HControl Holdings LLC v. Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 29, 2023
Docket2023-0283
StatusPublished

This text of HControl Holdings LLC v. Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S. (HControl Holdings LLC v. Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S.) 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
HControl Holdings LLC v. Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S., (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

HCONTROL HOLDINGS LLC, OTI FIBER ) LLC, RURAL BROADBAND SYSTEMS, ) LLC, COMMUNITY FIBER LLC, and ) MARIO M. BUSTAMANTE, solely in his ) capacity as Sellers’ Representative, ) ) Plaintiffs/Counterclaim ) Defendants, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2023-0283-KSJM ) ANTIN INFRASTRUCTURE PARTNERS ) S.A.S. and OTI PARENT LLC, ) ) Defendants/Counterclaim ) Plaintiffs. )

POST-TRIAL MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: May 22, 2023 Date Decided: May 29, 2023

Richard I. G. Jones, Jr., Michael W. McDermott, Harry W. Shenton IV, BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Patrick J. Smith, Brian T. Burns, Sean McMahon, CLARK SMITH VILLAZOR LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Counterclaim Defendants HControl Holdings LLC, OTI Fiber LLC, Rural Broadband Systems, LLC, Community Fiber LLC, and Mario M. Bustamante.

William M. Lafferty, Thomas W. Briggs, Jr., Miranda N. Gilbert, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Anna G. Rotman, P.C., KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, Houston, Texas; Stefan Atkinson, P.C., Mike Rusie, KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, New York, New York; Zack C. Ewing, KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, Austin, Texas; Counsel for Defendants-Counterclaim Plaintiffs Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S. and OTI Parent LLC.

McCORMICK, C. On December 3, 2022, Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S. (“Antin”) entered into a

merger agreement (the “Merger Agreement”) to acquire a group of privately held Florida

broadband companies, collectively referred to as “OpticalTel,” which were formed by and

affiliated with Mario Bustamante. 1 The Merger Agreement contained capitalization

representations concerning the owners of OpticalTel, and Buyers negotiated for a bring-

down provision requiring that those representations be accurate in all respects at the time

of closing.

After the parties entered into the Merger Agreement, a former OpticalTel employee

named Rafael Marquez came out of the woodwork claiming an ownership interest in an

OpticalTel subsidiary based on a 2004 software development agreement. Marquez, a

seemingly colorful character and a skilled shakedown artist, embarked on a campaign of

disruption to extract as much value from Bustamante and Sellers as possible. As part of

this campaign, he made direct contact with Buyers and Buyers’ counsel, banker, and

financing partners, claiming to be a co-founder of OpticalTel. Buyers investigated

Marquez’s claims. Although both Sellers and Buyers rightly concluded that Marquez was

dramatically overstating the value of his interest, Buyers also determined that Marquez’s

claim had some factual basis. Buyers asked Sellers to settle with Marquez, but Marquez’s

1 For convenience, this decision refers to the OpticalTel parties to the Merger Agreement as the “Sellers” and the Antin parties to the Merger Agreement as the “Buyers.” The Sellers are: HControl Holdings LLC, OTI Fiber LLC, Rural Broadband Systems, LLC, Community Fiber LLC, and Mario Bustamante in his capacity as Sellers’ representative. The Buyers are Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S. and OTI Parent LLC. See C.A. No. 2023-0283-KSJM, Docket (“Dkt.”) 93, Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order (“PTO”) at 1. unreasonable demands made that unachievable. Ultimately, Buyers noticed a breach of

the capitalization representations based on Marquez.

Marquez’s campaign of disruption stirred up other potential capitalization issues.

In one of his unsolicited calls to Antin’s senior partner, Marquez warned: “I am not the

only one!” Antin interpreted this to mean that there might be other former employees who

would claim an ownership interest in OpticalTel and began investigating that suspicion.

That investigation unearthed another former employee, Wajid Iqbal, who claimed to hold

options, warrants, and a 5% interest in one of the OpticalTel entities. Sellers denied that

Iqbal had any valid claims but attempted to settle with Iqbal. These efforts were

unsuccessful. Buyers took the position that Iqbal’s interests rendered the capitalization

representations inaccurate and noticed a breach on this independent basis.

The Marquez issue further snowballed into additional disputes between Buyers and

Sellers. Sellers responded to the notice of breach by asking Buyers for permission to

contact other potential acquirers. Buyers took this to mean that Sellers were already

contacting backup bidders, claimed that such efforts violated the no-shop provision in the

Merger Agreement, and ultimately noticed a breach of the no-shop.

Sellers also attempted to cure the Marquez breach, but those efforts gave rise to

other litigable issues. Without first obtaining Buyers’ consent, Sellers transferred the

software assets of the OpticalTel subsidiary in which Marquez claimed an interest to a

parent company for a value determined by the Sellers. Sellers then filed to dissolve the

subsidiary with Florida’s Department of State. The subsidiary placed in trust an amount

2 that Sellers believed sufficient to satisfy Marquez’s claims, and Bustamante agreed to

indemnify the subsidiary for any damages recovered by Marquez that exceeded that

amount. Sellers argued that this cured Marquez’s claim by reducing it to a monetary claim.

Buyers denied that the transfer-dissolution plan cured the Marquez issue, claimed that the

transfer, dissolution, and indemnity agreement violated multiple interim covenants in the

Merger Agreement, and served a notice of breach on that basis.

Ultimately, Buyers terminated the Merger Agreement based on Sellers’ breaches of

the Merger Agreement. In anticipation of termination, Sellers filed this suit for specific

performance. They claim that Buyers breached the Merger Agreement by wrongfully

terminating it and by failing to use best efforts to close the merger. To support their claim

for breach of the best-efforts provision, Sellers took the position that it became impossible

to settle with Marquez because Buyers attempted direct contact, giving him greater

leverage in negotiations. Buyers counterclaimed for breach of the capitalization

representations, interim covenants, and no-shop provisions.

With Buyers’ debt commitment expiring on June 9, 2023, the parties moved

expeditiously toward a three-day trial in May 2023, and requested a prompt posttrial

decision. 2 This decision finds that the Marquez issue rendered the capitalization

2 See PTO ¶ 135; Dkt. 147 (May 26, 2023 letter from counsel). The parties are to be commended for the efficiency with which they proceeded to trial and for avoiding any discovery disputes in the process. To issue a posttrial decision in time to permit potential appellate review and final disposition of this action before the debt commitment expired, I wrote this decision quickly and cut the editing process short. As a consequence, aspects of this decision probably lack polish (please forgive the typos) and the extended treatment that the issues deserve. 3 representations inaccurate, and that Sellers failed to cure the issue. Sellers breached the

Merger Agreement on this basis, rendering Buyers’ termination valid. The parties failed

to prove any of their other claims or counterclaims.

It bears noting that the financial value of the Marquez issue is minor relative to the

deal value, as Buyers concede. One would think that Buyers could protect themselves from

the economic risk of those claims through an escrow arrangement at closing, which would

supplement the protections of the broad special indemnity Buyers secured in the Merger

Agreement.

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HControl Holdings LLC v. Antin Infrastructure Partners S.A.S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hcontrol-holdings-llc-v-antin-infrastructure-partners-sas-delch-2023.