Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 30, 2016
Docket10321-VCG
StatusPublished

This text of Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C. (Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C.) 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
Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C., (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GRAMERCY EMERGING MARKETS ) FUND, BALKAN VENTURES LLC, ) and RILA VENTURES LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 10321-VCG ) ALLIED IRISH BANKS, P.L.C. and ) BULGARIAN-AMERICAN ) ENTERPRISE FUND, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: September 14, 2016 Date Decided: December 30, 2016

Stephen B. Brauerman, Vanessa R. Tiradentes, and Sara E. Bussiere, of BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Sean F. O’Shea, Michael E. Petrella, Amanda L. Devereux, and Brian B. Alexander, of BOIES, SCHILLER & FLEXNER, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiffs Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund, Balkan Ventures LLC, and Rila Ventures LLC.

Kevin R. Shannon and Christopher N. Kelly, of POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Walter C. Carlson and Elizabeth Y. Austin, of SIDLEY AUSTIN LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Defendant Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c.

Kenneth J. Nachbar, Ryan D. Stottmann of MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Brian D. Sieve, P.C. and Jessica L. Staiger, of KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Defendant Bulgarian-American Enterprise Fund.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor The factual background of this case is baroque. The Plaintiffs are an

investment fund—a corporate citizen of the Cayman Islands doing business out of

Greenwich, Connecticut—and its two wholly-owned subsidiaries. The Plaintiffs

owned 26% of a bank that is a corporate citizen of, and which does business in,

Bulgaria. Majority control of the Bulgarian bank was held by a non-profit entity

incorporated in Delaware. The non-profit was created by the Congress of the United

States in 1991, to facilitate investment and the development of market capitalism in

Bulgaria, then newly emerging from Soviet domination.

In 2008, the non-profit sold a 49.99% interest in the Bulgarian bank to a bank

holding company, a corporate citizen of Ireland. According to the Plaintiffs, this

triggered a right of all minority stockholders in the bank to participate in the sale,

“pursuant to Article 149 of the Bulgarian Public Offer[ing] of Securities Act” (the

“Bulgarian POSA”). 1 According to the Complaint, that act triggers a participatory

right for minority stockholders upon a sale of a majority stake in a publicly-traded

company. The Plaintiffs contend that the sale of stock from the non-profit to the

Irish entity was a “de facto” sale of control, triggering the requirement that the Irish

entity make a mandatory tender offer for all outstanding bank stock. Alternatively,

the Plaintiffs assert there was a secret voting agreement between the non-profit and

the Irish bank, evidenced by a purported voting pattern, in circumvention of the same

1 Compl. ¶ 34.

1 regulation. Whether the Bulgarian POSA should be so interpreted appears to present

a novel question of Bulgarian law, and forms a key legal issue presented in this

litigation.

The initial question before me is more fundamental. Is Delaware an

appropriate forum? The Defendants have moved to dismiss on forum non

conveniens grounds, arguing that Bulgaria is the clearly-appropriate forum for this

litigation. They made this same argument, successfully, as defendants before an

Illinois court, in a virtually identical action involving the same plaintiffs. This raises

an interesting question under the forum non conveniens doctrine: how should the

Court address such serial filers?

The parties agree that a motion to dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds

is addressed to the discretion of this Court, but fundamentally disagree as to the

appropriate scope of the exercise of that discretion. Where a litigant has made a first

choice of venue (within jurisdictional limits), that choice is entitled to strong

deference. Such deference is attributable to public policy concerns involving comity

and avoidance of forum-shopping. So strong is the deference in favor of a plaintiff’s

choice of forum, that our case-law describes the showing required to defeat the

plaintiff’s first choice as one of “overwhelming hardship.”2 Recent cases have

2 See, e.g., Chrysler First Bus. Credit Corp. v. 1500 Locust Ltd. P'ship, 669 A.2d 104, 108 (Del. 1995) (emphasis added).

2 clarified that that adjective is not to be read as preclusive, but also make clear that a

defendant must demonstrate that the plaintiff’s choice of forum is manifestly

unreasonable before a court may dismiss on grounds of forum non conveniens.3

Such considerations are absent when a litigants’ first choice of forum is not

Delaware. Where a matter has been first-filed elsewhere, interests of comity and the

avoidance of forum shopping cut the other way, and this Court is able to “freely”

exercise its discretion to dismiss or stay in favor of the first-filed action, as justice

requires.4 These two doctrines are colloquially referred to by the seminal cases

setting them forth; the forum non conveniens analysis for cases first-filed in

Delaware is the overwhelming hardship test, analyzed via the Cryo-Maid factors;

the analysis used where another, earlier-filed action is pending elsewhere is known

as the McWane doctrine.

This case must, as I see it, be analyzed under the latter standard, despite the

fact that no earlier-filed actions remain pending. The Defendants argue that the

interests of justice weigh strongly in favor of the litigation proceeding, if at all, in

3 See Martinez v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., 86 A.3d 1102, 1106 (Del. 2014), as revised (Mar. 4, 2014) (“To summarize, although the overwhelming hardship standard is stringent, it is not preclusive. Accordingly, in deciding forum non conveniens motions to dismiss, Delaware trial judges must decide whether the defendants have shown that the forum non conveniens factors weigh so overwhelmingly in their favor that dismissal of the Delaware litigation is required to avoid undue hardship and inconvenience to them.”). 4 See, e.g., Lisa, S.A. v. Mayorga, 993 A.2d 1042, 1047 (Del. 2010).

3 Bulgaria. The Plaintiffs, for their part, did not choose this Court, or this jurisdiction,

as the appropriate forum for resolution of this dispute. Their first choice of forum

was Federal District Court in Illinois, where the bank holding company does

business, and where they had jurisdiction over an individual defendant resident

there, a party defendant in Illinois but not here. This first action was dismissed for

lack of diversity. They then tried Illinois state court, where those same defendants

sought a dismissal on forum non conveniens grounds. That issue was litigated, and

the Illinois court, applying that jurisdiction’s forum non conveniens analysis,

dismissed, finding that Bulgaria, not Illinois, was the appropriate venue for this

litigation. The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed the trial court’s decision, by its own

detailed written opinion. While Plaintiffs’ petition for leave to appeal was pending

before the Illinois Supreme Court, as a third choice the Plaintiffs filed here. After

the Delaware action was filed, the Illinois Supreme Court denied Plaintiffs’ petition

for leave to appeal.

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Lisa, S.A. v. Mayorga
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Gramercy Emerging Markets Fund v. Allied Irish Banks, P.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gramercy-emerging-markets-fund-v-allied-irish-banks-plc-delch-2016.