KT4 Partners LLC v. Palantir Technologies, Inc.

203 A.3d 738
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 29, 2019
Docket281, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 203 A.3d 738 (KT4 Partners LLC v. Palantir Technologies, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KT4 Partners LLC v. Palantir Technologies, Inc., 203 A.3d 738 (Del. 2019).

Opinion

STRINE, Chief Justice:

*741 This appeal arises from a less-than-summary books and records action brought under Section 220 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. The stockholder and plaintiff below, KT4 Partners LLC, appeals from the Court of Chancery's post-trial order granting in part and denying in part KT4's request to inspect various books and records of appellee Palantir Technologies Inc., a privately held technology company based in Palo Alto, California.

After extensive motion practice and a one-day trial, the Court of Chancery found that KT4 had shown a proper purpose of investigating suspected wrongdoing in three areas: (1) "Palantir's serial failures to hold annual stockholder meetings"; (2) Palantir's amendments of its Investors' Rights Agreement in a way that "eviscerated KT4's (and other similarly situated stockholders') contractual information rights after KT4 sought to exercise those rights"; and (3) Palantir's potential violation of two stockholder agreements by failing to give stockholders notice and the opportunity to exercise their rights of first refusal, co-sale rights, and rights of first offer as to certain stock transactions. 1 The Court of Chancery therefore ordered Palantir to produce the company's stock ledger, its list of stockholders, information about the company's directors and officers, year-end audited financial statements, books and records relating to annual stockholder meetings, books and records relating to any cofounder's sales of Palantir stock, each notice that Palantir sent to any "Major Investor" relating to certain offerings or sales of Palantir stock, and certain books and records relating to the Investors' Rights Agreement amendments. 2 The court otherwise denied KT4's requests, including its request to inspect emails related to the Investors' Rights Agreement amendments and its request for an exception to a jurisdictional use restriction that the court imposed.

The Court of Chancery dealt skillfully and expeditiously with the myriad issues dividing the parties in this contentious litigation, which is but one lawsuit among several between them. Consistent with their feisty relationship, the parties raise many issues on appeal. In our view, the Court of Chancery correctly applied the law and was within its discretion in resolving most of these issues, and we need not use many bytes addressing them. 3 But, as *742 to two issues, we do conclude that the Court of Chancery erred.

We first hold that the Court of Chancery abused its discretion by denying wholesale KT4's request to inspect emails relating to the amendments of Palantir's Investors' Rights Agreement. Section 220 entitles a stockholder to inspect all books and records that are necessary to accomplish that stockholder's proper purpose, and on our review of the record below, KT4 made a sufficient showing that emails were necessary to investigate potential wrongdoing related to the Investors' Rights Agreement amendments. Given that discovery is limited in § 220 actions, KT4 discharged its evidentiary burden by presenting evidence that Palantir did not honor traditional corporate formalities (as suggested by its "serial failures to hold annual stockholder meetings" 4 ) and had acted through email in connection with the same alleged wrongdoing that KT4 was seeking to investigate. Faced with that evidence, Palantir failed to present any evidence of its own that more traditional materials, such as board resolutions or minutes, even existed. And although the Court of Chancery may have credited Palantir's implicit suggestion that more formal books and records would be adequate for KT4's purposes, Palantir concedes on appeal that no such documents exist.

Ultimately, if a company observes traditional formalities, such as documenting its actions through board minutes, resolutions, and official letters, it will likely be able to satisfy a § 220 petitioner's needs solely by producing those books and records. But if a company instead decides to conduct formal corporate business largely through informal electronic communications, it cannot use its own choice of medium to keep shareholders in the dark about the substantive information to which § 220 entitles them.

As to the second issue, we hold that the Court of Chancery abused its discretion by refusing KT4's modest requests to temper the jurisdictional use restriction the court imposed. At Palantir's request, the Court of Chancery imposed a broad restriction on the use of the materials KT4 was entitled to inspect, such that KT4 could not use them in litigation outside the Court of Chancery (except perhaps in another court located in Delaware, should the Court of Chancery decline jurisdiction). In imposing that limitation, the court rejected KT4's requests that it be allowed to bring suit: (1) in the first instance in the Superior Court, where other litigation between the parties was already pending; and (2) for any non-derivative action where one of Palantir's directors, officers, or agents is named as a defendant and that person would not consent to personal jurisdiction in Delaware, in a court located in another jurisdiction. Given that the court found a credible basis to investigate potential wrongdoing related to the violation of contracts executed in California, governed by California law, and among parties living or *743 based in California, the basis for limiting KT4's use in litigation of the inspection materials to Delaware and specifically the Court of Chancery was tenuous in the first place, and the court lacked reasonable grounds for denying the limited modifications that KT4 requested.

As this Court observed in United Technologies Corp. v. Treppel , the Court of Chancery must be cautious about limiting the jurisdictions in which a petitioner can use in litigation the books and records it receives from a § 220 action. 5 That is for an obvious reason: § 220 itself does not contain any statutory language restricting stockholders from using the books and records they inspect in lawsuits brought outside of Delaware. Accordingly, Treppel rested on the premise that restrictions of this kind are not routine and must be justified by "case-specific factors." 6 In that case, for example, the petitioner was limited to using the records in Delaware courts because, under the respondent corporation's bylaws, that was the only permissible forum in which the petitioner could bring suit, and because the other pertinent circumstances weighed toward restricting litigation use outside of Delaware. Here, the situation is quite different. The party seeking to impose the restriction, Palantir, had itself sued KT4 in California. And Palantir's bylaws did not contain a forum selection clause limiting suit to any particular jurisdiction. Not only that, but the two major stockholder agreements at issue in this case contained California choice of law clauses, which would give KT4 a rational basis for preferring that California courts resolve any disputes related to those contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
203 A.3d 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kt4-partners-llc-v-palantir-technologies-inc-del-2019.