InterMune, Inc. and Roche Holdings, Inc. v. W. Scott Harkonen, M.D.
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Opinion
IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
INTERMUNE, INC. and ROCHE ) HOLDINGS, INC., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2021-0694-NAC ) W. SCOTT HARKONEN, M.D., ) ) Defendant. )
POST-TRIAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: September 22, 2023 Date Decided: August 1, 2024
Karen A. Jacobs, Megan W. Cascio, Courtney Kurz, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Laurie Carr Mims, Benjamin D. Rothstein, Candice Mai Khanh Nguyen, Melissa Cornell, Catherine C. Porto, KEKER, VAN NEST & PETERS LLP, San Francisco, California; Counsel for Plaintiffs InterMune, Inc. and Roche Holdings, Inc.
Michael A. Weidinger, Megan Ix Brison, PINCKNEY, WEIDINGER, URBAN & JOYCE LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Elizabeth Sandza, Richard Sandza, SANDZA LAW, PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Counsel for Defendant W. Scott Harkonen, M.D.
COOK, V.C. Delaware holds corporations accountable for their advancement obligations.
But this case serves as a reminder that advanced sums sometimes must be repaid.
Defendant Dr. W. Scott Harkonen was the Chief Executive Officer of
InterMune, Inc. (“InterMune” or the “Company”). Following the issuance of a
misleading press release in 2002, Dr. Harkonen became the center of a federal
government investigation and criminal trial. To fund his sophisticated and well-
resourced defense, Dr. Harkonen requested and accepted very sizeable
advancements. The Company funded the advancements via several director and
officer (“D&O”) insurance policies and from its own coffers. The advanced sums were
subject to repayment if the litigation was found to be non-indemnifiable under Section
145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”). A federal jury subsequently
convicted Dr. Harkonen of felony wire fraud in 2009. Dr. Harkonen then embarked
on nearly a decade of unsuccessful appeals to overturn that conviction.
In light of the wire fraud conviction, two of the Company’s excess D&O
insurance providers demanded, in arbitration, that InterMune and Dr. Harkonen
repay the sums advanced to Dr. Harkonen to litigate the wire fraud charge. In 2019,
InterMune and Dr. Harkonen settled with the two insurers. InterMune paid the
settlements in full and retained its right to sue Dr. Harkonen for recovery.
InterMune is exercising that right with this litigation.
Dr. Harkonen raised many of his defenses to InterMune’s claim for the first
time on the eve of trial. These defenses are both procedurally improper and
1 prejudicial to InterMune, which was deprived a fair opportunity to address the
defenses in discovery and in its trial preparation.
And despite not filing a single counterclaim, Dr. Harkonen seeks a declaration
that the Company must reimburse him for various legal expenses he accrued in a
related California Medical Board disciplinary proceeding, two insurance arbitrations,
advancement negotiations with InterMune, and a presidential pardon. Dr.
Harkonen’s claims, like his untimely defenses, are also improper.
The parties appeared before this Court for trial on a paper record. Based on
my findings and our law, Dr. Harkonen is responsible for the legal expenses incurred
in litigating his wire fraud conviction, and the Company is therefore entitled to
recover the amounts it seeks in this action. Dr. Harkonen’s claims do not fare any
better. In addition to being procedurally improper, each of Dr. Harkonen’s claims is
either untimely or fails to satisfy the requirements for indemnification under Section
145.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The preponderance of the evidence supports the following findings of fact.
Fortunately, the material facts are undisputed or otherwise not subject to reasonable
dispute. 1
1 Citations in the form of “JX — ([Descriptor])” refer to the joint exhibits the parties
submitted for trial. Citations in the form of “TT —” refer to the trial transcript. Where appropriate, I have taken judicial notice of the decisions and filings in Dr. Harkonen’s criminal proceedings, his collateral challenges to those proceedings, and the insurance arbitrations. See D.R.E. 201(b)(2), (c)–(d), 202(a)(1). Relevant decisions include United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen I), 2009 WL 1578712 (N.D. Cal. June 4, 2009); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen II), 2010 WL 2985257 (N.D. Cal. July 27, 2010); United States v.
2 A. The Creation of InterMune
InterMune is a biotechnology company incorporated in Delaware with its
principal place of business in California. 2 During his tenure at InterMune, Dr.
Harkonen served both as the Company’s CEO and as a director on its board.
Under InterMune’s bylaws (the “Bylaws”), the Company agreed to advance to
its directors and officers “all expenses incurred by any director or officer” in
connection with proceedings related to their role at the Company. 3 Additionally, the
Company agreed to “indemnify its directors and officers to the fullest extent not
prohibited by the DGCL or any other applicable law[.]” 4
But the advancements were conditioned “upon [the] receipt of an undertaking”
stating that the director or officer would repay advanced funds to the Company “if it
should be determined ultimately that such person is not entitled to be indemnified
Harkonen (Harkonen III), 2011 WL 13250647 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 18, 2011), aff’d, 510 F. App’x 633 (9th Cir. 2013); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen IV), 510 F. App’x 633 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 571 U.S. 1110 (2013); Harkonen v. United States (Harkonen V), 571 U.S. 1110 (2013); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen VI), 2015 WL 4999698 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 21, 2015), aff’d, 705 F. App’x 606 (9th Cir. 2017); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen VII), 705 F. App'x 606 (9th Cir. 2017), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 467 (2018); Harkonen v. United States (Harkonen VIII), 139 S. Ct. 467 (2018); InterMune, Inc. v. Harkonen (Harkonen IX), 2023 WL 3337212 (Del. Ch. May 10, 2023).
2 InterMune, Inc. v. Harkonen, C.A. No. 2021-0694-NAC, Docket (“Dkt.”) 167, Pre-
Trial Stipulation Order (“PTO”) ¶¶ 1, 3. In 2014, Roche Holdings, Inc. acquired the Company and agreed in the merger agreement to honor the Company’s indemnification and advancement obligations. JX 558 § 6.06 (a)–(b) (Roche Merger Agreement). For simplicity, I will only refer to InterMune throughout the opinion, regardless of whether the time in question is pre- or post-acquisition.
3 JX 14 § 43(c) (Bylaws).
4 Id. § 43(a).
3 under [the Bylaws] or otherwise.” 5 The Bylaws also shifted the claimant’s fees to the
Company if the claimant is “successful in whole or in part” in enforcing “[a]ny right
to indemnification or advances granted by [the Bylaws.]” 6
On March 22, 2000, the Company and Dr. Harkonen entered into an indemnity
agreement (the “Indemnity Agreement”), whereby the Company “agree[d] to hold
harmless and indemnify [Dr. Harkonen] to the fullest extent authorized or permitted
by the provisions of the Bylaws and the [DGCL.]” 7 Further, the Indemnity
Agreement, like the Bylaws, obligated the Company to advance to Dr. Harkonen “all
expenses [he] incurred” in proceedings related to his employment at the Company. 8
But, again, this was conditioned on the “receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of
[Dr. Harkonen] to repay said amounts if it shall be determined ultimately that [he]
is not entitled to be indemnified under the provisions of this Agreement, the Bylaws,
the [DGCL] or otherwise.” 9 The Indemnity Agreement also mirrored the Bylaws by
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IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
INTERMUNE, INC. and ROCHE ) HOLDINGS, INC., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2021-0694-NAC ) W. SCOTT HARKONEN, M.D., ) ) Defendant. )
POST-TRIAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
Date Submitted: September 22, 2023 Date Decided: August 1, 2024
Karen A. Jacobs, Megan W. Cascio, Courtney Kurz, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Laurie Carr Mims, Benjamin D. Rothstein, Candice Mai Khanh Nguyen, Melissa Cornell, Catherine C. Porto, KEKER, VAN NEST & PETERS LLP, San Francisco, California; Counsel for Plaintiffs InterMune, Inc. and Roche Holdings, Inc.
Michael A. Weidinger, Megan Ix Brison, PINCKNEY, WEIDINGER, URBAN & JOYCE LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Elizabeth Sandza, Richard Sandza, SANDZA LAW, PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Counsel for Defendant W. Scott Harkonen, M.D.
COOK, V.C. Delaware holds corporations accountable for their advancement obligations.
But this case serves as a reminder that advanced sums sometimes must be repaid.
Defendant Dr. W. Scott Harkonen was the Chief Executive Officer of
InterMune, Inc. (“InterMune” or the “Company”). Following the issuance of a
misleading press release in 2002, Dr. Harkonen became the center of a federal
government investigation and criminal trial. To fund his sophisticated and well-
resourced defense, Dr. Harkonen requested and accepted very sizeable
advancements. The Company funded the advancements via several director and
officer (“D&O”) insurance policies and from its own coffers. The advanced sums were
subject to repayment if the litigation was found to be non-indemnifiable under Section
145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”). A federal jury subsequently
convicted Dr. Harkonen of felony wire fraud in 2009. Dr. Harkonen then embarked
on nearly a decade of unsuccessful appeals to overturn that conviction.
In light of the wire fraud conviction, two of the Company’s excess D&O
insurance providers demanded, in arbitration, that InterMune and Dr. Harkonen
repay the sums advanced to Dr. Harkonen to litigate the wire fraud charge. In 2019,
InterMune and Dr. Harkonen settled with the two insurers. InterMune paid the
settlements in full and retained its right to sue Dr. Harkonen for recovery.
InterMune is exercising that right with this litigation.
Dr. Harkonen raised many of his defenses to InterMune’s claim for the first
time on the eve of trial. These defenses are both procedurally improper and
1 prejudicial to InterMune, which was deprived a fair opportunity to address the
defenses in discovery and in its trial preparation.
And despite not filing a single counterclaim, Dr. Harkonen seeks a declaration
that the Company must reimburse him for various legal expenses he accrued in a
related California Medical Board disciplinary proceeding, two insurance arbitrations,
advancement negotiations with InterMune, and a presidential pardon. Dr.
Harkonen’s claims, like his untimely defenses, are also improper.
The parties appeared before this Court for trial on a paper record. Based on
my findings and our law, Dr. Harkonen is responsible for the legal expenses incurred
in litigating his wire fraud conviction, and the Company is therefore entitled to
recover the amounts it seeks in this action. Dr. Harkonen’s claims do not fare any
better. In addition to being procedurally improper, each of Dr. Harkonen’s claims is
either untimely or fails to satisfy the requirements for indemnification under Section
145.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The preponderance of the evidence supports the following findings of fact.
