BBP Holdco, Inc. v. Brunswick Corporation
This text of BBP Holdco, Inc. v. Brunswick Corporation (BBP Holdco, Inc. v. Brunswick Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE BBP HOLDCO, INC., BBP ) INVESTMENT HOLDINGS LLC, ) BRUNSWICK BOWLING ) PRODUCTS, LLC, BRUNSWICK ) BOWLING MAGYARORSZAG ) KORKLATOLT FELELOSSEGU ) TARSASAG, and BBP REYNOSA ) S. DE R.I. DE C.V. ) Plaintiffs, ) v. ) C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD ) BRUNSWICK CORPORATION, ) ) Defendant. )
Submitted: April 17, 2025 Decided: July 14, 2025
DECISION AFTER TRIAL
David A. Dorey, Esquire, James G. Gorman III, Esquire, BLANK ROME, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; James T. Smith, Esquire, Brian S. Paszamant, Esquire, D. Morgan Barry, Esquire, BLANK ROME, LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attorneys for Plaintiffs BBP Holdco, Inc., BBP Investment Holdings LLC, Brunswick Bowling Products, LLC, Brunswick Bowling Magyarorszag Korklatolt Felelossegu Tarsasag, and BBP Reynosa S. DE R.I. DE C.V.
Kevin R. Shannon, Esquire, Christopher N. Kelly, Esquire, Callan R. Jackson, Esquire, Emma K. Diver, Esquire, POTTER ANDERSON & COROON, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Nilofer Umar, Esquire, Kendra L. Stead, Esquire, Heather Benzmiller Sultanian, Esquire, William J. Lawrence, Esquire, SIDLEY AUSTIN, LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Hamilton H. Hill, Esquire, Reid M. Bolton, Esquire, Lee M. Mason, Esquire, Jessica R. Bernhardt, Esquire, BARTLIT BECK LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorney for Defendant Brunswick Corporation.
WALLACE, J. BBP Holdco Inc.1 brings this suit after having entered into the Stock and Asset
Purchase Agreement (“SAPA”) with Brunswick Corporation to purchase Brunswick
Bowling & Billiards (“BBB”—which was renamed “Brunswick Bowling Products”
after the sale). BBP alleges that, prior to the SAPA’s closing, Brunswick made
fraudulent misrepresentations regarding an existing or potential recall of its pinsetter
products across Europe and breached the SAPA’s contractual terms.
I. THE TRIAL
The Court held an eleven day-bench trial. During trial, the Court heard the
live testimony of:
David Mark Sella Corey Dykstra Louis Barbieri, III, Esq. Steven Pully James Jay Jaxon Erick Gadman Ryan Gwillim Andrew Weatherbee Randy Altman Alan Dashwood Geert van Calster Mark Hosfield
The parties presented video deposition testimony from Stefan Bessman, Kelly
Kaiser, Nina Niejahr, Dustin McCoy, Michael Basil, Virginia Kiseljack, Sean
Daugherty, and Michael De-Franco. 2 The parties also submitted around 500
1 The named Plaintiffs in this action—BBP Holdco, Inc., BBP Investment Holdings LLC, Brunswick Bowling Products, LLC, Brunswick Bowling Magyarorszag Korlatolt Felelossegu Tarsasag, and BBP Reynosa S. de R.I. de C.v.—will be referred to collectively as “BBP.” 2 See generally Bessman Dep. (Ct. Ex. 10A); Kaiser Dep. (Ct. Ex. 9A); Niejahr Dep. (Ct. Ex. 15A); McCoy Dep. (Ct. Ex. 15B); Basil Dep. (Ct. Ex. 27A); Kiseljack Dep. (Ct. Ex. 27B); Daugherty Dep. (Ct. Ex. 28A); DeFranco Dep. (Ct. Ex. 28B).
-1- exhibits. 3 The Court now determines Brunswick’s liability, and if any, the
appropriate damages to be awarded to BBP.
II. APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND STANDARDS
The Court has examined all exhibits submitted by the parties and considered
the testimony of all witnesses, both direct and cross, live and by deposition. During
trial, the Court applied the Delaware Rules of Evidence to the testimony and the
exhibits presented. Consistent with the Court’s knowledge of those rules and the
specific rulings that were articulated by this Court during both pre-trial and trial
proceedings, the Court has relied only on the evidence allowed under those rules and
rulings for its deliberation.
As this was a bench trial, the Court is the sole finder of fact. 4 In turn, the
Court has made its own assessment of each witness’s credibility and reconciled, to
the best of its ability, any inconsistencies in the testimony and documentary
evidence.5 The Court then reviewed and applied the same instructions that it would
give a jury in these circumstances.6
3 D.I. 679 (Trial Activity Sheet); D.I. 680 (List of Exhibits Admitted into Evidence). 4 Pouls v. Windmill Ests., LLC, 2010 WL 2348648, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. June 10, 2010). 5 Pencader Assoc., LLC v. Synergy Direct Mortg. Inc., 2010 WL 2681862, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. June 30, 2010) (“[I]n a bench trial, it is the Court’s role to resolve the conflicts in witnesses’ testimony and weigh their credibility.”); Interim Healthcare, Inc. v. Spherion Corp., 884 A.2d 513, 545–46 (Del. Super. Ct. 2005) (setting forth “the customary Delaware standard” a trial judge applies when assessing trial testimony and evidence in a bench trial). 6 See, e.g., Del. Super. Ct. Civ. Pattern Jury Instr. 4.1 (Burden of Proof by a Preponderance of the Evidence); id. at 4.2 (Evidence Equally Balanced); id. at 23.1 (Evidence—Direct or
-2- The Court has remained mindful throughout its deliberations that a plaintiff
seeking judgment and relief must prove as to each of its claims, the elements thereof
by a preponderance of the evidence.7
In reaching its verdict, the Court has considered all applicable Delaware law
and each party’s respective arguments, both oral and written, on the merit of the
parties’ claims and the weight to be accorded to witness testimony and other forms
of evidence submitted.8
III. FINDINGS OF FACT
For certain actions at trial, it is often difficult to completely segregate findings
of fact from conclusions of law.9 To the extent that any of the Court’s findings of
fact here might be more appropriately viewed as a conclusion of law, such finding
Circumstantial); id. at 23.9 (Credibility of Witnesses—Weighing Conflicting Testimony); id. at 23.10 (Expert Testimony). 7 Pouls, 2010 WL 2348648, at *4; Surf’s Up Legacy Partners, LLC v. Virgin Fest, LLC, 2024 WL 1596021, at *15 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 12, 2024), reargument denied, 2024 WL 3273427 (Del. Super. Ct. July 2, 2024) (“A party must prove each element by a preponderance of the evidence.”). See Grand Acquisition, LLC v. Passco Indian Springs DST, 145 A.3d 990, 994 (Del. Ch. 2016), as revised (Sept. 7, 2016), aff’d, 158 A.3d 449 (Del. 2017) (explicating the preponderance of evidence standard); see also Reynolds v. Reynolds, 237 A.2d 708, 711 (Del. 1967) (defining preponderance of the evidence: “The side on which the greater weight of the evidence is found is the side on which the preponderance of the evidence exists.”); Newark Shopping Ctr. Owner, L.L.C. v. Saudades Grp., LLC, 2025 WL 655063, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 26, 2025) (same). 8 The Court may highlight certain facts and legal principles uniquely applicable to this case. But the fact that a certain principle is mentioned here does not indicate that the Court did not consider other legal principles applicable to this case and to the parties’ claims and defenses during its deliberations. 9 Intermec IP Corp. v. TransCore, LP, 2023 WL 5661585, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 23, 2023).
-3- of fact may be considered a conclusion of law on that point.10
A. THE PURCHASE OF BBB
Brunswick is a manufacturer of sporting equipment that at one time included
bowling alley machinery regularly exported to the European market.11 BBB was
one of Brunswick’s business divisions.12
In July 2014, Brunswick publicized its intention to sell BBB. 13 In the
following months, BBP Holdco, LLC, began negotiating with Brunswick for a
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE BBP HOLDCO, INC., BBP ) INVESTMENT HOLDINGS LLC, ) BRUNSWICK BOWLING ) PRODUCTS, LLC, BRUNSWICK ) BOWLING MAGYARORSZAG ) KORKLATOLT FELELOSSEGU ) TARSASAG, and BBP REYNOSA ) S. DE R.I. DE C.V. ) Plaintiffs, ) v. ) C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD ) BRUNSWICK CORPORATION, ) ) Defendant. )
Submitted: April 17, 2025 Decided: July 14, 2025
DECISION AFTER TRIAL
David A. Dorey, Esquire, James G. Gorman III, Esquire, BLANK ROME, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; James T. Smith, Esquire, Brian S. Paszamant, Esquire, D. Morgan Barry, Esquire, BLANK ROME, LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attorneys for Plaintiffs BBP Holdco, Inc., BBP Investment Holdings LLC, Brunswick Bowling Products, LLC, Brunswick Bowling Magyarorszag Korklatolt Felelossegu Tarsasag, and BBP Reynosa S. DE R.I. DE C.V.
