IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
IN RE ASPEN TECHNOLOGY, INC., ) C.A. No. 2025-0210-SEM (MTZ) SECTION 220 LITIGATION )
ORDER REGARDING EXCEPTIONS
WHEREAS:1
A. Plaintiff Kevin Barnes served a demand under 8 Del. C. § 220 on
defendant Aspen Technology, Inc. (“Aspen” or the “Defendant”) on February 13,
2025.2 Plaintiff Elliott Associates, L.P. (“Elliott,” and together with Barnes,
“Plaintiffs”) served its demand on February 19.3 Their demands identified several
purposes for inspection, but they all largely relate to the purpose of investigating
potential wrongdoing in a conflicted controller transaction: nonparty Emerson
Electric Co.’s (“Emerson”) acquisition of the minority of Aspen it did not already
own through a tender offer and merger.4
1 References to the admitted and undisputed facts in the Pretrial Stipulation and Order (“PTO,” Docket item (“D.I.”) 33) are cited as “PTO ¶ __.” Joint trial exhibits are cited as “JX __.” The Magistrate’s final post-trial report (D.I. 56) is cited as “Rpt. __.” Citations in the form of “POB __” refer to Plaintiffs’ opening brief, available at D.I. 62. Citations in the form of “DAB __” refer to Aspen’s answering brief, available at D.I. 65. Citations in the form of “PRB __” refer to Plaintiffs’ reply brief, available at D.I. 66. 2 JX 203. 3 JX 204. 4 JX 203; JX 204. B. Aspen produced formal board materials concerning the acquisition.5
Between Aspen’s production and public disclosures, Plaintiffs have put together a
detailed timeline. Relevant details in Plaintiffs’ narrative include:
1) Aspen formed a “Director Group” to consider alternatives to an Emerson takeover before Emerson’s standstill expired.6
2) Aspen’s board chair, Jill Smith, departed at the beginning of negotiations, with Aspen disclosing she resigned7 and Emerson disclosing she was ushered out due to disagreements with Emerson;8 Emerson elevated director Whelan to chair; and Whelan’s elevation left a board seat vacant.9
3) The Director Group retained Perella Weinberg Partners LP (“PWP”) as an advisor;10 PWP was entitled to a fee upon an Emerson take-private even if it was dismissed;11 yet PWP was dismissed and replaced, in keeping with Whelan’s recommendation to do so.12
4) Aspen’s board had a standing Related Party Transaction Committee,13 but created a separate Special Committee for the Emerson transaction comprised of Whelan, an Emerson-appointed director, and a third director.14 The Special Committee engaged advisors other than PWP15 that Plaintiffs contend are conflicted. The two committees were activated at different times throughout the negotiations.
5 PTO ¶ 122. 6 Id. ¶ 11; JX 8–12. 7 JX 202 at 12. 8 Id. at 15. 9 PTO ¶ 25. 10 Id. ¶ 12; JX 14. 11 PTO ¶ 56; JX 134. 12 PTO ¶¶ 30, 61; JX 133, 134. 13 JX 56 at 2. 14 JX 200 at 23. 15 PTO ¶ 51; JX 200.
2 5) Emerson misrepresented the size of the premium its offer represented, and the Special Committee knew it.
C. To investigate those details, Plaintiffs sought an additional mix of
formal board materials, informal board materials, and officer materials. Aspen
refused to produce them. Plaintiffs came to this Court, and their additional
requests were tried before a Magistrate in Chancery on June 11, 2025.16 The only
dispute was whether the additional requests are “necessary and essential.”17
D. On June 17, the Magistrate issued a prompt and detailed oral final
report declining Plaintiffs’ request for further documents (the “Final Report”).18
The Magistrate did so under Delaware common law governing Barnes’ demand,
rather than the recently enacted statutory standards governing Elliott’s demand,
which are subject to a constitutional challenge that is stayed pending resolution of