Fortunately, the material facts are undisputed or otherwise not subject to reasonable
dispute. 1
1 Citations in the form of “JX — ([Descriptor])” refer to the joint exhibits the parties
submitted for trial. Citations in the form of “TT —” refer to the trial transcript. Where appropriate, I have taken judicial notice of the decisions and filings in Dr. Harkonen’s criminal proceedings, his collateral challenges to those proceedings, and the insurance arbitrations. See D.R.E. 201(b)(2), (c)–(d), 202(a)(1). Relevant decisions include United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen I), 2009 WL 1578712 (N.D. Cal. June 4, 2009); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen II), 2010 WL 2985257 (N.D. Cal. July 27, 2010); United States v.
2 A. The Creation of InterMune
InterMune is a biotechnology company incorporated in Delaware with its
principal place of business in California. 2 During his tenure at InterMune, Dr.
Harkonen served both as the Company’s CEO and as a director on its board.
Under InterMune’s bylaws (the “Bylaws”), the Company agreed to advance to
its directors and officers “all expenses incurred by any director or officer” in
connection with proceedings related to their role at the Company. 3 Additionally, the
Company agreed to “indemnify its directors and officers to the fullest extent not
prohibited by the DGCL or any other applicable law[.]” 4
But the advancements were conditioned “upon [the] receipt of an undertaking”
stating that the director or officer would repay advanced funds to the Company “if it
should be determined ultimately that such person is not entitled to be indemnified
Harkonen (Harkonen III), 2011 WL 13250647 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 18, 2011), aff’d, 510 F. App’x 633 (9th Cir. 2013); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen IV), 510 F. App’x 633 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 571 U.S. 1110 (2013); Harkonen v. United States (Harkonen V), 571 U.S. 1110 (2013); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen VI), 2015 WL 4999698 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 21, 2015), aff’d, 705 F. App’x 606 (9th Cir. 2017); United States v. Harkonen (Harkonen VII), 705 F. App'x 606 (9th Cir. 2017), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 467 (2018); Harkonen v. United States (Harkonen VIII), 139 S. Ct. 467 (2018); InterMune, Inc. v. Harkonen (Harkonen IX), 2023 WL 3337212 (Del. Ch. May 10, 2023).
2 InterMune, Inc. v. Harkonen, C.A. No. 2021-0694-NAC, Docket (“Dkt.”) 167, Pre-
Trial Stipulation Order (“PTO”) ¶¶ 1, 3. In 2014, Roche Holdings, Inc. acquired the Company and agreed in the merger agreement to honor the Company’s indemnification and advancement obligations. JX 558 § 6.06 (a)–(b) (Roche Merger Agreement). For simplicity, I will only refer to InterMune throughout the opinion, regardless of whether the time in question is pre- or post-acquisition.
3 JX 14 § 43(c) (Bylaws).
4 Id. § 43(a).
3 under [the Bylaws] or otherwise.” 5 The Bylaws also shifted the claimant’s fees to the
Company if the claimant is “successful in whole or in part” in enforcing “[a]ny right
to indemnification or advances granted by [the Bylaws.]” 6
On March 22, 2000, the Company and Dr. Harkonen entered into an indemnity
agreement (the “Indemnity Agreement”), whereby the Company “agree[d] to hold
harmless and indemnify [Dr. Harkonen] to the fullest extent authorized or permitted
by the provisions of the Bylaws and the [DGCL.]” 7 Further, the Indemnity
Agreement, like the Bylaws, obligated the Company to advance to Dr. Harkonen “all
expenses [he] incurred” in proceedings related to his employment at the Company. 8
But, again, this was conditioned on the “receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of
[Dr. Harkonen] to repay said amounts if it shall be determined ultimately that [he]
is not entitled to be indemnified under the provisions of this Agreement, the Bylaws,
the [DGCL] or otherwise.” 9 The Indemnity Agreement also mirrored the Bylaws by
requiring the Company to pay for the legal fees the claimant incurred enforcing “[a]ny
right to indemnification or advances granted by this [Indemnity] Agreement[.]” 10 The
5 Id. § 43(c).
6 Id. § 43(d).
7 JX 15 § 2 (Indemnity Agreement).
8 Id. § 8 (emphasis added).
9 Id.
10 Id. § 9.
4 Indemnity Agreement was governed by Delaware law. 11 Neither the rights granted
under the Bylaws 12 nor the rights granted under the Indemnity Agreement are
exclusive. 13
B. Press Release and Dr. Harkonen’s Departure
In 2000, InterMune received a license to commercialize interferon gamma-1b,
better known by its brand name—Actimmune. 14 Before InterMune received the
rights to Actimmune, a preliminary study was published in the New England Journal
of Medicine suggesting that interferon gamma-1b improved lung function in certain
patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (“IPF”). 15 But the researchers noted that
a larger study would need to be conducted to confirm the drug’s potential effectiveness
in treating lung diseases. 16 InterMune set off to conduct such a study.
From October 2000 through August 2002, InterMune ran a clinical trial to test
the effectiveness of Actimmune in treating IPF. 17 In August of 2002, Dr. Harkonen
drafted and issued a press release, on behalf of the Company, announcing the results
11 Id. § 14.
12 JX 14 § 43(e).
13 JX 15 § 11.
14 PTO ¶ 16; Harkonen I, 2009 WL 1578712, at *1.
15 JX 6 at 5 (NEJM Article).
16 Id.; Harkonen I, 2009 WL 1578712, at *2.
17 PTO ¶ 17.
5 of its Actimmune clinical trial. 18 The press release claimed that Actimmune
“[r]educes mortality by 70% in Patients with Mild to Moderate [IPF]” and quoted Dr.
Harkonen praising the study: “We are extremely pleased with [the clinical study’s]
results, which indicate Actimmune may extend the lives of patients suffering from
[IPF].” 19
The press release, however, misrepresented the clinical study results.
Contrary to the press release, “overwhelming, undisputed evidence [showed] that the
[clinical] study was a failure.” 20 Yet the press release characterized the study, which
“missed its primary endpoint as well as all ten of the secondary endpoints[,]” 21 as “a
major breakthrough” with “results [that] will support the use of Actimmune and lead
to peak sales in the range of $400–$500 million per year[.]” 22
A consultant who led the data monitoring committee for the Actimmune
clinical trial commented that “if the press release were rated on a scale from 1 to 10,
10 being the most misleading, [the consultant] considered the press release a 10.” 23
As a federal judge observed, Dr. Harkonen’s follow-on “analyses were conducted with
18 JX 177 (Press Release).
19 Id.
20 Harkonen II, 2010 WL 2985257, at *10.
21 Id.
22 JX 177.
23 JX 387 at 4 (Form 302 for Dr. Thomas Fleming).
6 fraudulent intent.” 24 Dr. Harkonen simply “cut that data and slice[d] it until [he] got
the kind of results [he was] looking for.” 25 Yet, “in the face of the [clinical] trial’s
objective failure,” Dr. Harkonen nonetheless issued a press release that described the
clinical trial as a success. 26
On June 30, 2003, less than a year after issuing the press release, Dr.
Harkonen resigned as the Company’s CEO. 27 On September 25, 2003, the Company
and Dr. Harkonen entered into a mutual release (the “Mutual Release”), which was
governed by California law. 28 Through the Mutual Release, “[t]he Company . . . fully
release[d Harkonen] . . . from and against any and all claims . . . connected with or
relating to any and all acts . . . occurring on or before the Board Resignation Date.” 29
Additionally, the parties agreed that the releases were “full and final releases
covering all known and unknown, suspected or unsuspected injuries, debts, claims or
damages as to the released matters only.” 30 But the Mutual Release did not modify
24 Harkonen IV, 510 F. App’x at 636.
25 JX 502 at 190 (David Cory Direct Examination at California Trial).
26 Harkonen II, 2010 WL 2985257, at *10.
27 PTO ¶ 4; JX 361 § 1(a) (Mutual Release).
28 JX 361 § 18.
29 Id. § 4. The Board Resignation Date was defined as September 25, 2003. Id. § 11.
30 Id. § 5.
7 Dr. Harkonen’s advancement and indemnification rights. 31 It did, however, include
a prevailing party provision. 32
C. Prosecution and Insurance Policies
In 2004, the U.S. Department of Justice (the “DOJ”) launched an investigation
into the Company’s promotion of Actimmune. 33 Several years later, on March 18,
2008, a grand jury indicted Dr. Harkonen “for fraudulently promoting . . . Actimmune
(interferon gamma–1b) by putting out false and misleading information about the
drug’s effectiveness in treating [IPF].” 34 Dr. Harkonen was indicted on one count of
felony misbranding and one count of felony wire fraud. 35
Dr. Harkonen, with the money advanced to him by the Company and its D&O
insurance policies, assembled a well-qualified legal team. 36 His defense attorneys
included counsel from several prestigious law firms and a now-sitting judge of the
Superior Court of California. 37
31 Id.
32 Id. § 20.
33 PTO ¶ 19.
34 Harkonen I, 2009 WL 1578712, at *1.
35 JX 470 (Criminal Indictment); PTO ¶ 21.
36 Harkonen VI, 2015 WL 4999698, at *2.
37 Id.
8 The Company had several layers of D&O insurance—a $10 million primary
policy and four excess policies of $5 million apiece. 38 Only two of the five policies are
relevant to the matter before me: one with Arch Specialty Insurance Company
(“Arch”) and the other with Old Republic Insurance Company (“Old Republic”). 39
By November 2008, the Company had depleted its primary D&O insurance
policy along with its first layer of excess D&O coverage. 40 The Company expected its
second layer of excess coverage to be depleted by the end of 2008. 41 Needless to say,
the cost of litigating Dr. Harkonen’s charges with a large and prestigious legal team
was substantial.
