In re Cote d'Azur Estate Corporation

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 18, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2017-0290-JTL
StatusPublished

This text of In re Cote d'Azur Estate Corporation (In re Cote d'Azur Estate Corporation) 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
In re Cote d'Azur Estate Corporation, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN RE CÔTE D’AZUR ESTATE ) C.A. No. 2017-0290-JTL CORPORATION )

OPINION

Date Submitted: September 16, 2022 Date Decided: November 18, 2022

Jeremy D. Anderson, FISH & RICHARDSON P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for plaintiff Lilly Lea Perry.

Steven L. Caponi, K&L GATES, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for defendant the BGO Foundation and for nominal party Côte d’Azur Estate Corporation.

Dieter Walter Neupert; Defendant pro se.

LASTER, V.C. Plaintiff Lilly Lea Perry has moved for the issuance of a letter of request to obtain

the assistance of the central authority in Switzerland to facilitate discovery. Lilly seeks

international assistance to obtain electronic data that Swiss investigators seized from the

law office of Dieter Neupert, a defendant in this case, while investigating whether Neupert

falsified evidence in a civil proceeding in Switzerland. A Swiss court determined that the

investigators had reasonable cause to obtain the materials and that the investigators acted

properly by only seizing evidence that was directly relevant to their investigation. The

resulting evidence consists primarily of emails sent or received by Neupert and one of his

assistants covering the period from May 1, 2015, through March 1, 2017 (the “Discovery

Materials”).

To obtain a letter of request, the movant must show initially that production would

be ordered if the materials sought were subject to the court’s jurisdiction. In one of her

proposals, Lilly seeks all of the Discovery Materials. In an alternative proposal, Lilly only

seeks the Discovery Materials to the extent that they touch on particular issues relevant to

this proceeding. The court adopts the latter proposal which makes the materials sought

plainly relevant. If the Discovery Materials were subject to this court’s jurisdiction, the

court would order them produced.

Whenever discovery involves a lawyer, there will be concerns about privilege. Here,

those concerns are likely to be limited, because the investigators conducted a focused

investigation and have stated that the Discovery Materials primarily implicate Neupert and

his assistant, rather than clients. Additionally, privilege issues are unlikely to be of concern

1 because of the crime/fraud exception. This court has previously ruled that the actions

Neupert took that form the basis for this case bear sufficient hallmarks of fraud to invoke

the crime/fraud exception. The Discovery Materials were also seized as part of an

investigation into a crime.

A party seeking a letter of request also must convince the issuing court to ask a

foreign court for assistance, taking into account the burden that such a request necessarily

imposes on the judicial system of another nation. Lilly has met her burden on that issue by

showing that the letter of request is targeted and appropriate. The Discovery Materials have

already been collected and are easily identifiable. Under Swiss law, a private plaintiff can

obtain the Discovery Materials, and Lilly has shown that investigators have provided

similar information to a private plaintiff in the past.

Although not required to secure the issuance of a letter of request, Lilly has shown

that it will be difficult, if not impossible, to obtain the information through other means.

To be sure, Neupert is a party to this case and ostensibly subject to compulsory process.

But since April 2017, Neupert has failed to participate meaningfully in this proceeding. He

is a foreign national who previously refused to be deposed, despite his status as a defendant.

Because of his non-participation in an earlier phase of this case, the court drew an inference

that any evidence that Neupert could have provided would be favorable to Lilly. Another

powerful indicator of Neupert’s non-participation is his failure to respond to Lilly’s motion.

Only the BGO Foundation has raised objections to the letter of request.

Lilly has made a convincing showing that Neupert would not produce the Discovery

Materials if he had them, and the record suggests that he may no longer have them. The

2 investigators reported that they seized the Discovery Materials, not that they made copies

of them. It is reasonable to infer that the only source is the investigators’ files.

Lilly’s motion is granted. The letter of request will issue.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Non-party Israel Igo Perry died on March 18, 2015. He was survived by Lilly, his

widow, and their two daughters, Tamar and Yael.1 Mr. Perry’s last will and testament

named Neupert as the executor of his estate. Neupert is Swiss lawyer who was Mr. Perry’s

longtime advisor and confidant.2 Neupert also was the architect of Mr. Perry’s estate plan,

which involved a complex network of entities called the “Structure.” Louis Oehri & Partner

Trust reg. (“LOPAG”), a Liechtenstein commercial trust company, formed and controlled

all of the entities in the Structure. Neupert and Louis Oehri co-founded LOPAG in 1989,

and they worked hand in hand to create the Structure and advise Mr. Perry.

Neupert and representatives of LOPAG told Lilly that when Mr. Perry died, he was

1 My standard practice is to identify individuals by their last name without honorifics. When individuals share the same last name, my standard practice is to shift to first names. Using Mr. Perry’s first name (Israel) can be confusing, because key events took place in the State of Israel. This decision therefore refers to him as “Mr. Perry.”

This decision periodically uses terms such as “the Perry family” or “the members of the Perry family” to refer to Lilly, Tamar, and Yael. By describing the Perry family in this fashion, this decision is not suggesting that other individuals do not qualify as members of the Perry family under a broader definition. 2 Although Mr. Perry named Neupert to the role of executor in his will, Lilly contested Neupert’s ability to serve, and Neupert never secured authority to act as executor. Instead, Tamar and another individual were appointed as co-executors of Mr. Perry’s estate.

3 the sole member of Côte d’Azur Estate LLC (“Côte d’Azur” or the “LLC”), a Delaware

limited liability company. The LLC owned La Treille, a villa in the south of France (the

“Villa”). Neupert and representatives of LOPAG told Lilly that the member interest in the

LLC passed to Mr. Perry’s estate and that she was the sole heir of the estate.

After Lilly, Tamar, and Yael disagreed about the disposition of Mr. Perry’s wealth,

Neupert and LOPAG tried to broker a settlement of those disputes. By June 2016, however,

it was clear that the family members could not agree. The family divided into two factions,

with Lilly and Tamar on one side and Yael on the other.

Neupert and LOPAG sought to force the family members back to the table by

pressuring Lilly. To achieve that goal, they reversed their position about the ownership of

the LLC, and they asserted that before his death, Mr. Perry transferred his member interest

to the BGO Foundation (the “Foundation”), one of the entities in the Structure. As evidence

of the transfer, they relied on a Deed of Assignment dated May 1, 2013. If the Foundation

controlled the LLC, then Neupert and LOPAG could deny Lilly access to the Villa.

In June 2016, in an effort to bolster their new position about the ownership of the

LLC, Neupert and LOPAG engaged in self-help.

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In re Cote d'Azur Estate Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cote-dazur-estate-corporation-delch-2022.