a similar challenge by the Delaware Supreme Court.19
E. On June 23, 2025, Plaintiffs filed a Notice of Exceptions to the Final
Report (the “Exceptions”).20 The matter was assigned to the undersigned on July
1, 2025, solely for the purpose of hearing the exceptions.21
16 D.I. 47. 17 Rpt. 19. 18 D.I. 53; Rpt. 19 Rpt. 21–22; D.I. 46. 20 D.I. 55.
3 F. The parties briefed the Exceptions.22 I took the Exceptions under
advisement on September 5, 2025.23
AND NOW, on this 6th day of October, 2025, the Court finds and orders as
follows:
1. A hearing on the Exceptions is unnecessary. The Court has
considered de novo the issues on exception.24
2. I begin with whether Barnes has shown the documents he seeks are
necessary and essential under the standards governing his demand. “The plaintiff
bears the burden of proving that each category of books and records is essential to
accomplish[] the stockholder’s articulated purpose for the inspection.”25 The
necessary and essential standard is a demanding one: the Court must “narrowly
tailor the inspection right to a stockholder’s stated purpose.” 26 Documents are
necessary and essential if they “address the ‘crux of the shareholder’s purpose’ and
21 D.I. 59. 22 D.I. 62; D.I. 65; D.I. 66. 23 D.I. 67. 24 See DiGiacobbe v. Sestak, 743 A.2d 180, 184 (Del. 1999). 25 Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 681 A.2d 1026, 1035 (Del. 1996). 26 Id.; accord Cook v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 2014 WL 311111, at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 30, 2014) (noting that in its vigilance to prevent Section 220 from being used as a tool of oppression, the court will limit relief to those records that are necessary and essential).
4 if that information ‘is unavailable from another source.’”27 “[T]he court must give
the petitioner everything that is ‘essential,’ but stop at what is ‘sufficient.’” 28 “In
determining the scope of inspection, the Court may consider the information
previously furnished by the corporation . . . .”29
3. “The starting point (and often the ending point) for an adequate
inspection will be board-level documents that formally evidence the directors’
deliberations and decisions and comprise the materials that the directors formally
received and considered, the ‘Formal Board Materials.’”30 Where the documents
sought are communications, rather than formal board materials, the stockholder
must show a specific need for those communications to satisfy the “necessary and
essential” standard. “[T]he Court of Chancery should not order emails to be
produced when other materials (e.g., traditional board-level materials, such as
minutes) would accomplish the petitioner’s proper purpose, but if non-email books
27 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Ind. Elec. Workers Pension Tr. Fund IBEW, 95 A.3d 1264, 1271 (Del. 2014) (quoting Espinoza v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 32 A.3d 365, 371–72 (Del. 2011). 28 KT4 P’rs LLC v. Palantir Techs. Inc., 203 A.3d 738, 752 (Del. 2019). 29 Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 685 A.2d 702,714 (Del. Ch. 1995). 30 Lebanon Cty. Emps.’ Ret. Fund v. AmerisourceBergen Corp., 2020 WL 132752, at *24 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 2020), aff’d, 243 A.3d 417 (Del. 2020); Woods Tr. of Avery L. Woods Tr. v. Sahara Enters., Inc., 238 A.3d 879, 897 (Del. Ch. 2020); accord Cook v. Hewlett- Packard Co., 2014 WL 311111, at *4 (Del. Ch. Jan. 30, 2014) (concluding a production of every nonprivileged page of board-level documents was sufficient for the plaintiff to investigate wrongdoing by officers and directors).
5 and records are insufficient, then the court should order emails to be produced.”31
If a plaintiff makes that showing, then the Court can expand the universe of books
and records to include “informal materials that evidence the directors’
deliberations, the information that they received, and the decisions they reached . .
. .”32
4. On exception, Barnes seeks seven categories of documents. I take
each in turn.
a. Director Group records: formal board materials, including presentations from PWP and other advisors, before Emerson’s standstill expired.
i. Barnes seeks additional banker presentations delivered at Director
Group meetings between the fall of 2023 and at least through April of 2024. The
Director Group met many times during this time frame to discuss Aspen’s options
once Emerson’s standstill expired.33 It was known Emerson wanted to own 100%
of Aspen.34 Aspen produced board minutes from ten Director Group meetings,
five sets of which expressly refer to banker presentations or analyses from PWP
31 Palantir, 203 A.3d at 752–53 (citations omitted); In re UnitedHealth Grp., Inc. Section 220 Litig., 2018 WL 1110849, at *9 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2018) (“Unlike the production of other books and records, email communications are generally ‘the exception rather than the rule.’”). 32 AmerisourceBergen Corp., 2020 WL 132752, at *25 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 2020), aff’d, 243 A.3d 417 (Del. 2020); accord Ok. Firefighters Pension & Ret. Sys. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 2022 WL 1760618, at *12 (Del. Ch. June 1, 2022). 33 JX 200 at 21. 34 JX 253 at 16; JX 242 at 8; Rpt. 8.