In November 2008, Arch informed the Company that Arch did not intend to
provide advancement to fund Dr. Harkonen’s litigation of his criminal charges. 42 On
December 1, 2008, in light of the already exhausted policies and Arch’s denial of
coverage, Dr. Harkonen sent a letter to the Company (the “December 2008 Letter”)
to remind it that “InterMune independently owes obligations to Dr. Harkonen to fund
his ongoing defense[s]” under the Bylaws, the Indemnity Agreement, and the
DGCL. 43 The next day, on December 2, 2008, Dr. Harkonen signed an undertaking
38 JX 590 (Old Republic Arbitration Ruling).
39 PTO ¶ 30.
40 Id. ¶ 29.
41 Id.
42 JX 475 at 2 (Arch Letter Declining Coverage); PTO ¶ 31.
43 JX 477 (December 2008 Letter).
9 (the “Undertaking”) requesting advancement from the Company. 44 In the
Undertaking, Dr. Harkonen pledged to repay the sums advanced and paid by the
Company “if it shall be determined ultimately that [Dr. Harkonen is] not entitled to
be indemnified under the provisions of the Indemnity Agreement, the [Bylaws],
Delaware General Corporation Law, or otherwise.” 45
Two days later, on December 4, 2008, Dr. Harkonen initiated arbitration
proceedings to compel Arch to provide him with advancement for his criminal
defense. 46 InterMune also initiated arbitration against Arch on January 13, 2009. 47
On May 28, 2009, the arbitration panel issued an interim order for Arch to advance
Dr. Harkonen’s legal expenses. 48
On September 29, 2009, following a six-week trial and four days of jury
deliberation, the jury delivered its verdict. 49 The jury acquitted Dr. Harkonen of the
misbranding charge but found him guilty of felony wire fraud. 50 Although the wire
44 JX 476 (Undertaking).
45 Id.
46 JX 478 (InterMune’s Demand for Arbitration).
47 Id.
48 JX 484 at 21 (Ruling on Arch Arbitration); PTO ¶ 34.
49 Harkonen II, 2010 WL 2985257, at *2.
50 JX 574 at 40 (Arch Arbitration Demand) (attaching the verdict form from Dr. Harkonen’s wire fraud conviction); PTO ¶ 22. Although the PTO states the jury “acquitted him on one count of mislabeling,” all other documents, including the verdict form and even other paragraphs in the PTO, refer to the charge as one of “misbranding.” Compare PTO ¶ 22, with JX 470, JX 574, and JX 590.
10 fraud charge carried the potential for twenty years of imprisonment, a $250,000 fine,
and three years of supervised release, 51 the court ultimately sentenced him to three
years of probation with six months of home confinement, and ordered Dr. Harkonen
to pay a $20,000 fine and complete 200 hours of community service. 52
D. Subsequent Litigation
On December 4, 2009, Dr. Harkonen filed a motion for a judgment of acquittal
and a motion for a new trial. 53 He claimed “that the government failed to present
sufficient evidence such that the jury could find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he
knowingly made a false or fraudulent statement with the intent to defraud.” 54
Having blown through the Arch policy by the end of 2009, 55 Dr. Harkonen drew from
InterMune’s Old Republic policy, which kicked in on January 26, 2010 but was
depleted by the end of June 2010. 56
Soon after, on July 27, 2010, the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of
California denied Dr. Harkonen’s post-trial motions in their entirety. 57 In light of Dr.
51 JX 470 at 3.
52 PTO ¶ 24.
53 Harkonen II, 2010 WL 2985257, at *2.
54 Id. at *3.
55 PTO ¶ 35.
56 JX 590 at 2.
57 Harkonen II, 2010 WL 2985257, at *20; PTO ¶ 23.
11 Harkonen’s wire fraud conviction, Arch sought to recoup the amounts it paid to Dr.
Harkonen under the D&O policy, citing the policy’s fraud exclusion. 58
Dr. Harkonen subsequently requested relief from his wire fraud conviction,
this time on the basis that he was entitled to a new trial based on “newly discovered
evidence” found in an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court. 59 In the amicus brief,
the United States government argued “that statistical evidence is not the only
reliable indication of causation[.]” 60 The District Court noted that “it [was] unclear
how the [amicus] brief is ‘newly discovered evidence,’” 61 and explained that the
amicus brief did not change the fact that Dr. Harkonen materially misrepresented
the clinical trial in the press release. 62 On April 18, 2011, the District Court denied
Dr. Harkonen’s motions for a new trial. 63
E. Reining In Fees
The bills continued to roll in at what InterMune described as a “profligate
rate.” 64 On September 11, 2011, the Company’s in-house counsel reached out to Dr.
58 JX 574. The fraud exclusion barred coverage for claims arising out of a “deliberate criminal or deliberate fraudulent act.” Id. at 5.
59 Harkonen III, 2011 WL 13250647, at *1. Dr. Harkonen also filed a motion for a new trial, alleging a Brady violation. Id.
60 Id. at *8.
61 Id.
62 Id. at *5.
63 Id. at *10.
64 Dkt. 153, Pls.’ Opening Pre-Trial Br. (“Pls.’ OB”) at 7.
12 Harkonen to challenge the reasonableness of his litigation expenses, writing that “we
find it difficult to accept that fees of approximately $4 million—fees incurred before
even the opening appellate brief has been filed—can be necessary and reasonable in
a matter involving a single defendant and a single claim.” 65 In response to the
Company’s hesitancy at the ever-growing litigation costs, on September 16, 2011, Dr.
Harkonen’s Delaware counsel reached out to the Company to enforce Dr. Harkonen’s
“rights to advancement and indemnification under Article XI of the InterMune
Bylaws.” 66
Shortly after the Company’s in-house counsel questioned the reasonableness
of Dr. Harkonen’s litigation costs, Dr. Harkonen hired another lawyer for his legal
team. 67 The Company’s counsel again disputed the reasonableness of Dr. Harkonen’s
legal expenses and argued that there was “no reason why Dr. Harkonen should need
to supplement his existing (and sizeable) legal team.” 68
On December 13, 2011, the Company and Dr. Harkonen entered into a
settlement agreement (the “2011 Settlement Agreement”) to address the Company’s
obligation to advance Dr. Harkonen’s legal expenses. 69 The 2011 Settlement
Agreement attempted to settle the ongoing disputes surrounding the reasonableness
65 JX 533 (Simon Email to Harkonen).
66 JX 621 at 16 (Collins Email to InterMune).
67 JX 537 (Simon Email to Haddad).
68 Id.
69 JX 539 (2011 Settlement Agreement); PTO ¶ 51.
13 of Dr. Harkonen’s legal expenses by setting budgets for legal expenses through
2012. 70 In the 2011 Settlement Agreement, the Company also agreed to pay almost
$2 million of Dr. Harkonen’s outstanding legal expenses. 71 Dr. Harkonen asserts that
he incurred $90,132.83 in legal expenses from his Delaware counsel in resolving the
advancement dispute that led to the 2011 Settlement Agreement. 72
F. More Federal Court Litigation
On May 16, 2011, Dr. Harkonen appealed his wire fraud conviction to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. 73 Dr. Harkonen advanced several arguments
on appeal, including that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction, the
First Amendment protected the fraudulent press release, the jury instruction was
improper, and the District Court had misapplied the law. 74 On March 4, 2013, a
Ninth Circuit panel rejected each of these arguments and affirmed the District
Court’s ruling. 75 On August 5, 2013, Dr. Harkonen petitioned the U.S. Supreme
70 JX 539.
71 Id. §§ 1–2. This payment consisted of a $1.7 million payment to Sidley Austin and a $141,746 payment to Dennis Riordan.
72 See JX 656 at Overview (May 2023, Harkonen Legal Expenses).
73 Harkonen III, 2011 WL 13250647, appeal docketed, No. 11-10242 (9th Cir. May 16,
2011).
74 Harkonen IV, 510 F. App’x at 635–39.
75 Id.; PTO ¶ 25.
14 Court for a writ of certiorari, which the Supreme Court denied on December 16,
2013. 76
Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s certiorari denial, the Company wrote to
Dr. Harkonen’s counsel that, “in light of the final judgment in the case, as of
December 16, 2013, it has been determined that Dr. Harkonen is not entitled to be
indemnified by InterMune.” 77
On July 30, 2014, Dr. Harkonen filed a petition for a writ of error coram nobis,
arguing he was the victim of ineffective counsel. 78 On August 21, 2015, the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of California denied his petition, noting that
for every example Dr. Harkonen asserted was evidence of ineffective counsel, “ample
evidence supports a finding that each of these strategic decisions was objectively
reasonable[.]” 79
Dr. Harkonen again appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit, arguing the District Court erred in denying his petition for a writ of error
coram nobis. 80 On December 4, 2017, the Ninth Circuit concluded that “the district
76 Harkonen V, 571 U.S. at 1110; PTO ¶ 26.
77 JX 554 at 1 (Topel Email to InterMune).
78 Harkonen VI, 2015 WL 4999698, at *1; PTO ¶ 27. The writ of error coram nobis is available to convicted persons who are ineligible for habeas corpus relief (which is only available to convicted persons in custody). Because Harkonen was on probation rather than in custody, he was ineligible for habeas corpus relief. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(a).
79 Harkonen VI, 2015 WL 4999698, at *10.
80 Harkonen VII, 705 F. App’x at 607; PTO ¶ 27.
15 court did not abuse its discretion” and affirmed the lower court’s ruling. 81 Dr.
