Lorenzo Roccia v. Martin Mugica

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 29, 2020
DocketC.A. No. 2020-0641-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of Lorenzo Roccia v. Martin Mugica (Lorenzo Roccia v. Martin Mugica) 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
Lorenzo Roccia v. Martin Mugica, (Del. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE LORENZO ROCCIA and ) TRANSATLANTIC GROUP ) PARTNERS, LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0641-MTZ ) MARTIN MUGICA and ULTINER ) LLC, ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) SKYLINE RENEWABLES, LLC ) ) Nominal Defendant. )

ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT WHEREAS, on review of Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment

(“Plaintiffs’ Motion”) and Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment

(“Defendants’ Motion”), as briefed and taken under advisement on November 6,

2020, it appears:1

1 Citations in the form of “PX –– at ––” refer to the exhibits attached to the Transmittal Declaration of Bruce E. Jameson, available at Docket Item (“D.I.”) 37. Citations in the form of “DX –– at ––” refer to the exhibits attached to the Unsworn Declaration of Martin Mugica, available at D.I. 34. A. This dispute centers on three entities nested like matryoshka dolls.2

The innermost doll is Nominal Defendant Skyline Renewables LLC (“Skyline”), an

investment company through which its owners invest in renewable energy ventures.3

It is nested within Transatlantic Power Holdings LLC (“Holdings”), which owns

100% of Skyline’s non-voting Class B shares and 0.5% of its Class A voting shares.4

Holdings is managed and controlled by its managing member, the outermost doll,

Transatlantic Ultiner LLC (“Managing Member”).5 Managing Member’s ownership

is split evenly between Plaintiff Lorenzo Roccia, through his entity Transatlantic

Group Partners LLC (“Transatlantic,” and together with Roccia, “Plaintiffs”), and

Defendant Martin Mugica, through his entity Ultiner LLC (“Ultiner,” and together

with Mugica, “Defendants”).6

B. Skyline, Holdings, and Managing Member are governed by a similarly

nested set of operating agreements (the “Skyline Operating Agreement,” the

2 Matryoshka dolls, often called Russian nesting dolls, are a popular form of folk art, wherein successively smaller wooden dolls are arranged inside one another. 3 See D.I. 40 ¶ 3 [hereinafter “Am. Answer”]. 4 See PX 4 [hereinafter “Skyline Op. Agr.”], Schedule I. Nonparty Windpower Americas I LLC (“Windpower I”) owns the other 99.5% of Skyline’s Class A shares. Id. Windpower I is a controlled subsidiary of Ardian, a French private equity firm. See Am. Answer ¶ 23. 5 Am. Answer ¶ 21. Managing Member owns a 75.8% voting interest in Holdings. Id. ¶ 21; PX 1 [hereinafter “Holdings Op. Agr.”], Schedule A. Eight other nonparty investors hold the remaining 24.2% interest, and vote only in certain strategic transactions. See Holdings Op. Agr., Schedule A; id. § 4.06(a)(ii)–(b). 6 Am. Answer ¶¶ 18–20.

2 “Holdings Operating Agreement,” and the “Managing Member Operating

Agreement,” respectively). The Skyline Operating Agreement establishes a

corporation-like management structure for Skyline, with a CEO and a five-member

board of managers (the “Skyline Board”).7 The Skyline Board has two managers

appointed by Holdings and three appointed by Skyline’s other investor, Windpower

I.8 The Skyline Operating Agreement also delegates certain authority to its asset

manager, Holdings. 9 Holdings similarly has a corporation-like management

structure, with a CEO and a four-member board of managers (the “Holdings Board”)

directing its affairs. Holdings also delegates certain authority to its managing

member, Managing Member. 10 Managing Member, in turn, is run by its two-

member board of managers (the “Managing Member Board”).

