IBEW Local Union 481 Defined Contribution Plan and Trust v. Raymond E. Winborne

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 7, 2023
DocketC.A. No. 2022-0497-JTL
StatusPublished

This text of IBEW Local Union 481 Defined Contribution Plan and Trust v. Raymond E. Winborne (IBEW Local Union 481 Defined Contribution Plan and Trust v. Raymond E. Winborne) 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
IBEW Local Union 481 Defined Contribution Plan and Trust v. Raymond E. Winborne, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IBEW LOCAL UNION 481 DEFINED ) CONTRIBUTION PLAN AND TRUST, ) Derivatively on Behalf of GODADDY, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2022-0497-JTL ) RAYMOND E. WINBORNE, et al., ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) GODADDY, INC., ) ) Nominal Defendant. )

OPINION DENYING MOTION TO DISMISS

Date Submitted: May 24, 2023 Date Decided: August 24, 2023 Date Corrected: September 7, 2023

Joel Friedlander, Jeffrey M. Gorris, Christopher M. Foulds, FRIEDLANDER & GORRIS, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Randall J. Baron, Benny C. Goodman III, ROBBINS GELLER RUDMAN & DOWD LLP, San Diego, California; Gladriel Shobe, Jarrod Shobe, SHOBE & SHOBE LLP, Provo, Utah; Counsel for Plaintiff.

S. Mark Hurd, Alexandra M. Cumings, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Jordan Eth, Philip T. Besirof, David J. Wiener, MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP, San Francisco, California; Counsel for Defendants and Nominal Defendant.

LASTER, V.C. The defendants paid $850 million to settle a liability that the company

contemporaneously valued on its audited financial statements at $175.3 million. The

plaintiff contends that the directors breached their fiduciary duties by approving the

payment in bad faith. They contend that the company’s chief financial officer provided the

directors with manufactured financial information to support their decision. They also say

that the payment constituted waste.

Those claims are derivative, and the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint

under Rule 23.1. That motion is denied. A majority of the directors who would consider

the demand are defendants on the merits, and the complaint alleges particularized facts that

collectively support a pleading-stage inference that the directors approved the payment in

bad faith. That inference both rebuts the business judgment rule and renders exculpation

unavailable, resulting in those directors facing a substantial risk of liability and rendering

demand futile.

The defendant directors also moved to dismiss the claims under Rule 12(b)(6). The

standard for pleading a claim that gives rise to a substantial threat of liability is higher than

the standard for pleading a reasonably conceivable claim, so the former analysis dictates

the outcome of the latter motion. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from the operative complaint, the documents it incorporates by

reference, and public documents that are subject to judicial notice.1 At this stage of the

proceedings, the complaint’s allegations are assumed to be true, and the plaintiff receives

the benefit of all reasonable inferences.

A. The Up-C IPO And The Tax Agreements

GoDaddy Inc. (“GoDaddy” or the “Company”) is a Delaware corporation

headquartered in Tempe, Arizona. It provides web hosting, Internet domain registration,

and other cloud-based services.

Robert Parsons founded GoDaddy’s predecessor in 1997. In 2011, Parsons sold a

majority of his equity stake, representing a controlling interest in GoDaddy, to Kohlberg

Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. (“KKR”), Silver Lake Partners (“Silver Lake”), and Technology

Crossover Ventures (“TCV”).

In 2015, GoDaddy completed an Up-C IPO. That chimeric structure layers a parent-

level corporation on top of a limited liability company that is treated as a partnership for

tax purposes. The member interest in the LLC is divided into a number of units. The

1 The operative complaint is the plaintiff’s amended complaint, filed on November 4, 2022. Dkt. 16. Citations in the form “Compl. ¶ —” refer to the paragraphs of the complaint. The complaint did not attach any exhibits, but it incorporated by reference documents that the plaintiff obtained using Section 220 of the General Corporation Law. The parties submitted those documents by affidavit. Citations in the form “DX [number] at —” refer to exhibits that the defendants submitted. See Dkts. 22, 28. Citations in the form “PX [number] at —” refer to exhibits that the plaintiff submitted. See Dkt. 24.

2 corporation owns some, but not all, of the units. The insiders taking the company public

own the remaining units.

The parent-level corporation issues two classes of stock. Class A stock is straight

common stock, and each share carries voting rights and reflects a proportionate economic

ownership interest in the corporation. Class B stock is special stock. It only carries voting

rights. The Class B stock does not reflect any economic ownership in the corporation.

In the Up-C IPO, public investors receive Class A shares. Insiders receive Class B

shares. The number of units in the LLC is adjusted to match the number of outstanding

shares.

The result is a hybrid entity in which public stockholders participate in governance

and economically through their Class A shares. The insiders participate in governance

through their Class B shares and economically through their LLC units. The combination

allows insiders to take a company public while retaining the benefit of pass-through tax

treatment. They also get the benefit of liquidity, because the transaction documents

authorize an insider to convert one Class B share plus one LLC unit into one Class A share,

which can then be sold.

In the Company’s version of the Up-C structure, GoDaddy was the holding

company. An entity named Desert Newco, LLC was the LLC. GoDaddy’s public

stockholders received Class A shares. Parsons, the private equity investors, and various

pre-IPO senior officers and stockholders (together, the “Founding Investors”) received

Class B shares and Desert Newco units. Consistent with the Up-C structure, the Founding

3 Investors could convert one Class B share plus one Desert Newco unit into one Class A

share.

Immediately before the IPO, GoDaddy and the Founding Investors entered into tax

revenue agreements (the “Tax Agreements” or “TRAs”). They provide that if GoDaddy

reduces its taxable income by using a tax asset generated by a Founding Investor, then

GoDaddy must pay the Founding Investor 85% of the savings. GoDaddy has no obligation

to make any payment to a Founding Investor unless and until GoDaddy uses the tax asset

to generate savings.

The principal tax asset that a Founding Investor might create would result if a

Founding Investor exercised its conversion right and sold the resulting Class A share for

more than the IPO price. That sale would result in a proportionate step up in the tax basis

of GoDaddy’s assets, and GoDaddy could claim depreciation on the increased value to

reduce its taxable income. If GoDaddy lacked sufficient taxable income to use the tax asset

in a given year, it could carry the asset forward to a later year, creating a deferred tax asset

(sometimes abbreviated “DTA”) that GoDaddy could use once it had taxable income.

B. The Founding Investors Sell Their Equity Stakes.

By February 2019, Parsons and the three private equity investors had fully exited

from their equity positions, generating tax assets with a total value of $2.2 billion (the “Tax

Asset”). GoDaddy’s commitment to pay 85% of that benefit to the Founding Investors

resulted in a nominal liability of approximately $1.8 billion (the “Nominal Liability”).

4 Despite the size of the Nominal Liability, GoDaddy had not made any payments

under the Tax Agreements because GoDaddy did not generate taxable income. GoDaddy

also had little prospect of generating taxable income.

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IBEW Local Union 481 Defined Contribution Plan and Trust v. Raymond E. Winborne, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ibew-local-union-481-defined-contribution-plan-and-trust-v-raymond-e-delch-2023.