Harkonen then sought a writ of certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court of the United
States for a second time. The Supreme Court subsequently denied his petition for
writ of certiorari on November 5, 2018. 82
G. Medical Board of California Disciplinary Action
Dr. Harkonen’s wire fraud conviction also had professional ramifications. In
2011, the Medical Board of California (the “MBC”) brought a disciplinary action
against him based on the 2002 press release and his subsequent wire fraud
conviction. 83 The MBC asserted two causes for the action: (1) Dr. Harkonen was
convicted of a crime related to the practice of medicine, which violated California’s
Business and Professions Code (the “CBPC”) and (2) Dr. Harkonen made false
statements related to the practice of medicine, also in violation of the CBPC. 84 The
Company offered to provide an attorney to defend Dr. Harkonen in the MBC action, 85
but Dr. Harkonen declined the offer, opting to select his own counsel. 86
81 Harkonen VII, 705 F. App’x at 607; PTO ¶ 27.
82 Harkonen VIII, 139 S. Ct. at 467; PTO ¶ 27.
83 JX 561 (MBC Decision).
84 Id.
85 JX 530 (InterMune Letter Confirming Defense for MBC Litigation).
86 JX 526 (Riordan Letter Confirming Retainer and Representation).
16 On December 13, 2012, in connection with the MBC proceeding, an
administrative law judge issued an order revoking Dr. Harkonen’s medical license. 87
Despite not having used his medical license for many years, 88 Dr. Harkonen
challenged the order. 89 On August 26, 2013, the Superior Court of the State of
California for the County of San Francisco granted Dr. Harkonen’s challenge on the
basis that “the administrative law judge excluded all of petitioner’s evidence.” 90 The
court remanded the matter for reconsideration by the MBC. 91
On February 20, 2015, the administrative judge in the MBC proceeding issued
her second ruling, where she again found cause for discipline under each of the two
alleged CBPC violations. 92 The punishment, however, was modified. Rather than
revoking Dr. Harkonen’s medical license, the judge ordered Dr. Harkonen to pay all
past due medical license renewal fees, complete a clinical training program, and
enroll in a professionalism program. 93 Dr. Harkonen paid the fees but failed to
complete the training courses due to health complications that made program
87 JX 561 at 20; PTO ¶ 47.
88 JX 561 at 2.
89 PTO ¶ 48.
90 JX 561 at 11.
91 Id. at 12.
92 Id. at 5–6.
93 Id. at 8–9; PTO ¶ 49.
17 attendance and further medical practice impractical. 94 Dr. Harkonen remains
unlicensed, and his medical license has been canceled. 95 Dr. Harkonen seeks
indemnification for $415,224.82 in legal fees he incurred from the MBC proceeding. 96
H. D&O Insurance Litigation
The primary D&O insurance policy, which was incorporated into both the Old
Republic and the Arch policies, provides:
The Insurer shall not be liable to make any payment for Loss in connection with any Claim made against an Insured . . . arising out of, based upon or attributable to the committing of any deliberate criminal or deliberate fraudulent act by the Insured if a judgment or final adjudication or an alternative dispute resolution proceeding adverse to the Insured(s) establishes that such deliberate criminal or deliberate fraudulent act was committed. 97
On November 12, 2014, Old Republic demanded arbitration to recover the full
$5 million under its policy, plus pre-judgment interest. 98 InterMune and Dr.
Harkonen were co-defendants in the arbitration, and both advocated for the mutually
beneficial position that Dr. Harkonen’s conduct did not fall within the fraud exception
of the insurance policy, although InterMune asserted that Dr. Harkonen would be
responsible for the payments if the arbitrations were to result in a claw-back. 99
94 Dkt. 175, Harkonen Dep. Tr. from April 12, 2023, at 69:19–70:24; PTO ¶ 50.
95 JX 567 (Riordan Email to MBC); PTO ¶ 50.
96JX 656 at Overview. The fees spreadsheet allocates $413,824.82 to Riordan & Horgan and $1,400 to G. Dubcoff. Id.
97 JX 657 § 4 (AIG Insurance Policy).
98 JX 559 (Old Republic Demand for Arbitration).
99 JX 566 (InterMune’s Counterclaim).
18 On October 8, 2018, Arch filed a motion for partial summary judgment in its
arbitration proceeding against Dr. Harkonen and InterMune, arguing that the
advancements it paid to Dr. Harkonen under its D&O policy fell under the fraud
exception. 100 Arch consequently sought to recoup the full $5 million it paid under the
D&O policy, plus prejudgment interest of $4.5 million. 101 Several months later, on
February 22, 2019, Old Republic filed a motion for summary judgment in its
arbitration, also seeking reimbursement for the full $5 million it paid out under the
D&O policy, plus prejudgment interest. 102
On June 25, 2019, the panel in the Old Republic arbitration concluded that Old
Republic was entitled to reimbursement for the “portion of the defense costs advanced
by Old Republic [that] are attributable solely to defense of the wire fraud count.” 103
On July 6, 2019, the Arch arbitration panel likewise concluded that Arch was entitled
to reimbursement “for the fees and costs advanced that are attributable to the Wire
Fraud count” and for “fees and costs [that] were incurred to defend against the
allegations relating to the press release.” 104
100 JX 574 at 6.
101 Id. at 17.
102 JX 576 at 28 (Old Republic Motion).
103 JX 590 at 7.
104 JX 591 at 8:11–16 (Arch Arbitration Ruling).
19 On September 19, 2019, InterMune and Dr. Harkonen settled Old Republic’s
arbitration claim. 105 The parties calculated the settlement amount by excluding Dr.
Harkonen’s legal expenses “incurred prior to the September 29, 2009, jury verdict”
since those invoices “arguably could be said to be allocable to the defense of the
misbranding count . . . .” 106 Dr. Harkonen approved and signed the Old Republic
settlement agreement. 107 The Company paid the Old Republic settlement in full,
subject to a reservation of rights against Dr. Harkonen. 108
Soon thereafter, on October 31, 2019, the parties settled the Arch dispute. 109
As with the Old Republic settlement, the Arch settlement reflected the
“reimbursement of defense costs solely applicable to the wire fraud claim.” 110 Dr.
Harkonen likewise approved and signed the Arch settlement. 111 The Company again
105 PTO ¶ 43; see JX 593 (Brown Email Regarding Old Republic Settlement).
106 JX 593 at 8.
107 JX 596 at 8 (Old Republic Settlement Agreement); JX 594 (Brown Email with Old
Republic Settlement Terms); Dkt. 175, Harkonen Dep. Tr. from April 14, 2023, at 20:5–17, 27:9–20.
108 JX 596 at 4; PTO ¶ 45. Dr. Harkonen agreed to the reservation of rights provision by signing the settlement agreements. See JX 596 at 8; Dkt. 175, Collins Dep. Tr. from April 18, 2023, at 98:5–14 (testifying that Harkonen knowingly and specifically agreed to the reservation of rights provision).
109 JX 600 (Arch Settlement Agreement).
110 Dkt. 175, Brown Dep. Tr. from March 15, 2023, at 107:13–108:8.
111 JX 600 at 9; JX 598 (Collins Email in Arch Settlement).
20 paid the settlement in full while preserving the right to seek reimbursement from Dr.
Harkonen. 112
I. Presidential Pardon
In 2020, following the settlements with the D&O insurers, Dr. Harkonen began
the process of soliciting a presidential pardon. 113 On January 19, 2021, then-
President Trump granted Dr. Harkonen’s pardon application (the “Pardon”). 114 Dr.
Harkonen requests that the Company indemnify him for the $125,274.58 of legal
expenses he incurred while seeking the Pardon. 115 Needless to say, both parties have
endured a lengthy and costly legal process due to Dr. Harkonen’s wire fraud
conviction. 116
112 JX 596 at 4; JX 600 at 4.
113 JX 603 (Pardon Application).
114 JX 606 (Presidential Pardon).
115 JX 656 at Overview.
116 In addition to the foregoing litigation, Dr. Harkonen brought separate actions against his defense counsel, Dr. Thomas Fleming, the DOJ, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. See Harkonen v. Topel, S.F. Super. Ct., CGC-11-513608, Aug. 23, 2011 (Dr. Harkonen suing Topel); Harkonen v. Fleming, 880 F. Supp. 2d 1071 (N.D. Cal. 2012) (Dr. Harkonen suing Dr. Fleming); Harkonen v. U.S. Dep’t of Just., 2012 WL 6019571 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 3, 2012) (Dr. Harkonen suing the DOJ); Harkonen v. Sebelius, 2013 WL 5734918 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 22, 2013) (Dr. Harkonen suing the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services). Each of the cases was eventually dismissed. Moreover, both the Company and Dr. Harkonen have noted that there are significant legal expenses neither party is seeking to recover from the other; Dr. Harkonen claims to have incurred $2 million in legal fees for which he is not seeking indemnification and the Company claims to have advanced an additional $6 million to Dr. Harkonen for which it is not seeking indemnification. Dkt. 168, Def.’s Opening Pre-Trial Br. (“Def.’s OB”) at 2 n.2; Pls.’ OB at 20 n.4.
21 J. This Litigation
The Company filed this action on August 11, 2021. 117 On May 10, 2023, I
granted partial summary judgment in favor of the Company (the “Summary
Judgment Opinion”), holding that the Pardon did not render Dr. Harkonen’s wire
fraud litigation “successful on the merits or otherwise” for purposes of
indemnification under DGCL Section 145(c). 118 Additionally, I concluded that Dr.
Harkonen, who was convicted of federal wire fraud, may not relitigate the issue of
“good faith” under Section 145(a) since the guilty verdict required proving that Dr.
Harkonen had acted in bad faith—and Dr. Harkonen had a full and fair opportunity
to challenge the conviction through the appellate process. 119 In the Summary
Judgment Opinion, I also rejected Dr. Harkonen’s defense that the Company’s
statements in the arbitration proceedings should be viewed as judicial admissions
that invalidate its claim for repayment under DGCL Section 145. 120
The Company now seeks repayment for the settlement amounts it paid to Arch
and Old Republic for the advancements paid from the D&O policies to Dr. Harkonen
for his unsuccessful defense of his wire fraud charge. Dr. Harkonen, in turn, seeks
indemnification for the legal expenses he incurred while litigating the MBC action,
enforcing his advancement rights, engaging in arbitration with Arch and Old
117 Dkt. 1, Verified Compl.
118 Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *8.
119 Id. at *20.
120 Id. at *20–21.
22 Republic, and seeking the Pardon. A trial on the paper record was held on September
11, 2023.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
The corporation, rather than the employee, bears the burden of proof in an
advancement claw-back action. 121 Likewise, “in the case of a mandatory
indemnification provision, the burden rests on the party from whom indemnification
is sought to prove that indemnification is not required.” 122 The applicable evidentiary
burden in this post-trial context is proof by a preponderance of the evidence. 123
“[P]roof by a preponderance of the evidence means proof that something is more likely
than not.” 124
The Bylaws provide that “the corporation shall indemnify its directors and
officers to the fullest extent not prohibited by the DGCL or any other applicable
law[.]” 125 “By using the phrase ‘shall indemnify,’ the [B]ylaw[s] not only mandate[]
indemnification; [they] also effectively place[] the burden on [the Company] to
demonstrate that the indemnification mandated is not required.” 126 The Company
121 VonFeldt v. Stifel Fin. Corp., 1999 WL 413393, at *3 (Del. Ch. June 11, 1999).
122 Stockman v. Heartland Indus. P’rs, L.P., 2009 WL 2096213, at *13 (Del. Ch. July
14, 2009).
123 United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Hldgs., Inc., 937 A.2d 810, 834 n.112 (Del. Ch. 2007).
124 Narayanan v. Sutherland Glob. Hldgs. Inc., 2016 WL 3682617, at *8 (Del. Ch. July
5, 2016).