Kevin R. Shannon, Esquire, Christopher N. Kelly, Esquire, Callan R. Jackson, Esquire, Emma K. Diver, Esquire, POTTER ANDERSON & COROON, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Nilofer Umar, Esquire, Kendra L. Stead, Esquire, Heather Benzmiller Sultanian, Esquire, William J. Lawrence, Esquire, SIDLEY AUSTIN, LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Hamilton H. Hill, Esquire, Reid M. Bolton, Esquire, Lee M. Mason, Esquire, Jessica R. Bernhardt, Esquire, BARTLIT BECK LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorney for Defendant Brunswick Corporation.
WALLACE, J. BBP Holdco Inc.1 brings this suit after having entered into the Stock and Asset
Purchase Agreement (“SAPA”) with Brunswick Corporation to purchase Brunswick
Bowling & Billiards (“BBB”—which was renamed “Brunswick Bowling Products”
after the sale). BBP alleges that, prior to the SAPA’s closing, Brunswick made
fraudulent misrepresentations regarding an existing or potential recall of its pinsetter
products across Europe and breached the SAPA’s contractual terms.
I. THE TRIAL
The Court held an eleven day-bench trial. During trial, the Court heard the
live testimony of:
David Mark Sella Corey Dykstra Louis Barbieri, III, Esq. Steven Pully James Jay Jaxon Erick Gadman Ryan Gwillim Andrew Weatherbee Randy Altman Alan Dashwood Geert van Calster Mark Hosfield
The parties presented video deposition testimony from Stefan Bessman, Kelly
Kaiser, Nina Niejahr, Dustin McCoy, Michael Basil, Virginia Kiseljack, Sean
Daugherty, and Michael De-Franco. 2 The parties also submitted around 500
1 The named Plaintiffs in this action—BBP Holdco, Inc., BBP Investment Holdings LLC, Brunswick Bowling Products, LLC, Brunswick Bowling Magyarorszag Korlatolt Felelossegu Tarsasag, and BBP Reynosa S. de R.I. de C.v.—will be referred to collectively as “BBP.” 2 See generally Bessman Dep. (Ct. Ex. 10A); Kaiser Dep. (Ct. Ex. 9A); Niejahr Dep. (Ct. Ex. 15A); McCoy Dep. (Ct. Ex. 15B); Basil Dep. (Ct. Ex. 27A); Kiseljack Dep. (Ct. Ex. 27B); Daugherty Dep. (Ct. Ex. 28A); DeFranco Dep. (Ct. Ex. 28B).
-1- exhibits. 3 The Court now determines Brunswick’s liability, and if any, the
appropriate damages to be awarded to BBP.
II. APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND STANDARDS
The Court has examined all exhibits submitted by the parties and considered
the testimony of all witnesses, both direct and cross, live and by deposition. During
trial, the Court applied the Delaware Rules of Evidence to the testimony and the
exhibits presented. Consistent with the Court’s knowledge of those rules and the
specific rulings that were articulated by this Court during both pre-trial and trial
proceedings, the Court has relied only on the evidence allowed under those rules and
rulings for its deliberation.
As this was a bench trial, the Court is the sole finder of fact. 4 In turn, the
Court has made its own assessment of each witness’s credibility and reconciled, to
the best of its ability, any inconsistencies in the testimony and documentary
evidence.5 The Court then reviewed and applied the same instructions that it would
give a jury in these circumstances.6
3 D.I. 679 (Trial Activity Sheet); D.I. 680 (List of Exhibits Admitted into Evidence). 4 Pouls v. Windmill Ests., LLC, 2010 WL 2348648, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. June 10, 2010). 5 Pencader Assoc., LLC v. Synergy Direct Mortg. Inc., 2010 WL 2681862, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. June 30, 2010) (“[I]n a bench trial, it is the Court’s role to resolve the conflicts in witnesses’ testimony and weigh their credibility.”); Interim Healthcare, Inc. v. Spherion Corp., 884 A.2d 513, 545–46 (Del. Super. Ct. 2005) (setting forth “the customary Delaware standard” a trial judge applies when assessing trial testimony and evidence in a bench trial). 6 See, e.g., Del. Super. Ct. Civ. Pattern Jury Instr. 4.1 (Burden of Proof by a Preponderance of the Evidence); id. at 4.2 (Evidence Equally Balanced); id. at 23.1 (Evidence—Direct or
-2- The Court has remained mindful throughout its deliberations that a plaintiff
seeking judgment and relief must prove as to each of its claims, the elements thereof
by a preponderance of the evidence.7
In reaching its verdict, the Court has considered all applicable Delaware law
and each party’s respective arguments, both oral and written, on the merit of the
parties’ claims and the weight to be accorded to witness testimony and other forms
of evidence submitted.8
III. FINDINGS OF FACT
For certain actions at trial, it is often difficult to completely segregate findings
of fact from conclusions of law.9 To the extent that any of the Court’s findings of
fact here might be more appropriately viewed as a conclusion of law, such finding
Circumstantial); id. at 23.9 (Credibility of Witnesses—Weighing Conflicting Testimony); id. at 23.10 (Expert Testimony). 7 Pouls, 2010 WL 2348648, at *4; Surf’s Up Legacy Partners, LLC v. Virgin Fest, LLC, 2024 WL 1596021, at *15 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 12, 2024), reargument denied, 2024 WL 3273427 (Del. Super. Ct. July 2, 2024) (“A party must prove each element by a preponderance of the evidence.”). See Grand Acquisition, LLC v. Passco Indian Springs DST, 145 A.3d 990, 994 (Del. Ch. 2016), as revised (Sept. 7, 2016), aff’d, 158 A.3d 449 (Del. 2017) (explicating the preponderance of evidence standard); see also Reynolds v. Reynolds, 237 A.2d 708, 711 (Del. 1967) (defining preponderance of the evidence: “The side on which the greater weight of the evidence is found is the side on which the preponderance of the evidence exists.”); Newark Shopping Ctr. Owner, L.L.C. v. Saudades Grp., LLC, 2025 WL 655063, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 26, 2025) (same). 8 The Court may highlight certain facts and legal principles uniquely applicable to this case. But the fact that a certain principle is mentioned here does not indicate that the Court did not consider other legal principles applicable to this case and to the parties’ claims and defenses during its deliberations. 9 Intermec IP Corp. v. TransCore, LP, 2023 WL 5661585, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 23, 2023).
-3- of fact may be considered a conclusion of law on that point.10
A. THE PURCHASE OF BBB
Brunswick is a manufacturer of sporting equipment that at one time included
bowling alley machinery regularly exported to the European market.11 BBB was
one of Brunswick’s business divisions.12
In July 2014, Brunswick publicized its intention to sell BBB. 13 In the
following months, BBP Holdco, LLC, began negotiating with Brunswick for a
potential acquisition of BBB.14 BBP Holdco, LLC, was represented by BlueArc
Capital Management during the negotiation of the SAPA15 and received financing
from both Gladstone Investment Corporation and PNC Bank, N.A.16
During due diligence, Brunswick placed a draft of the SAPA and a disclosure
statement (“Disclosure Schedule”) in a designated data room (the “Data Room”).17
The Data Room was virtual and was open to access by potential buyers including
10 Id. (citing Facchina Constr. Litigations, 2020 WL 6363678, at *2 n.12 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 29, 2020) (collecting authority). 11 1/7/25 Trial Tr. at 116 (D.I. 706). 12 DX927. 13 Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶ 26 (D.I. 695). 14 Complaint (“Compl.”) at 6 (D.I. 1). 15 JX1 (Transition Services Agreement) at 10. 16 JX2, Section 5.5. 17 Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶ 45.
-4- BlueArc. 18 The Disclosure Schedule was appended to the SAPA and provided
exceptions to the various representations and warranties made in the SAPA.19
In May 2015, BBP Holdco, LLC, completed its purchase of BBB from
Brunswick. 20 BBP Holdco, LLC, later became BBP Holdco, Inc., 21 one of the
named plaintiffs in this action.
B. THE SWEA NOTIFICATION AND DECISION
In July 2012, prior to Brunswick’s announcement of its intent to sell BBB, the
Swedish Work Environment Authority (“SWEA”) issued a regulatory notice (the
“Notification”) to Brunswick’s Swedish distributor (“VBS”). 22 The Notification
stated that SWEA “is now considering [. . .] prohibiting you from releasing on the
market or making available for use the pinsetter Brunswick GSX and the kit for the
accessory Brunswick original safety guard – ‘Advanced guards.’”23 Under Swedish
administrative law, a notice or a notification is issued by the government to inform
the recipient of certain action or potential action without legally binding effect.24
On August 30, 2013, SWEA issued a decision (“Decision”), which announced
18 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 54 (D.I. 703). 19 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 143-144 (D.I. 705); 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 119 (D.I. 708). 20 See generally JX1 (the SAPA). 21 Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶ 1. 22 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 100 (D.I. 704). 23 PX42. 24 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 318 (D.I. 682).
