
Practice § 4.03, at 13 (2019))); The Illusion at 644 & n.189 (observing that “a capacious
use of the Schnell doctrine could imperil the stability of Delaware law” (cleaned up)).

                                            15
recapitalization that it feared, reasonably, would cause great injury to the Company.”52

Because the Atlas board acted in good faith, the Chancellor rejected the argument that the

per se rule of Schnell applied.53 Although the court declined to deem the Atlas board’s

actions invalid per se, the Chancellor enjoined the board expansion because the board

failed to demonstrate a compelling justification for its actions.54         The compelling-

justification test employed in Blasius would later be elevated to a standard applicable when

a board “acts for the primary purpose of impeding stockholders’ franchise rights.”55

         In reasoning through Blasius’ arguments, Chancellor Allen implicitly distinguished

between disenfranchising actions that lack a good faith basis (and are thus per se prohibited

under Schnell) and disenfranchising actions taken in good faith. Indeed, it was this

distinction that prompted the Chancellor to articulate the Blasius standard.56

         Chancellor Allen would later clarify his intent that Blasius displace the per se rule

of Schnell. In his view, the possibility of a good faith basis for a disenfranchising action

weighed in favor of supplanting the per se rule of Schnell with the more flexible two-step

52
     Blasius, 564 A.2d at 658.
53
   Id. at 662 (holding that “[i]n my view, our inability to foresee now all of the future
settings in which a board might, in good faith, paternalistically seek to thwart a shareholder
vote, counsels against the adoption of a per se rule invalidating, in equity, every board
action taken for the sole or primary purpose of thwarting a shareholder vote, even though
I recognize the transcending significance of the franchise to the claims to legitimacy of our
scheme of corporate governance”).
54
     Id. at 662–63.
55
     Appellate Decision at 962.
56
     See Blasius, 564 A.2d at 658.

                                              16
approach of Blasius.57 Delaware law, however, did not clearly evolve in the direction urged

by Chancellor Allen. At best, it is an open issue whether Blasius displaced Schnell as the

standard applicable when a board action impedes the stockholder franchise. Perhaps there

is hope yet, and the difficulty that this jurist has had in distinguishing the two standards in

this context will inspire others to pick up where Chancellor Allen left off.58

         In the meantime, one reading of the Appellate Decision is that Schnell establishes a

standard applicable to disenfranchising actions that is independent from Blasius.59 If the

standards are to have independent existence in this factual scenario, one must thus conclude

that they address distinct fact patterns; Schnell’s prohibited “inequitable purposes” must be

distinct from the facts that trigger Blasius review. Viewed in this light, Blasius must be

interpreted as a carve-out to Schnell for disenfranchising actions taken in good faith.

         Although viewing Blasius as a carve-out to Schnell gets the court closer to a working

definition of “inequitable purposes,” the line between Schnell and Blasius is still

57
     See Stahl v. Appel Bancorp, Inc., 579 A.2d 1115, 1122 (Del. Ch. 1990).
58
   Perhaps this movement will further inspire renewed interest in the project suggested by
Mercier v. Inter-Tel (Del.), Inc., where then-Vice Chancellor Strine urged that the Blasius
and Unocal standards be brought “together in a workable manner.” 929 A.2d 786, 809
(Del. Ch. 2007). There, the Vice Chancellor lamented “the widely known reality that our
law has struggled to define with certainty the standard of review this court should use to
evaluate director action affecting the conduct of corporate elections.” Id. at 805. Suffice
to say, the struggle is real. And the struggle is compounded by the possibility that Schnell
might serve as an independent standard in this context.
59
  It may be that the high court viewed these standards as two faces of a unified standard;
the Appellate Decision did refer to the analysis as “Schnell/Blasius review.” Appellate
Decision at 963–64 & n.66. Regardless of whether the high court intended that this court
apply a unified Schnell/Blasius standard, rather than engage in separate inquiries under
Schnell and Blasius, the outcome would be the same.

