chillinger Genetics, Inc. v. Benson Hill Seeds, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 1, 2021
DocketC.A. No. 2020-0260-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of chillinger Genetics, Inc. v. Benson Hill Seeds, Inc. (chillinger Genetics, Inc. v. Benson Hill Seeds, Inc.) 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
chillinger Genetics, Inc. v. Benson Hill Seeds, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

SCHILLINGER GENETICS, INC., ) an Iowa corporation, and JOHN ) SCHILLINGER, on his own behalf ) and in his capacity as Owners’ ) Representative, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0260-MTZ ) BENSON HILL SEEDS, INC., f/k/a ) SGI GENETICS, INC., a Delaware ) corporation, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: October 5, 2020 Date Decided: February 1, 2021

Michael P. Kelly, Andrew S. Dupre, and Sarah E. Delia, McCARTER & ENGLISH, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

Travis S. Hunter and Dorronda R. Bordley, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A, Wilmington, Delaware; Kenneth J. Mallin, Jason S. Meyer, and Sasha D. Riedisser, BRYAN CAVE LEIGHTON PAISNER, LLP, St. Louis, Missouri, Attorneys for Defendant.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor. Parties contracting in good faith and with prudent foresight often place funds

in escrow to tailor their contractual obligations to events, predicted or unexpected,

that may come to pass. In the present case, the buyer purchased substantially all of

the seller’s assets pursuant to an asset purchase agreement, and escrowed funds to

secure the seller’s obligations with respect to any post-closing price adjustment or

indemnity claims in two distinct accounts, each guarded by some procedural hurdles

that the buyer struggled to clear.

The first account contained escrow funds to be distributed in accordance with

the agreement’s post-closing purchase price adjustment process. Under that process,

the buyer was obligated to deliver to the seller a closing statement setting forth the

buyer’s calculated purchase price adjustment within ninety days of closing. The

buyer failed to timely deliver the requisite closing statement. After much prodding

by the seller, the buyer submitted the closing statement nearly two months late.

The second escrow account contained funds to be distributed in satisfaction

of any timely indemnity claim for the seller’s breach of the agreement. The

agreement set forth a period and procedure for the buyer to give notice of such

indemnity claims and preserve the buyer’s right to claw back the indemnity escrow

funds. The agreement also specified how notice was to be given, while providing

that the buyer’s failure to properly notice an indemnity claim would not adversely

affect the buyer’s right to the indemnity escrow funds in the absence of material

1 prejudice. The buyer’s written notice of an escrow claim pressed the boundaries of

the agreement’s time and manner requirements.

The seller, as plaintiff in this action, claims the buyer breached the agreement

by failing to follow the procedures for properly claiming the escrowed funds and by

ultimately refusing to release those funds. The seller moved for partial summary

judgment. Because the buyer failed to timely deliver the closing statement as

required by the agreement, I conclude the seller is entitled to summary judgment on

its claim for the adjustment escrow funds. But because the buyer preserved its

indemnity claim by providing sufficient notice, I conclude summary judgment is

appropriate in the buyer’s favor on the seller’s count regarding the indemnity escrow

funds.

I. BACKGROUND1

Schillinger Genetics, Inc. (“Seller” or the “Company”) is an Iowa corporation

that was formerly engaged in the business of soybean research and breeding.2

Plaintiff John Schillinger (“Schillinger,” and together with Seller, “Plaintiffs”)

1 Citations in the form of “Compl. ¶ ––” refer to the plaintiff’s complaint, available at Docket Item (“D.I.”) 1. Citations in the form of “Answer ¶ ––” refer to the Defendant’s answer to the Complaint; citations in the form of “Affirmative Defense ¶ ––” refer to Defendant’s affirmative defenses to the Complaint; and citations in the form “Countercl. ¶ ––” refer to Defendant’s counterclaims; each is available at D.I. 44. 2 Answer ¶ 7.

2 founded Seller.3 Benson Hill Seeds, Inc. (“Defendant” or “Buyer”) is a Delaware

corporation and “crop improvement company dedicated to unlocking the natural

diversity of plants.”4 Buyer conducts soybean research and breeding using assets

purchased from Seller.5

A. The Parties Execute The APA And Escrow Agreement.

This action arises out of an asset purchase agreement dated February 7, 2019

(the “Closing”)6 between and among Seller or certain stockholders of Seller (the

“Owners”), Schillinger as “Owners’ Representative,” and Buyer (the “APA”).7 The

APA transferred all assets and certain liabilities of Seller to Buyer for $14,000,000

subject to certain adjustments (the “Transaction”).8 The APA contemplates a post-

Closing purchase price adjustment and sets forth a process for calculating and paying

any adjustment out of escrowed funds. It also contains indemnification provisions

3 Id. ¶ 8. 4 D.I. 24 at 2; D.I. 24, Affidavit of Michael Wainscott ¶ 3 [hereinafter “Wainscott Aff.”]. Buyer is formerly known as “SGI Genetics, Inc.” and is a wholly owned subsidiary of Benson Hill Biosystems. See Wainscott Aff. ¶ 3. 5 Answer ¶ 9. 6 I use this term to refer to both the closing of the Transaction and the date on which it occurred, February 7, 2019. 7 Compl. Ex. A [hereinafter “APA”]. 8 Id. Recital A, §§ 2.1, 2.2, 2.3; see also Answer ¶ 15; D.I. 18, Affidavit of John Schillinger ¶ 2 [hereinafter “Schillinger Aff.”].

3 pursuant to which Seller agreed to indemnify Buyer for breaches of certain

provisions of the APA, also out of escrowed funds.

The parties also executed an escrow agreement dated February 7, 2019

(the “Escrow Agreement”).9 Buyer deposited $950,000 into an escrow account

(the “Escrow Funds”).10 The Escrow Funds are divided into two separate accounts:

“(a) $250,000 (such amount, together with any interest, future deposits, and other

income thereon, the “Adjustment Escrow Funds”), and (b) $700,000 (such amount,

together with any interest, future deposits, and other income thereon, the “Indemnity

Escrow Funds”).”11 The Adjustment Escrow Funds are intended to secure the

parties’ post-Closing price adjustment obligations under Section 2.5 of the APA, and

the Indemnity Escrow Funds are intended to secure the parties’ indemnification

obligations under Sections 7.1, 7.2, 7.3, and 7.5 of the APA. 12 Accordingly, the

Adjustment Escrow Funds and Indemnity Escrow Funds are held in separate

accounts and have distinct release and timing mandates under the APA and Escrow

Agreement.13

9 Compl. Ex. B [hereinafter “Escrow Agreement”]; Answer ¶ 17. 10 Answer ¶ 19. 11 Escrow Agreement § 3; see also APA § 2.8(a); Answer ¶ 20. 12 See Answer ¶ 16. 13 See APA § 2.8(a)–(c).

4 1. Post-Closing Price Adjustment

Section 2.5 of the APA sets forth a purchase price adjustment process.14 That

section obliges the Owners’ Representative to prepare and deliver to Buyer a pre-

Closing “Estimated Closing Statement” setting forth a reasonable good faith

estimate of Seller’s accounts payable.15 After Closing, Buyer bears the burden of

establishing a post-Closing adjustment to the purchase price if the Seller’s actual

accounts payable assumed and paid by Buyer exceeded the pre-Closing estimate:16

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