-5- a sales prohibition and arguably a recall of the same GSX pinsetter products
addressed in the Notification.25 Translated, the Decision—again directed to VBS—
stated that SWEA:
prohibits VBS Bowling AB from releasing on the market or making available for use the following products with the deficiencies stated under the heading “Assessment of the Work Environment Authority”. 1. The pinsetter Brunswick GSX. 2. Kit for the accessory Brunswick original safety guard – “Advanced Guards”26
The Decision further stated that “VBS Bowling shall at the latest by 1 January
2014 recall the pinsetter Brunswick GSX with the deficiencies noted under the
heading Assessment of the Work Environment Authority.”27 Under Swedish law, a
decision is aimed at influencing the behavior of its recipient and is legally
enforceable.28
C. THE SWEA INSPECTIONS
Since the SWEA Notification and Decision were issued, Brunswick’s
pinsetter products sold on the Swedish market became subject to inspections by
SWEA’s field agents. 29 Some of the pinsetter shipments passed the inspections;
25 1/7/25 Trial Tr. at 274. 26 PX5. 27 Id. 28 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 318-319. 29 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 50.
-6- others did not.30 The shipments that passed the inspections were sold on the market
without further impediment.31
If the products failed to pass inspections, SWEA usually requested or
recommended certain modifications to the machines.32 But in two instances, SWEA
imposed monetary fines,33 both of which were litigated in a Swedish court.34 One
fine was dismissed due to procedural issues in SWEA’s request, 35 and the other
which was about $24,000 was upheld in 2015.36
D. BBB SALES CONTINUE IN SWEDEN.
Under the approval of BBB’s President, Brent Perrier, and a senior BBB
employee, David Sella, no shipment of pinsetter products was ever curtailed from
August 2013 to the closing of the SAPA in May 2015. 37 Nor was there ever a
physical removal of the preexisting pinsetter products during this time period.38 A
VBS employee wrote to Mr. Sella in October 2013—a few months after the SWEA
Decision—that “the case is closed as long as we deliver equipment the way I have
30 JX32; JX34; 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 138. 31 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 45. 32 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 37, 63. 33 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 49, 106-107 (D.I. 707). 34 Id. at 106. 35 JX133; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 106; 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 63. 36 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 106. 37 Id. at 48-50. 38 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 61.
-7- presented it to them. There is no threat of equipment needing to be taken out.”39
Mr. Sella forwarded this email to Mr. Perrier and notified another employee at
Brunswick that despite the “recall language,” there will be no recall “as long as we
deliver fixes by end of year.”40
Mr. Sella and Mr. Perrier believed that shipping the products was worth any
exposure to possible fines.41 BBB was further encouraged by a May 2014 email
from Brunswick’s attorney, Stefan Bessman, which stated that a SWEA official
named Mikael Holst told him that “merely shipping machines or machine parts into
Sweden [. . .] will not trigger any fines, as long as no machine with any ‘defects,’
such as the ones referred to in the August 30, 2013 decision are sold to end users
[. . .].”42
E. BRUNSWICK’S MEETINGS WITH SWEA AND THE EC
In August 2014, Brunswick’s representatives met with SWEA officials in
Stockholm to discuss the implications of the Decision.43 At this meeting—which
Brunswick’s representative Ryan Gwillim reported “went very well”—the parties
agreed that BBB would install a modified design at a bowling center in Gustavsberg,
39 DX156; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 38-39. 40 DX161; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 39-40. 41 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 49. 42 JX41; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 43-44. 43 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 67; Plaintiffs’ Opening Post-Trial Brief (“Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br.”) at 7-8 (D.I. 692).
-8- Sweden, based on SWEA’s prescriptions articulated in the most recent inspections.44
SWEA would then decide whether to “lift the ban in Sweden.” 45 The meeting
minutes state that, once approved, the proposed modifications “will be implemented
at future installations.”46 The next meeting with SWEA was scheduled to be held in
October 2014.47
Brunswick also met with European Commission (“EC”) officials in Brussels,
Belgium, in September 2014.48 After this meeting, Mr. Gwillim wrote in an internal
email sent to a fellow Brunswick representative and several BBB representatives
that the EC officials were “sympathetic” to Brunswick and expressed appreciation
for Brunswick’s willingness to communicate.49 The email further noted that the EC
refrained from making any formal decision at the meeting. 50 Mr. Gwillim
anticipated three possible outcomes of the pinsetter issue, also noting the likelihood
of each: (1) “determining the ban was inappropriate (very possible),”
(2) “determining that there is no remaining issue with SWEA […] (very possible),”
44 JX61. 45 Id.; Defendant’s Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (“Defs.’ Op. Br.”) at 7 (D.I. 691). 46 PX13. 47 JX69. 48 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 77. 49 JX69. 50 JX69.
-9- and (3) “determining that the ban was appropriate and should be upheld [. . .]
(unlikely in our opinion).”51
Brunswick met with SWEA for the second time as scheduled in October
2014.52 There, the parties agreed on a plan for “Brunswick to refine the proposed
resolutions,” “SWEA to comment definitively,” “Brunswick to adjust based on
comments,” “Brunswick to upgrade Gustavsberg according to the adjusted proposal,”
and a “[f]inal inspection and meeting in Gustavsberg.”53
The next meeting between Brunswick and SWEA was scheduled to be held in
April 2015.54 Mr. Sella wrote in anticipation of this meeting:
The focus will be on the status of the proposal and subsequent inspections of upgraded equipment […] A successful meeting with agreement by SWEA that the machines are safe could be a precursor to resolving the issues in Europe.”55
At the meeting, SWEA officials told Brunswick that “we have found a
solution,” and Mr. Sella emailed Mr. Perrier: “I feel we are getting very close to
putting this to bed.”56
51 JX69. 52 DX1477; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 83-86. 53 DX393. 54 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 153. 55 JX133. 56 DX830.
- 10 - F. BBP’S DUE DILIGENCE
Prior to the SAPA’s closing, BlueArc performed a significant amount of due
diligence on behalf of BBP in anticipation of the purchase.57 The third party advisors
and experts involved in this due diligence were: Womble Carlyle, Grant Thornton,
Stax Consulting, Ironwood Insurance, Premier Logic, Basham, Ringe y Correa,
Nagy and Troscanyi, Hart & Hickman, and Private Law Group.58 BlueArc also had
previous experience purchasing or investing in assets and businesses like BBB.59
In Section 4.7 of the SAPA, BBP represented that it had “conducted its own
independent investigation, review and analysis of the business, operations, assets,
liabilities [. . .]” and was also “provided with adequate access to [BBB’s] personnel,
properties, premises and books and records.”60
As to the pinsetter issue, BBP hired no subject matter experts,61 nor did it
conduct additional internet research. 62 James Jay Jaxon, who spearheaded due
diligence on behalf of BlueArc, testified: “You know, as someone who had never
done anything in the bowling industry before, we had to rely on the seller to identify
57 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 92. 58 Id. at 64-69, 249-250. 59 Id. at 210-211. 60 JX1 at 39. 61 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 234. 62 Id. at 235.
- 11 - the risks that they had deemed to be material and most critical.”63 According to
BBP, it was because Brunswick failed to mention the real reason for implementing
the new GSNXT designs—i.e., that it was in response to the European regulators’
requests64—that BlueArc chose not to investigate the matter any further.65
Specifically, BBP chose not to investigate the implications of Article 11 of the
Machinery Directive 2006/42/EC, even though this provision was explicitly
mentioned in Disclosure Schedule 3.16 as a provision to which “SWEA believed
that Brunswick’s GSX pinsetter did not conform.” 66 Schedule 3.16 stated in its
entirety:
Since 2006, Seller and other manufacturers of pinsetters have received challenges from European health and safety inspectors regarding compliance to the Machinery Directive. Challenges from the United Kingdom, Finland and Germany were all resolved to the satisfaction of national authorities without notable business disruption. In August 2013, the Company’s Swedish distributor received notification from the Swedish Work Environment Authority (“SWEA”) that SWEA believed that Brunswick’s GSX pinsetter did not conform to certain provisions of Article 11 of the Machinery Directive 2006/42/EC. SWEA in turned notified the European Commission of its belief. As a result of the notification, Seller and the Company have continued to work with Swedish and EU authorities to ensure the pinsetters comply with such laws and regulations as applied and interpreted by these authorities, and, as Seller and the Company have done since 2006 in other jurisdictions, the Company believes it will
63 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 52-53. 64 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 282-283 (D.I. 681). 65 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 37-38. 66 JX2 at 51.
- 12 - come to an agreement with the authorities as to whether any additional guarding is necessary. The Company continues to believe that its GSX pinsetter complies with all applicable laws and regulations as currently in force, including the Machinery Directive.67
Mr. Jaxon didn’t investigate Article 11 himself.68 Nor did he hire any other
experts or advisors 69 because he deemed that “it wasn’t considered a material
issue.” 70 Louis Barbieri—BlueArc’s lead counsel 71 —also testified that his firm
didn’t perform due diligence on this matter because, in his view, “[t]here hadn’t been
a disclosure of facts and circumstances that would merit that.”72 He underscored
that “[w]e were U.S. counsel conducting diligence on U.S.” issues whereas the
Machinery Directive was a European matter. 73 When Mr. Barbieri sought
permission from BlueArc for his firm to hire Swedish counsel to investigate Article
11, BlueArc refused to grant the permission; it also wouldn’t permit the engagement
of any other European counsel for this issue.74
Throughout this process, Brunswick and BBP maintained communication
67 Schedule 3.16, PX424 at 36 (emphasis added); JX2 at 51. 68 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 178. 69 Id. at 238-239. 70 Id. at 242. 71 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 13 (D.I. 683). 72 Id. at 108. 73 Id. at 126-128. 74 Id. at 138.
