LGM Holdings, LLC v. Gideon Schurder

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 22, 2025
Docket314, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of LGM Holdings, LLC v. Gideon Schurder (LGM Holdings, LLC v. Gideon Schurder) 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
LGM Holdings, LLC v. Gideon Schurder, (Del. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

LGM HOLDINGS, LLC and LGM § SUBSIDIARY HOLDINGS, LLC, § § No. 314, 2024 Plaintiffs Below, § Appellants, § § Court Below: Superior Court v. § of the State of Delaware § GIDEON SCHURDER, MENDY § C.A. No. N23C-09-011 SCHURDER, LEAH CHITRIK, and § IBS PHARMA, INC. § § Defendants Below, § Appellees. §

Submitted: January 29, 2025 Decided: April 22, 2025

Before VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and GRIFFITHS, Justices.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Thomas E. Hanson, Jr., Esquire, BARNES & THORNBURG LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Eric H. Sussman, Esquire (argued), BARNES & THORNBURG LLP, Chicago, Illinois for Appellants LGM Holdings, LLC and LGM Subsidiary Holdings, LLC.

Travis S. Hunter, Esquire, Gabriela Z. Monasterio, Esquire, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Michael J. Payne, Esquire (argued), FRANKEL, RUBIN, KLEIN, PAYNE & PUDLOWSKI, P.C., St. Louis, Missouri for Appellee Gideon Schurder.

John M. Seaman, Esquire (argued), Florentina D. Field, Esquire, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware for Appellees Mendy Schurder, Leah Chitrik, and IBS Pharma, Inc. (collectively, the “IBS Sellers”). TRAYNOR, Justice:

The buyers of a pharmaceutical business appeal the Superior Court’s dismissal

of their fraudulent-inducement and indemnification claims against the sellers. In

short, the trial court determined that that the buyers had waived their fraudulent-

inducement claims and that the indemnification claim was time-barred.

The court’s waiver determination was based on its interpretation of a letter

agreement between the parties, which was executed several years after the buyers’

acquisition of the business and in the wake of governmental proceedings involving

FDA and Department of Justice investigations of the acquired business. According

to the sellers, the purpose of the letter agreement was to preclude further litigation

between the parties, including claims of the kind the buyers made in this case. The

buyers, on the other hand, understood the letter agreement not as waiving their fraud

claims but as simply limiting the size and scope of claims for the recovery of losses

attributable to the governmental proceedings. The Superior Court agreed with the

sellers and, in consequence, dismissed the buyers’ fraudulent-inducement claims.

We hold that the buyers’ interpretation of the letter agreement is reasonable, as is the

sellers’ and the trial court’s. Put another way, we find that the relevant provision of

the letter agreement is ambiguous and that it was therefore inappropriate for the court

to dismiss the buyers’ fraudulent-inducement claim. We conclude, too, that the

buyers adequately pleaded that the sellers had fraudulently concealed the facts

2 giving rise to the buyers’ indemnification claim such that the otherwise applicable

survival period for bringing the claim was tolled. Because it is reasonably

conceivable that the buyers’ indemnification claim was timely filed, the court erred

in dismissing it. Consequently, and as more fully explained below, we reverse the

Superior Court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I

A

Gideon Schurder, Mendy Schurder, Leah Chitrik, and IBS Pharma, Inc.

(“IBS”) (collectively, the “Sellers”) owned three pharmaceutical companies (the

“Target Companies”).1 The Target Companies, one of which was LGM Pharma,

LLC (“LGM”), sourced and distributed active pharmaceutical ingredients (“API”)

from manufacturers and suppliers around the world.

On September 19, 2017, LGM Holdings, LLC and LGM Subsidiary Holdings,

LLC (collectively, the “Buyers”) entered into an agreement with the Sellers to

acquire the Target Companies (the “Purchase Agreement”). Specifically, the Buyers

agreed to purchase shares in the Target Companies in exchange for $23.4 million in

cash, an interest in LGM Holdings, LLC valued at $6.6 million, and two unsecured

1 Because Appellees Gideon Schurder and Mendy Schurder share a surname, this opinion refers to them by their first names for the sake of clarity. No disrespect or familiarity is intended.

3 $2.5 million promissory notes to Gideon and IBS. Hence, the total value of the

acquisition was approximately $35 million.

In Article IV of Purchase Agreement, the Sellers made numerous

representations and warranties to the Buyers. Three of those representations and

warranties are relevant here. In Section 4.20, the Sellers represented that the Target

Companies and their facilities were in material compliance with applicable laws and

had been for the past seven years.2 In Section 4.21, the Sellers represented that the

Target Companies were in material compliance with “all Health Care Laws” and had

been for the past five years.3 And in Section 4.30, the Sellers represented that their

representations and disclosures were complete and accurate.4

Article XII of the Purchase Agreement contains indemnification provisions.

Section 12.1(b)(ii) provides, in pertinent part, that:

Subject to the limitations set forth herein, the Selling Parties shall indemnify, protect, defend and hold and save the Buyer Parties harmless, from and against the entirety of any Losses any of the Buyer Parties may suffer, sustain or become subject to, including in connection with any charges, complaints, actions, suits, proceedings, hearings, investigations, claims, demands, judgments, orders, decrees, stipulations, injunctions, through and after the date of the claim for indemnification, including without limitation any Losses any of the Buyer Parties may suffer, sustain, or become subject to, after the end of the applicable Survival Period (if applicable) if a claim is made, specifying the factual basis in reasonable detail before the end of such Survival Period, resulting from, arising from or out of, or caused by:

2 App. to Opening Br. at A139. 3 Id. at A140. 4 Id. at A145.

4 (A) any breach or inaccuracy of any representation or warranty set forth in Article IV of this Agreement . . . .5

Section 12.1(a)(iii) provides a five-year survival period for indemnification claims

relating to representations set forth in Section 4.21—the “Health Care

Representations.”6 Section 12.1(a)(iii) states:

All of the representations and warranties that constitute Health Care Representations shall survive the Closing, and shall continue in full force and effect until . . . sixty (60) months thereafter . . . after which period such representations and warranties shall terminate and have no further force or effect[.]7 Section 12.3(a) of the Purchase Agreement sets forth the procedure by which the

Buyers could seek indemnification from the Sellers. Section 12.3(a), titled “Claims

Procedure,” states:

An Indemnified Person shall give prompt written notice (a “Claim Notice”) to the Indemnifying Person after the Indemnified Person first becomes aware of any event or other facts that has resulted or that might result in any Loss for which the Indemnified Person is entitled to any indemnification under this Agreement . . . .8

Finally, Section 12.9, titled “Indemnification as Sole Remedy,” provides that “the

sole and exclusive remedy” for breaches of representation and warranties of the

Purchase Agreement is “the indemnification and reimbursement obligations of the

5 Id. at A165 (emphasis added). 6 See id. at A100 (defining “Health Care Representations” as the “representations and warranties set forth in Section 4.21”). 7 Id. at A164 (emphasis added). 8 Id. at A166 (emphasis in original).

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