6 and the Special Committees’ eventual bankers.35 Aspen produced only one of
those presentations.36
ii. These formal board materials are necessary and essential to Barnes’
investigatory purpose.37 They set the stage with what advisors told Aspen’s
fiduciaries about its options with Emerson and Aspen’s valuation before starting
negotiations. They offer Aspen’s baseline. What’s more, those advisors would be
retained by the Special Committee, and some of those fiduciaries would end up on
the Special Committee. And they speak to the Director Group’s selection of PWP
as its advisor, which would reverberate through Smith’s resignation and PWP’s
replacement despite still being owed a fee.
b. Smith’s resignation records: formal and informal board materials, and officer-level materials, to clear up the conflicting narratives as to why she resigned.
i. Smith led the Director Group’s consideration of Aspen’s options once
the standstill expired, and signed PWP’s engagement letter.38 She resigned from
35 JX 8; JX 9; JX 10; JX 11; JX 12. 36 JX 16. 37 That the requested banker presentations were delivered “before any negotiations on the Merger began” is not fatal to Barnes’s request. DAB 27. See Lavin v. West Corp., 2017 WL 6728702, at *14 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2017) (holding that the “relevant time period implicated” by the plaintiff’s credible basis to suspect wrongdoing with respect to a transaction includes “the period beginning when . . . the Board began contemplating strategic transactions”). 38 PTO ¶¶ 11–12.
7 the board suddenly, five days before the standstill expired.39 Aspen’s May 2024
disclosures say she resigned “for personal reasons.”40 Emerson’s February 10,
2025 Offer to Purchase (“OTP”) disclosed Emerson asked her to leave due to
“various differences of opinion” regarding her leadership, including proposing
management candidates Emerson did not like, and engaging PWP.41 Emerson
appointed Whelan to replace Smith as board chair.42
ii. Barnes would like formal and informal board materials to clear up the
reason for Smith’s departure, and officer-level materials to investigate Aspen’s
disclosures about it. Barnes has not shown he needs those materials to investigate.
He contends “the record provides no clarity” on the circumstances surrounding
Smith’s resignation.43 That is not so. The OTP discloses, and Barnes recites, the
various reasons for which Smith was “criticized” by Emerson’s leadership.44
Barnes has sufficient information to achieve his stated purpose of investigating
wrongdoing: he has a foothold for investigating that Emerson wanted Smith out
39 JX 237 at 3; PTO ¶¶ 9, 27; JX 6 at 23. 40 JX 237 at 3; JX 236 at 1. 41 JX 202 at 15. 42 JX 47. 43 POB 49. 44 JX 202 at 15; POB 48.
8 before it started making moves, and that Aspen disclosed a different reason at the
time. He is not entitled to more.45
c. PWP records: formal and informal board materials on PWP’s suspension; and formal and informal board materials, plus officer materials, on PWP’s entitlement to a fee.