125 JX 14 § 43(a).
126 VonFeldt, 1999 WL 413393, at *3.
23 therefore bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence in this case,
not only on its affirmative claims against Dr. Harkonen but also with respect to Dr.
Harkonen’s requests for indemnification against the Company.
A. D&O Settlement Indemnification
The Company seeks a judgment requiring Dr. Harkonen to repay to the
Company the $5,906,927.02 the Company paid to Arch and Old Republic to settle the
actions for repayment of the advanced sums used by Dr. Harkonen to litigate his wire
fraud charge.
DGCL Section 145 governs corporate indemnification of directors and
officers. 127 “By enacting § 145, our General Assembly helped ensure that capable
persons would be willing to serve as directors, officers, employees, and agents of
Delaware corporations. But those indemnification and advancement provisions are
not a blank check for corporate officials.” 128 Thus, under Section 145(e), a corporation
may provide advancements to its officers “upon receipt of an undertaking by or on
behalf of such director or officer to repay such amount if it shall ultimately be
determined that such person is not entitled to be indemnified by the corporation as
127 See 8 Del. C. § 145.
128 Fasciana v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp., 829 A.2d 178, 186 (Del. Ch. 2003).
24 authorized in this section.” 129 This ensures that “the Company’s remedy for
improperly advanced fees [is] recoupment at the indemnification stage.” 130
As I explained in the Summary Judgment Opinion, Dr. “Harkonen is not
entitled to indemnification under Section 145(c)[,]” and Dr. “Harkonen is precluded
from establishing good faith under Section 145(a) because his [wire fraud] conviction
is conclusive evidence that he acted in bad faith.” 131 Dr. Harkonen is therefore
ineligible to be indemnified for the advanced amounts he spent defending his wire
fraud charge and appealing his conviction.
The risk of advancement repayment was always a known possibility. The
Bylaws and the Indemnity Agreement both require that InterMune indemnify Dr.
Harkonen only “to the fullest extent not prohibited by the DGCL.” 132 And the Bylaws
and the Indemnity Agreement expressly state that Dr. Harkonen must repay the
advanced amounts if it is “determined ultimately that [he] is not entitled to be
indemnified under” the DGCL. 133 Indeed, the Undertaking confirmed Dr. Harkonen’s
obligation to repay advanced sums “if it shall be determined ultimately that [he is]
129 8 Del. C. § 145(e); see also Marino v. Patriot Rail Co., 131 A.3d 325, 336–37 (Del.
Ch. 2016).
130 Mooney v. Echo Therapeutics, Inc., 2015 WL 3413272, at *6 (Del. Ch. May 28, 2015)
(citing Holley v. Nipro Diagnostics, Inc., 2014 WL 7336411, at *13–14 (Del. Ch. Dec. 23, 2014)).
131 Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *8, *13 (explaining why Dr. Harkonen is barred
from recovering under both Sections 145(a) and 145(c)). The Pardon does not change this outcome. Dr. “Harkonen remains unsuccessful, pardoned or not.” Id. at *10.
132 JX 14 § 43(a); JX 15 § 8.
133 JX 14 § 43(c); JX 15 § 8.
25 not entitled to be indemnified under the provision of the Indemnity Agreement, the
[Bylaws], Delaware General Corporate Law, or otherwise.” 134
The record confirms that both settlements reflect only the amounts
attributable to the wire fraud count and the subsequent interest thereon. 135 The
arbitrations leading to the settlements each concluded that the D&O insurers—Arch
and Old Republic—were entitled to recover the amounts attributable to the wire
fraud defense and appeals. 136 Dr. Harkonen’s former attorney even testified that the
settlement amounts were based on the arbitration panels’ “interlocutory award that
said that [the insurers] were going to be able to recover fees allocable to the . . . wire
fraud conviction.” 137 Dr. Harkonen must therefore repay the Company for the
$5,906,927.02 it paid to settle the insurance disputes arising from Arch and Old
Republic’s payments to him to litigate his wire fraud charge.
134 JX 476.
135 See, e.g., JX 593 at 8–9; JX 596; Dkt. 175, Brown Dep. Tr. from March 15, 2023, at
100:5–11 (explaining that counsel for Old Republic calculated the final settlement figure by “figur[ing] out how much of the defense costs” were “clearly applicable to the wire fraud claim,” in order to “pay his client back for that amount plus interest”); id. at 106:21–107:1 (explaining that InterMune “accepted [Old Republic’s] proposal and did a deal that called for a payment back, again, to the penny, for the costs incurred for the wire fraud count”); JX 600 at 3; see also JX 597 at 3–4 (Brown Email to InterMune) (explaining that the Old Republic settlement approach “inform[ed]” InterMune’s approach to the Arch settlement); Dkt. 175, Brown Dep. Tr. from March 15, 2023, at 107:13–108:8 (explaining that, like the Old Republic settlement, the Arch settlement represented a “buyout of what [Brown] thought was [Arch’s] only remaining claim, which was reimbursement of defense costs solely applicable to the wire fraud claim”).
136 See JX 590; JX 591.
137 Dkt. 175, Collins Dep. Tr. from April 18, 2023, at 99:11–13.
26 Dr. Harkonen was convicted of felony wire fraud. Accordingly, Dr. Harkonen
was found to have acted in bad faith. Despite numerous opportunities on appeal to
overturn the conviction, his conviction was repeatedly and conclusively affirmed. Dr.
Harkonen is therefore not entitled to indemnification for his defense of that wire
fraud conviction under DGCL Section 145. 138
B. Dr. Harkonen’s Unsuccessful Defenses
Dr. Harkonen raises several defenses, attempting to prevent this conclusion.
Dr. Harkonen argues that (1) the Company waived and released all claims under the
Mutual Release, (2) the Company is barred by hold harmless provisions in the
Indemnity Agreement and the Mutual Release, (3) the settlement payment was
voluntary, (4) the Company’s claims are time-barred, (5) the Company is barred by
the unclean hands doctrine, and (6) the settlements themselves are not advancement
fees. I discuss each defense in turn.
1. The Mutual Release
Dr. Harkonen argues that InterMune waived and released its claims against
him via the Mutual Release in 2003. InterMune counters that, among other things,
Dr. Harkonen waived this defense by waiting until pre-trial briefing to raise it.
138 The Company also asserts that it may recover the settlement amounts from Dr.
Harkonen because it reserved the right to hold Dr. Harkonen responsible in the settlement agreements themselves. Both settlement agreements provided that the settlements would “not limit or otherwise compromise any rights or obligations that InterMune and/or Harkonen have or may have vis-à-vis one another, including . . . [the] ultimate responsibility at law, in equity, or otherwise for the [s]ettlement [a]mount[.]” JX 596 at 4; JX 600 at 4.
27 “Court of Chancery Rule 8(c) requires a defendant responding to a complaint
to set forth ‘any . . . matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.’” 139
“Generally, an affirmative defense must be pled or the defense is waived.” 140 In the
interests of both fairness and efficiency, parties are expected to assert defenses “early
and loudly.” 141 In deciding whether to allow a late defense, courts consider whether
failure to raise the defense sooner “caused prejudice to a party without notice of the
defense by making it difficult, if not impossible, to fairly face the issue for the first
time during trial.” 142
Nowhere in Dr. Harkonen’s affirmative defenses did he assert the Mutual
Release as a defense to InterMune’s claims. Dr. Harkonen raised eleven affirmative
defenses in his answer to the Complaint (the “Answer”), spanning nearly thirty
pages. 143 Yet none of them can be fairly read to give notice of this Mutual Release
defense. The closest of the eleven merely asserts that InterMune’s claims are “Barred
139 In re Nantucket Island Assocs. Ltd. P’ship Unitholders Litig., 2002 WL 31926614,
at *2 (Del. Ch. Dec. 16, 2002) (alteration in original).
140 James v. Glazer, 570 A.2d 1150, 1153 (Del. 1990) (citations omitted); see also Anderson v. Hill, 2020 WL 2128738, at *5 n.35 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2020) (“[T]he failure to raise an affirmative defense may constitute a waiver, if that defense is not raised in a timely fashion.”).
141 In re Nantucket Island Assocs., 2002 WL 31926614, at *4.
142 Alexander v. Cahill, 829 A.2d 117, 128–29 (Del. 2003). Then-Vice Chancellor Strine
ruled on at least two occasions that defenses raised in the final months before trial were barred due to the prejudicial nature of changing arguments after the other side had conducted discovery and created a litigation strategy based on the pled claims and defenses. See In re Nantucket Island Assocs., 2002 WL 31926614, at *3; In re PNB Hldg. Co. S’holders Litig., 2006 WL 2403999, at *22 n.117 (Del. Ch. Aug. 18, 2006).
143 See Dkt. 52, Answer to the Verified Compl. (“Answer”) at 40–69.
28 by Controlling Documents and Law.” 144 But even if I were to ignore the
extraordinarily vague nature of that phrase, the explanatory paragraph mentions
several documents on which the defense is founded, and the Mutual Release is
notably absent. And when confronted with this point in the briefing and at trial, Dr.
Harkonen did not identify anything that would have put the Company on notice of
this defense until shortly before trial.
The Company asserts that this late defense is prejudicial. The Company raises
specific examples of information it would have requested in discovery, had it been put
on notice of the Mutual Release defense now raised by Dr. Harkonen. 145 The
Company suggests this prejudice is even more severe here since Dr. Harkonen raised
the defense shortly before a trial on the paper record, meaning there would be no live
cross-examination of Dr. Harkonen about the Mutual Release at trial. 146 I agree with
the Company—defenses should not be raised on the eve of trial. Dr. Harkonen’s
failure to raise his Mutual Release defense before the pre-trial briefs, let alone “early
and loudly,” means the defense is waived.
But even if I were to consider the Mutual Release defense, Dr. Harkonen
subsequently signed and delivered the Undertaking to the Company. 147 Both the
144 Id. at 42.
145 See Dkt. 160, Pls.’ Answering Pre-Trial Br. at 17–18.
146 Id. at 18.
147 At trial, Dr. Harkonen’s counsel astonishingly argued that the Undertaking is “a
worthless document” that “has no legal effect[.]” TT 109:8–9, 21–22. Dr. Harkonen’s counsel also surprisingly argued that this Court should not consider the December 2008 Letter
29 December 2008 Letter demanding advancement and the Undertaking that the letter
references cite the Indemnity Agreement and Dr. Harkonen’s obligation to repay
advanced amounts if it is determined that Dr. Harkonen is not entitled to be
indemnified. 148 If there was any doubt whether the Mutual Release covered Dr.
