NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _______________
No. 23-2631 _______________
COMPAGNIE DES GRANDS HÔTELS D’AFRIQUE S.A., Appellant
v.
STARWOOD CAPITAL GROUP GLOBAL I LLC; STARMAN HOTEL HOLDINGS LLC _______________
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (D.C. No. 1-18-cv-00654) District Judge: Hon. Stephanos Bibas* _______________
Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) on June 24, 2024
Before: KRAUSE, RESTREPO, and MATEY, Circuit Judges.
(Filed: September 20, 2024)
_______________
OPINION** _______________
* Judge, Third Circuit Court of Appeals, Sitting by Designation ** This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, under I.O.P. 5.7, is not binding precedent. KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
Appellant Compagnie des Grands Hôtels d’Afrique (“Compagnie”) owns the
Royal Mansour Hotel (the “Hotel”) in Casablanca, Morocco. In 1989, Compagnie
entered into a Management Agreement with Woodman Maroc S.à.r.l. (“Woodman”),
which was acquired in the mid-2000s by Appellees Starwood Capital Group Global I
LLC (“Starwood”) and Starman Hotel Holdings LLC (“Starman”).1 The hotel’s
condition declined for years, and in 2012, Woodman missed a rent payment to
Compagnie, violating the Management Agreement. Compagnie began an arbitration
proceeding against Woodman in London that ultimately led to an award against
Woodman of tens of millions of dollars in damages, none of which it paid. Compagnie
eventually filed the underlying suit here, alleging liability under the theories that (1)
Woodman acted as Appellees’ agent and (2) Woodman was merely an alter ego for
Appellee Starman, meriting piercing of the corporate veil, but the District Court
dismissed the first claim and granted summary judgment against Compagnie on the
second.
We will reverse and remand. As to agency liability, the District Court did not
apply the correct rule of Delaware law. As to alter-ego liability, while we agree with the
District Court that two of Compagnie’s alter-ego arguments lack merit, its third,
concerning fund siphoning, presents a genuine dispute of material fact. We address those
claims in turn.
1 Woodman only took that name after its acquisition by Appellees. Previously, it was known as Trusthouse Forte Morocco S.à.r.l. and, later, Meridien Maroc S.à.r.l. 2 DISCUSSION2
I. Compagnie’s Agency Claim
First, Compagnie argues that in breaching the Management Agreement, Woodman
acted as Appellees’ agent, and that they can therefore be held liable for Woodman’s
breach.
Generally, the only parties liable for breach of a contract are the parties who
signed it. Wallace ex rel. Cencom Cable Income Partners II, Inc. v. Wood, 752 A.2d
1175, 1180 (Del. Ch. 1999). But “[w]hen one corporation acts as the agent of a disclosed
principal corporation, the latter corporation may be liable on contracts made by the
agent.” Phoenix Canada Oil Co. v. Texaco, Inc., 842 F.2d 1466, 1477 (3d Cir. 1988)
(citing Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 144, 147, 149 (Am. L. Inst. 1958)). Unlike
alter-ego theories of corporate liability, agency “does not overlook the distinctions
between the entities involved, but instead creates a narrow path to liability focused on the
principal’s authority and control over the agent’s wrongdoing.” Otto Candies, LLC v.
KPMG, LLP, No. 2018-0435, 2020 WL 4917596, at *9 (Del. Ch. Aug. 21, 2020).