i. Aspen suspended PWP’s engagement on the Emerson transaction
even though PWP remained entitled to a substantial tail fee. Aspen has only
produced PWP’s letter to Whelan confirming its suspension,46 and formal materials
documenting the Special Committee’s retention of different advisors.47
ii. Barnes seeks formal and informal board materials on PWP’s
suspension, in furtherance of his purpose of investigating wrongdoing. Other
evidence indicates PWP was inclined to be aggressive towards Emerson;48 Smith’s
45 Frank v. Nat’l Hldgs. Corp., C.A. No. 2021-0160-MTZ, at 15–16 (Del. Ch. July 22, 2022) (TRANSCRIPT) (“Frank’s position is that so long as he has questions that are left unanswered, or rocks he has not overturned, he is entitled to more. That is not our law, particularly in the context of board and management communications.”). Plaintiff’s citation to Deephaven Risk Arb Trading Ltd. v. UnitedGlobalCom, Inc. does not disturb this conclusion. 2005 WL 1713067, at *9 (Del. Ch. July 13, 2005). In determining whether the plaintiff had a proper purpose, the Deephaven Court viewed two conflicting press releases, together with other evidence, as credible evidence supporting an inference of wrongdoing. Id. Deephaven does not stand for the proposition that conflicting public disclosure always make underlying informal materials necessary and essential to investigating wrongdoing. 46 JX 67. 47 JX 200 at 22. 48 JX 16 at 5, 59.
9 departure was based in part on her engagement of PWP;49 and Whelan is the one
who recommended PWP’s suspension, “apparently through informal channels.”50
Barnes contends these facts “raise[] questions about Emerson’s interference with
the selection of sell-side financial advisors.”51
iii. Barnes is entitled to formal and informal board materials on PWP’s
suspension. He does not have materials sufficient to investigate any wrongdoing
by Emerson in Aspen’s suspension of PWP. The timing, the fact that the
suspension recommendation came from Whelan, the indicia that Emerson
disfavored the PWP engagement enough to remove Smith over it, and signs that
PWP would be aggressive towards Emerson, all amount to smoke. Barnes is
entitled to documents necessary and essential to investigate if there is fire. Barnes
has argued, and Aspen did not dispute, that Whelan’s recommendation was made
informally. The nature of that communication means Barnes is unlikely to uncover
any meaningful answers in the formal materials already produced.52 Barnes has
carried his burden to show the formal board materials he already has are
49 JX 202 at 15. 50 POB 51. 51 Id. at 52. 52 See Palantir, 203 A.3d at 756 (“[W]hen a petitioner . . . reasonably identifies the documents it needs and provides a basis for the court to infer that those documents likely exist in the form of electronic mail, the respondent corporation cannot insist on a production order that excludes emails even if they are in fact the only responsive corporate documents that exist and are therefore by definition necessary.”).
10 insufficient for purposes of investigating any wrongdoing by Emerson in Aspen’s
suspension of PWP.
iv. Barnes also seeks formal and informal board materials, and officer-
level materials, regarding PWP’s entitlement to a fee. Aspen produced the Special
Committee’s November 10 meeting minutes addressing its awareness of PWP’s
fee and its decision to proceed with engaging other advisors.53 Barnes’ briefing on
exception probes whether Aspen paid PWP its tail fee or what the size was; Barnes
estimated the fee owed was over $40 million.54 Indeed, depending on the facts, the
size of an advisor fee can support a concern about corporate wrongdoing.55
v. On September 23, Plaintiffs filed a letter informing the Court of a
recent development that clarifies much of what Barnes wants to know about the
fee.56 On September 4, PWP filed an action for breach of contract in the New
York State Supreme Court for the County of New York, seeking payment of the
tail fee.57 PWP’s complaint asserts it is owed no less than $67 million.58 The
complaint reinforces what Barnes already knew from public disclosures and the
materials Aspen already produced: that PWP was owed a substantial tail fee
53 JX 134 at 3–4. 54 POB 53. 55 E.g., Woods, 238 A.3d at 902. 56 D.I. 70. 57 D.I. 70 Ex. A. 58 JX 134 at 3–4.
11 upwards of $40 million.59 And it contains the remaining answer Barnes seeks: that
PWP was not paid.60 Barnes has not otherwise shown he needs more in connection
with PWP’s fee.61 Plaintiffs’ letter does not explain what else is missing, between
public disclosures, PWP’s complaint, and the formal materials already produced.
d. Special Committee records: informal board materials regarding the Special Committee’s composition and selection of advisors, and officer materials regarding selection of advisors.
i. Barnes seeks informal board materials on the selection of the Special
Committee members, in view of the facts that two Emerson-affiliated directors
were selected even though an independent director was not chosen, a board seat sat
vacant, and there was already a standing Related Party Transaction Committee.