- 13 - regarding the pinsetter issue. In December 2014, Brunswick and BBP discussed the
pinsetter issue in a conference call. 75 During trial, Mr. Jaxon paraphrased what
Brunswick—through Mr. Gwillim—told him in this call: “these kind of things come
up from time to time in the industry. We have had these things come up before in
the U.K. and some other places […] it’s not something that, […] is of material
concern.” 76 At one point when BBP requested additional documents related to
Schedule 3.16, Mr. Gwillim replied “there was nothing to review.”77
Also, around this time BBP sent Brunswick a comprehensive “Information
Request List,” which sought information about any pending claims or litigation, or
issues related to government regulation and legal compliance.78 In response to this
request, Brunswick “pointed to us [i.e., BBP] to Section 3.16 of the disclosure
schedules.”79
Meanwhile, at the request of Mr. Gwillim, Mr. Sella compiled a collection of
information regarding the SWEA issue and provided the materials to him—after
some significant delay—on March 18, 2015.80 Mr. Gwillim ultimately didn’t upload
75 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 290. 76 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 79. 77 Id. at 80. 78 JX93. 79 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 71. 80 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 172, 184.
- 14 - Mr. Sella’s tardy materials to the Data Room, believing the issue had already been
put to bed by the parties by the time Mr. Sella handed them in.81 The SWEA issue
was “far outside the top ten” items discussed during due diligence;82 the “biggest
issue” in BBP’s due diligence was an unrelated environmental issue.83
Given timing issues, logistics, and the setting of other higher priorities by the
parties in trying to close the highly anticipated sale, BBP never received all the GSX-
related documents it had asked for.84 BBP nonetheless executed the SAPA on April
13, 2015, and closed on May 22, 2015.85
G. POST-CLOSING
Near the end of November 2015, SWEA issued a Formal Request,86 which
approved Brunswick’s proposed modifications but also required BBB to apply these
modifications to all pre-existing pinsetters.87 Shortly after the Formal Request was
issued, Mr. Sella informed Mr. Perrier that “Swedish inspectors have finally agreed
with our latest guarding solution that it complies with EU regs. Unfortunately,
81 Id. at 184. 82 Id. at 62. 83 Id. at 278; 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 106-107. 84 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 46-47; 1/10/25 Tr., 190-191. 85 Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶¶ 55, 58; 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 307. 86 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 346; 1/21/25 Tr., 84-85 (D.I. 709). 87 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 193, 233.
- 15 - they’ve requested that we recall all previous models and upgrade them.” 88 The
information about this Formal Request was shared at BBP’s January 2016 board
meeting.89 In response, BBP made an indemnification request by submitting a Claim
Notice to Brunswick. Brunswick declined.90
After having been notified by SWEA, the European Commission conducted
its own investigation to determine whether the SWEA measures were justified.91
When the European Commission issued a decision in December 2018
(“Implementing Decision”) confirming the SWEA Decision,92 BBP filed an appeal
to challenge the Implementing Decision at the General Court of the European
Union.93 In September 2021, the General Court handed down a decision confirming
the Implementing Decision.94 BBP then appealed the General Court’s decision to
the Court of Justice of the European Union (“CJEU”).95 Years later, in April 2023,
the CJEU ruled against BBP, reaffirming the SWEA Decision.96
BBP then switched its stance from resistance to compliance. In August 2023,
88 DX913; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 198-199. 89 DX919; 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 145-146. 90 JX1 § 8.3; PX314. 91 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 108. 92 PX46, Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2018/1960, 2018 O.J. (L 315) 29. 93 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 113-114. 94 PX733. 95 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 120-121. 96 JX164; 1/21/25 Trial Tr. at 102.
- 16 - BBP contacted all EU nations where it sold the pinsetter products to inquire about a
solution.97 Some countries were silent, replied, others replied,98 and each country
that did so sought different kinds and degrees of remedial measures for the pinsetter
issue.99 BBP eventually chose the strictest compliance measures available in Europe
based on the French regulators’ proposed remedy, and implemented it across
Europe.100
H. BBP’S CONTENTIONS
BBP now seeks damages alleging that Brunswick made fraudulent
misrepresentations about the GSX pinsetter issue in the form of (1) silence in the
face of a duty to speak, (2) deliberate concealment, and (3) overt misrepresentations.
BBP seeks $23,123,040 for the costs it says are associated with resolving the GSX
pinsetter issue across Europe, attorney’s fees, and pre-judgment interest.101
BBP contends that Brunswick was silent in the face of a duty to speak because
Brunswick did not share information that may have alerted BBP to the possibility of
a recall.102 BBP claims that the SAPA only mentions the SWEA Notification without
97 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 110-111. 98 1/21/25 Trial Tr. at 102. 99 Id. at 134; 1/22/25 Trial Tr. at 133-135 (D.I. 710). 100 1/21/25 Trial Tr. at 125-126. 101 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 37. 102 Id. at 43-44.
- 17 - mentioning the Decision, 103 the SAPA fails to directly mention any “recall” or
“ban,”104 Brunswick failed to provide all the documents that BBP requested,105 and
the SAPA failed to disclose the risk of the recall and sales prohibitions across
Europe.106
BBP further contends that Brunswick deliberately concealed the pinsetter
issue by advising BBP that there were no recalls or government notices, even though
Brunswick was aware of SWEA’s notification of the European Commission of a
recall and sales prohibition.107 BBP also alleges that Brunswick ultimately failed to
be responsive to BBP’s document requests even while earlier representing that
Brunswick would provide the requested information.108
BBP claims that SAPA §§ 3.15, 3.16, 3.17, and 3.22 contained overt
misrepresentations, which thereby constituted a breach of § 6.1(a) of the SAPA that
provides that the representations and warranties in Article 3 of the SAPA were “true
and correct in all respects as of the Closing.” 109 Moreover, BBP claims that the
103 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 20. 104 Plaintiffs’ Post-Trial Answering Brief (“Pls.’ Post-Trial Ans. Br.”) at 21 (D.I. 700). 105 Id. at 21 (citing Great Hill Equity Partners IV, LP v. SIG Growth Equity Fund I, LLLP, 2018 WL 6311829, *39 (Del. Ch. 2018) (“despite [defendants’] willingness to discuss chargebacks with [plaintiff], they withheld the actual notices that underlined those chargeback issues.”)). 106 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 21; Pls.’ Post-Trial Ans. Br. at 21. 107 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 47. 108 Pls.’ Post-Trial Ans. Br. at 18-22. 109 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 38-41; see SAPA § 6.1(a).
- 18 - alleged breach of these provisions triggered SAPA § 8.1’s indemnification
obligations.110
IV. ANALYSIS AND LEGAL FINDINGS
In Delaware, fraud requires a plaintiff to show “(1) a false representation,
usually of fact, made by the defendant; (2) the defendant’s knowledge or belief that
the representation was false, or was made with reckless indifference to the truth;
(3) an intent to induce the plaintiff to act or to refrain from acting; (4) [that] the
plaintiff’s action or inaction was taken in justifiable reliance upon the representation;
and (5) damage to the plaintiff as a result of such reliance.”111 The first element—
“false representation”—may take the form of the defendant’s: (1) overt
misrepresentation; (2) deliberate concealment of material facts; or (3) silence in the
face of a duty to speak.112
A. BRUNSWICK MADE NO PRE-CLOSING, NON-CONTRACTUAL FALSE REPRESENTATIONS.
BBP has failed to meet its burden of proving by the preponderance of the
evidence that Brunswick engaged in fraud via non-contractual false representations
prior to the closing of the SAPA. Contrary to BBP’s claims, Brunswick was neither
110 JX1 § 8.1; Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41-42. 111 Kostyszyn v. Martuscelli, 2015 WL 721291, at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 18, 2015). See also Crowhorn v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 2001 WL 695542, at *5 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 26, 2001). 112 Great Hill Equity Pr’s, 2018 WL 6311829, at *32 (citing Stephenson v. Capano Dev., 462 A.2d 1069, 1074 (Del. 1983)).
- 19 - silent in the face of a duty to speak nor deliberate in concealing material facts.