Here, the District Court dismissed Compagnie’s agency claims on the grounds that
agency liability “applies only if the parent existed at the time the subsidiary signed the
2 The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331–32 and 9 U.S.C. § 203. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss de novo, accepting as true all factual allegations in the complaint and viewing those facts in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. Klotz v. Celentano Stadtmauer & Walentowicz LLP, 991 F.3d 458, 462 (3d Cir. 2021). We exercise plenary review over grants of summary judgment and view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. Kelly v. Borough of Carlisle, 622 F.3d 248, 253 (3d Cir. 2010). 3 contract: A parent company can be held liable only for ‘conduct shown to be instigated
by’ it.” Compagnie des Grands Hôtels d’Afrique S.A. v. Starman Hotel Holdings LLC,
No. 1:18-cv-00654, 2021 WL 4893366, at *2 (D. Del. Oct. 20, 2021) (quoting C.R. Bard
Inc. v. Guidant Corp., 997 F. Supp. 556, 560 (D. Del. 1998)). Applying this purported
rule, the District Court reasoned that because Appellees did not exist at the time of the
Management Agreement’s execution, they could not be held liable for their subsidiary’s
We disagree with that statement of Delaware law. A corporate parent need not
have been extant at the time a contract was formed to be liable for its subsidiary’s breach
of that contract under an agency theory. Instead, Delaware law requires a plaintiff
alleging agency liability to “demonstrate a relationship between the corporations and the
cause of action.” Phoenix Canada Oil, 842 F.3d at 1477. Specifically, the plaintiff must
“plead [the parent’s] control over that specific wrongful act.” Otto Candies, 2020 WL
4917596, at *12; see also Phoenix Canada Oil, 842 F.2d at 1477 (“[O]ne
corporation . . . may assume the role of the second corporation’s agent in the course of
one or more specific transactions.”). When the cause of action is a breach of contract, the
relevant inquiry is not whether the corporate parent existed when the contract was
formed, but whether it existed when the contract was breached.
In crafting its rule, the District Court relied on a Delaware case that disregards this
simple principle. In Mabon, Nugent & Co. v. Texas American Energy Corp., 1988 WL
5492 (Del. Ch. Jan. 27, 1988), a subsidiary defaulted on debentures after it had been
acquired by the corporate parent, but the Court of Chancery disregarded that fact and held
4 that the plaintiff’s agency theory of liability against the parent was “deficient” because
the subsidiary was not the parent’s agent “when the debentures were issued.” Id. at *4.
Notably, the Mabon, Nugent court did not explain its indifference to the parent’s
ownership of the subsidiary at the time of default, and it misstated a core principle of
agency law, asserting that “[t]o establish liability under an agency theory, plaintiffs must
show that the parent dominates and controls the subsidiary.” Id. Not so. Under an
agency theory, “total domination or general alter ego criteria need not be proven.”
Phoenix Canada Oil, 842 F.2d at 1477.
At least two cases decided since Mabon, Nugent have suggested that an acquiring
parent can be liable for its subsidiary’s wrongful conduct if it occurred post-acquisition.
See In re Express Scripts, Inc., Pharmacy Benefits Mgmt. Litig., No. 1672, 2006 WL
2632328, at *7 (E.D. Mo. Sept. 13, 2006) (holding that “if [subsidiary] continued
engaging in fraudulent actions after the acquisition, agency theories could impose
liability on [parent] for those later harms.”); cf. Mobil Oil Corp. v. Linear Films, Inc., 718
F. Supp. 260, 272 (D. Del. 1989) (holding that parent could not be liable as a principal
“direct[ing] the specific actions of the alleged agent” because it did not acquire subsidiary
until five years after subsidiary began breaching patent).3 See also Ronald A. Katz Tech.
3 Curiously, the district court in Mobil Oil wrote that in reaching its conclusion, it applied “[i]dentical logic” to that used by the Court of Chancery in Mabon, Nugent, 718 F. Supp. at 272, but it did not, instead adopting an approach more consistent with Delaware agency law. In Mobil Oil, the patent-breaching conduct occurred before acquisition— hence, the District Court’s rejection of Mobil’s argument that the Defendant “directed the alleged infringement by the [subsidiary].” Id. By contrast, in Mabon, Nugent the default on the debentures occurred after acquisition, leaving open the possibility that the parent
5 Licensing v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc., No. 01-5627, 2002 WL 31356302, at *3 (E.D. Pa.
Oct. 16, 2002) (citing Mobil Oil Corp., 718 F. Supp. at 272) (holding that parent “may be
liable . . . if it is directing the specific actions of the alleged agent.”). These cases
underscore that in considering a parent’s agency liability for a breach, courts look not at
whether the parent existed when the contract was formed, but instead at “the arrangement
between the corporations, the authority given in the arrangement, and the relevance of
that arrangement to the Plaintiffs’ claim.” Eisenmann Corp. v. Gen. Motors Corp., No.
99C-07-260, 2000 WL 140781, at *12 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan. 28, 2000); see also Phoenix
Canada Oil, 842 F.2d at 1477 (holding that agency liability requires that “an arrangement
exist between the two corporations so that one acts on behalf of the other and within
usual agency principles” and that “the arrangement must be relevant to the plaintiff’s
claim of wrongdoing”).
