Julia Haart v. Silvio Scaglia

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 4, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2022-0145-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of Julia Haart v. Silvio Scaglia (Julia Haart v. Silvio Scaglia) 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
Julia Haart v. Silvio Scaglia, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

JULIA HAART, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2022-0145-MTZ ) SILVIO SCAGLIA, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) ) FREEDOM HOLDING, INC., and ELITE ) WORLD GROUP, LLC, ) ) Nominal Respondents. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: May 10, 2022 Date Decided: May 26, 2022 Date Issued: August 4, 2022

Henry E. Gallagher, Jr., Matthew F. Boyer, and Scott E. Swenson, CONNOLLY GALLAGHER LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Thomas R. Ajamie, Wallace A. Showman, Ryan van Steenis, and Lewis S. Fischbein, AJAMIE LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Petitioner Julia Haart.

Rudolf Koch, Susan Hannigan Cohen, Travis S. Hunter, Kyle Lachmund, Sandy Xu, and Kevin M. Kidwell, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Peter Bicks, Lisa T. Simpson, and Marc R. Shapiro, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP, New York, New York; Emily Rae, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP, Los Angeles, California, Attorneys for Respondent Silvio Scaglia.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor. Fashion designer Julia Haart and telecom billionaire Silvio Scaglia have a

carefully curated public image supporting both their business partnership and their

marriage. They met through work at a luxury fashion brand, and married in a lavish

ceremony. Scaglia brought his new wife into the leadership of one of his businesses,

a major model management company. Haart and Scaglia present as though they own

and run that business as equals. In their free time, the couple maintains a glamorous

lifestyle. They host friends and family in their sprawling Tribeca penthouse. They

drive matching Bentleys. And television cameras follow their every move for

Haart’s Netflix reality series, My Unorthodox Life. But their public image differs

from their formal business arrangement. That tension is the central issue in this case.

Behind the cameras and bright lights is a pair of Delaware entities. The first

is the holding company for the modeling business, Elite World Group, LLC

(“EWG”). The second is the couple’s umbrella company, Freedom Holding, Inc.

(“Freedom”), which holds EWG and the couple’s other personal and business

investments. Haart and Scaglia are co-owners of Freedom; Haart was an EWG

director and its CEO; and this opinion assumes Haart was a Freedom director. To

the public, Haart and Scaglia presented a united front, telling potential investors,

other third parties, and tax authorities that they owned Freedom equally. But behind

the scenes, Freedom’s internal documents told a different story.

1 Scaglia formed Freedom and initially held all one hundred shares of its

common stock. In December 2018, anticipating his marriage to Haart, Scaglia

caused Freedom to issue him 123,665 preferred shares of Freedom stock. After the

couple married in June 2019, Scaglia transferred Haart fifty of Freedom’s common

shares, but did not mention or transfer any preferred shares. In March 2020, Haart

learned about the preferred shares, and demanded that the two be equal partners. In

response, Scaglia executed a stock power, transferring 61,832, or 49.9995957%, of

the preferred shares to Haart. Scaglia thus maintained a one-share voting advantage

over Haart. Haart discovered this discrepancy as the couple’s marriage deteriorated,

but continued to insist she was an equal owner.

In the final moments of their marriage, Scaglia used his control over Freedom

to oust Haart from her positions at Freedom and EWG; a majority of EWG’s board,

including Scaglia, also removed her from her positions at EWG. Haart argues that

because she is an equal owner of all classes of Freedom stock, Scaglia could not

unilaterally remove her from her Freedom directorship, Freedom is deadlocked, and

neither Freedom nor EWG’s board could remove her from her EWG roles. She

brings declaratory judgment claims to resolve who controls Freedom and EWG

under 8 Del. C. § 225 and 6 Del. C. § 18-110, a claim to dissolve Freedom under

8 Del. C. § 226, and a breach of fiduciary duty claim. Scaglia brought reciprocal

counterclaims for declaratory judgments.

2 This post-trial opinion on the declaratory judgment and dissolution claims

finds that Haart does not own half of Freedom’s preferred shares, and so is not

entitled to relief under any of her theories. Despite the appearance of an equal

partnership, the evidence reveals that Haart never owned an equal stake of

Freedom’s preferred stock. For the reasons that follow, judgment is entered for

Scaglia on all those counts.

I. BACKGROUND

This matter was tried on April 19 and 20, 2022.1 The trial record includes

over 300 joint exhibits, live testimony from three witnesses, and deposition

testimony from two more witnesses.2 I find the following facts based on a

preponderance of that evidence.3 And I limit my findings to those necessary to

resolve the narrow dispute in this expedited summary proceeding.4

1 See Docket Item (“D.I”) 124; see also D.I. 57. 2 Citations in the form “[Last Name] Tr. —” refer to trial testimony of the referenced witness, available at D.I. 127 and D.I. 128. Citations in the form “JX —” refer to the parties’ joint trial exhibits. See D.I. 121. Citations in the form “PTO —” refer to the parties’ stipulated pre-trial order, available at D.I. 119. Unless otherwise noted, I have reproduced the parties’ correspondence in its original form. 3 Reynolds v. Reynolds, 237 A.2d 708, 711 (Del. 1967) (“The side on which the greater weight of the evidence is found is the side on which the preponderance of the evidence exists.”). 4 See Nycal Corp. v. Angelicchio, 1993 WL 401874, at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 31, 1993) (“An action under [Section] 225 is a summary proceeding to determine the lawful board of a Delaware corporation. . . . [I]n order to promptly and fairly address this issue, I will not consider ‘collateral’ issues, or those unnecessary to decide the validity of the July 23 shareholder consents, at this time.” (citing Bossier v. Connell, 1986 WL 11534, at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct. 7, 1986)); see also Genger v. TR Inv’rs, LLC, 26 A.3d 180, 201–02 (Del. 2011)

3 A. Scaglia Acquires The Elite Businesses And Meets Haart.

Scaglia is an Italian entrepreneur and investor whose business interests span

from technology to fashion.5 In 2011, Scaglia invested in the “Elite” brand, which

at the time included numerous European modeling and fashion businesses.6 Scaglia

invested in Elite through his holding company, S.M.S. Finance S.A. (“S.M.S.

Finance”).7

Scaglia also owned La Perla, a fashion and lingerie company. 8 In 2015,

Scaglia, then La Perla’s CEO, met Haart during a cobranding project between La

Perla and Haart’s business, Julia Haart Shoes.9 Haart became a designer at La Perla

and quickly took on more responsibilities.10 In May 2016, she became La Perla’s

creative director, earning an approximately $2 million annual salary.11 Haart and

(holding the Court of Chancery properly adjudicated who was entitled to vote disputed shares but erred in adjudicating questions of ultimate beneficial ownership in a Section 225 proceeding because such a proceeding is in rem and the Court lacked in personam jurisdiction over the litigants). Cf. Zohar II 2005-1, Ltd. v. FSAR Hldgs., Inc., 2017 WL 5956877, at *25–26 (Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2017) (holding the issue of beneficial ownership was not collateral and that deciding it would not violate the parties’ due process rights).

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