Aspen’s disclosures state the Board identified the Special Committee members
“based on preliminary discussions of each Board member’s independence and
disinterest with respect to Emerson and a potential strategic proposal by
59 D.I. 70 Ex. A. 60 Id. 61 See Greenlight Cap. Offshore P’rs, Ltd. v. Brighthouse Fin., Inc., 2023 WL 8009057, at *6 (Del. Ch. Nov. 20, 2023) (“If adequate public information exists to satisfy the stockholder’s stated purpose, the Section 220 demand will be denied.”); see also Espinoza, 32 A.3d at 371–72 (“A document is ‘essential’ for Section 220 purposes if . . . the essential information the document contains is unavailable from another sources.”); Sanders v. Ohmite Hldgs., LLC, 17 A.3d 1186, 1195 (Del. Ch. 2011) (“[I]f the stockholder already has ‘sufficient’ information from other sources . . . then the inspection similarly can be curtailed.”).
12 Emerson.”62 Aspen produced minutes recording the Special Committee members’
appointment; independence questionnaires for each director;63 formal minutes
reflecting discussion of the process of forming a special committee;64 and
resolutions appointing the three members.65
ii. Barnes does not need informal board materials on the Special
Committee members’ selection to investigate the Special Committee members’
independence from Emerson. The formal board materials contain sufficient
information on the Special Committee members’ ties to Emerson, the fact that
Emerson-affiliated directors were on the Special Committee when other options
were available, and how negotiations proceeded. Put differently, the selection of
the Special Committee members is not the “crux of the shareholder’s purpose.”66
Barnes’ request for those materials is denied.
iii. Barnes also wants informal board materials and officer-level materials
reflecting the Special Committee’s selection of its financial advisors, including one
with a substantial relationship with Emerson. The formal materials are sufficient:
they reflect the Special Committee’s assessment and determination that the
62 JX 200 at 23. 63 JX 85–86; JX 94; JX 96–103. 64 JX 129 at 2. 65 Id. Ex. A. 66 Espinoza, 32 A.3d at 371–72.
13 advisors were independent,67 and the Special Committee’s consideration of PWP’s
fee.68 I have also ordered Aspen to produce those advisors’ pitch presentations to
the Director Group, and formal and informal board materials on PWP’s
suspension. Barnes has not shown he needs more.
e. Projection adjustment records: informal board materials and officer materials to assess the decision to alter projections to drop the acquisition, and Emerson’s role in it.
i. Barnes seeks informal and officer-level materials regarding Aspen’s
projections and their treatment of an acquisition Aspen favored but Emerson
disfavored. But Barnes knows the acquisition was excluded from the projections
and at whose direction, and has a credible basis as to why.69 That is sufficient to
investigate wrongdoing. Barnes has not shown he needs more.70
67 JX 130; JX 132; JX 134. 68 JX 134. 69 PRB 35; JX 200 at 26 (“Because [Emerson’s CEO] believed that given Emerson’s submission of the November 5 Proposal, the pursuit of [the potential acquisition] would be a distraction, [the CEO] called Mr. Whelan to inform him that Emerson would not support [the potential acquisition] at this time.”); JX 178. 70 This case is distinguishable from Hightower v. SharpSpring, Inc., on which Plaintiffs rely. 2022 WL 3970155, at *7 (Del. Ch. Aug. 31, 2022). There, the Court ordered production of informal and officer-level materials addressing “the events surrounding [] updated projections.” Id. at *10. That conclusion was based on a showing of inconsistencies between the proxy and the formal materials as to why the company updated its projections and at whose direction. Id. at *4. Barnes has not pointed to similar gaps warranting further intrusion.
