Basho Technologies Holdco B, LLC v. Georgetown Basho Investors, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 6, 2018
DocketCA 11802-VCL
StatusPublished

This text of Basho Technologies Holdco B, LLC v. Georgetown Basho Investors, LLC (Basho Technologies Holdco B, LLC v. Georgetown Basho Investors, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basho Technologies Holdco B, LLC v. Georgetown Basho Investors, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

BASHO TECHNOLOGIES HOLDCO B, LLC, ) BASHO TECHNOLOGIES HOLDCO C, LLC, ) BASHO TECHNOLOGIES HOLDCO E, LLC, ) HUNOBY ENTERPRISES, LLC, and EARL ) P. GALLEHER, III, individually and ) derivatively on behalf of Basho Technologies, ) Inc., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 11802-VCL ) GEORGETOWN BASHO INVESTORS, LLC, ) a Delaware limited liability company, ) NEWPORT BEACH INVESTORS, LLC, a ) Delaware limited liability company, CHESTER ) C. DAVENPORT, ROBERT L. REISLEY, ) JONATHAN FOTOS, ATSUSHI ) YAMANAKA, and ADAM J. WRAY, ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) BASHO TECHNOLOGIES, INC., a Delaware ) corporation, ) ) Nominal Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: April 9, 2018 Date Decided: July 6, 2018

R. Montgomery Donaldson, Robert A. Penza, POLSINELLI PC, Wilmington, Delaware; Robert V. Spake, POLSINELLI PC, Kansas City, Missouri; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

Barry M. Klayman, COZEN O’CONNOR, Wilmington, Delaware; Lezlie Madden, COZEN O’CONNOR, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Attorneys for Defendants.

LASTER, V.C. Nominal defendant Basho Technologies, Inc. (“Basho” or the “Company”) was a

promising, early-stage technology company. In 2010, defendant Georgetown Basho

Investors, LLC (“Georgetown”) invested in Basho. Defendant Chester Davenport

controlled Georgetown and served as its President and Managing Member. Davenport

joined the Company’s board of directors (the “Board”).

Over the next three years, Georgetown led or co-led a series of preferred stock

financings for Basho. Through them, Georgetown gained blocking rights that enabled it to

control Basho’s access to capital. As Davenport recognized and emphasized repeatedly,

the blocking rights gave Georgetown effective control over the Company when the

Company was on the verge of running out of money.

In 2013, after maneuvering the Company into a positon of maximum financial

distress, Georgetown and Davenport forced through a Series G financing round that was

highly favorable to Georgetown and unfair to Basho and its other investors. The Series G

round also gave Georgetown hard control.

After achieving hard control, Georgetown added defendant Jonathan Fotos, a

Georgetown employee, to the Board. Davenport, Fotos, and their allies on the Board took

steps to consolidate their control, including by creating an Executive Committee through

which Davenport and another Georgetown representative ran the Company. They caused

Basho to engage in self-dealing transactions, and they turned down sources of capital that

would have undermined their control. Three outside directors left the Board, as did the

CEO, other senior managers, and key employees.

1 Davenport hoped to sell Basho and channel the bulk of the proceeds to Georgetown

through its preferred stock holdings. Davenport thought that other investors would eagerly

participate in the Series G financing that Georgetown had extracted, thereby providing the

Company with necessary financing. Instead, investors viewed Georgetown’s oppressive

actions as a red flag and questioned Basho’s ability to succeed. Georgetown was not able

to generate any significant outside funding for Basho, nor was it able to achieve a sale.

Basho never recovered. In 2016, Basho entered receivership and was liquidated. Its

equity was worthless.

The plaintiffs are former holders of common and preferred stock issued by Basho.

They filed suit, claiming that various combinations of defendants breached their fiduciary

duties, aided and abetted breaches of duty by other defendants, or committed other wrongs.

During the course of the litigation, the plaintiffs’ focus narrowed to a claim for breach of

fiduciary duty against Georgetown, Davenport, and Fotos.

The plaintiffs proved at trial that Georgetown and Davenport exercised effective

control over Basho in connection with the Series G financing. As a result, Georgetown and

Davenport had the burden of proving that the terms of the Series G financing were entirely

fair. They failed to carry that burden. As a remedy for the injury inflicted by the Series G

financing, this decision holds Georgetown and Davenport jointly and severally liable for

compensatory damages of $17,490,650, plus pre- and post-judgment interest calculated at

the legal rate, compounded quarterly, and running from January 23, 2013, to the date of

payment, with the rate of interest fluctuating with changes in the legal rate.

2 The plaintiffs proved at trial that after the Series G financing, Georgetown and

Davenport continued to control Basho. They further proved that Georgetown, Davenport,

and Fotos caused Basho to engage in self-dealing transactions and took other self-interested

actions. The defendants did not make any meaningful effort at trial to prove that their

actions were entirely fair. They bore the burden of proof on this issue, which they failed to

meet.

The plaintiffs did not seek transaction-specific damages awards for the actions that

the defendants took after the Series G financing. Instead, the plaintiffs sought a damages

award equal to the difference between the value of their shares after the Series G financing

and the value at the time of trial, which is zero. The plaintiffs convinced me that on the

facts presented, that award is warranted. As a remedy for their actions after the Series G

round, this decision holds Georgetown, Davenport, and Fotos jointly and severally liable

for damages in the amount of $2,778,228, plus post-judgment interest calculated at the

legal rate, compounded quarterly, and running from the date of judgment until the date of

payment, with the rate of interest fluctuating with changes in the legal rate.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Trial took place over four days. The parties submitted 866 joint exhibits, lodged

twelve depositions, and presented live testimony from four fact witnesses and one expert.

The parties made the court’s task more difficult by submitting exhibits that were not in

chronological order. The exhibits also included many imaged emails that appeared in (at

best) six-point font.

3 To facilitate fact-finding, courts evaluate evidence against a burden of proof. For

this case, the appropriate standard of proof was straightforward: a preponderance of the

evidence.1 The question of who bore it was complex.

For the breach of fiduciary duty claim, the plaintiff bore the burden of proving that

Georgetown owed fiduciary duties in connection with the Series G financing. With the

plaintiff having carried that burden, Georgetown and Davenport bore the burden of proving

that the Series G financing was entirely fair.2 The defendants bore the burden of proof on

their affirmative defense of acquiescence. The plaintiffs bore the burden of proof on

remedial issues. The same structure governed the analysis of Georgetown, Davenport, and

Fotos’ actions after the Series G financing. Within this framework, the following facts were

proven by a preponderance of the evidence.

A. Basho’s Early Stages

In 2008, plaintiff Earl Galleher and a colleague co-founded Basho.3 Galleher

became President, CEO, and Chairman of the Board.

1 See Estate of Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 2009 WL 2586783, at *4 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 2009) (“Typically, in a post-trial opinion, the court evaluates the parties’ claims using a preponderance of the evidence standard.”), aff’d, 991 A.2d 1153 (Del. 2010). 2 See Ams.

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