Fortis Advisors LLC v. Stillfront Midco AB

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 13, 2026
Docket162, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Fortis Advisors LLC v. Stillfront Midco AB (Fortis Advisors LLC v. Stillfront Midco AB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fortis Advisors LLC v. Stillfront Midco AB, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

FORTIS ADVISORS, LLC, § solely in its capacity as § Seller Representative, § § No. 162, 2025 Plaintiff Below, § Appellant, § § Court Below: Court of Chancery v. § of the State of Delaware § STILLFRONT MIDCO AB, § C.A. No. 2021-0870 § Defendant Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: October 22, 2025 Decided: February 13, 2026

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED.

Philip Trainer, Jr., Esquire, Samuel M. Gross, Esquire, ASHBY & GEDDES, Wilmington, Delaware; Lloyd Winawer, Esquire, Daniel J. Bergeson, Esquire, John D. Pernick, Esquire, Susan Bower, Esquire, BERGESON LLP, San Jose, California, for Plaintiff Below, Appellant Fortis Advisors, LLC.

John L. Reed, Esquire, Kelly L. Freund, Esquire, DLA PIPER LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Mallory Biblo, Esquire, DLA PIPER LLP, Dallas, Texas, for Defendant Below, Appellee Stillfront Midco AB. TRAYNOR, Justice:

We are called upon to review the Court of Chancery’s interpretation of an

alternative-dispute-resolution (“ADR”) provision in a merger agreement under

which the parties agreed to resolve disputes over the calculation of a post-closing

earnout payment. The buyer invoked the provision and moved to compel arbitration

after the seller representative sued it for breach of contract and breach of the implied

covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Among other things, the seller

representative alleged that the buyer had materially breached the merger agreement

by acting in bad faith to reduce the earnout amount and by failing to provide

information and access to personnel.

In response to the buyer’s motion to compel arbitration, the seller

representative argued that the ADR provision, which refers a dispute over an earnout

calculation to an accounting-firm arbitrator, was a narrow carve-out to the parties’

agreement to have a Delaware court adjudicate “any action or proceeding arising out

of or related to” the merger agreement.

The Court of Chancery disagreed with the seller representative. To the court’s

way of thinking, the seller representative’s bad-faith claim was at its core a dispute

concerning the buyer’s calculation of the earnout and thus fell within the ambit of

the ADR provision. And the alleged violation of the seller representative’s

information rights, according to the court, was an issue of procedural arbitrability,

2 which, under settled law is for the arbitrator—not the court—to decide.

Consequently, the court compelled arbitration. In due course, the arbitrator issued a

determination that the seller representative was not entitled to any recovery. The

Court of Chancery confirmed this determination and entered judgment in favor of

the buyer.

In this appeal, the seller representative challenges the Court of Chancery’s

decision to compel arbitration of its claims. Among other arguments, the seller

representative now contends that the ADR provision at issue called for an expert

determination and not an arbitration. Such a classification would, the seller

representative contends, support its position that the arbitrator’s remit was

exceedingly narrow and did not include consideration of its claims. It also

challenges the court’s confirmation of the arbitrator’s determination in keeping with

its allegation during the confirmation proceedings that the arbitrator was acting,

unbeknownst to the seller representative, under an undisclosed conflict of interest.

In this opinion we conclude that the seller representative’s bad-faith breach

claims fall within the compass of the ADR provision. In reaching this conclusion,

we hold the seller representative to its framing of the issues in the Court of Chancery

and, in particular, its acknowledgement that the parties had agreed to submit the

earnout determination to arbitration. And because we view the bad-faith breach

claims as contesting the accuracy of the buyer’s earnout determination—the subject

3 matter of the issue the parties agreed to arbitrate—we conclude that the Court of

Chancery did not err by compelling arbitration. We also hold that the seller

representative’s information-rights claim was for the arbitrator to decide. And

finally, we discern no error in the court’s refusal to vacate the arbitrator’s award

because of undisclosed relationships between his firm and the buyer’s counsel. We

therefore affirm the Court of Chancery’s judgment.

I

A

Kixeye is an online video game company that creates, develops, and publishes

strategy games for personal computers and mobile devices.1 In accordance with an

Agreement and Plan of Merger dated June 3, 2019 (the “merger agreement”),

Stillfront acquired Kixeye on June 24, 2019.2 Fortis is the Seller Representative

under the merger agreement.3

B

Under the merger agreement, Stillfront agreed to pay a base purchase price of

$90,000,000. 4 The merger agreement also provides for an earnout bonus if Kixeye’s

“Adjusted EBITDA” for the year ending December 31, 2019 exceeded

1 App. to Opening Br. at A24–25, A202. 2 Id. at A24–25, A37–38, A86. 3 Id. at A114–17. 4 Id. at A103, A202.

4 $15,000,000. 5 The maximum possible earnout amount was $30,000,000. 6 The

parties consented to “the exclusive jurisdiction of any court of the State of Delaware,

sitting in New Castle County, or the United States District Court for the District of

Delaware . . . in any action or proceeding arising out of or relating to” the merger

agreement.7 But they also included an ADR provision that provided an expedited

mechanism for the resolution of a dispute over the calculation of the earnout amount.

Because the scope of the provision—§ 2.14 of the merger agreement—is the

dispositive issue on appeal, we set it forth in some detail here.

Section 2.14 of the merger agreement (the “Earnout Calculation Provision”)

establishes a three-step procedure to calculate the earnout.8

First, § 2.14(a), titled “Earnout Determination,” provides for the surviving

corporation’s independent auditors to deliver a report with the surviving

corporation’s financial statement for the year ending on December 31, 2019:

Promptly, but in any event no later than 45 days after the date that the Surviving Corporation’s independent auditors (which auditors shall be the same as used by the Company prior to the Closing) deliver a report with respect to the Surviving Corporation’s financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2019, [Stillfront] shall prepare and deliver to [Fortis] a statement (the “Earnout Determination Statement”) setting forth [Stillfront]’s calculation of the Earnout Amount. [Stillfront] shall

5 Id. at A91, A103, A118. 6 Id. at A91. 7 Id. at A163. 8 Id. at A117–18.

5 make available to [Fortis] such financial statements prepared by the independent auditor as well as the work papers, schedules, memoranda, and other documents that [Stillfront] prepared or reviewed in determining the amounts set forth on the Earnout Determination Statement and concurrently shall provide [Fortis] access to the Company’s books and records to the extent reasonably necessary for [Fortis] to complete its review of [Stillfront]’s calculations contained in the Earnout Determination Statement.9

Next, § 2.14(b), titled “Disagreement,” outlines the procedures available to

Fortis if it wishes to dispute the Earnout Determination Statement provided by

Stillfront:

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Fortis Advisors LLC v. Stillfront Midco AB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortis-advisors-llc-v-stillfront-midco-ab-del-2026.