Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC v. Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 26, 2023
DocketCA No. 2022-1113-SG
StatusPublished

This text of Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC v. Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC (Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC v. Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC) 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
Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC v. Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC; Evolve ) Holdco, Inc.; and Evolve Intermediate ) Holding LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs and Counterclaim Defendants ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2022-1113-SG ) Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC; ) M&A Healthcare LLC; Ducat HC LLC; ) and Daryl Hagler, ) ) Defendants and Counterclaim Plaintiffs. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: June 16, 2023 Date Decided: July 26, 2023

Kenneth J. Nachbar and Alexandra M. Cumings of MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Andrew Z. Schwartz, Euripides Dalmanieras, and Christian A. Garcia of FOLEY HOAG LLP, Boston, Massachusetts, Attorneys for Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC, Evolve Holdco, Inc., and Evolve Intermediate Holding LLC.

Rudolf Koch, Travis S. Hunter, and Sara M. Metzler of RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Motty Shulman of CENTRICITY LAW PLLC, New York, New York; Robin A. Henry of FRIED, FRANK, HARRIS, SHRIVER & JACOBSON LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC, M&A Healthcare LLC, Ducat HC LLC, and Daryl Hagler.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor Judges have—should have—as their goal, doing justice. Judges are inclined,

or perhaps I should say “conditioned” in the Skinnerian sense, to achieve that goal

from consideration of the record, whether on the pleadings (at the motion to dismiss

stage) or up through a trial on the merits. It is that conditioning to evidentiary-based

decision making that makes the decision explained below difficult, for this judge at

least.

That decision regards an action to enforce an arbitration award. The

arbitration proceeding and the resulting award are flawed, in the sense that one might

use that term in a review of their substance. Briefly, the arbitration chiefly addressed

the contractual rights arising from breach of representations and warranties in an

agreement to purchase an LLC. The complaint in arbitration also stated claims based

on fraud or negligent misrepresentation. The latter claims were only tangentially

referenced in the arbitral litigation, and not relied on, explicitly, at least, by the

arbitral panel (the “Panel”). This causes a problem for the reasons that follow.

First, in the interest of clarity, a note about nomenclature. The buyers in the

transaction at issue are the parties who were the claimants in the arbitration, and who

have filed this petition for confirmation of the arbitration award. The sellers (and

seller representative) were parties respondent in the arbitration, as well as in this

litigation. In the instant litigation, the parties have styled the buyers as “Plaintiffs”

and the sellers and seller representative as the “Defendants.” I employ that usage

1 here. For the sake of clarity, I also employ it in describing the same parties in

arbitration, so the party claimants in arbitration I refer to as the Plaintiffs there, and

the party respondents in arbitration I refer to as the Defendants. When quoting the

proceedings in arbitration, I have placed “Plaintiffs” and “Defendants” in brackets,

connoting replacement of the several terms used in that proceeding.

In the arbitration, both Plaintiffs and Defendants generally referred to all

Defendants subject to arbitration before the Panel as the “[Defendants].” These

included the entities liable for indemnification for simple breaches of representations

and warranties under the contract. It also included an individual, Mr. Daryl Hagler,

the “Seller Representative.” Hagler was not liable for simple breaches of reps and

warranties under the contract, but could be liable for damages arising from his fraud

or intentional acts or gross negligence. Hagler was a substantial actor with respect

to the underlying transaction, and was a named defendant in the complaint in

arbitration.

The arbitral award the (“Award”) did not differentiate among the Defendants.

Instead, based upon breaches of the reps and warranties, the Panel found all

Defendants jointly and severally liable in damages for the claims in arbitration. The

parties liable included Hagler. The Panel found breaches of representations and

warranties that could, presumably, result from facts also supporting liability for

Hagler’s fraud or gross negligence, but the Award was silent in this regard. I do

2 note that the Award provided that the facts before it “strongly support” intentional

misrepresentation, but did not base liability on such.

On cross-motions for summary judgement, the Defendants object to

confirmation of the award, and seek vacatur, only as it pertains to Mr. Hagler. As

the facts below illustrate, the Panel focused on the contractual claims, not on fraud

or on intentional or negligent misrepresentation. According to the Defendants, this

renders the award against Hagler legally incoherent, and thus the award of the Panel

should be vacated.

It is true that the Panel did not focus on the different theories that could lead

to liability on behalf of Hagler, as opposed to the entity defendants. The Panel made

clear that its decision rested on violation of the reps and warranties. Perhaps this

was oversight, perhaps it was error, perhaps it occurred because all Parties’ counsel

failed adequately to alert the Panel to the difference among the Defendants. The

latter oversight itself could have been strategic, or merely sloppy. If I sat as an

appeals court to the Panel, I would not hesitate to send it back to resolve these issues.

But I do not.

I must resist my temptation to address the Panel’s decision on the merits, and

instead consider what is in front of me. Confirmation of an arbitration award is a

kind of specific performance of a contract to arbitrate. The parties have agreed, for

reasons of their own, to submit certain disputes to an arbitration, and to accept the

3 results of the arbitration, absent fraud on the part of the arbitrator or certain other

very limited exceptions. The value of such a submission lies in reduced cost to

resolve disputes subject to arbitration; that value would be lost if the decision were

subject to substantive review. To protect this value, the applicable law here—the

Federal Arbitration Act—limits review of arbitrations under its aegis to the most

narrow of considerations. These are composed of four grounds for vacatur: where

the award is the product of fraud; where the arbitrator was not impartial or is

otherwise corrupt; where the arbitrator engaged in egregious procedural misconduct;

or where the arbitrator so exceeded her power or applied it in a way such that the

award was not effectively made upon the subject matter submitted. The Defendants

here advance only the latter proposition, arguing that the award against Hagler was

unsupported in facts or law. Such a proposition requires a high showing; that the

record is entirely bare of all support justifying the award.1 “[A]s long as the

arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying the contract and acting within the

scope of his authority, that a court is convinced that he committed serious error does

not suffice to overturn his decision.”2

1 See Carl Zeiss Vision, Inc. v. Refac Holdings, Inc., 2017 WL 3635568, at *4 (Del. Ch. Aug. 24, 2017). 2 SPX Corp. v. Garda USA, Inc., 94 A.3d 745, 751 (Del.

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Evolve Growth Initiatives, LLC v. Equilibrium Health Solutions LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evolve-growth-initiatives-llc-v-equilibrium-health-solutions-llc-delch-2023.