Absent some pre-existing fiduciary or contractual duty to disclose information,
there is no general duty to speak.113 Even so, if a party to an arm’s length transaction
does choose to speak, then the speaker may not lie or speak “partially or obliquely
such that what the party conveys becomes misleading.”114 The speaker is thereby
bound by a duty to disclose because “the choice to speak exposes the speaker to
liability if his words are materially misleading.”115
A statement can be materially misleading “because of [the speaker’s] failure
to state additional or qualifying matter[s],’” and this duty to disclose can be
epitomized as a “duty to make a full and fair disclosure as to the matters about which
[one] assumes to speak.”116 Although this “full and fair disclosure” language is most
commonly invoked as a corporate fiduciary duty, 117 Delaware courts have on
occasion referenced such more broadly when examining arms-length transactions.118
113 Albert v. Alex. Brown Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 2005 WL 2130607, at *3 (Del. Ch. Aug. 26, 2005). 114 Prairie Cap. III, L.P. v. Double E Holding Corp., 132 A.3d 35, 52 (Del. Ch. 2015). 115 Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc. v. CHR Holding Corp., 2008 WL 963048, at *6 (Del. Ch. Apr. 10, 2008). 116 Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc., 2008 WL 963048, at *6 (emphasis added). 117 Loudon v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 700 A.2d 135, 143 (Del. 1997) (“It is well established that ‘directors of Delaware corporations are under a fiduciary duty to disclose fully and fairly all material information within the board’s control when it seeks shareholder action.’”) (emphasis added). See also In re GGP, Inc. S’holder Litig., 282 A.3d 37, 62 (Del. 2022). 118 See Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc., 2008 WL 963048, at *6 (citing Lock v. Schreppler, 426 A.2d 856, 862 (Del. Super. Ct. 1981) (“Although there is no general duty to speak, nevertheless, if a person undertakes to speak, he then has a duty to make a full and fair disclosure as to the matters about which he assumes to speak.”)). See also In re Wayport, Inc. Litig., 76 A.3d 296, 323 (Del.
- 20 - Importantly, this “duty to make a full and fair disclosure” does not mean that
one must give every single detail about a certain matter. Generally, “Delaware law
does not require disclosure of […] speculative information which would tend to […]
inundate [the listener] with an overload of information.”119 A partial disclosure is
not materially misleading unless there is “a substantial likelihood” that the omitted
information would have “significantly altered the ‘total mix’ of information made
available.”120 A partial disclosure is permissible so long as it is considered “fair.”
When the listener is a sophisticated party, it is considered “fair” to disclose facts that
are enough to allow that listener to pursue its own additional investigation.121
That said, once a speaker allows the listener to conduct additional
investigation, then the speaker “cannot conceal information [. . .] because permitting
the investigation operates as the functional equivalent of providing information.”122
1. Brunswick chose to speak and properly disclosed the SWEA issue.
Brunswick chose to speak prior to the closing of the SAPA regarding the
Ch. 2013). 119 Arnold v. Soc’y for Sav. Bancorp, Inc., 650 A.2d 1270, 1280 (Del. 1994). 120 Arnold, 650 A.2d at 1277 (citing Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., 493 A.2d 929, 944 (Del. 1985) (citing TSC Indus., Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 449 (1976)) and adopting the TSC materiality standard as Delaware law)). 121 See e.g. In re JCC Holding Co., Inc., 843 A.2d 713, 721 (Del. Ch. 2003) (finding a fair disclosure where a “proxy statement was written in a manner that allowed a reasonably sophisticated investor to see the key judgments that [a party] made […].”). 122 Prairie Cap. III, L.P., 132 A.3d at 52 (citing Stephenson, 462 A.2d at 1074).
- 21 - Swedish pinsetter issue by voluntarily sharing such via the Data Room—including
the draft of the SAPA and the Disclosure Schedules 123 —and during verbal
communications with BBP. 124 Such a decision to speak exposed Brunswick to
potential liability for fraud.125 Even so, under Delaware law, Brunswick was not
then required to disclose the pinsetter issue in more exacting detail to BBP, a
sophisticated party.126
Brunswick disclosed what was needed, so that its representations were not
materially misleading. 127 And Brunswick permitted BBP to conduct its own
investigation. 128 Although the SWEA issue was “far outside the top ten” issues
discussed,129 it was discussed during the parties’ phone calls in December 2014,130
early March 2015, and again in late March or early April 2015. 131 During the
December 2014 call, Brunswick’s Mr. Gwillim informed BBP that the SWEA issue
was a common regulatory issue within the industry and that it was not a material
123 SAPA and Schedule 3.16 were in the Data Room in November 2014. See Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶ 45. 124 See, e.g., 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 56-57; 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 62, 278. 125 Prairie Cap. III, L.P., 132 A.3d at 52; Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc., 2008 WL 963048, at *6. 126 In re JCC Holding Co., Inc., 843 A.2d 713, 721 (Del. Ch. 2003). 127 See Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc., 2008 WL 963048, at *6. 128 See Prairie Cap. III, L.P., 132 A.3d 35, 52 (citing Stephenson, 462 A.2d at 1074). 129 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 62, 278. 130 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 21; 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 290. 131 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 286.
- 22 - concern.132 Having examined the entire trial record, the Court finds this was truthful.
In response to BBP’s extensive due diligence request for information on the issue,
Brunswick explicitly directed BBP to the Disclosure Schedule 3.16.133 Schedule
3.16 disclosed SWEA’s Notification by stating that the Swedish distributor of BBB
“received notification from the Swedish Work Environment Authority.”134 Schedule
3.16 also referenced Article 11 of the Machinery Directive, a publicly available
legislative act of the European Union. 135
When BBP requested more documents, Mr. Gwillim responded that at that
time there were no additional documents to review.136 And true, some likely could
have been compiled (as they eventually were), at the time and in context of then
existing events, this was not a false representation. Nonetheless, what was already
disclosed sufficiently put BBP on notice of the SWEA issue and gave BBP all the
information required to conduct its own investigation, as consistent with industry
custom.137 BBP’s expert witness, Steven Pully, admitted during cross-examination
132 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 79-80. 133 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 71. 134 Schedule 3.16, PX424 at 36. 135 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 127-128; see Directive 2006/42/EC, of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2006 on machinery, and amending Directive 95/16/EC (recast), 2006 O.J. (L 157) 24. 136 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 80-81, 115-116. 137 Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Midcap, 893 A.2d 542, 554 (Del. 2006) (“The custom or practice in a particular industry is probative of what conduct is reasonable under the circumstances.”).
- 23 - that it is industry custom for a buyer to conduct due diligence by independently
searching publicly available information outside the Data Room, 138 which could
include relatively simple internet searches.139 And no doubt, as demonstrated during
trial it is possible to find Article 11 of the Machinery Directive on the internet within
a few clicks.140
Even a cursory glance of the text of Article 11 would have apprised a
sophisticated reader of the possibility of a product recall and prohibition: “a Member
State […] shall take all appropriate measures to withdraw such machinery from the
market, to prohibit the placing on the market [...].” 141 BBP’s own witness,
Mr. Barbieri, admitted that the expression “withdraw such machinery from the
market” could be understood as a recall.142
Despite the notice provided in the Disclosure Schedule, BBP chose not to
independently investigate the implications of Article 11. Mr. Barbieri reviewed the
Disclosure Schedule during due diligence,143 but he and his law firm didn’t conduct
138 Id. at 270-271. 139 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 272. 140 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 127-128. 141 Directive 2006/42/EC, of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2006 on machinery, and amending Directive 95/16/EC (recast), 2006 O.J. (L 157) 24, 30. 142 Id. at 133. 143 Id. at 19.
- 24 - further due diligence regarding Article 11.144 Mr. Barbieri once asked his client for
permission to hire a foreign law firm to further investigate this issue, but BlueArc
didn’t grant him the permission to hire Swedish or other European counsel. 145
Instead, BlueArc chose to rely on Brunswick “to identify the risks that they had
deemed to be material and most critical.”146 While BBP attempts to do so, it cannot
so easily ascribe its own failure to conduct adequate due diligence to the scope of
Brunswick’s disclosure.
Schedule 3.16, with its express mention of Article 11, provided correct and
adequate information required for any sophisticated party to investigate on its own.
That is what the law requires.147
BBP was a sophisticated party when it was negotiating the SAPA148 and it
performed a significant amount of independent due diligence.149 BBP was alerted to
but consciously and deliberately chose not to further investigate the SWEA pinsetter
issue, and instead relied exclusively on the materials Brunswick had provided.150
For Brunswick’s part, it disclosed the issue with the degree of import it seemed to
144 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 107-108, 126-127, 128, 130, 151. 145 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 138. 146 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 52-53. 147 See In re JCC Holding Co., Inc., 843 A.2d at 721. 148 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 15, 91, 210-211. 149 Id. at 92. 150 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 44.
- 25 - demand at the time. Hindsight is always 20/20. At the time this issue was in play
during the negotiations, it seems no one had ever seen an enforcement action like
SWEA’s and the EC’s before. Brunswick’s non-contractual representations were not
materially misleading because Brunswick made a reasonable and fair disclosure as
to the pinsetter issue that it assumed a duty to speak about.151
2. Brunswick did not deliberately conceal the SWEA issue.
BBP failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Brunswick
deliberately concealed the SWEA issue. A “deliberate concealment of material facts”
is yet another form of false representation.152 A court may find fraud by deliberate
concealment where a “defendant took some action affirmative in nature designed or
intended to prevent, and which does prevent, the discovery of facts giving rise to the
fraud claim, some artifice to prevent knowledge of the facts or some representation
intended to exclude suspicion and prevent inquiry.”153
Here, there was no deliberate concealment; Brunswick disclosed the pinsetter
issue and its honest belief that the issue was not a material concern. This belief was
based on Brunswick’s positive engagement with the Swedish and the European
151 Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 Inc., 2008 WL 963048, at *6. 152 Great Hill Equity Pr’s, 2018 WL 6311829, at *32 (citing Stephenson, 462 A.2d at 1074). 153 Metro Commc'n Corp. BVI v. Advanced Mobilecomm Techs. Inc., 854 A.2d 121, 150 (Del. Ch. 2004).
