Continental Insurance v. Rutledge & Co.

750 A.2d 1219, 2000 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2000 WL 62951
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 10, 2000
DocketC.A. 15539
StatusPublished
Cited by146 cases

This text of 750 A.2d 1219 (Continental Insurance v. Rutledge & Co.) 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
Continental Insurance v. Rutledge & Co., 750 A.2d 1219, 2000 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2000 WL 62951 (Del. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

This case involves a dispute between a limited partner and the general partner of a Delaware limited partnership. The parties ask the Court to resolve the following two issues. One, does the limited partnership agreement permit limited partners to withdraw at will, or did the parties orally amend the agreement to suspend temporarily the limited partners’ withdrawal rights? Two, does the limited partnership agreement permit the general partner to receive fees directly from portfolio companies? These issues are before the Court on cross-motions for summary judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Individual defendant John Rutledge is an experienced economist who has advised hundreds of companies regarding their financial affairs. He served as an economic advisor to both Presidents Ford and Rea *1224 gan. One of Rutledge’s advisee companies was plaintiff Continental Insurance Company (“Continental”). Not long after he began his relationship with Continental in 1981, Charles Parker, the Chief Investment Officer of Continental Asset Management (“CAM”), and Gerald Bollman, an executive Vice President of CAM, and Rutledge began considering joining forces to form an investment fund. Their collaboration resulted in the formation of John Rutledge Partners (“JRP”), a limited partnership designed to raise and invest capital. The general partner of JRP was Rutledge & Company, Inc. (“RCI”, of which John Rutledge is apparently the sole shareholder). Continental was a limited partner in JRP.

Section 23 of the JRP limited partnership agreement (the “Agreement”) enabled a limited partner to withdraw from the partnership at will as long as the limited partner provided timely notice. If a limited partner withdrew, the general partner was to pay such limited partner according to its capital account. At issue here is RCI’s claim that the parties orally amended the Agreement to reflect a promise by limited partner Continental to temporarily forgo its withdrawal rights.

Section 18 of the Agreement permitted RCI to engage in business outside the limited partnership. 1 Rutledge’s outside business interests, particularly as they related to companies in which JRP invested, are the second subject of this litigation.

Initially, JRP planned to invest in public equity but switched to a private equity investment strategy mid-stream. At the same time that RCI, in its role as general partner of JRP, was negotiating private equity investments with potential portfolio companies, it was also collecting fees from the same companies. It collected these fees solely in its capacity as RCI and not on behalf of the JRP limited partnership.

Continental and RCI initially agreed that JRP would invest in public equity because Rutledge maintained advisory relationships primarily with public companies. Continental was to infuse the portfolio companies with capital, and Rutledge would provide the companies with a financial strategy in order to improve its performance. The improved performance would increase the value of the limited partnership’s investment in that company.

As indicia of the partners’ intentions, the parties attached appendices to the Agreement discussing JRP’s investment strategy. In pertinent part, the operations section of Schedule B to the Agreement provides:

We anticipate that the Partnership will ... invest in situations only where there is a clear exit for the Partnership. This implies restricting the Partnership’s investment activities to either a) marketable securities, or b) private securities which contain provisions allowing the Partnership to put the investment back to the company with predetermined time and valuation parameters.

Although Schedule B reflects what Continental and RCI “anticipate” and what the Agreement “implies,” the Agreement actually entitles the general partner to adopt exactly the opposite strategy, investing in restricted private equity. Specifically, the Agreement entitles the general partner to invest in securities as the 1933 Securities Act defines the term in § 2(1), which includes restricted securities. Indeed, RCI did not adopt the strategy outlined in Schedule B to the Agreement, opting for a private equity strategy instead.

This shift in strategy lies at the center of this dispute. RCI claims that the par *1225 ties, during their discussions regarding the strategy shift, orally amended Section 23 so that Continental would temporarily forgo its withdrawal rights until the illiquid investments that RCI anticipated making could be harvested for maximum profit. RCI alleges that in reliance on discussions it had with Bollman and Parker regarding Continental’s withdrawal rights, it caused JRP to make several private, as opposed to public, equity investments.

After three illiquid, private equity investments, Continental and RCI, in September 1993, amended the limited partnership Agreement. JRP’s auditor, Deloitte & Touche, informed RCI that it had earned carried interest (i.e., percentage of partnership profits) due to quarterly increases in the value of JRP’s passive investments in public equity. 2 RCI informed Deloitte & Touche that it and Continental had agreed to calculate carried interest on an annual rather than quarterly basis. Deloitte & Touche would not recognize the change absent an amendment to the Agreement. As a result, RCI and Continental amended the Agreement in September 1993. While the parties amended the accounting section of the Agreement, RCI and Continental did not amend the Agreement to reflect the alleged oral modification of the withdrawal provision.

Following this amendment to the Agreement, RCI continued to invest in private equity. It caused JRP to make six additional investments between 1993 and 1995. In November 1994, RCI caused JRP to invest $9.1 million in United Refrigerated Services (“URS”). Simultaneously, URS paid RCI $270,000 as a transaction fee, or a closing fee, which Rutledge earned for negotiating the transaction. URS paid RCI the $270,000 directly from the $9.1 million investment that JRP had just made in URS. Additionally, URS agreed during negotiations to pay RCI an annual consulting fee of $100,000. The Investment Memorandum RCI sent to Continental does not disclose the fees URS paid RCI.

RCI also caused JRP to purchase shares of Ellis Communications, Inc. (“ECI”). ECI paid RCI $400,000. (Rutledge refers to this payment as an investment banking fee.) RCI did not disclose this payment in the Investment Memorandum given to Continental.

In March 1995, JRP invested $5 million in a company called Fluidrive. In return for this investment, RCI received sixty-one of the company’s eighty-five voting shares, while JRP received just less than 47 percent of the non-voting shares. As part of the negotiation, Fluidrive agreed to pay RCI $150,000 per year as an advisory fee for 10 years. RCI did not disclose this fee to Continental in the Investment Memorandum.

Continental’s financial condition began to deteriorate in 1994. Continental began selling assets and seeking an equity infusion.

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Bluebook (online)
750 A.2d 1219, 2000 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, 2000 WL 62951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-insurance-v-rutledge-co-delch-2000.