                                              17
surprisingly difficult to draw. Does Schnell apply to board actions lacking any good faith

basis or all board actions having any bad faith motivation?60 Must the court look to the

directors’ subjective intent in making this determination? Does the court presume bad faith

where no business justification for the action can be credibly defended or otherwise

discerned?61

       In the end, no matter how one fashions a line between Schnell and Blasius under the

carve-out approach, determining the scope of “inequitable purposes” prohibited by Schnell

risks conflating the court’s inquiry into purpose with the court’s inquiry into justification.

Chancellor Chandler might cringe at this step, or at least counsel against it. In Peerless,

Chancellor Chandler denied cross-motions for summary judgment on claims challenging

the postponement of an annual stockholder meeting where a factual dispute concerning the

board’s justifications precluded judgment as a matter of law. Before making factual

60
   In Stahl, Chancellor Allen argued against conflating “inequitable purpose” with motives
or justifications, writing that “[a]n inequitable purpose is not necessarily synonymous with
a dishonest motive. Fiduciaries who are subjectively operating selflessly might be pursuing
a purpose that a court will rule is inequitable,” as was the case in Blasius. 579 A.2d at
1121. The converse is also true in certain circumstances. Under entire fairness review, for
example, fiduciary action undertaken for selfish reasons may nevertheless be deemed fair
and thus equitable. Chancellor Allen made this distinction, however, while arguing that
Blasius should displace the per se rule of Schnell. Id. at 1122. If Blasius did not displace
Schnell in the category of stockholder-franchise challenges, then this court is left to
interpret “inequitable purpose” under Schnell as synonymous with improper motives.
61
   See, e.g., Lawrence A. Hamermesh & Leo. E. Strine, Jr., Voting Manipulation and
Entrenchment, in THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF FIDUCIARY LAW 888, 888 (Evan J. Criddle
et al. eds., 2019) (interpreting Schnell as ruling that “it was the objective circumstances
themselves that established the requisite improper purpose” (emphasis in original)).

                                             18
findings concerning the board’s primary purpose and reviewing the disputed facts on the

board’s justifications, the Chancellor made a helpful theoretical distinction:

       inquiries into purpose as opposed to justification are two separate analyses
       that must remain distinct. The question of purpose asks for what ultimate
       ends were the acts committed. Purpose is defined as “[a]n objective, goal, or
       end.” The concept of justification concerns the rationale behind the search
       for that end. Justification is defined as “[a] lawful or sufficient reason for
       one’s acts or omissions.”62

Chancellor Chandler’s point is well-taken. And it continues to serve as an important

distinction within the context of a Blasius review like that at issue in Peerless. But in a

world where Blasius does not entirely displace Schnell as the standard applicable where a

board purposefully disenfranchises stockholders, it seems inescapable that justifications

inform the choice of a standard.

       Heeding the policy determination that Schnell should be deployed sparingly, this

decision interprets Schnell, when considered in the category of stockholder-franchise

challenges, as applicable in the limited scenario wherein the directors have no good faith

basis for approving the disenfranchising action. That factual finding can be made based

on evidence that speaks directly to subjective intent. That factual finding also can made

when objective evidence discredits proffered business reasons for the decision.

       Interpreting “inequitable purposes” in this manner is consistent with decisions of

this court that discredited business justifications for board actions as a predicate to

invalidating them under Schnell. For example, in Batzel, Phillips, Packer, and Lerman,

62
  Wis. Inv. Bd. v. Peerless Sys., 2000 WL 1805376, at *11 (Del. Ch. Dec. 4, 2000)
(emphasis in original, citations omitted).