- 26 - authorities to address the issue prior to closing.154 Brunswick was optimistic that
these discussions might lead to a lessening of regulatory burdens, as was often the
case in the past in the European market.155 This optimistic outlook is reflected in
BBB’s internal assessment of the probability of recall that was shared with
Brunswick’s representatives. For example, in a presentation delivered prior to
meetings with SWEA, Mr. Sella informed Mr. Gwillim, Messrs. Altman, Perrier,
and Dykstra, and Ms. Kaiser that there was a “20% chance of significant recalls of
$.5M or greater” and merely a “5% chance of a worst case scenario” involving
“$9.7M recall exposure,” which Mr. Sella himself described as “extremely
remote.”156
This rosy assessment is consistent with the language of Schedule 3.16 that
expresses subjective opinion, not objective certainty. Schedule 3.16 states that
“Company [i.e., BBB] believes it will come to an agreement” and that “Company
continues to believe that its GSX pinsetter complies with all applicable laws and
regulations.” 157 These expressions of “belief” or opinion can also be found in
154 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 67, 77, 153. 155 Defendant’s Response to Plaintiffs’ Opening Post-Trial Brief (“Defs.’ Resp. to Pls.’ Op. Post- Trial Br.”) at 2 (D.I. 699) (citing 1/7/25 Trial Tr. at 156-157); 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 143; 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 79. 156 Defs.’ Op. Br. at 7; PX60; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 225; 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 76-77. 157 JX2, Schedule 3.16.
- 27 - Mr. Gwillim’s internal comments.158
Contrary to Brunswick’s hope-filled beliefs, SWEA recalled the pinsetter
products in November 2015 via the Formal Request.159 Brunswick committed an
error in prediction—a prediction that it shared with BBP during due diligence. But
“[t]he law is rightly reluctant to find that mere expressions of opinion about the
future can buttress a claim of fraud.”160 Brunswick’s honest disclosure and error in
prediction was not deliberate concealment, i.e., it was not an action “designed or
intended to prevent [. . .] the discovery of facts,” nor was it “some artifice.”161
B. BRUNSWICK MADE NO OVERT MISREPRESENTATIONS IN THE SAPA. NOR DID BRUNSWICK BREACH ITS CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS.
BBP further brought a fraud claim alleging false representation in the form of
an “overt misrepresentation” 162 in several of the SAPA provisions. 163 BBP also
charged breach of contract regarding the same provisions164 as well as breach of the
contract’s indemnification obligation.165
Overt misrepresentation is defined as “a representation of false statements as
158 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 316-317. 159 1/22/25 Trial Tr. at 83. 160 Metro Commc’n Corp. BVI, 854 A.2d at 148. 161 Id. at 150. 162 Great Hill Equity Pr’s, 2018 WL 6311829, at *32 (citing Stephenson, 462 A.2d at 1074). 163 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 43. 164 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 38-41. 165 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41.
- 28 - true.”166 A party that makes an overt misrepresentation within a contract might be
held liable for contractual fraud.167 That party can also be liable for a breach of
representations and warranties if the false statement was part of the representations
and warranties provided in the contract.168 And a breach of a representation and
warranty may support a contract-borne indemnification claim169 as well as a breach
of contract claim. 170 A breach of contract requires showing (1) “a contractual
obligation,” (2) “a breach of that obligation by the defendant,” and (3) “a resulting
damage to the plaintiff.”171
The Court finds that Brunswick made no overt misrepresentations in the SAPA
and did not breach any representations and warranties. It follows then that
Brunswick isn’t liable for breach of any indemnification obligation, either.
1. SAPA Section 3.16 does not contain a misrepresentation.
BBP claims that Section 3.16 of the SAPA overtly misrepresented that
166 Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs., N.V., 85 A.3d 725, 774 (Del. Ch. 2014); Metro Commc’n Corp. BVI, 854 A.2d at 143. 167 Aveanna Healthcare, LLC v. Epic/Freedom, LLC, 2021 WL 3235739, at *13 n. 117 (Del. Super. Ct. July 29, 2021); Online HealthNow, Inc. v. CIP OCL Invs., LLC, 2021 WL 3557857, at *1 n. 2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 12, 2021). 168 Arwood v. AW Site Servs., LLC, 2022 WL 705841, at *38 (Del. Ch. Mar. 9, 2022). 169 Certainteed Corp. v. Celotex Corp., 2005 WL 217032, at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 24, 2005). 170 Anvil Holding Corp. v. Iron Acquisition Co., 2013 WL 2249655, at *8-9 (Del. Ch. May 17, 2013). See also AmeriMark Interactive, LLC v. AmeriMark Holdings, LLC, 2022 WL 16642020, at *10 (Del. Super. Ct. Nov. 3, 2022). 171 Humanigen, Inc. v. Savant Neglected Diseases, LLC, 238 A.3d 194, 202 (Del. Super. Ct. 2020).
- 29 - Brunswick had not received “any written notice from any Governmental Authority
to the effect that any such Person is not in material compliance with any applicable
Law” because Brunswick had received the SWEA Notification and Decision.172
Here, it could be argued that the 2013 SWEA Notification qualifies as a
“written notice” from a governmental authority indicating Brunswick’s
noncompliance with the applicable Swedish laws. 173 But Brunswick adequately
disclosed the relevant information in the Disclosure Schedule 3.16.174 Given this
disclosure, Brunswick made no misrepresentation via Section 3.16.
Schedule 3.16 is an exception to the SAPA representations and warranties—
including Section 3.16. If a seller “disclosed a fact in a disclosure statement, that
disclosure, in essence, was carved out of Sellers’ representations and warranties.”175
BBP insists that Schedule 3.16 cannot be deemed a proper exception merely
because, unlike the other SAPA Article 3 provisions, Section 3.16 itself doesn’t
expressly contain the language “except as set forth on Section [] of the Seller
Disclosure Schedule.”176 Not so.
A substantive provision isn’t the only place one may look when interpreting a
172 JX1 at 35; Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 20; 1/8/25 AM Trial Tr. at 21-22. 173 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 10-11. 174 Schedule 3.16, PX424 at 36 (“In August 2013, the Company’s Swedish distributor received notification from the Swedish Work Environment Authority (‘SWEA’) that….”). 175 Pilot Air Freight, 2020 WL 5588671, at *6 (Del. Ch. Sept. 18, 2020). 176 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 39.
- 30 - contract. A contract’s recitals or preamble are oft an “obvious source for gaining
contractual intent [ . . . ] because it is there that the parties express[] their purposes
for executing the Agreement.”177 Indeed, a preamble may be deemed legally binding
so long as it doesn’t contradict any of the substantive provisions in the contract.178
The Preamble to Article 3 of the SAPA expressly provides that:
Except as otherwise set forth in the disclosure schedule delivered by the Seller to the Purchaser concurrently with the execution and delivery of this Agreement and dated as of the date of this Agreement (the “Seller Disclosure Schedule”) […].”179 This language doesn’t contradict any of the substantive provisions of the SAPA. And
as such, that language effectively renders each provision of the Disclosure Schedule,
including Schedule 3.16, applicable as a valid exception to all the substantive
provisions in Article 3 of the SAPA, including Section 3.16.
Accordingly, the Court finds there was no overt contractual misrepresentation
in Section 3.16 of the SAPA; the written notice from SWEA was already adequately
disclosed in the Disclosure Schedule 3.16.
2. SAPA Section 3.22 does not contain a misrepresentation.
The Court finds that there was no overt misrepresentation in Section 3.22 of
177 Citadel Holding Corp. v. Roven, 603 A.2d 818, 823 (Del. 1992); Stein v. Wind Energy Holdings, Inc., 2022 WL 17590862, at *1 n.5 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec. 13, 2022). 178 See Llamas v. Titus, 2019 WL 2505374, at *16 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2019), judgment entered, (Del. Ch. 2019); see also GMG Cap. Invs., LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P., 36 A.3d 776, 779 (Del. 2012) (“The meaning inferred from a particular provision cannot control the meaning of the entire agreement if such an inference conflicts with the agreement’s overall scheme or plan.”). 179 JX1 at 24; 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 194-195.
- 31 - the SAPA, which states that:
Except as set forth on Section 3.22 of the Seller Disclosure Schedule, none of the products sold, provided, or delivered by either of the Acquired Companies in connection with, or relating to, the Business, in each case during the immediately preceding three (3) years, has been subject to any recall.180
BBP alleges overt misrepresentation because Brunswick stated “None” in
Schedule 3.22 when referring to any additional facts to disclose regarding Section
3.22 of the SAPA.181 BBP claims that this was a false statement because the pinsetter
products were already “subject to a recall” when the SWEA Decision was issued in
August 2013.182 Brunswick disagrees, and claims that no recall took place prior to
the closing of the SAPA in May 2015.183 The Court finds that Brunswick did not
make a contractual misrepresentation about a “recall.”