14 f. Premium misrepresentation records: informal board materials reflecting the Special Committee’s consideration of whether to correct the misrepresentation.
i. Barnes seeks informal board materials regarding the Special
Committee’s consideration of Emerson’s public statements about the premium it
offered over the unaffected stock price. Formal materials show the Special
Committee knew Emerson’s figure was inaccurate.71 Barnes wants to know
“whether the Special Committee considered correcting the record,” in pursuit of
investigating whether stockholders were informed and the Special Committee’s
independence.72 But the Special Committee told stockholders its own view of
Emerson’s premium.73 The Special Committee’s informal treatment of Emerson’s
calculation is not necessary and essential to Barnes’ investigation of wrongdoing.
g. Negotiation timing records: informal board materials on whether the Special Committee authorized Whelan to agree to lock up a deal before Aspen’s next earnings release.
i. The Special Committee’s January 6, 2025 minutes narrate the
conversation in which Whelan agreed to Emerson’s request to lock in a deal before
71 JX 173 at 5 (noting “[t]he premise of [Emerson’s] stated premium is, therefore, not accurate”). 72 POB 62. 73 JX 200 at 24 (disclosing that “[t]he November 5 Proposal represented a 1% premium to [Aspen’s] Share price of $237.59 on November 4, 2024, the date immediately prior to the November 5 Proposal”).
15 Aspen announced positive quarterly earnings in February 2025.74 The minutes also
describe the Special Committee’s subsequent direction to Whelan: to raise the
price by $35 per share.75 The formal board materials do not state that the Special
Committee authorized Whelan’s concession. Barnes wants informal board
materials on that point, and whether the Special Committee considered the positive
effect the earnings release would have on Aspen’s stock price.
ii. Whether Whelan was authorized is far from the “crux” of Barnes’
investigatory purpose. Barnes knows Whelan gave up leverage, and knows how
the Special Committee responded. The Special Committee’s reaction is in the
formal board minutes.76 Barnes is not entitled to informal board materials on this
point.
h. Documents for Elliott
i. Barnes has fallen short of the common law standard for many of his
requests. Like the Magistrate, I believe that a stockholder who falls short of this
standard would also fall short under 8 Del. C. §§ 220(f)–(g). It follows Elliott
would not be entitled to those materials, either.
74 JX 171 at 1–2. 75 Id. at 2 (“Following discussion, the Special Committee determined that Mr. Whelan should respond to the January 6 Emerson offer with a counteroffer of $286 per Share”). 76 See, e.g., id.; JX 175; JX 176 (“Mr. Whelan then explained . . . that, while the Special Committee believed that time was of the essence, the Special Committee was comfortable recommending that [Aspen] continue as a standalone company if Emerson was not able to increase its offer price.”
16 ii. That leaves the question of what to do about the documents I have
awarded Barnes. Elliott has argued the application of Section 220 as recently
amended to its demand is unconstitutional, and that argument is stayed pending the
Delaware Supreme Court’s adjudication of a similar issue.77 On exception, Elliott
seeks production of the documents Barnes will receive under a confidentiality
order permitting sharing books and records with similarly situated stockholders.78
Aspen objects, vaguely gesturing in the direction of Section 220 as amended and
asserting two separate confidentiality orders would be required.
iii. On these unique facts, fairness warrants permitting Elliott to receive the
same materials sought by Barnes, under a single confidentiality order. Plaintiffs’
demands sought to inspect books and records pertaining to the same transaction for
the same proper purpose. The demands were separated by only six days, and
Section 220 was not retroactive when Elliott served its demand. This Court has
broad discretion to “place reasonable confidentiality restrictions on a Section 220
production.”79 “The restrictions cannot, however, impart ‘inequitable notion[s]
77 POB 66. 78 Id. at 5, 66; see, e.g., Jefferson v. Dominion Hldgs., Inc., 2014 WL 4782961, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 24, 2014); Nottingham P’rs v. Trans-Lux Corp., 1987 WL 7534, at *2 (Del. Ch. Feb. 4, 1987). 79 Tiger v. Boast Apparel, Inc., 214 A.3d 933, 937 (Del. 2019); see also CM & M Grp., Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 793–94 (Del. 1982); Disney v. Walt Disney Co., 857 A.2d 444, 447 (Del. Ch. 2004).
17 into Delaware’s Section 220 jurisprudence.’”80 Aspen has not identified any
concrete prejudice it would suffer from a single confidentiality order.
/s/ Morgan T. Zurn Vice Chancellor Morgan T. Zurn
80 Greenlight, 2023 WL 8009057, at *10 (citing Ravenswood Inv. Co., L.P. v. Winmill & Co. Inc., 2014 WL 2445776, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2014)).