                                             19
before invalidating the challenged board action under Schnell, this court made credibility

determinations that the proffered business justifications for the challenged board actions

were pretextual.63 This interpretation is also consistent with the two pre-Schnell decisions

invalidating stock issuances cited in the Appellate Decision, Canada Southern Oils and

Condec.    In each decision, the court took the same approach—rejecting business

justifications as pretext before invalidating the stock issuance.64

63
  See WNH Invs., LLC v. Batzel, 1995 WL 262248, at *6 (Del. Ch. Apr. 28, 1995) (holding
that a board’s “justification for [a] stock issuance is pretextual” because the court could not
“accept the contention that the timing and effect of the dilutive issuance was coincidental”
and the “circumstances compel the conclusion that the purpose of the dilutive issuance was
to defeat the challenge to the board’s control”); Phillips v. Insituform of N. Am., Inc., 1987
WL 16285, at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 27, 1987) (observing that “the record supplies scant
grounds to suppose that an affirmative injury to the corporation was to be reasonably
apprehended,” and concluding that “the board acted . . . not to save the company from a
threatened injury, but to change the capital structure of the firm so that it would be fairer
to the owners of 86% of the company’s equity and would make raising additional capital
easier”); Packer v. Yampol, 1986 WL 4748, at *15 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 1986) (holding that
“[e]ven if one accepts in its entirety the defendants’ position that they had no economic
choice but to issue the Preferred to Yampol, Battery, and Manor, no reason has been shown
why, at the very least, the transaction could not have been made conditional upon the
Preferred not being voted until after the May 13, 1986 election . . . . as a factual matter,
defendants’ claim that they had no other alternatives lacks adequate record support”);
Lerman v. Diagnostic Data, Inc., 421 A.2d 906, 912–14 (Del. Ch. 1980) (rejecting a
board’s argument that it adopted a bylaw amendment “not to thwart the intentions of the
challengers” but to reduce election expenses by permitting time to come to “some
accommodation between competing factions before the proxy materials are mailed”
because the board acted “with full knowledge of [the stockholder’s] intentions” to run a
competing slate”).
64
   See Can. So. Oils, Ltd. v. Manabi Expl. Co., Inc., 96 A.2d 810, 812–13 (Del. Ch. 1953)
(rejecting defendant’s argument that it issued shares “to raise money to meet defendant’s
dire financial plight” because the court was “not persuaded that its long range financial
prospects were as bad as defendant sought to represent them” and therefore the court
“infer[red] that the primary purpose behind the sale of these shares was to deprive plaintiff
of the majority voting control”); Condec Corp. v. Lunkenheimer Co., 230 A.2d 769, 777
(Del. Ch. 1967) (holding that “[w]hile the record . . . is replete with accounting reasons in
justification of Lunkenheimer’s continuing fight against Condec’s efforts to assimilate its
                                              20
         This interpretation is arguably consistent with language in the Appellate Decision,

which repeatedly casts “inequitable purposes” as distinguishable from those taken in good

faith,65 and which uses words associated with subjective intent (e.g., “motives”) when

describing the Schnell analysis.66

         In this case, the UIP board’s decision did not totally lack a good faith basis. As

discussed above, the UIP board had multiple reasons for approving the Stock Sale. Some

were problematic. As the Appellate Decision explained, the UIP board’s desire “to

eliminate Plaintiff’s ability to block stockholder action, including the election of directors,

and the leverage that accompanied those rights” was inequitable.67 The UIP board was

also motivated to advance the best interests of UIP. As the Post-Trial Decision found, the