In addition to being contrary to Delaware law, the District Court’s rule, if adopted,
would have a perverse practical consequence: It would grant parent companies blanket
immunity from agency liability for actions their subsidiaries take pursuant to contracts
formed before the parents existed. Such immunity is ill-suited to a modern capitalist
had directed the conduct, as required under agency principles. Even stranger, the Mobil Oil court stated in a footnote that it, like the Mabon, Nugent court, “[found] most pertinent the fact that the [parent] corporation did not even exist at the time the alleged infringement began,” even though the parent in Mabon, Nugent did, in fact, exist when the wrongful conduct occurred. Id. at 272 n.16. Nonetheless, the Mobil Oil court was ultimately correct in focusing on whether the parent was able to direct the breach. See id. at 271. 6 economy where companies may be acquired by multiple parents across their lifetimes,
including parents formed only recently.
For these reasons, we will reverse the District Court’s dismissal of Appellant’s
agency claims. On remand, the District Court should apply the correct standard of
parental-agency liability and determine whether Appellant has stated a plausible claim.
See Otto Candies, 2020 WL 4917596, at *9–*12; Phoenix Canada Oil, 842 F.2d at 1477–
78.
II. Compagnie’s Alter Ego Claim
Under Delaware law, veil piercing is an uncommon remedy reserved for “the
exceptional case,” Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs. N.V., 62 A.3d 26, 49 (Del. Ch.
2012) where a corporation is shown to be “a sham” that “exist[s] for no other purpose
than as a vehicle for fraud,” Wallace, 752 A.2d at 1184. In substance, two companies
meet this test when (1) they operate as a single economic entity, Manichaean Capital,
LLC v. Exela Techs., Inc., 251 A.3d 694, 707 (Del. Ch. 2021) and (2) this deceptive
“corporate structure cause[d] fraud or similar injustice,” Wallace, 752 A.2d at 1184.
Delaware courts weigh “a number of factors in determining whether to disregard the
corporate form and pierce the corporate veil,” including whether the sham company was
undercapitalized; whether it was solvent; whether corporate formalities were observed in
7 its maintenance; whether the parent company siphoned its funds; and whether it
functioned as “a façade” for the parent. Manichaean Capital, 251 A.3d at 706. 4
Here, although the District Court held that there was a genuine dispute of fact as to
whether Starman and Woodman operated as a single economic entity, it granted summary
judgment for Starman because it was not persuaded there was fraud or injustice. On
appeal, Compagnie raises three arguments for why injustice was, in fact, present. We
consider them in turn.
A. Starman’s “Placate and Delay” Strategy
First, Compagnie argues that Starman caused fraud and injustice through its use of
what Compagnie calls a “placate and delay” strategy. Opening Br. 45–46. According to
Compagnie, Starman assured Compagnie that it was committed to Woodman’s financial
4 Our dissenting colleague reads Manichaean Capital’s reference to “some combination of these factors, in addition to an overall element of injustice or unfairness,” 251 A.3d at 706, to mean that the requisite element of fraud or fraud-like injustice is a standalone factor that must be established independent of the considerations identified by Delaware courts. But we do not read Manichaean Capital or other Delaware caselaw to erect such a firewall; rather, they teach that where the facts support it, the “fraud or similar injustice” may be inferred from the presence of these enumerated factors. See, e.g., Pauley Petroleum, Inc. v. Continental Oil Co., 239 A.2d 629, 633 (Del. 1968) (describing veil piercing as appropriate “only in the interest of justice, when such matters as fraud, contravention of law or contract, public wrong, or where equitable consideration among members of the corporation required it, are involved”); Manichaean Capital, 251 A.3d at 709 (holding that “[a]cts intended to leave a debtor judgment proof are sufficient to show fraud and injustice” and finding that plaintiffs had sufficiently pleaded that “fraud and injustice has resulted and will result from the diversion of funds”); see also United States v. Pisani, 646 F.2d 83, 88 (3d Cir. 1981) (holding that the presence of some of the factors “can be sufficient to show . . . unfairness”). Indeed, adopting the dissent’s view would create a quandary of proof, requiring plaintiffs to prove fraud or injustice without reference to the conduct and circumstances constituting the fraud.