C. Roccia and Mugica have management roles in each entity. The two

men are Holdings’ designees on the Skyline Board.11 Roccia is the Skyline Board’s

7 See Skyline Op. Agr. § 7.1(a)–(f). Skyline is a series LLC; for the purposes of this Order, I refer to all Skyline entities as “Skyline” and all those entities boards’ as the “Skyline Board.” 8 See id. § 7.1(e)–(f); see also id., Schedule I. 9 See id. § 1.1 (defining Holdings as Skyline’s “Asset Manager”); see also DX 8 [hereinafter “Asset Manager Agr.”]. Holdings, as Skyline’s Asset Manager was responsible for directing certain aspects of Skyline’s day-to-day business. See, e.g., Skyline Op. Agr. §§ 5.1–5.2, 8.3(e); see also Asset Manager Agr. § 2.1. 10 See, e.g., Holdings Op. Agr. § 12.02(a) (appointing Managing Member as Holdings’ “Tax Matters Member”). 11 See Skyline Op. Agr. § 7.1(f).

3 chairman;12 Mugica is Skyline’s President and CEO.13 They have the same roles at

the Holdings level: both Mugica and Roccia are members of the Holdings Board,

Roccia is the Holdings Board’s chairman, and Mugica is President and CEO.14 And

at the Managing Member level, Roccia and Mugica are the only two members of the

Managing Member Board.15

D. This action concerns Mugica’s attempt, in his role as Holdings’

President and CEO, to remove Roccia from the Skyline Board. On May 11, 2020,

Mugica wrote Roccia, the Skyline Board members, and the Holdings Board members

(the “Removal Letter”):

Pursuant to my authority as President and CEO of Transatlantic Power Holdings LLC (the “Company”), this letter serves as notice that Lorenzo Roccia is hereby removed, effective immediately, as a member of the Board of Managers of Skyline Renewables LLC and as a member of the Board of Managers of Skyline Renewables LLC - Series 1.

Mr. Roccia’s removals are made in accordance with Section 7.6(a) of the Amended and Restated Operating Agreement of Skyline Renewables LLC dated effective as of February 23, 2018 (the “Operating Agreement”). Pursuant to Section 7.1(f) of the Operating Agreement, I will in the near future appoint a replacement for Mr. Roccia on both Boards as one of the Company’s two permitted representatives.16

12 Id. § 7.2(a). 13 Id. § 7.7(a). 14 Holdings Op. Agr. § 8.02. There are two other members of the Holdings Board, Abel Navarro and a fourth director to be appointed by Managing Member. Id. 15 Managing Member Op. Agr. § 6.02. 16 PX 6.

4 The parties dispute whether Roccia’s removals were valid and proper.

E. On July 31, 2020, Plaintiffs filed their first complaint under 6 Del. C.

§ 18-110, seeking an injunction preventing Roccia’s removal from the Skyline Board,

a declaration that his purported removal was void, and attorneys’ fees pursuant to the

Skyline Operating Agreement. 17 Defendants answered the first complaint on

September 2.18

F. The parties agreed to present this matter to the Court through cross-

motions for summary judgment,19 which they filed simultaneously on October 23.20

Also on October 23, Plaintiffs filed their amended complaint,21 which Defendants

answered on October 28.22 The parties stipulated that the amended pleadings would

govern the cross motions for summary judgment.23 Plaintiffs’ Motion requests the

Court “declare the purported removal of Roccia from the Skyline Board as void ab

initio, and award to Plaintiffs their reasonable fees and expenses in prosecuting this

17 D.I. 1 at 26. 18 D.I. 17 at 1. 19 D.I. 20 at 1. 20 D.I. 39; D.I. 35; see also D.I. 32; D.I. 36. 21 D.I. 31 at 1. 22 Am. Answer at 1. 23 D.I. 30 ¶ 3. Counsel is commended for narrowing the issues for the Court’s consideration and presenting them concisely.

5 action.”24 Defendants argue that Mugica’s removal of Roccia was valid and binding

on Holdings.

G. The Motions present two questions of contract interpretation. First,

under the relevant agreements, may Holdings remove Roccia from the Skyline

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