UIP board sought to reward and retain an essential employee, to implement a succession

business by merger or otherwise,” there was no “direct investigation, professional
consultation or evidence of contradiction in the actions and explanations of corporate
purpose on the part of Condec officials which would lead the management of
Lunkenheimer justifiably to believe that Condec’s aspirations represented a reasonable
threat to the continued existence of Lunkenheimer”).
65
   See Appellate Decision at 954 (framing the project of this court on remand as
determining whether “the board acted for inequitable purposes or in good faith but for the
primary purpose of disenfranchisement without a compelling justification” (emphasis
added)); id. at 960 (“As explained below, the court should have considered Coster’s
alternative arguments that the board approved the Stock Sale for inequitable reasons, or in
good faith but for the primary purpose of interfering with Coster’s voting rights and
leverage as an equal stockholder without a compelling reason to do so.”).
66
   Id. at 958 (remanding for inquiry into “the board’s motives” (emphasis added)); id. at
953 (remanding for consideration of “the board’s motivations and purpose for the Stock
Sale” (emphasis added)); see also id. at 963 (describing the Schnell inquiry as looking to
“inequitable reasons” (emphasis added)).
67
     Post-Trial Decision at *12.

                                              21
plan that Wout had favored, and to moot the Custodian Action to avoid risk of default under

key contracts. The Post-Trial Decision held that under the entire fairness standard, the UIP

board’s mix of reasons and the substantive outcome it achieved were entirely fair. Those

same findings establish that the UIP board did not act exclusively for an inequitable

purpose.

         Given the presence of good faith bases for approving the Stock Sale, the first

question posed by the Appellate Decision can be answered in the negative: No, the UIP

board did not approve the Stock Sale for inequitable purposes under Schnell. To the extent

a Schnell rule exists that requires a court to declare invalid disenfranchising action taken

for an inequitable purpose, that rule does not apply in this case.

         B.     Blasius

         The analysis thus moves to the second question posed by the Appellate Decision:

Did the UIP board approve the Stock Sale for the “‘primary purpose of thwarting’ Coster’s

vote to elect directors or reduce her leverage as an equal stockholder,” and if so, did the

UIP board have a “compelling justification” for doing so?68

         As discussed above, the UIP board had many goals approving the Stock Sale:

retaining and rewarding Bonnell, mooting the Custodian Action, and undermining

Plaintiff’s leverage. The Post-Trial Decision concluded, after weighing these purposes,

that the Stock Sale was “significantly motivated by a desire to moot the Custodian Action,”

68
     Appellate Decision at 954.

                                             22
and the Delaware Supreme Court emphasized that finding on appeal.69 Adhering to that

finding as the law of the case, this decision finds that the Stock Sale was for the primary

purpose of mooting the Custodian Action.

           Importantly, in seeking to moot the Custodian Action, the UIP board sought to

protect the Company. They viewed the appointment of a custodian as deleterious to UIP

and its stockholders, including Plaintiff.70

           The UIP board’s primary purpose was not to “‘thwart[]’ Coster’s vote to elect

directors.”71 As a 50% stockholder, she did not have the power to elect directors. Neither

side did, which is why the stockholders were deadlocked.

           The UIP board did seek to “reduce her leverage as an equal stockholder,”72 in the

sense that part of her leverage was the ability to pursue the Custodian Action. That was

not an inequitable purpose, in the sense of action contrary to the best interests of the

Company. Rather, it was an equitable purpose, in the sense of action that was in the best

interests of the Company: the UIP board believed that the Custodian Action would cause

69
     Post-Trial Decision at *12.
70
   Id. It bears emphasizing that mooting the Custodian Action was not the “singular
impetus,” as Plaintiff argues. Pl.’s Post-Remand Opening Br. at 19 n.19. Were that so,
then Defendants could have issued Bonnell, Cox, or Schwat a single share. Instead,
Defendants undertook a process to establish a price and sold Bonnell the third of the
Company’s equity that he had long been promised. While the timing suggests that the
Company finally instituted this process and approved the sale as a consequence of the
Custodian Action, the form of transaction corroborates the UIP directors’ testimony that
they were pursuing multiple goals at once, including a genuine desire to reward and retain
Bonnell and implement the succession plan that Wout had favored.
71
     Appellate Decision at 954.
72
     Id.

                                               23
defaults under the Company’s key agreements and threaten the business. No one, including

Plaintiff, would benefit from that outcome.