8 health and to honoring its obligations under the Management Agreement. Compagnie
says that in fact, these representations were “little more than an attempt to prevent
Compagnie from pursuing legal remedies against Woodman.” Opening Br. 47.
We agree with the District Court that this strategy does not meet the high bar of
fraud or injustice. Compagnie does not show how Starman’s purported strategy in fact
prevented it from filing suit for breach of contract or for repossession of the hotel.
Though it may be true, as Compagnie argues, that it “does not bear the burden of proving
the unavailability of every other possible legal remedy,” Opening Br. 52, it does bear the
burden of proving fraud or injustice, and the only fraud or injustice it alleges because of
the placate and delay strategy is its decision to forego litigation. But that decision was
Compagnie’s alone; nothing about Starman’s conduct in fact disarmed its ability to sue.
This argument must fail.
B. Starman’s Sale of Woodman
Second, Compagnie points out that actions designed to make a corporation
judgment-proof can be “sufficient to show fraud and injustice,” Manichaean Capital, 251
A.3d at 708-09 (citation omitted), and asserts that Starman’s sale of Woodman (and its
direct corporate parent) in 2014 was a sham designed to shield both Starman and
Woodman’s managers from liability. The District Court rejected this argument on the
ground that Compagnie failed to show how the sale rendered Starman and Woodman’s
managers immune from liability.
We agree. Starman was not liable for Woodman’s breach before the sale simply
by virtue of being Woodman’s parent, see Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U.S. 349, 362 (1944)
9 (“Limited liability is the rule not the exception . . . .”), and Compagnie does not explain
how the sale changed this basic fact. Instead, it baldly asserts that the sale made Starman
judgment-proof and is evidence of Starman’s managers’ “knowledge of their improper
conduct.” Reply Br. 26. To the District Court’s observation that Compagnie could have
pursued Woodman’s managers in Moroccan insolvency proceedings both before and after
the sale, Compagnie replies only that it does not bear the burden of proving the
unavailability of every possible legal remedy.
This may be true, but Compagnie must show fraud and injustice, not merely
missed opportunities. Because nothing in its brief explains how the sale rendered
Starman or Woodman’s managers judgment-proof, this argument, too, must fail.
C. Starman’s Alleged Fund Siphoning
Finally, Compagnie argues that the corporate veil should be pierced because even
after Woodman became insolvent, it continued to pay its debts to Starwood Hotels, a
close affiliate of Starwood Capital, so that another of Starman’s subsidiaries, Lehwood
Holdings, would not incur contractual liabilities to Starwood Hotels. It claims, in other
words, that Starman made Woodman prioritize payments to Starwood Hotels over
payments to Compagnie, constituting the type of “fund siphoning” that may warrant veil
piercing. See Manichaean Cap., 251 A.3d at 706 (considering “whether the dominant
shareholder siphoned company funds” in determining whether to pierce the corporate
veil).
Siphoning is “the improper taking of funds that the owner was not legally entitled
to receive.” In re Autobacs Strauss, Inc., 473 B.R. 525, 557 (D. Del. 2012) (quotation
10 marks and citation omitted). The record shows that Starman had stopped floating
Woodman by early 2013, yet Woodman made at least one payment to Starwood Hotels
long after its parental funding had dried up, sparing a Starman subsidiary from
contractual penalties. Crucially, there is evidence that Woodman made these payments in
spite of an interim order from the arbitrators forbidding Woodman from making
payments to any third parties pending their final decision. These facts warrant further
inquiry into whether Starman in fact directed these payments, and if so, for what purpose.