Harkonen’s obligation to repay future advanced sums arising out of future litigation,
Dr. Harkonen’s subsequent signing and delivery of the Undertaking in 2008 confirms
that, before this litigation, Dr. Harkonen believed it did not. 149 In addition, Dr.
Harkonen’s Mutual Release defense presumes that the Company could choose to
ignore Section 145’s limitations on indemnification for bad faith conduct. Dr.
Harkonen fails to explain how this squares with the statute. 150
demanding advancement and specifically referencing the Undertaking. TT 106:12–15. Regardless of what Dr. Harkonen may argue now, the December 2008 Letter makes plain the broad scope he intended the Undertaking to be given when he was demanding the Company open its checkbook. See JX 477.
148 JX 477 (referencing Dr. Harkonen’s obligation “to repay said amounts if it shall be
determined that [Dr. Harkonen] is not entitled to be indemnified under the provisions of this Agreement, the By-Laws, the Code or otherwise” (quoting JX 15 § 8)); JX 476 (referencing Dr. Harkonen’s obligation to repay “if it shall be determined that [he is] not entitled to be indemnified under the provisions of the Indemnity Agreement, the By-Laws of InterMune, Delaware General Corporation Law, or otherwise”).
149 See Kennecott Corp. v. Union Oil Co., 196 Cal. App. 3d 1179, 1189 (Cal. Ct. App.
1987) (“The conduct of the parties after execution of the contract and before any controversy has arisen as to its effect affords the most reliable evidence of the parties’ intention.”).
150 In addition, as highlighted by the Company during trial, “all contracts for advancement and indemnification are subject to an implied reasonableness term.” Reddy v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp., 2002 WL 1358761, at *5 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2002) (citing Citadel Hldg. Corp. v. Roven, 603 A.2d 818, 823 (Del. 1992)).
30 In sum, the Mutual Release defense was waived. But even if I were to consider
it, the releases found in the Mutual Release do not reach the Company’s claims
against Dr. Harkonen in this action.
2. Hold Harmless Provisions
Dr. Harkonen next argues that the hold harmless provisions in the Mutual
Release and the Indemnity Agreement bar the Company from recovery. 151 But this
defense, like the Mutual Release defense, was raised for the first time in the pre-trial
briefings, which was too late for InterMune to focus its discovery on the hold harmless
provisions of the two agreements.
The only pled affirmative defense that could potentially be construed to give
InterMune notice of this defense is, again, the vague sixth affirmative defense:
“Barred by Controlling Documents and Law.” But even this defense, although it notes
that “InterMune’s claim is barred by its Indemni[ty] Agreement” is unrelated to the
hold harmless provisions. 152 A full reading of the affirmative defense confirms that
that it is limited to the context of the Pardon, not as it relates to the provisions of the
Indemnity Agreement. 153 And, as noted previously, the Mutual Release is absent
from the defenses entirely. So, for the same reasons the Mutual Release defense was
waived, the hold harmless provisions defense is also waived.
151 JX 15 § 2; JX 361 § 5.
152 Answer at 42.
153 Id.
31 But, again, even if I were to consider this defense, it would fail for the same
reasons the Mutual Release defense fails. As mentioned above, Dr. Harkonen’s
subsequent Undertaking confirms Dr. Harkonen’s obligation to “repay said amounts
advanced[.]” 154 And, importantly, this argument too is premised on the notion that
the Company could ignore the bad faith limitations of Section 145.
Thus, Dr. Harkonen waived the hold harmless provisions defense. But even if
I were to consider the untimely defense, it fails for the additional reasons described
above.
3. Voluntary Payment
Dr. Harkonen next suggested that InterMune’s payments to settle the D&O
insurance claims were voluntary payments that cannot be recovered. The Company
devoted not insignificant portions of its briefing to rebutting this defense. And Dr.
Harkonen ultimately withdrew the defense of voluntary payment at trial. 155
4. Time-Barred
Next, Dr. Harkonen suggests that InterMune’s claims are time-barred. 156 The
Company again asserts that the defense is raised too late in the litigation process.
Dr. Harkonen’s second affirmative defense in the Answer asserted
“InterMune’s claim is barred, in whole or in part, on the equitable principle of
154 JX 476.
155 TT 74:1–2.
156 Def.’s OB at 18.
32 Laches[.]” 157 Yet timeliness has hardly been the center of Dr. Harkonen’s defense
arguments, and there is a strong argument that the statute of limitations defense
under 10 Del. C. § 8106 does not fall within the laches affirmative defense identified
by Dr. Harkonen in the Answer. But I recognize that the Company was on notice
that Dr. Harkonen could raise a timeliness defense and therefore address this defense
on its merits.
“[B]ecause indemnification is a right conferred by contract, under statutory
auspice, actions seeking indemnification are subject to the three-year limitations
period . . . .” 158 A claim for indemnification or for repayment of advancement due to
a lack of entitlement to indemnification are mirror images of each other. They accrue
at the same stage and are subject to the same three-year limitations period.
“Delaware courts decline to exercise jurisdiction over a case unless the
underlying controversy is ripe, i.e., has ‘matured to a point where judicial action is
appropriate.’” 159 “[N]umerous decisions of our Court of Chancery have consistently
held that an indemnity claim does not accrue until the underlying action is
resolved.” 160 Thus, a claim for indemnification “only becomes ripe once the
157 Answer at 40.
158 Stifel Fin. Corp. v. Cochran, 809 A.2d 555, 559 (Del. 2002); see also 10 Del. C.
§ 106(a).
159XL Specialty Ins. Co. v. WMI Liquidating Tr., 93 A.3d 1208, 1217 (Del. 2014) (quoting Stroud v. Milliken Enters., Inc., 522 A.2d 476, 480 (Del. 1989)).
160 Connelly v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 135 A.3d 1271, 1280 n.36 (Del. 2016)
(collecting DGCL Section 145 precedent).
33 underlying proceeding is truly final.” 161 This is, in part, to “reduce the chance that
the court will engage in a wasteful exercise in predictive justice, only to see its work
undone by a reversal of the trial court’s judgment in the underlying matter.” 162 Since
repayment claims depend on a party’s rights to indemnification, repayment claims in
indemnification cases likewise only become ripe when the underlying action is
resolved.
The claim for repayment became ripe at the earliest on November 5, 2018,
when Dr. Harkonen exhausted his final appeal upon the U.S. Supreme Court denying
his petition for writ of certiorari 163 or, at the latest, in 2019 when the settlement
liabilities were incurred. InterMune filed its Complaint on August 11, 2021, well
within the three-year window under either alternative.
Dr. Harkonen’s time-bar defense therefore fails.
5. Unclean Hands
The unclean hands defense is the only defense that both the Company and Dr.
Harkonen agree was properly raised at the pleading stage. Yet, although properly
raised, it is inapplicable.
161 Sun-Times Media Gp., Inc. v. Black, 954 A.2d 380, 397 (Del. Ch. 2008).
162 Simon v. Navellier Series Fund, 2000 WL 1597890, at *9 (Del. Ch. Oct. 19, 2000).
163 But I question whether InterMune could have brought the claims in 2018, prior to
the D&O settlements. The Undertaking limited the Company to recovering only “expenses [that] are not paid by insurance.” JX 476. Indeed, incurring the expense is a logical prerequisite to the request for repayment. And the Company did not make the repayment request until the Company settled with Arch and Old Republic in 2019 once the Company ultimately incurred the expense. But even if the claims began to accrue once Dr. Harkonen exhausted his appellate reviews, the claims would still be within the statute of limitations.
34 “The doctrine of unclean hands is ‘[e]quity’s maxim that a suitor who engaged
in his own reprehensible conduct in the course of [a] transaction at issue must be
denied equitable relief . . . , a rule which in conventional formulation operated in
limine to bar the suitor from invoking the aid of the equity court . . . .’” 164 “The Court
of Chancery has broad discretion in determining whether to apply the doctrine of
unclean hands.” 165 “The question of unclean hands is factual . . . .” 166 But, although
the question of whether unclean hands applies is factual, under the doctrine of
collateral estoppel, “once an issue is actually and necessarily determined by a court
of competent jurisdiction, that determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based
on a different cause of action involving a party to the prior litigation.” 167
Much of Dr. Harkonen’s unclean hands defense is an improper attempt to
relitigate his original wire fraud conviction and his relevant state of mind. Indeed,
Dr. Harkonen’s affirmative defense of unclean hands spans almost twenty pages of
the Answer, and much of the substance mirrors the arguments he made in his prior
cases. 168 Consistent with the doctrine of collateral estoppel, I refuse to reconsider
164 RBC Cap. Mkts., LLC v. Jervis, 129 A.3d 816, 875–76 (Del. 2015) (alteration in
original) (quoting McKennon v. Nashville Banner Publ’g. Co., 513 U.S. 352, 360 (1995)).
165 SmithKline Beecham Pharms. Co. v. Merck & Co., Inc., 766 A.2d 442, 448 (Del.
2000) (citing Nakahara v. NS 1991 Am. Tr., 718 A.2d 518, 522 (Del. Ch. 1998) (“[T]he decisional authority is almost universal in its acceptance that courts of equity have extraordinarily broad discretion in application of the doctrine [of unclean hands].” (citations omitted))).
166 Collins v. Burke, 418 A.2d 999, 1004 (Del. 1980).
167 Hercules Inc. v. AIU Ins. Co., 783 A.2d 1275, 1278 (Del. 2000).
168 See Answer at 42–68.
35 whether Dr. Harkonen was properly convicted of wire fraud. Numerous judges have
already reviewed the matter, and all have determined the same thing—Dr. Harkonen
remains guilty of wire fraud.