         This decision nevertheless assumes, as the Appellate Decision suggests, that a desire

to moot an action brought to appoint a custodian under Section 226(a)(1) of the DGCL due

to a deadlock between 50-50 stockholders is a purpose that triggers Blasius.73 The question

then becomes whether the UIP board had a compelling justification for doing so.

          Defendants bear the burden of demonstrating a compelling justification.74 To

satisfy the compelling-justification standard, “the directors must show that their actions

were reasonable in relation to their legitimate objective, and did not preclude the

stockholders from exercising their right to vote or coerce them into voting a particular

way.”75 “In this context, the shift from ‘reasonable’ to ‘compelling’ requires that the

directors establish a closer fit between means and ends.”76 “If for some reason, the fit

between means and end is not reasonable, the directors would also come up short.”77

         The compelling-justification test has been described colorfully as calling for the

court to view the directors’ explanations with a gimlet eye.78 That is so for good reason.

73
     See id. at 963–64.
74
     See Stroud v. Grace, 606 A.2d 75, 91 (Del. 1992).
75
     Mercier, 929 A.2d at 810–11.
76
     Pell v. Kill, 135 A.3d 764, 787 (Del. Ch. 2016) (citation omitted).
77
     Mercier, 929 A.2d at 811.
78
   See Pell, 135 A.3d at 787 (“Although linguistically reminiscent of the type of review
given to suspect classifications under the federal constitution, the use of the word
‘compelling’ is not intended to signal that type of strict scrutiny. Instead, it is a reminder
for courts to approach directorial interventions that affect the stockholder franchise with a
‘gimlet eye.’” (citations omitted)); see also Williams v. Geier, 671 A.2d 1368, 1376 (Del.
                                               24
Delaware is rightly protective of the stockholder franchise because it is the “‘ideological

underpinning’ upon which the legitimacy of the directors [sic] managerial power rests.”79

Consequently, to date this court has found compelling justifications under Blasius in

limited circumstances.80

1996) (describing the compelling justification burden as “quite onerous” and “therefore
applied rarely”).
79
   MM Cos., Inc. v. Liquid Audio, Inc., 813 A.2d 1118, 1126 (Del. 2003) (quoting Blasius,
564 A.2d at 659); see, e.g., EMAK Worldwide, Inc. v. Kurz, 50 A.3d 429, 433 (Del. 2012)
(“Shareholder voting rights are sacrosanct. The fundamental governance right possessed
by shareholders is the ability to vote for the directors the shareholder wants to oversee the
firm. Without that right, a shareholder would more closely resemble a creditor than an
owner.” (footnote omitted)); Paramount Commc’ns, Inc. v. QVC Network, Inc., 637 A.2d
34, 42 (Del. 1994) (“Because of the overriding importance of voting rights, this Court and
the Court of Chancery have consistently acted to protect stockholders from unwarranted
interference with such rights.”); San Antonio Fire & Police Pension Fund v. Bradbury,
2010 WL 4273171, at *7 (Del. Ch. Oct. 28, 2010) (“Stockholders exercise their authority
over corporate affairs by way of ballots. Accordingly, the right to vote on certain matters—
most importantly the election of directors—is a fundamental power reserved to the
stockholders.” (footnote omitted)).
80
   See, e.g., Mercier, 929 A.2d at 819 (explaining that “[i]n the corporate context,
compelling circumstances are presented when independent directors believe that: (1)
stockholders are about to reject a third-party merger proposal that the independent directors
believe is in their best interests; (2) information useful to the stockholders’ decision-
making process has not been considered adequately or not yet been publicly disclosed; and
(3) if the stockholders vote no, the acquiror will walk away without making a higher bid
and that the opportunity to receive the bid will be irretrievably lost”); Hollinger Int’l, Inc.
v. Black, 844 A.2d 1022, 1089 (Del. Ch. 2004) (holding that “even if Blasius did apply to
the Rights Plan, a sufficiently compelling justification exists for any incidental burden on
Inc.’s voting rights. Inc. is not blameless here; it is charged with knowledge of the
misconduct of its agent, Black. The time-limited use of a Rights Plan is permissible in these
extraordinary circumstances”); see also Peerless, 2000 WL 1805376, at *15 (on a motion
for summary judgment, leaving open the possibility, but expressing doubt, that the
defendants could satisfy the compelling-justification test through their collective proffered
justifications, none of which were individually sufficient to satisfy the compelling-
justification test); The Illusion at 643 (observing that, as of 2013, “only five cases, four by
the Delaware Court of Chancery and one by the Delaware Supreme Court, have triggered
the Blasius test, and, at best, only one passed” (footnotes omitted)).

