CertiSign Holding, Inc. v. Kulikovsky

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 7, 2018
DocketCA 12055-VCS
StatusPublished

This text of CertiSign Holding, Inc. v. Kulikovsky (CertiSign Holding, Inc. v. Kulikovsky) 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
CertiSign Holding, Inc. v. Kulikovsky, (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

CERTISIGN HOLDING, INC., : a Delaware corporation, : : Plaintiff, : : v. : C.A. No. 12055-VCS : SERGIO KULIKOVSKY, : : Defendant. : ---------------------------------------------------- : SERGIO KULIKOVSKY and : SK INERNATIONAL HOLDINGS, LLC, : : Counterclaim Plaintiffs, : : v. : : CERTISIGN HOLDING, INC., : a Delaware corporation, : : Counterclaim Defendant. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 12, 2018 Date Decided: June 7, 2018

Michael A. Pittenger, Esquire, Jaclyn C. Levy, Esquire, Jay G. Stirling, Esquire and Tyson J. Prisbrey, Esquire of Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff and Counterclaim Defendant CertiSign Holding, Inc. David J. Margules, Esquire, Elizabeth A. Sloan, Esquire and Suzanne O. Lufadeju, Esquire of Ballard Spahr LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, and William B. Igoe, Esquire of Ballard Spahr LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attorneys for Defendant and Counterclaim Plaintiffs Sergio Kulikovsky and SK International Holdings, LLC.

SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor John D. Rockefeller is quoted as saying, “a friendship founded on business is

a good deal better than a business founded on friendship.”1 And so it was for three

friends who formed a network of entities to do business in the internet protocol and

security space. After a period of some success, the business began to falter and,

ultimately, the business partners fell out. Verbal and physical skirmishes ensued.

Whatever business sense the friends brought with them into the venture was replaced

by shortsighted bitterness and vindictiveness. The partners behaved badly.

Litigation inevitably followed. As it turns out, some of the bad behavior amounted

to actionable wrongdoing. Because one of the entities at the center of the business

relationship, CertiSign Holding, Inc. (“CertiSign” or the “Company”), is a Delaware

corporation, the litigation landed in this Court.

The parties are CertiSign as plaintiff and counterclaim defendant on one side,

and a former director of CertiSign, Sergio Kulikovsky (“Kulikovsky”), and his

wholly-owned entity, SK International Holdings, LLC (“SK Holdings”) as

defendant (Kulikovsky) and counterclaim plaintiffs (Kulikovsky and SK Holdings)

on the other.2 The events leading to this litigation began in 2005, when CertiSign

underwent a reorganization. In connection with the 2005 reorganization, CertiSign

1 John D. Rockefeller, Random Reminiscences of Men and Events (Doubleday 1909) (actually attributing the quote to his business partner Henry Flagler). 2 Although SK Holdings is not a defendant, for simplicity’s sake, I refer to Kulikovsky and SK Holdings collectively as “Defendants.”

1 issued a substantial amount of stock. Approximately three years later, in 2008,

Kulikovsky, who had been serving as CEO of the operating company, resigned from

that position after his business partners expressed a preference for a professional

manager to serve as CEO. By then, the disintegration of the trio’s friendship and

business relationship was brewing. Four years later, in 2012, as the parties began to

explore a potential sale of CertiSign, it was discovered that the stock issued in

connection with the 2005 reorganization had been issued before CertiSign’s

amended and restated certificate of incorporation was filed with the appropriate

authorities. Consequently, CertiSign’s outside legal advisors opined that because

the vast majority of CertiSign’s outstanding stock (as issued in the reorganization)

was defective, the subsequent vote to elect its board of directors had also been

defective and all actions taken thereafter by the pseudo board were invalid.

CertiSign sought to remedy these structural defects with certain self-help steps

devised by its counsel. At the time the defects were discovered, Kulikovsky was

one of two CertiSign directors in office who had been a director both before and

after the reorganization. Accordingly, CertiSign needed Kulikovsky to sign certain

consents to remedy the capital structure defects. But, by then, Kulikovsky’s

relationship with his former friends and current business partners had soured.

In response to the request for his assistance in restoring CertiSign’s capital structure,

Kulikovsky declared that he would not sign the consents unless CertiSign and certain

2 of its stockholders acceded to several demands. These demands included

(1) dissolving CertiSign’s controlling stockholder, in which SK Holdings holds

stock, so that Kulikovsky could vote the CertiSign shares he contributed to CKS

directly, and (2) requiring another CertiSign director to repay Kulikovsky a personal

loan owed to Kulikovsky. CertiSign did not give in to Kulikovsky’s demands and

Kulikovsky never signed the consents. This, in turn, entirely shut down CertiSign’s

self-help efforts.

In a separate action, the Court granted relief to CertiSign under 8 Del. C.

§ 205, over Kulikovsky’s opposition, by entering an order validating the stock issued

in the reorganization.3 Having prevailed in the Section 205 action, CertiSign then

initiated this action in which it alleges Kulikovsky breached his fiduciary duty of

loyalty to CertiSign by refusing to sign the self-help documents unless CertiSign

gave into his self-interested demands. CertiSign seeks damages, attorneys’ fees and

expenses. In riposte, Kulikovsky and SK Holdings have pressed counterclaims

against CertiSign in which Kulikovsky seeks to compel CertiSign to grant stock

options to him that allegedly were promised but never delivered, and SK Holdings

seeks to compel CertiSign to repay a loan that CertiSign allegedly assumed on behalf

3 In re CertiSign Hldg., Inc., 2015 WL 5136226 (Del. Ch. Aug. 31, 2015); In re CertiSign Hldg., Inc., 2015 WL 5786138, at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 2, 2015) (ORDER).

3 of its indirectly-held, wholly-owned subsidiary (related to, but separate from, the

personal loan owed to Kulikovsky).

In this post-trial Memorandum Opinion, I conclude that (1) Kulikovsky

breached his fiduciary duty of loyalty to CertiSign by refusing to cooperate with the

self-help for solely personal reasons; (2) Defendants did not prove that CertiSign

granted Kulikovsky options; and (3) Defendants did not prove that CertiSign

assumed the debt owed to SK Holdings by CertiSign’s indirectly-held, wholly-

owned subsidiary. I also award CertiSign some attorneys’ fees and expenses as

damages. My reasoning follows.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from the parties’ pre-trial stipulation, evidence admitted

at trial and those matters of which the Court may take judicial notice. 4 The trial

record consists of 431 joint trial exhibits, 990 pages of trial testimony and eight

lodged depositions. The following facts were proven by a preponderance of the

competent evidence.

4 I cite to the Joint Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order as “PTO ¶”; to the joint trial exhibits as “JX #”; to the trial transcript as “Tr. # (witness name)”; and to the transcript of the Oral Argument on Defendants’ and Counterclaim Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike and Post-trial Oral Argument as “OA Tr. #.”

4 A. Parties and Relevant Non-Parties

Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant, CertiSign, is a Delaware corporation

formed in December 2004 by non-party Certipar, S.A. (“Certipar”), a Brazilian

corporation, to act as a holding company for Certipar. 5 CertiSign has four

stockholders: (1) CKS Holding, Inc.

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