As InterMune points out, however, although Dr. Harkonen’s defense of unclean
hands may have started as an attempt to relitigate his conviction, it has evolved over
the life of this case. 169 Indeed, Dr. Harkonen’s original unclean hands defense
asserted in his affirmative defenses involved InterMune’s actions that “irreparably
harmed Dr. Harkonen’s reputation and ability to . . . properly defend himself at his
criminal trial and in subsequent actions by the U.S. government.” 170 This theory
more or less continued into Dr. Harkonen’s pre-trial opening brief where he asserted
that InterMune’s “misrepresentations led to Dr. Harkonen’s underserved criminal
record and the loss of his brilliant career.” 171 Yet, now, Dr. Harkonen asserts that
this Court should accept his unclean hands defense because InterMune’s “20-year
pattern of adopting irreconcilable positions depending on which way direction the
wind blew should prevent [the Company’s] recovery on [its] claims in this equitable
action.” 172
Dr. Harkonen attempts to walk a fine line in making his most recent unclean
hands argument because, as I explained in the Summary Judgment Opinion, “[t]he
169 TT 47:21–49:5.
170 Answer at 57–58.
171 Def.’s OB at 32.
172 Dkt. 169, Def.’s Answering Pre-Trial Br. (“Def.’s AB”) at 16.
36 legal theories of the Company’s arbitration counsel [were] not judicial admissions” 173
and do not provide an avenue for Dr. Harkonen to “disguise the wolf of
indemnification for a willful violation of positive law in the sheep’s clothing of a
judicial admission.” 174 Indeed, to accept Dr. Harkonen’s position “would enable
corporations to indemnify conduct that Section 145 has deemed non-
indemnifiable.” 175 That is neither our law nor in line with the equitable principles
upon which Dr. Harkonen professes to call.
None of this should detract from the fact that Dr. Harkonen was convicted
based on his actions. It does not matter, for purposes of this analysis, how strongly
Dr. Harkonen now believes he should not have been convicted, or even if he may
otherwise be an upstanding citizen.
This has been fought up and down. Dr. Harkonen has had ample opportunity
to fight his conviction, and much of that fight was done on the Company’s dime. The
Company’s efforts to win the insurance arbitrations, or at least minimize any award,
are not unclean hands. If they were, companies would be confronted with conflicting
and strange incentives.
Dr. Harkonen voluntarily accepted and enjoyed the full benefit of advancement
to defend himself in the federal wire fraud litigation. But these advancements were
subject to an undertaking in which he acknowledged and committed to satisfy his
173 Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *21.
174 Id. at *22.
175 Id. at *20.
37 repayment obligations under the Indemnity Agreement and the DGCL. Even if in
seeking to minimize any arbitration award the Company took positions in the
insurance arbitrations that were advantageous to Dr. Harkonen, that does not
eliminate Dr. Harkonen’s obligation to repay the advancements under the
Undertaking and DGCL Section 145’s limitations on indemnification for actions
taken in bad faith.
Dr. Harkonen’s unclean hands defense is therefore inapplicable in this case.
6. Scope of the Undertaking
Dr. Harkonen’s final defense is that only a portion of the settlement amounts
constitute “fees” within the scope of the Undertaking.
Dr. Harkonen raised this final defense for the first time at trial. 176 I asked
counsel whether this defense had been briefed, 177 and counsel responded that she
would confirm. 178 I did not receive a response to my question at trial. In light of this
defense and other new arguments made by Dr. Harkonen at trial, I requested that
the parties submit letters to this Court identifying arguments presented at trial that
had not been briefed.
The Company filed its letter first, noting that Dr. Harkonen asserted this
defense, along with several other arguments, for the first time at trial. 179 Dr.
176 TT 102:21–103:5.
177 Id. 103:18–23.
178 Id. 104:4–6.
179 See Dkt. 185, Def.’s Post-Trial Letter.
38 Harkonen then filed his letter and confirmed that this defense was indeed made for
the first time at trial, but that the Court should nonetheless consider it. 180 Dr.
Harkonen then dedicated a significant portion of his letter to arguing his newest
defense.
“It is difficult to address th[is] theor[y] because [Dr. Harkonen] only mentioned
[it] briefly, did not develop the arguments, and did not provide any supporting [legal]
authority other than bare citations to provisions of the [Undertaking]. A court need
not address arguments that are presented in such a cursory and elliptical manner.”181
Indeed, “issues adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort
at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.” 182 By mentioning the defense for
the first time in passing at the trial on a paper record, the defense is waived. The
analysis ends there.
But even if I were to consider the defense, it would not change the outcome.
InterMune and Dr. Harkonen spent many months in the arbitrations working to
minimize the amount the Company and, thus, Dr. Harkonen would need to repay to
the D&O insurers. Not only did InterMune take lead in negotiating to minimize the
settlement payment, but InterMune also agreed to pay the amount in full in the first
180 Notably, this was not the only argument raised by Dr. Harkonen for the first time
at trial. See Dkt. 184, Pls.’ Post-Trial Letter.
181 AB Stable VIII LLC v. Maps Hotels & Resorts One LLC, 2020 WL 7024929, at *78
(Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2020), aff’d, 268 A.3d 198 (Del. 2021).
182 Roca v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 842 A.2d 1238, 1242 n.12 (Del. 2004) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
39 instance, while reserving its right ultimately to hold Dr. Harkonen responsible for
the settlement amount.
The record confirms the general calculations of the settlements, and they were
not a hodge podge of concessions, as suggested by Dr. Harkonen in his supplemental
letter. The settlement amounts instead reflected an approximation of the
advancements used to litigate the wire fraud charge plus interest. In the Old
Republic settlement, for example, InterMune’s counsel noted that settlement
discussions were less of a compromise and more of “an application of the principles
laid out” in the Old Republic arbitration panel’s ruling. 183 And, in both arbitrations,
the settlements reflected only the amounts Dr. Harkonen used to litigate his wire
fraud charge and conviction. 184
Let us also not forget that Dr. Harkonen had a seat at the table for both
settlements. Dr. Harkonen approved and signed the settlements, which included
InterMune’s reservation of rights to hold Dr. Harkonen ultimately responsible for the
settlement amounts.
There is little doubt that these settlements reflected the advancement amount
Dr. Harkonen used for the wire fraud litigation, which was both non-indemnifiable
and not covered by the D&O insurance policies. The untimely nature of Dr.
Harkonen’s defense is further evidence of that understanding; no one questioned
183 JX 592 at 2 (Brown Letter for Old Republic Settlement).
184 JX 593 (describing the Old Republic settlement amount); Dkt. 175, Brown Dep. Tr.
from March 15, 2023, at 107:13–108:8 (describing the Arch settlement amount).
40 whether the settlements approximated the amounts for which Dr. Harkonen was
required to repay until I asked at trial whether that argument had been made in the
briefing, and counsel seized the opportunity to make the late argument in a post-trial
letter to the Court. This defense thus fails.
7. Conclusion
Dr. Harkonen must repay the Company the $5,906,927.02 it seeks in this
action as repayment of advanced sums for which Dr. Harkonen is not entitled to
indemnification. The advancements were not foisted upon Dr. Harkonen; he
voluntarily demanded their payment and gave the Undertaking. Dr. Harkonen then
accepted and enjoyed the full benefit of very substantial advancements of attorneys’
fees, conditioned only on an obligation to repay if he were ultimately ineligible for
indemnification. Given that Dr. Harkonen is ineligible for indemnification, he now
has the obligation to repay the advanced amounts he received to litigate his wire
C. Dr. Harkonen’s Requests for Indemnification
Dr. Harkonen requests indemnification “under 8 Del. C. § 145(c)” for expenses
incurred in (1) litigating the MBC action, (2) seeking advancements from the
Company, (3) litigating the D&O insurance arbitrations, and (4) seeking the
Pardon. 185
Before I address Dr. Harkonen’s “counterclaims,” I note that, in yet another
strange twist in this case, they were never pled. Not a single counterclaim is raised
185 Def.’s OB at 41.
41 in Dr. Harkonen’s Answer. 186 That alone is fatal to the counterclaims’ viability. But,
at trial, counsel for the Company stated that although Dr. Harkonen never formally
pled his “counterclaims” for indemnification, the Company nonetheless asks me “to
resolve as many of the open issues between these parties as possible[.]” 187
Given the parties’ mutual desire for an adjudication of Dr. Harkonen’s
“counterclaims,” I will, with great reluctance, consider them. Ultimately, however,
in addition to being procedurally improper, Dr. Harkonen’s indemnification
counterclaims are unsuccessful.
1. Medical Board of California
Dr. Harkonen argues that, under Section 145(c), the Company must indemnify
him for the $415,224.82 he incurred while litigating in his MBC disciplinary
proceeding. The claim, however, is untimely. In addition, Dr. Harkonen was not
“successful” in the proceeding.
As discussed above, indemnification claims must be brought within three years
after the underlying action is resolved. It is difficult to see how the MBC proceeding
was not an independent proceeding before a medical licensing and disciplinary board.
Because the MBC proceedings concluded in 2015, nearly a decade ago, any
indemnification claim Dr. Harkonen might have once had relating to the proceeding
186 At oral argument on September 15, 2022, Dr. Harkonen’s counsel observed that
“[t]his is not a case where Dr. Harkonen is seeking indemnification of the money he paid out of pocket.” Dkt. 48, Tr. for September 15, 2022, Hr’g at 9:4–5. That continued to be the case on September 30, 2022, when Dr. Harkonen filed his Answer without asserting a single counterclaim. See Answer at 40.
187 TT 134:19–20.
42 accrued then too. Dr. Harkonen thus asserts his “counterclaim” long after the three-
year limitations period ran.
But, even if I were to look past this, Dr. Harkonen was unsuccessful in his
MBC litigation and therefore does not qualify for indemnification under DGCL
Section 145(c). In determining whether a party is “successful” under Section 145(c),
the party “need only prevail—in a strictly legal sense—in terms of the outcome of the
proceeding.” 188 And, as this Court has recognized, an individual may be unsuccessful
in the legal sense, even when a settlement does not require a monetary payment or
admission of liability. 189
“[I]n a strictly legal sense,” Dr. Harkonen was unsuccessful in his MBC
proceedings because in both proceedings the administrative judge ruled that “cause
for license discipline exists[.]” 190 Dr. Harkonen nonetheless maintains that this
litigation was a success because “he achieved the result he sought.” 191 But the
administrative judge ultimately ruled against Dr. Harkonen, finding cause for
discipline under each of the two alleged CBPC violations—albeit imposing a lesser
punishment than that issued in the original ruling. Lessening a punishment,
however, is not a “success” under Section 145(c) for the same reason that Dr.
188 Evans v. Avande, Inc., 2021 WL 4344020, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 23, 2021) (citing
Hermelin v. K-V Pharm. Co., 54 A.3d 1093, 1107 (Del. Ch. 2012)).