If they do not definitively establish that Woodman was a sham, they at least create a
genuine dispute that it was one, especially given the District Court’s findings of genuine
disputes over whether Woodman was insolvent, undercapitalized, and a mere façade for
Starman.5
The District Court rejected Compagnie’s siphoning argument, observing that
Starwood Hotels was able to withdraw funds directly from Woodman’s bank account and
that, for several years, Starman did not take money out of Woodman, but instead funded
it. Thus, the Court determined, there could be no genuine dispute that Woodman was
merely making a choice to pay “a smaller bill to keep the hotel running rather than a
larger bill to make rent,” and no reasonable jury could conclude there was siphoning
afoot. Compagnie des Grands Hôtels d’Afrique, No. 1:19-cv-00654, 2023 WL 5095274,
at *7 (D. Del. Aug. 8, 2023). We disagree. That Starman funded Woodman for a time is
5 In describing an entity subject to veil piercing as a “sham,” Delaware courst have not required it to be a sham from the outset. See Wallace ex rel. Cencom Cable Income Partners II, Inc. v. Wood, 752 A.2d 1175, 1180 (Del. Ch. 1999) (“Effectively, the corporation must be a sham and exist for no other purpose than as a vehicle for fraud.”). 11 not enough, on its own, to warrant summary judgment in Starman’s favor. What matters
is “not what [Starman] put in the company, but when they took it out,” id., and here,
Woodman made at least one payment after it was insolvent.
To be clear, we are not holding that Starman in fact siphoned funds, nor are we
definitively concluding that, if there was siphoning, it gave rise to the kind of injustice
that warrants veil-piercing, either alone or as part of a larger pattern of conduct.
Compagnie continues to face the arduous task of persuading the District Court that it has
presented “the exceptional case” that requires setting aside the corporate form. Vichi, 62
A.3d at 49. With this decision, we are merely holding that the facts, viewed in the light
most favorable to Compagnie, raise a genuine issue of material fact upon which a jury
could conceivably find in Compagnie’s favor. See Boyle v. Cnty of Allegheny Pa., 139
F.3d 386, 393 (3d Cir. 1998).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the District Court’s dismissal of
Compagnie’s agency claims and its grant of summary judgment for Starman on
Compagnie’s alter ego claim.
12 MATEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part.
While I agree that Compagnie’s agency claim warrants a second look, I would
affirm the District Court’s decision on the veil-piercing claim.
Delaware law disregards the corporate form only in “exceptional case[s].”
Manichaean Cap., LLC v. Exela Techs., Inc., 251 A.3d 694, 706 (Del. Ch. 2021)
(alteration in original) (quoting Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs. N.V., 62 A.3d 26, 49
(Del. Ch. 2012)). Under that stringent standard, Compagnie must show, not as a “factor,”
Maj. Op. at 8 n.4, but as the second step in a two-step test, that Woodman is “a sham and
exist[s] for no other purpose than as a vehicle for fraud,” Wallace ex rel. Cencom Cable
Income Partners II, Inc. v. Wood, 752 A.2d 1175, 1184 (Del. Ch. 1999). That is quite a
high bar. See, e.g., Cleveland-Cliffs Burns Harbor LLC v. Boomerang Tube, LLC, No.
2022-0378, 2023 WL 5688392, at *6 (Del. Ch. Sept. 5, 2023) (noting the fraud or
injustice must “come from an inequitable use of the corporate form itself as a sham”)
(citation omitted); Crosse v. BCBSD, Inc., 836 A.2d 492, 497 (Del. 2003) (“[T]he
plaintiff must plead facts supporting an inference that the corporation . . . has created a
sham entity designed to defraud investors and creditors.”).
Compagnie’s claims fall short because there is no suggestion that Woodman
existed “solely as a vehicle for fraud.” Wenske v. Blue Bell Creameries, Inc., No. 2017-
0699, 2018 WL 3337531, at *15 (Del. Ch. July 6, 2018). To be sure, siphoning is one of
the factors Delaware courts consider, in the first step of the inquiry, to determine whether
the companies are a single economic entity. Manichaean Cap., 251 A.3d at 706–07. But a
decision to pierce the corporate veil is “based on some combination of these factors, in addition to an overall element of injustice or unfairness.” Id. at 707 (emphasis added)
(quotations and citation omitted). Establishing even that all five of the single economic
entity factors are present will not do, as Delaware law requires that these factors stand
alongside fraud or injustice. That neither erects a “firewall” between the facts, Maj. Op.
at 8 n.4, nor creates a freeway where courts can collapse the analysis into one inquiry.
Instead, the standard remains—evidence showing a subsidiary existed “for no other
purpose” than for fraud. Wallace, 752 A.2d at 1184 (emphasis added).
As I conclude the District Court properly resolved that question, I respectfully
dissent in part.