Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Stream TV Networks, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 29, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2022-0930-JTL
StatusPublished

This text of Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Stream TV Networks, Inc. (Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Stream TV Networks, Inc.) 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
Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Stream TV Networks, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

HAWK INVESTMENT HOLDINGS LTD.,) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2022-0930-JTL ) STREAM TV NETWORKS, INC., and ) TECHNOVATIVE MEDIA, INC. ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: November 18, 2022 Date Decided: November 29, 2022

Steven L. Caponi, Matthew B. Goeller, Megan E. O’Connor, K&L GATES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Plaintiff Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd.

Andrew S. Dupre, Brian R. Lemon, Stephanie H. Dallaire, Travis J. Ferguson, McCARTER & ENGLISH, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Defendants Stream TV Networks, Inc. and Technovative Media, Inc.

LASTER, V.C. Technovative Media, Inc. (“Technovative” or the “Company”) is a wholly owned

subsidiary of Stream TV Networks, Inc. (“Stream”). The brothers Mathu and Raja Rajan

control Stream. Stream contends that Mathu is the sole director of the Company.

Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. (“Hawk”) is a secured creditor of Stream. Under a

series of pledge agreements that secured Hawk’s loans, Stream granted Hawk the right to

vote all of its shares of Company common stock following an event of default. Hawk

claims that it validly exercised its rights under the pledge agreements to remove Mathu

and elect Shad L. Stastney as the sole director of the Company.

Hawk filed this action under Section 225 of the Delaware General Corporation

Law (the “DGCL”) to obtain a determination that Stastney was validly elected as the

Company’s sole director. During the initial scheduling conference, Stream challenged

Hawk’s ability to obtain relief on numerous grounds. In its lead argument, Stream

asserted that Hawk had assigned its rights to an affiliate named SeeCubic, Inc. such that

Hawk was not a real party in interest for purposes of this case. Stream posited that this

issue could be addressed as a matter of law based on a package of loan documents that

Hawk and SeeCubic executed in June 2022.

Stream also disputed whether its loan agreements with Hawk were valid and

whether a default had occurred. Hawk responded that those issues had been resolved

against Stream by a partial final judgment in earlier litigation between Stream and

SeeCubic. Hawk maintained that collateral estoppel barred Stream from relitigating those

issues. Stream also asserted that Hawk’s loans had been converted into equity. Hawk

again invoked collateral estoppel, contending that the court had rejected a similar

conversion argument and held that the conversion right required that Stream raise new

equity capital before Stream could exercise it.

A Section 225 action is a summary proceeding. Although motion practice is

disfavored, sometimes it can be helpful. Recognizing that the scope of the case would

expand dramatically if the parties litigated the validity of the loan documents and the

existence of defaults, the court scheduled an early hearing to consider the issues that the

parties contended could be addressed as a matter of law. Stream responded by moving to

dismiss Hawk’s claims under Rules 17 and 12(b)(6). Hawk countered by moving for

partial summary judgment.

This decision denies Stream’s motion to dismiss under Rule 17. Stream concedes

that Hawk has statutory standing to litigate this Section 225 proceeding. That makes

Hawk a real party in interest for purposes of the in rem proceeding that Section 225

contemplates. By contrast, Stream’s interpretation of the real-party-in-interest

requirement would generate perverse results.

This decision also denies Stream’s motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). Stream

has shown that Hawk entered into an agreement that assigned all of the enforcement

rights under its notes and the associated loan documents to SeeCubic. But there is a

second agreement which provides that if an event of default occurs under a note purchase

agreement between SeeCubic and Hawk, then Hawk can levy on all of Stream’s assets,

including the enforcement rights that Hawk had assigned to SeeCubic. Hawk then can

2 enforce those rights. An event of default occurred when the Delaware Supreme Court

issued a decision adverse to SeeCubic in a related case. The default caused Hawk to

regain the ability to exercise rights under the pledge agreements, which Hawk used to

remove Mathu and elect Stastney.

This decision grants Hawk’s motion for partial summary judgment. Collateral

estoppel prevents Stream from relitigating issues that were resolved adversely to Stream

by a partial final judgment in earlier litigation between Stream and SeeCubic. Those

issues include (i) the validity of the loan documents under which Hawk loaned Stream

millions of dollars, (ii) the existence of events of default, (iii) the fact that Hawk’s loans

were not converted into equity before November 10, 2021, and (iv) the requirement that

Stream obtain new equity financing before gaining the ability to convert Hawk’s notes

into equity.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Between 2010 and 2020, Stream borrowed millions of dollars. Stream’s senior

secured creditor is SLS Holdings VI, LLC (“SLS”). Between 2011 and 2012, Stream

borrowed $6 million from SLS under a series of notes (the “SLS Notes”). Stream pledged

all of its assets as security for the SLS Notes and executed a security agreement that

authorized SLS to levy on its assets in the event of default.

3 Stream’s junior creditor is Hawk. Between 2010 and 2020, Stream borrowed more

than £50 million from Hawk, plus additional millions denominated in dollars. The loans

are documented by a total of eighteen substantively identical notes (the “Hawk Notes”).1

In connection with the Hawk Notes, Stream executed eighteen substantially

identical security agreements (together, the “Hawk Security Agreements”).2 Subject to

the senior security interest held by SLS, each of the Hawk Security Agreements granted

Hawk a security interest in substantially all of Stream’s assets, including the Company’s

shares. Each of the Hawk Security Agreements authorized Hawk to levy on and take

control of Stream’s assets to satisfy the Hawk Notes if Stream defaulted.

Also in connection with the Hawk Notes, Stream executed a total of fifteen

substantially identical pledge agreements (together, the “Hawk Pledge Agreements”).3

1 See Compl. Ex. D (collecting notes). The dates of the Hawk Notes are (1) March 26, 2014, (2) October 15, 2014, (3) January 2, 2015, (4) August 6, 2015, (5) October 12, 2015, (6) February 15, 2016, (7) July 8, 2016, (8) September 27, 2016, (9) May 3, 2017, (10) December 11, 2017, (11) July 5, 2018, (12) December 6, 2018, (13) July 5, 2019, (14) September 18, 2019, (15) October 2019, without a specific day identified, (16) January 16, 2020, (17) February 26, 2020, and (18) a second note dated February 26, 2020. 2 See Compl. Ex. E. The dates of the Hawk Security Agreements are (1) March 26, 2014, (2) October 15, 2014, (3) January 2, 2015, (4) August 6, 2015, (5) October 12, 2015, (6) February 15, 2016, (7) July 8, 2016, (8) September 27, 2016, (9) May 3, 2017, (10) December 11, 2017, (11) July 5, 2018, (12) December 6, 2018, (13) July 5, 2019, (14) September 18, 2019, (15) October 8, 2019, (16) January 16, 2020, (17) February 26, 2020, and (18) a second security agreement also dated February 26, 2020. 3 See Compl. Ex. F.

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Hawk Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Stream TV Networks, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawk-investment-holdings-ltd-v-stream-tv-networks-inc-delch-2022.