The parties’ contest stems from their base disagreement over the definition of
the term “recall.” The SAPA doesn’t define “recall.” 184 Because “recall” is an
undefined term in the SAPA, the Court interprets it according to its plain and
ordinary meaning.185 Brunswick claims that recall meant “asking us to remove the
180 JX1 at 36 (emphasis added). 181 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41, JX2 § 3.22. 182 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41. 183 Defs.’ Op. Br. at 44. 184 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 5. 185 Sunstone Partners Management, LLC v. Synopsys, Inc., 2024 WL 3813266, at *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 14, 2024) (citing Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA v. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chemicals Co., 1992 WL 22690 at *12 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan. 16, 1992) (“In the absence of such a
- 32 - product that was already sitting in […] centers.”186 On the other hand, BBP cites the
Black’s Law Dictionary definition: “[a] manufacturer’s request to consumers for the
return of defective products for repair or replacement.”187 Under Black’s definition,
a mere need for “repair or replacement” is not a freestanding element; a recall
involves the manufacturer’s request for a “return” of the products as well.188
At bottom, under the most common understanding of “recall” in American
parlance, the Court finds that there was none of the pinsetter products prior to the
closing of the SAPA—there had yet to be a finalized governmental action and yet to
be a request to customers for the physical removal, return, or access to defective
products with the intention of repairing their defects or replacing them.189
The November 2016 “Formal Request”190 was the earliest identifiable event
when the pinsetter products might be said to have become subject to a “recall” as
that is commonly understood in everyday English or American consumer experience.
definition, the applicable rules of construction require that the term be given its plain, ordinary meaning.”)). 186 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 62. 187 Pls.’ Post-Trial Ans. Br. at 27. 188 Recall, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY, 1522 (12th ed. 2024). 189 See Recall, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/recall (last visited July 13, 2025) (as pertinent here, defining “recall” as “a public call by a manufacturer for the return of a product that may be defective or contaminated”); In re Solera Ins. Coverage, 240 A.3d 1121, 1132 (Del. 2020) (“This Court often looks to dictionaries to ascertain a term’s plain meaning.”). 190 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 346.
- 33 - The Formal Request was where SWEA officially affirmed its intent to impose and
enforce its 2013 Decision by requiring BBB to apply the proposed modifications to
its pre-existing products,191 which then might have involved a physical removal or
return of these products to fix or replace them. Until that moment, a recall was
merely tentative since SWEA was engaged in dialogue with Brunswick192 and no
products were being physically removed from the market.193
Accordingly, Brunswick’s products were not subject to a “recall” before the
closing of the SAPA. Neither Section 3.22 nor Schedule 3.22 contained an overt
misrepresentation.
3. SAPA Section 3.15 did not contain a misrepresentation.
No overt misrepresentation was made regarding Section 3.15 of the SAPA.
Section 3.15 states that, at the time of the closing, BBB possessed:
[…] all material Governmental Authorizations that are necessary for them to conduct the Business in the manner in which it is presently conducted, and each such material Governmental Authorization is in full force and effect and the Acquired Companies and the Asset Sellers are in material compliance therewith. To Seller’s Knowledge, no event has occurred that, with or without notice or lapse of time or both, would reasonably be expected to result in the revocation, suspension, lapse or limitation of any material Governmental Authorizations held by the Acquired Companies and the Asset Sellers to conduct the Business in the manner in which it is presently conducted.194
191 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 193, 233. 192 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 67, 77, 153. 193 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 61. 194 JX1 at 35 (emphasis added).
- 34 - BBP argues that Brunswick breached Section 3.15 because Brunswick had no
“Governmental Authorization” to ship the products bearing the deficiencies
enumerated in the SWEA Decision. 195 Brunswick replies that the term
“Governmental Authorization” has a narrow meaning of an “affirmative
authorization akin to licenses and permits,” which was never enforced because
pinsetter products continued to be shipped.196
The Court finds that the term “Governmental Authorization” has a broad
meaning. Section 1.1 of the SAPA expressly defines Governmental Authorization
as “any approval, consent, ratification, waiver, license, permit, registration or other
authorization issued or granted by any Governmental Authority.” 197 When
interpreting the terms “and” and “or,” Delaware courts found that “ordinarily ‘and’
is conjunctive, while ‘or’ is disjunctive.”198 Given that “[w]ords are to be understood
in their ordinary, everyday meanings,”199 the word “or” here in Section 1.1 should
also be interpreted as disjunctive, which has an inclusive200 and open-ended meaning.
195 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 38 (citing 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 186-187, 192). 196 Defs.’ Resp. to Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 28-29. 197 JX1 at 5 (emphasis added); Pls.’ Post-Trial Ans. Br. at 27. 198 Weinberg v. Waystar, Inc., 294 A.3d 1039, 1045 (Del. 2023). 199 Weinberg, 294 A.3d at 1044 n.13 (citing Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, READING LAW: INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 69 (2012)). 200 Gonzalez v. State, 207 A.3d 147, 156 (Del. 2019) (“In ordinary English, the phrase “P or Q” on its own often suggests the inclusive sense of “or,” but the addition of the word “either” before “P or Q” weighs toward the exclusive use.”).
- 35 - Moreover, the repeated use of the word “any” alongside the disjunctive “or other
authorization” indicates that the parties intended the usage of the term “Government
Authorization” to be broad.
Applying this broad definition, the Court finds that BBB possessed the
required Governmental Authorizations—SWEA allowed pinsetter products to be
shipped to Sweden that passed the inspections.201 Yet, the pinsetters containing the
deficiencies noted in the SWEA Decision202 might be viewed as not enjoying “all
material Governmental Authorizations” because they might need alteration to be
approved.203 And the SWEA Notification and Decision and the communications
with the SWEA and the EU may cause some doubt as to whether “no event has
occurred that [ . . . ] would reasonably be expected to result in the revocation,
suspension, lapse or limitation of any material Governmental Authorizations.”204
Even with that BBP-friendly read, the Court finds no misrepresentation in
Section 3.15. True, no corresponding “Disclosure Schedule 3.15” exists for Section
3.15 of the SAPA.205 But Schedule 3.16 properly disclosed cross-sectionally all the
201 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 50, 187; 1/14/25 Trial Tr. at 78. 202 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 38 (citing 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 186-187). 203 JX1 at 35. 204 Id. 205 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 38-39. See also SAPA Section 11.7: […] The Seller Disclosure Schedule is arranged in sections and paragraphs corresponding to the numbered and lettered sections and paragraphs of Article 3 and Article 4, respectively. The disclosure in any section or paragraph of the Seller Disclosure Schedule,
- 36 - information that needed to be disclosed regarding “Governmental Authorizations.”
The Preamble of the Seller Disclosure Schedule reads, in relevant parts:
The Seller and the Purchaser acknowledge and agree that for purposes of the Seller Representations (a) any matter set forth in any section of the Seller Disclosure Schedule with respect to a specific representation and warranty will, in each case, also be deemed disclosed with respect to any other representation and warranty to the extent it is reasonably apparent on its face that it relates to another representation or warranty hereunder […].206
A contractual provision that provides “that contract language shall apply
cross-sectionally where it is reasonably apparent on its face that the language is
relevant cross-sectionally” can act as “a savings clause for a draftsperson’s failure to
adequately cross-reference a provision in” an agreement.”207 This type of provision
“excuses actions that would otherwise breach covenants where [ . . . ] absent cross-
sectional applicability an inconsistency in the contractual terms would result.”208
Specifically, this “deemed disclosed” and “reasonably apparent” language in
the Preamble permits Schedule 3.16 to cross-sectionally apply to Section 3.15 as an
exception, despite the apparent mismatch between the number “3.16” of the
and those in any amendment or supplement thereto, will be deemed to relate to each other provision of Article 3 or Article 4, respectively. JX1 at 71 (emphasis added). 206 JX2 (emphasis added). 207 Williams Companies, Inc. v. Energy Transfer LP, 2021 WL 6136723, at *30 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2021), aff’d, 2023 WL 6561767 (Del. Oct. 10, 2023). 208 Id.
- 37 - Disclosure Schedule and the number “3.15” of the SAPA. It is “reasonably apparent
on its face”209 that the language of Schedule 3.16 relates to that of Section 3.15.
Express references to Brunswick’s interactions with the Swedish and the EU
government authorities disclosed in Schedule 3.16 (e.g., “Swedish Work
Environment Authority,” “the European Commission,” and “Swedish and EU
authorities,” 210 ) unmistakably relate to the “Governmental Authorization”
mentioned in Section 3.15.
