Judy v. Preferred Communications Systems, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 19, 2016
DocketC.A. 4662-VCL
StatusPublished

This text of Judy v. Preferred Communications Systems, Inc. (Judy v. Preferred Communications Systems, Inc.) 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
Judy v. Preferred Communications Systems, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MICHAEL D. JUDY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Consol. C.A. No. 4662-VCL ) PREFERRED COMMUNICATION ) SYSTEMS, INC., a Delaware ) corporation, CHARLES M. AUSTIN, and ) GERALD E. SETKA, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: June 29, 2016, Date Decided: September 19, 2016

Michael W. McDermott, David B. Anthony, BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Plaintiff Michael Judy.

Joseph B. Cicero, CHIPMAN BROWN CICERO & COLE, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for the Special Committee of Defendant Preferred Communication Systems, Inc.

Brian M. Rostocki, John C. Cordrey, REED SMITH LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Intervenor Preferred Spectrum Investments, LLC.

Evan O. Williford, Andrew Huber, THE WILLIFORD LAW FIRM LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Intervenor Preferred Investors Association.

LASTER, Vice Chancellor. Preferred Spectrum Investments, LLC (―PSI‖) seeks to recover $20 million as an

award of attorneys‘ fees and expenses from Preferred Communication Systems, Inc. (the

―Company‖ or ―PCSI‖). PSI claims it is entitled to this amount because it provided the

funding necessary for plaintiff Michael Judy to pursue three pieces of litigation that were

filed separately and then consolidated into this action: (i) a summary proceeding to obtain

books and records, (ii) a summary proceeding to compel the holding of an annual

meeting, and (iii) a plenary action challenging the authority of the individual then running

the Company and the validity of certain actions he took.

PSI claims that because Judy prevailed in the litigation, the Company was able to

preserve its ownership of two blocks of wireless licenses that constituted the Company‘s

primary assets. The Company subsequently sold one block of licenses for $60 million,

and PSI values the other block of licenses at $40 million. PSI contends it should receive

one third of the after-tax value of the aggregate $100 million benefit. PSI posits a tax rate

of 40%, yielding an after-tax benefit of $60 million, and an award of $20 million.

As a fallback, PSI contends it should recover $4,059,099.12, representing

expenses that PSI claims to have incurred. PSI contends it actually incurred

$8,257,717.52 in expenses, but during a period when individuals affiliated with PSI also

held positions with the Company, it made partial payment of the amounts due, leaving the

amount PSI now seeks.

The original $8,257,717.52 appears grossly inflated. Of the total amount, PSI

claims to have expended $4,198,618.40 for lawyers and other law-related expenses, but

PSI admits that not all of those fees and expenses were for Judy‘s litigation efforts in this

1 action. A substantial portion of the fees went to fund lawyers for individuals who PSI

encouraged to intervene and assert personal claims for equity or other securities from the

Company. Another substantial portion of the fees were for lawyers who appeared in

proceedings before the Federal Communications Commission (the ―FCC‖), where PSI

took positions adverse to the interests of the Company.

The remaining $4,059,099.12 that PSI claims to have incurred is even worse. This

amount includes virtually every business expense that PSI incurred to manage its

operations over a period of eight years. It includes items such as the compensation that

PSI paid to members of its management committee, commissions that PSI paid for its

own financing transactions, and fees that PSI paid to hire an executive search firm. It

includes routine corporate expenses such as accounting services, bookkeeping costs,

banking fees, and office supplies. It even includes the interest PSI paid to borrow the

funds that it used to pay for its other expenses.

For multiple reasons, PSI‘s motion is denied. First, PSI lacks standing to seek a

fee award. PSI was neither the plaintiff nor plaintiff‘s counsel. PSI gratuitously financed

litigation nominally being conducted by Judy. As a volunteer financier, PSI cannot seek

an equitable fee award.

Second, PSI cannot obtain a fee award because it financed Judy‘s litigation as part

of an attempt to take over the Company. This court has held that parties cannot obtain an

equitable fee award when they use litigation in support of a takeover.

2 Third, PSI cannot establish the necessary causal connection between its litigation

financing and the value of the licenses. There are too many intervening steps for PSI to

be able to claim responsibility for $100 million in value.

Finally, PSI cannot recover a quantum meruit award, and in any event cannot

recover all of the expenses it has claimed. Under no circumstances can PSI recover the

amounts it spent to hire lawyers for individuals to pursue personal claims against the

company or for lawyers to appear before the FCC and take positions adverse to the

Company. Nor can PSI recover the myriad of ordinary business expenses that it has

included in its petition.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

PSI has made its fee application in a case that was litigated through trial to

judgment. The facts are drawn from a combination of sources, including (i) the trial

record and the court‘s earlier rulings in the case, (ii) the submissions made by the parties

in connection with the application for an award of attorneys‘ fees and expenses, and (iii)

pertinent public records that are subject to judicial notice.1

1 See D.R.E. 201(b); Aequitas Sols., Inc. v. Anderson, 2012 WL 2903324, at *3 (Del. Ch. June 25, 2012) (taking judicial notice of a pleading filed in a related action); In re Wheelabrator Techs., Inc. S’holders Litig., 1992 WL 212595, at *11–12 (Del. Ch. Sept. 1, 1992) (taking judicial notice, in a motion to dismiss context, of documents of public record); see also In re Tyson Foods, Inc. Consol. S’holder Litig., 919 A.2d 563, 585 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Rule 201 permits a court to take judicial notice of ―documents [outside the pleadings] that are required by law to be filed, and are actually filed, with federal or state officials‖) (footnote omitted).

3 The factual background is lengthy because of the strange nature of PSI‘s

application, which seeks in the first instance to obtain a ―fee award‖ equal to one-third of

the value of the Company‘s assets, and in the alternative to recover eight years worth of

legal and business expenses. These broad claims make it is necessary to provide the

background required to place those requests in context.

A. The Company And Its Original Buy-And-Flip Strategy

The Company is a Delaware corporation formed on January 15, 1998. It has a

complex and troubled history.

The Company arose from a scheme by Pendleton C. Waugh to acquire a critical

mass of specialized mobile radio licenses for sites located in the U.S. Virgin Islands and

Puerto Rico, then flip them within six months to a year to Telecellular, Inc., an aspiring

cellular telephone operator. At the time, Waugh was President and a director of

Telecellular. Due to the various means by which the FCC historically licensed spectrum,

many of the licenses that Waugh sought to acquire were held by individuals having

varying degrees of financial and legal sophistication.

Waugh had a lengthy and checkered record in the cellular telephone industry. In

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