189 See, e.g., Huret v. MondoBrain, Inc., 2022 WL 1232582 (Del. Ch. Apr. 27, 2022).
190 JX 560 at 7 (MBC’s Decision After Non-Adoption).
191 Def.’s AB at 41.
43 Harkonen’s wire fraud conviction was not a success under Section 145(c) despite the
penalty ultimately imposed being substantially less than the maximum or requested
sentence pursued by federal prosecutors.
Dr. Harkonen therefore is not entitled to indemnification for the costs incurred
in the MBC proceeding because the claim is both untimely and he was unsuccessful
in the respective proceeding.
2. Advancement Rights
Dr. Harkonen next argues that the Company must indemnify him for the
$90,132.83 he incurred in enforcing his advancement rights. But, as the Company
properly points out, this “counterclaim” is also brought too late.
Fees on fees claims are claims for indemnification. 192 As discussed above,
indemnification claims must be brought within three years under the statute of
limitations. 193 The Bylaws and the Indemnity Agreement both grant Dr. Harkonen
the right to recover fees incurred while enforcing his right to advancements. 194 But
Dr. Harkonen’s claim accrued on December 13, 2011, when Dr. Harkonen and
InterMune entered into the 2011 Settlement Agreement. Yet Dr. Harkonen asserted
192 See Fasciana, 829 A.2d at 183–84.
193 See also 10 Del. C. § 8106(a).
194 JX 14 § 43(d).
44 this fees-on-fees “claim” over a decade after the 2011 Settlement Agreement. This
claim, like the MBC indemnification claim, is therefore untimely. 195
3. Insurance Arbitrations
Next, Dr. Harkonen asserts that the Company must indemnify him for the
legal expenses he incurred during the insurance arbitration which amounts to
$201,238.18 in the Old Republic arbitration and $326,368.36 in the Arch arbitration.
Even setting aside Dr. Harkonen’s failure to plead this (or any) counterclaim,
Dr. Harkonen was not “successful” in the insurance arbitrations such that Section
145(c) mandates indemnification. The arbitrators in both arbitrations ruled that the
amounts associated with defending Dr. Harkonen’s wire fraud charge fell under the
policies’ exclusion for claims “attributable to the committing of any deliberate
criminal or deliberate fraudulent act[.]” 196 The D&O insurers were therefore entitled
to recoupment for the defense costs incurred on behalf of Dr. Harkonen in litigating
the wire fraud charge. The parties then settled, with the Company paying the
settlement amounts in the first instance, but reserving, with Dr. Harkonen’s express
agreement, its right to hold Dr. Harkonen ultimately responsible, which the Company
then exercised via this action.
This conclusion is further confirmed in light of my ruling that Dr. Harkonen is
responsible for the full settlement amounts. If anything, the Company accorded Dr.
195 The Company makes several other arguments, including waiver and the reasonableness of the underlying fees. I need not reach these given my analysis above.
196 JX 657 § 4(c).
45 Harkonen a benefit by paying the amounts required to resolve arbitration with the
insurers. It would be strange to say that, in doing so, the Company placed itself on
the hook for Dr. Harkonen’s very substantial attorneys’ fees in participating in an
arbitration that squarely rejected the arguments against liability and that resulted
in cash outflows that he must now repay in full. So, although Dr. Harkonen delayed
his payment of the liability, he cannot assert that he successfully “avoided an adverse
result.” 197
Additionally, even if I were to consider Dr. Harkonen as eligible for
indemnification in litigating a claim caused by his bad faith actions, he expressly
agreed, in both the Old Republic settlement and the Arch settlement, to bear his “own
respective costs and fees” incurred during the arbitrations. 198
Dr. Harkonen, therefore, cannot look to the Company for indemnification for
the legal expenses he incurred participating in the arbitrations with Arch and Old
Republic.
4. Presidential Pardon
Lastly, Dr. Harkonen demands that the Company indemnify him for the
$125,274.58 he incurred in seeking the Pardon.
197 Hermelin v. K-V Pharm. Co., 54 A.3d 1093, 1107 (Del. Ch. 2012). Alternatively, one might conceive that the bad faith determination itself vitiated Dr. Harkonen’s right to indemnification. See Evans, 2021 WL 4344020, at *6 (commenting that a director “adjudged to have acted in bad faith . . . can hardly assert that he is entitled to indemnification for a claim where that integrity was found lacking”).
198 See JX 600 at 5; JX 596 at 4.
46 Dr. Harkonen’s framing of the Pardon, like his counterclaims and defenses,
has changed over the course of this litigation. Prior to the Summary Judgment
Opinion, Dr. Harkonen framed the Pardon as the ultimate successful defense of his
wire fraud conviction, thereby absolving him of his duty to repay the advanced
amount used to defend the wire fraud charge. In the Summary Judgment Opinion,
however, I noted that under Section 145(c)—the only provision under which Dr.
Harkonen seeks indemnification here—indemnification is only available for directors
and officers who have “been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any
action, suit or proceeding[.]” 199 The Pardon, however, like most pardons, “does not
erase or expunge the record of conviction and does not indicate innocence.” 200
Therefore, as I explained in the Summary Judgment Opinion, the Pardon does not
constitute success for his wire fraud proceeding under Section 145(c). 201 So even
viewing the Pardon as part of the criminal wire fraud proceeding, 202 Dr. Harkonen
was therefore unsuccessful in his wire fraud defense.
Having found no luck when considering the Pardon as an extension of the
underlying wire fraud proceeding, Dr. Harkonen now asks me to consider the Pardon
as its own proceeding. Dr. Harkonen tries to strike an awkward balance by stating
199 Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *8 (quoting 8 Del. C. § 145(c)(1)).
200 JX 606; see also Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *10–13.
201 Harkonen IX, 2023 WL 3337212, at *10–13.
202 Although in issuing the Summary Judgment Opinion I questioned whether the
Pardon should be considered as part of the wire fraud proceeding. See id. at *9 n.62.
47 that the Pardon was both in defense of his criminal charges and separate from the
criminal proceeding itself. 203 And although related to the criminal wire fraud, Dr.
Harkonen further suggests the Pardon was a separate “effort to restore his
reputation.” 204
But even assuming the Pardon constitutes its own proceeding, Section 145
requires that the expenses be incurred “in defense of” that proceeding. 205 And
although this Court “adopt[s] a broad reading of the phrase ‘in defense[,]’” 206 that
broad reading has its limits. 207
Here, Dr. Harkonen received the Pardon in January 2021, a decade after his
wire fraud conviction and years after his underlying wire fraud conviction became
final and non-appealable. The Pardon, when separated from the criminal wire fraud
proceeding, cannot be viewed as “in defense of” a proceeding, even when allegedly
pursued to vindicate one’s perceived reputation. As this Court has held in prior
decisions, there are distinctions to be drawn between defensive actions taken by
directors and officers in litigation related to their service, and affirmatively filed suits
initiated by directors and officers. 208 In this instance, even assuming the Pardon
203 See Def.’s OB 53–59.
204 Id. at 56.
205 8 Del. C. § 145(c).
206 Citadel Hldg. Corp. v. Roven, 603 A.2d 818, 824 (Del. 1992).
207 See generally Baker v. Impact Hldg., Inc., 2010 WL 2979050 (Del. Ch. July 30,
2010).
208 Id. at *7–9.
48 process might be deemed a separate “proceeding” as Dr. Harkonen advocates, his
obtaining the Pardon was not “in defense of” that proceeding. And, to the extent Dr.
Harkonen argues the Pardon was “in defense of” the underlying felony wire fraud
proceeding, the Summary Judgment Opinion explains at length why that argument
must be rejected. Dr. Harkonen therefore is not entitled to indemnification under
DGCL Section 145(c).
D. Fees on Fees
Dr. Harkonen also requests an award of fees on fees for this action. Given that
Dr. Harkonen did not prevail on any claim, Dr. Harkonen is not entitled to fees on
fees.
***
The only remaining questions relate to interest. Although the Company
devoted a significant portion of its briefing to interest questions, that briefing was
directed to arguments concerning any potential award of interest in Dr. Harkonen’s
favor. And, for his part, Dr. Harkonen did not address an interest award to the
Company at all. “In Delaware, prejudgment interest is awarded as a matter of
right.” 209 And, “[a]s a general rule, interest accumulates from the date payment was
due to the plaintiff[.]” 210 “Prejudgment interest accrues at the legal rate set forth in
209 Pontone v. Milso Indus. Corp., 100 A.3d 1023, 1058 (Del. Ch. 2014) (quoting Roven,
603 A.2d at 826).
210 Moskowitz v. Mayor of Wilmington, 391 A.2d 209, 210 (Del. 1978).
49 6 Del. C. § 2301(a) and is compounded quarterly.” 211 “Under Delaware law, where
neither party submits evidence showing the appropriate rate of interest, the court
typically awards 5% over the Federal Reserve discount rate compounded
quarterly.” 212
Accordingly, InterMune is entitled to pre-judgment interest at the legal rate
provided in 6 Del. C. § 2301(a), compounded quarterly.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, InterMune is entitled to recover the $5,906,927.02
it paid to settle the D&O insurance claims; Dr. Harkonen is ultimately responsible
for those legal expenses incurred in litigating his wire fraud conviction. Additionally,
Dr. Harkonen’s unpled counterclaims for indemnification each fail. The parties are
directed to confer and provide a form of order implementing this decision.
211 Creel v. Ecolab, Inc., 2018 WL 5733382, at *10 (Del. Ch. Oct. 31, 2018).
212 Sweeney v. Sweeney, 2024 WL 3040424, at *14 n.172 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2024).
Additionally, “Delaware courts routinely grant post-judgment interest in advancement cases.” Underbrink v. Warrior Energy Servs. Corp., 2008 WL 2262316, at *19 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2008). So, I further grant InterMune “post-judgment interest on the full amount of the judgment, including that part comprised of pre-judgment interest, compounded quarterly at the legal rate under 6 Del. C. § 2301(a).” Id. (footnote omitted) (citing Brandin v. Gottlieb, 2000 WL 1005954 (Del. Ch. July 13, 2000)).
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
InterMune, Inc. and Roche Holdings, Inc. v. W. Scott Harkonen, M.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intermune-inc-and-roche-holdings-inc-v-w-scott-harkonen-md-delch-2024.