Moreover, if Schedule 3.16 were to not apply cross-sectionally to Section 3.15,
then an “inconsistency in the contractual terms would result.”211 The disclosure
made in Schedule 3.16—which represents that BBB is still struggling with the
regulators—directly contradicts the representation in Section 3.15 that BBB already
has “all material Governmental Authorizations” and knows no event that may
jeopardize such authorizations.212
The disclosure in Schedule 3.16 cross-sectionally provides an exception to the
representations in Section 3.15. Therefore, Section 3.15 does not contain a
209 JX2; Williams Companies, Inc., 2021 WL 6136723 at *30-31. 210 Schedule 3.16, PX424 at 36 (emphasis added). 211 Williams Companies, Inc., 2021 WL 6136723, at *30. 212 JX1 at 35 (emphasis added).
- 38 - 4. SAPA Section 3.17 did not contain a misrepresentation.
BBP alleges that there is an overt misrepresentation in Section 3.17 of the
SAPA. There isn’t.
Section 3.17 states, in relevant parts, that:
there is no Proceeding pending or, to the Seller’s Knowledge, threatened against any member of the Seller [ . . . ]. Except as set forth in Section 3.17 of the Seller Disclosure Schedule, to the Seller’s Knowledge, no event has occurred or circumstance exists that may give rise to, or serve as a basis for, any Legal Proceeding [ . . .].213
BBP maintains that contrary to this representation, there were “ongoing legal
proceedings” by the time the SAPA closed.214 Specifically, BBP cites Mr. Bessman’s
email where he mentions that SWEA’s responses indicate “ongoing legal
proceedings here against VBS initiated by SWEA.” 215 BBP also elicited trial
testimony from BBB’s CFO, Corey Dykstra, that the SWEA Decision letter in 2013
signals the existence of a legal proceeding.216 Additionally, BBP asserts in its post-
trial briefing that the procedure under which the European Commission would
evaluate the justifiability of SWEA’s measures was an “event[] that may give rise to
a legal proceeding,”217 and that “over half of BBB’s 2014 legal spend was expended
213 JX1 at 35 (emphasis added). 214 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 40. 215 PX351. 216 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 11. 217 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41.
- 39 - on the European pinsetter issues.”218
a. “Legal Proceeding” does not include SWEA or EU actions before SAPA closed.
The Court finds that there were no “ongoing legal proceedings” before the
SAPA closed. The SAPA does not define the term “Legal Proceeding.”219 So again,
this an undefined SAPA term that must be interpreted according to its plain and
ordinary meaning. 220 “Under well-settled case law, Delaware courts look to
dictionaries for assistance in determining the plain meaning of terms which are not
defined in a contract.”221 According to Merriam-Webster, “legal proceedings” are
“actions taken to settle an argument in a court of law.”222
Neither SWEA’s Notice, Decision, nor any other pinsetter-related
communication prior to the Closing fits this definition—which, no doubt, is
consistent with the plain, ordinary understanding of “legal proceeding.”
There is no evidence that such communications involved a court of law. The
European Commission was involved at that time,223 but the European Commission
218 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 40. 219 JX1 at 7. 220 Sunstone Pr’s Mgt., 2024 WL 3813266, at *2; Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chem. Co., 1992 WL 22690 at *12. 221 Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Am. Legacy Found., 903 A.2d 728, 738 (Del. 2006). 222 Legal Proceedings, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ legal%20proceedings (last visited July 13, 2025). 223 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 108; “Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2018/1960,” PX46.
- 40 - is not a court of law. It is rather a “chief enforcer of EU law,” an executive branch
within the supranational EU system. 224 Messrs. Bessman and Dykstra’s
characterization of the SWEA letters as evidence of “legal proceedings” isn’t
determinative. Under a common understanding of that term there were no then-
extant (or even then-threatened) legal proceedings by the time the SAPA closed.
Again, in context, it was honestly believed to be a normal regulatory matter that
would be resolved with and by executive agencies without any more formal
proceedings.
b. BBB’s pre-closing attorney’s fees did not arise out of “legal proceedings.”
BBP alleges that BBB’s 2014 expenditure on attorney’s fees constitutes
evidence of a legal proceeding.225 It doesn’t.
The attorney’s fees that BBP paid prior to the closing of the SAPA covered
various forms of legal services, including due diligence, transactional work, and
providing advice regarding the SWEA issue.226 But none of these services involved
a “legal proceeding.”
Now-plaintiff BBP’s attorneys only began engaging in “actions taken to settle
224 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 36. 225 Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 40. 226 1/13/25 Trial Tr. at 206; 1/9/25 Trial Tr. at 219; 1/10/25 Trial Tr. at 50.
- 41 - an argument in a court of law”227 after they started preparing for an appeal of the
European Commission’s Implementing Decision to the General Court of the
European Union, which occurred after closing. 228 Within the EU system, the
General Court is a court of law whose decision could subsequently be appealed to
the Court of Justice of the European Union.229 Here, the Implementing Decision that
confirmed SWEA’s measures230 was issued on December 10, 2018.231 Yet again, that
is best described as action by an executive agency—not what one would commonly
call a “legal proceeding.” A “legal proceeding,” if any, could have begun only after
December 10, 2018—more than three years after the SAPA closed on May 22,
2015.232
c. Even if EU actions were an event that may give rise to a legal proceeding, they were disclosed in the SAPA.
One might generously suggest that the involvement of the European
Commission was an “event[] that may give rise to a legal proceeding.”233 This is
because the EC’s activities could be subject to the supranational EU judiciary’s
227 Legal Proceedings, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ legal%20proceedings (last visited June 30, 2025). 228 1/8/25 PM Trial Tr. at 113-114. 229 JX164 at 2. 230 Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2018/1960, 2018 O.J. (L 315) 29, PX46. 231 PX46; 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 108. 232 Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts ¶ 58; 1/16/25 Trial Tr. at 307. 233 JX1 at 35; Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 41.
- 42 - review for violation of EU law.234 Even so, the EC’s relevant activities here were
cross-sectionally disclosed in the Disclosure Schedule 3.16, 235 which states that
SWEA “notified the European Commission of its belief. As a result of the
notification, Seller and the Company have continued to work with Swedish and EU
authorities.”236
Similarly, Schedule 3.17 expressly provides that as to “Commercial” matters
in Legal Proceedings, “[t]he item set forth on Section 3.16 of the Seller Disclosure
Schedule is hereby incorporated herein by reference.”237 The information regarding
the SWEA Notification in Schedule 3.16 was thereby incorporated into Schedule
3.17 by reference, which was then disclosed as an exception to Section 3.17. Either
way, the possible event that may give rise to a legal proceeding was disclosed as an
exception provided in Schedule 3.16. Therefore, there was no misrepresentation in
Section 3.17 of the SAPA.
In sum, the Court finds that BBP failed to meet its burden of proving that
Brunswick made any fraudulent representation within the SAPA. And because there
was no false representation in the SAPA, the Court needn’t address the remaining
234 1/15/25 Trial Tr. at 179-180. 235 JX2 at 51. See also Williams Companies, Inc., 2021 WL 6136723, at *30. 236 Schedule 3.16, PX424 at 36. 237 Defs.’ Resp. to Pls.’ Op. Post-Trial Br. at 31 (citing JX2 at 52).
- 43 - elements of BBP’s fraud or breach-of-contract claims arising therefrom. 238
Brunswick is not liable for any related contractual or indemnification obligations.
C. BBP IS NOT ENTITLED TO DAMAGES.
BBP seeks damages based on the foregoing allegations, but the Court finds
that Brunswick did not act fraudulently or breach the SAPA. Any losses that BBP
claims to have suffered aren’t attributable to any alleged wrongdoing by Brunswick.
Since BBP failed to prove any of its claims of liability by a preponderance of the
evidence, it is not entitled to damages.
V. CONCLUSION
BBP brought this suit insisting that Brunswick was liable for fraud for various
alleged non-contractual misrepresentations made prior to the closing of the SAPA.
BBP also claimed breach of contract for representations and warranties in the SAPA
and breach of the indemnities clauses connected therewith. BBP’s claims now
hyperfixate on a particular issue in this deal that—for good reason given
Brunswick’s prior experience and BBP’s then-shifting focus on other aspects of the
sale—seemed of little moment to either party at the time but—to all parties’ surprise
and dismay—simply went unexpectedly (and expensively) sideways. The Court is
unburdened by such an obsessive perception affliction when weighing the evidence,
238 See Kelley v. Procino-Wells & Woodland, LLC, 2025 WL 48175, at *14 (Del. Ch. Dec. 27, 2024); Phage Diagnostics, Inc. v. Corvium, Inc., 2023 WL 3491882, at *11 (Del. Super. Ct. May 2, 2023).
- 44 - making credibility determinations, and rendering its trial decision and verdict.
Following an eleven-day trial, the Court finds in favor of Brunswick. Having
considered the content of the entire trial and the various exhibits and briefs submitted,
the Court finds that BBP has proven not a single one of its fraud or breach-of-
contract claims by a preponderance of the evidence. The Court does not find
Brunswick liable, and accordingly, no damages shall be awarded.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Paul R. Wallace ____________________ Paul R. Wallace, Judge
- 45 -
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
BBP Holdco, Inc. v. Brunswick Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bbp-holdco-inc-v-brunswick-corporation-delsuperct-2025.