                                              25
       In the exceptionally unique circumstances of this case, Defendants have met the

onerous burden of demonstrating a compelling justification. Defendants proved that the

broad relief sought by Plaintiff in the Custodian Action rose to the level of an existential

crisis for UIP. Defendants demonstrated that the appointment of a custodian could trigger

broad termination provisions in key contracts and threaten a substantial portion of UIP’s

revenue. Defendants also proved, more generally, that UIP was a services business

dependent on personal relationships; thus, displacing oversight and managerial powers

would defeat the founders’ purpose in forming UIP.81

81
   In the Post-Trial Decision, the court held that “Plaintiff does not dispute the existence of
broad termination rights and clauses identifying the appointment of a custodian as a
default.” Post-Trial Decision at *12 n.190. In post-remand briefing, Plaintiff takes issue
with this finding, arguing that “in both her Opening Post-Trial Brief at pages 54-56, and in
her Post-Trial Answering Brief at pages 37-42, Plaintiff vigorously disputed that
contention.” Pl.’s Post-Remand Opening Br. at 27 n.29. But in those pages, Plaintiff did
not initially dispute the existence of broad termination rights. Rather, Plaintiff first argued
that Defendants failed to prove that investors would exercise these rights. See Dkt. 143
(Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br.) at 54–55 (arguing that “Defendants failed to present any
evidence from any counterparty to a UIP contract (or a contract of UIP GC or UIP PMC)
that appointment of a custodian would lead that counterpart to terminate an agreement with
UIP or its subsidiaries”). Perhaps recognizing the weakness of this argument, Plaintiff
added arguments in her next brief, including that (i) UIP is not a party to the contract
excerpts in evidence, which are between SPEs and either UIP Property Management, Inc.
or UIP Asset Management, Inc.; (ii) while some of the excerpted contracts provide for
termination without cause, some are only terminable for cause; and (iii) many of the
contracts refer to bankruptcy, dissolution, or some other liquidation as an event of default,
but do not explicitly mention “custodian appointment.” See Dkt. 149 (Pl.’s Post-Trial
Answering Br.) at 37–42. Thus, according to Plaintiff, appointment of a custodian over
UIP “would constitute default in only one or two of the 43 agreements submitted by
Defendants as evidence in this action.” Id. at 39. The court rejected these arguments
previously. Having again reviewed these arguments and the contract excerpts in evidence,
the court remains convinced that appointment of a custodian would constitute a terminable
event under many of the Company’s agreements. See, e.g., JX-79 at 6910 (authorizing
termination without cause), 6914 (authorizing termination for no cause), 6917 (authorizing
termination for no cause), 6931 (authorizing termination if the “UIP Key Principals” cease
                                              26
       Defendants also proved that the Stock Sale was appropriately tailored to achieve the

goal of mooting the Custodian Action while also achieving other important goals, such as

implementing the succession plan that Wout favored and rewarding Bonnell. Although it

is true that the Stock Sale eliminated Plaintiff’s ability to use her 50% interest to block

stockholder action, the Stock Sale also had that effect on Schwat. The transaction made

Bonnell the swing vote and deprived both incumbent 50% owners of their blocking rights.

