Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc. v. Partner One Capital, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 2024
Docket8:23-cv-02196
StatusUnknown

This text of Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc. v. Partner One Capital, Inc. (Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc. v. Partner One Capital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc. v. Partner One Capital, Inc., (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

* FIDELIS CYBERSECURITY, INC., et al., * Plaintiffs, * v. * Civil No. 23-2196-BAH PARTNER ONE CAPITAL, INC., et al., * Defendants. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiffs Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc., (“Fidelis”) and Fidelis AcquisitionCo, LLC (“AcquisitionCo” and, collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed this breach of contract suit against Defendants Partner One Capital, Inc. (“Partner One”) and Daniel G. Charron, (“Defendants”). ECF 23. Plaintiffs now move for leave to amend their first amended complaint. ECF 47. The Court has reviewed Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend, ECF 47, Defendants’ opposition, ECF 50, and Plaintiffs’ reply in support, ECF 51. For the reasons that follow, Plaintiff’s motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. I. BACKGROUND In 2022 and 2023, Plaintiffs and Defendant Partner One engaged in substantial negotiations relating to Partner One’s potential purchase of Fidelis, allegedly culminating in a binding agreement for a fifty-million-dollar sale (plus 25% equity). ECF 23, at 2. That sale never happened; instead, Fidelis was sold in a foreclosure sale for less than eighteen million dollars to a “Partner[ ]One-affiliated entity.” ECF 47-2, at 12. This failed transaction and ultimate boon for Partner One are at the heart of this case. ECF 23, at 2–10. Plaintiffs have amended their complaint once as a matter of course, ECF 23, and now seek leave to file a second amended complaint, ECF 47. Defendants oppose this motion. ECF 50. A. Factual Background Plaintiff AcquisitionCo was the sole shareholder of Fidelis at all times relevant to this case.

ECF 51, at 6. Fidelis is a cybersecurity company that, despite having a robust customer base, was not yet profitable in 2022. ECF 23, at 3. As a result, Plaintiffs began seeking an acquirer for Fidelis in September 2022. Id. Plaintiffs reached out to several potential acquirers and had all interested buyers sign a non-disclosure agreement (“NDA”) before Fidelis granted them access to confidential information to begin conducting due diligence relating to the potential sale. Id. at 3– 4. The NDA required that the interested buyers not use any of Fidelis’ confidential information for any purpose other than preparing for and negotiating a potential sale; delete or otherwise destroy any and all confidential information they had obtained throughout the due diligence process after discussions terminated between the potential buyers and Fidelis; and refrain from “solicit[ing] for employment or employ[ing] any employee” of Fidelis for two years. Id. at 14.

Sixty-two potential acquirers signed the NDA and began conducting due diligence on Fidelis as a precursor to a potential offer, including Partner One. Id. at 4. Much of the communication Partner One made to Plaintiffs came through Partner One’s Founder and CEO, Defendant Daniel Charron. Id. at 2. What followed next was a mire of confusion as Plaintiffs and Defendants attempted to negotiate a deal over the next several months. In December 2022, Partner One submitted an initial non-binding “indication of interest” (“IOI”) to Plaintiffs to purchase Fidelis and all its assets for $120 million. ECF 23, at 4. In March 2023, after conducting additional due diligence, Partner One reduced its offer to $73.5 million, but added a promise to close quickly on the deal, estimating that it could close the deal within thirty to forty-five days. Id. Shortly thereafter, Partner One raised its offer to $85 million. Id. Only weeks later, though, Partner One lowered its offering price again, this time to $50 million dollars in April 2023. Id. Plaintiffs were dissatisfied with Partner One’s offer of $50 million and did not accept Partner One’s April 2023 IOI. Id.

In May 2023, Plaintiffs received an IOI from a competing potential buyer “for an up-front purchase price of $55 million cash, plus tens of millions in potential earnout payments (expected to be $90 million), leading to a total potential consideration of up to $145 million.” ECF 23, at 5. Plaintiffs entered into negotiations with this new potential buyer. Id. When the new buyer adjusted their offer by reducing the up-front cash payment, however, Plaintiffs were left with “an option, but not an obligation, to terminate negotiations” with the new buyer. Id. As Plaintiffs were considering the adjusted terms from the new potential buyer, Partner One adjusted its own offer to $50 million for just 75% of Fidelis instead of the original 100% of Fidelis. ECF 23, at 5. Plaintiffs agreed to accept Partner One’s offer and terminate discussions with other potential buyers on the condition that Partner One make its offer binding and commit

to closing the sale by July 14, 2023. Id. Plaintiffs explained to Partner One that this timeline was necessary due to Fidelis’ funding needs. Id. Partner One agreed to these terms and signed a binding agreement on June 6, 2023, to buy “all of [Fidelis’] assets and 80.1% of its stock . . . for $50 million cash, plus certain additional rights and other benefits.” Id. The agreement signed by Plaintiffs and Partner One specified that its purpose was to “set out the main binding terms and conditions” of the sale and stated that “the price and terms provided in [the agreement] shall be binding.”1 ECF 1-1 at 2–3. It stated that the closing of the deal would

1 The agreement also included a termination provision under which Partner One could terminate the agreement “without any recourse being available” to Plaintiffs if Partner One became aware of any material fact or facts which, independently or in conjunction, would be “reasonably expected “occur as soon as possible . . . but no later than July 14, 2023.” Id. at 3. In signing the agreement, “[e]ach party acknowledge[d] to the other that a failure to move forward with the execution of the [agreement would] cause such party significant and material harm and financial distress.” Id. The agreement was signed by an agent of Plaintiffs and by Mr. Charron on behalf of Partner One. Id.

at 6–7. After signing the agreement with Partner One on June 6, 2023, Fidelis asked its lender for an abatement on a principal payment due on June 15, 2023, due to Fidelis’ “urgent funding needs.” ECF 23, at 6. Fidelis planned to use the proceeds from the sale to Partner One to then repay its debt to its lender in full before its next payment came due on July 15, 2023. Id. Because of the abatement for the June payment, the July payment owed to the creditor would be double the normal amount, a sum Fidelis knew it would not be able to pay without the proceeds from the sale to Partner One. Id. at 23. Plaintiffs communicated as much to Mr. Charron. Id. According to Plaintiffs, Defendants’ next actions were taken with the explicit goal of causing Fidelis to default on its loan to its lender, resulting in a foreclosure sale where one of

Partner One’s affiliates could then purchase Fidelis for a fraction of its true value. Id. at 7. Plaintiffs claim that Mr. Charron first requested that Plaintiffs voluntarily terminate the binding agreement in favor of a non-binding IOI. Id. When Plaintiffs would not agree to that, Partner One’s counsel, allegedly at Mr. Charron’s direction, sent a letter to Plaintiffs stating, without providing any explanation, that Partner One was terminating the agreement. Id. Plaintiffs “objected strenuously” to Partner One’s attempt to terminate the agreement. ECF 23, at 8. While they sought to convince Partner One to honor the binding agreement, Plaintiffs

to have a material adverse effect” on Fidelis’ “business, properties, assets, or liabilities.” ECF 1- 1, at 4–5. reached back out to other potential buyers, including the buyer who had made an offer in May 2023. Id. But less than a day after Plaintiffs sent their objection to Partner One’s purported termination letter, Mr.

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Fidelis Cybersecurity, Inc. v. Partner One Capital, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelis-cybersecurity-inc-v-partner-one-capital-inc-mdd-2024.