Although Schwat and Bonnell currently have a good working relationship, and although

the Post-Trial Decision held that they worked together to consummate the Stock Sale, that

transaction did not impose any future obligations on Schwat and Bonnell to vote as a block.

Bonnell could switch sides tomorrow and unite with Plaintiff to Schwat’s detriment. The

record reflects that Schwat and Bonnell have disagreed on a number of business

decisions.82 To make Bonnell the swing vote, Schwat clearly believed that the Custodian

Action was a threat to the Company and that Bonnell was vital to the Company. Because

“to Control” or “be primarily responsible for the day-to-day operations of” a UIP affiliate),
6939 (authorizing termination for no cause), 6947 (authorizing termination for no cause),
6954 (authorizing termination if one of the UIP Principals, defined as Schwat, Bonnell,
and Heath Wilkinson, ceases “to control the ownership and management of UIP Member”).
These provisions, in addition to the credible testimony of Defendants’ witnesses, support
the court’s finding that many of the Company’s agreements are terminable in the event a
custodian is appointed over the Company. See Trial Tr. at 357:23–358:1 (Schwat)
(testifying that “the appointment of a custodian is a default under the majority of JV
agreements we have with our partners”), 456:15–17 (Bonnell) (testifying that “many of the
operating agreements are specific that the appointment of a custodian is a default”).
82
   See Trial Tr. at 361:1–19 (Schwat testifying that Bonnell operates as a “check” on him,
that they disagree, and that Bonnell does not defer to him), 423:4–425:23 (Bonnell
testifying about his working relationship with Schwat and discussing a recent
disagreement).

                                             27
the Stock Sale created the possibility of a swing vote, it is difficult to view it as coercive

or preclusive in the context of director elections.

       The UIP board could have chosen more aggressive means of breaking the deadlock

that would have favored Schwat. They could have issued him an additional share, thereby

giving him hard voting control. They could have issued Schwat options, claiming that it

was part of his compensation. They could have created an employee stock option plan and

empowered Schwat to vote those shares. The list of potential transactions is limited only

by the creativity of transaction planners. But the UIP board did not pursue a course that

would enhance Schwat’s authority. It implemented the succession plan that Wout had

favored.

       These are the reasons that the Post-Trial Decision stated, albeit in an inartful and

cursory manner, that “Plaintiff did not succeed in proving her theories regarding

Defendants’ purposes or justifications.”83 The evidence showed that the UIP board had a

compelling justification for acting, although one that the court considered as part of its

review under the entire fairness test rather than as part of a separate Blasius analysis.

       Ignoring this part of the Post-Trial Decision, Plaintiff takes the position on remand

that the court’s prior factual findings preclude any finding that Defendants had a

compelling justification for approving the Stock Sale. In Plaintiff’s view, the court’s only

option on remand is to cancel the Stock Sale—a sale that was found to be entirely fair—

83
   Post-Trial Decision at *13. The court recognizes that Defendants bear the burden of
proving justifications and the court has allocated the burden appropriately for the purpose
of this analysis.

                                              28
and appoint a custodian. Of course, granting Plaintiff’s requested relief would expose UIP

to the business risks that Defendants sought to avoid, including jeopardizing key SPE

contracts and chancing Bonnell’s departure. To Plaintiff, those risks are of no moment and

worthy of no consideration. In Plaintiff’s view, the court must grant this potentially

destructive relief.

         Plaintiff’s argument is misguided for several reasons. For starters, Plaintiff’s

position would mean that the Delaware Supreme Court did not mean what it said, and that

although the high court stated this court was free to conduct further analysis, it really meant

for this court to invalidate the Stock Sale.84 This court has an obligation to follow the

rulings of the Delaware Supreme Court, including a ruling stating that this court has the

freedom to exercise its best judgment on remand. If the only possible outcome in this case

was for the Stock Sale to be invalidated, the Supreme Court could have held as much.

         Plaintiff’s legal authorities are distinguishable. Plaintiff cites to Liquid Audio as its

primary authority for the premise that where a board acts for the “primary purpose” of

maintaining its control, there can be no compelling justification, and the board action must

prima facie fail under Blasius.85 But in Liquid Audio, the Delaware Supreme Court held

that no compelling justification existed because, as conceded by the board in that case, the

84
     Compare Liquid Audio, 813 A.2d at 1132, with Appellate Decision at 964.
85
  See Pl.’s Post-Remand Opening Br. at 15–17 n.9–15 (citing Liquid Audio, 813 A.2d at
1132 and collecting cases).

                                                29
justification for their action was solely the threat that the stockholders would choose

different directors.86

         If there is one aspect of the compelling-justification standard that cases have made

clear, it is that “the belief that directors know better than stockholders is not a legitimate

justification when the question involves who should serve on the board of a Delaware

corporation.”87 “The notion that directors know better than the stockholders about who

should be on the board is no justification at all.”88 “[E]ven a board’s honest belief that its

incumbency protects and advances the best interests of the stockholders is not a compelling

justification. Instead, such action typically amounts to an unintentional violation of the

fiduciary duty of loyalty.”89

         In this case, the UIP board did not act for the primary purpose of protecting its

incumbency. Rather, the UIP board had significant business reasons for approving the

Stock Sale, which the Post-Trial Decision credited. Those reasons provide a compelling

justification for the UIP board’s action.90

86
 See Liquid Audio, 813 A.2d at 1125 (quoting interrogatory response provided by board
members).
87
     Pell, 135 A.3d at 790.
88
     Mercier, 929 A.2d at 811; see also Blasius, 564 A.2d at 663.
89
     Esopus Creek Value LP v. Hauf, 913 A.2d 593, 602 (Del. Ch. 2006) (footnotes omitted).
90
  Plaintiff also cites to Benihana and Keyser, but neither support Plaintiff’s position. In
Benihana, this court declined to hold that directors acted improperly when taking action
that diluted the interest of a dissident shareholder who expressed the desire to control the
company and was viewed as “hostile” to management. See Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v.
Benihana, Inc., 891 A.2d 150, 193 (Del. Ch. 2005); see also Pl.’s Post-Remand Opening
Br. at 16 n.14 (citing same). Likewise, the facts in Keyser are distinguishable. In that case,
the sole director executed a written consent creating 50,000 shares of new voting stock that
                                              30
       Because this decision finds that the UIP board had a compelling justification for the

Stock Sale, the court declines to cancel the Stock Sale. Accordingly, there is no need to

appoint a custodian or fashion alternative relief.

III.   CONCLUSION

       Many aspects of the facts and law of this case were vexingly complicated or unique.

This court has done its best to discern the appropriate standard and apply it faithfully.

Nevertheless, the case gave rise to many close calls on which reasonable minds could

differ. In the end, the court takes solace in knowing that the ultimate solution to the

deadlock—the Stock Sale—was consistent with the succession plan that Wout and Schwat

devised on a clear day before deadlock emerged. The only aspects of the sale left

unaddressed at the time of Wout’s death were the substantive terms. The UIP board

achieved terms that the Post-Trial Decision found to be entirely fair. For all of the

foregoing reasons, judgment is again entered in favor of Defendants.

entitled the exercise of 1,000 times more voting power than the previously issued common
stock, and then issued 25,000 shares of this stock to himself for “a penny a share.” See
Keyser v. Curtis, 2012 WL 3115453, at *4, *12–13 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2012), aff’d, 65 A.3d
617 (Del. 2013) (TABLE). These actions are distinguishable from Defendants’ actions,
where the Stock Sale was made after an entirely fair valuation of the Company, to an
individual who had long been promised equity, with the goal of avoiding the harm posed
to the Company by a custodian with the broad powers requested by Plaintiff.

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