Mark S. Davis v. EMSI Holding Company

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 3, 2017
DocketCA 12854-VCS
StatusPublished

This text of Mark S. Davis v. EMSI Holding Company (Mark S. Davis v. EMSI Holding Company) 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
Mark S. Davis v. EMSI Holding Company, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

EFiled: May 03 2017 03:25PM EDT Transaction ID 60552075 Case No. 12854-VCS IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MARK S. DAVIS and : ROBERT P. BROOK, : : Plaintiffs, : : v. : C.A. No. 12854-VCS : EMSI HOLDING COMPANY, : : Defendant. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 8, 2017 Date Decided: May 3, 2017

Philip Trainer, Jr., Esquire and Toni-Ann Platia, Esquire of Ashby & Geddes, Wilmington, Delaware; Lisa C. Solbakken, Esquire of Arkin Solbakken LLP, New York, New York; and Timothy D. Kelly, Esquire of Dykema Gossett, PLLC, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

S. Mark Hurd, Esquire, Ryan D. Stottmann, Esquire, and Lauren K. Neal, Esquire of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP, Wilmington, Delaware and Stephen C. Hackney, Esquire and Timothy Knapp, Esquire of Kirkland & Ellis LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Defendant.

SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor In this advancement action, two former directors and officers of a recently

acquired corporation, EMSI Holding Company (“EMSI” or the “Company”), seek

payment of attorney’s fees and expenses they have incurred, and will incur, in

defending themselves in a separate action pending before this Court. In the

underlying action, the Plaintiffs here and others have been sued for indemnification

arising out of allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations they made in a Stock Purchase

Agreement (the “SPA”). Plaintiffs have made a demand for advancement.

Defendant has refused that demand and argues that Plaintiffs waived their right to

advancement in the SPA by agreeing that contractual indemnification was the only

remedy that would survive the closing of the transaction. Alternatively, Defendant

contends that Plaintiffs’ right to advancement was not clearly established prior to the

SPA and, in any event, Plaintiffs have not been sued by reason of the fact that they

were directors or officers of the Company.

In this opinion, I grant Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on their

claims for mandatory advancement and fees on fees. I do so because the SPA clearly

preserves Plaintiffs’ preexisting right to advancement and the claims they are

defending in the underlying indemnification action arise by reason of the fact they

were directors or officers of EMSI. None of Defendant’s arguments to the contrary

survive construction of the clear and unambiguous terms of the SPA and the

applicable governance documents.

1 I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment in advance of discovery arguing

that the complaint in the underlying indemnification action, the clear terms of the

SPA and the clear terms of the applicable corporate bylaws demonstrate that they

are entitled to advancement as a matter of law. Defendant has sought to expand the

record under Court of Chancery Rule 56(f). As will be discussed below, I am

satisfied that the facts that can be drawn from the pleadings in the underlying

indemnification action and the operative documents reveal that Plaintiffs’ motion is

well-grounded as is the relief they seek here.1

A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties

Plaintiffs, Mark S. Davis and Robert P. Brook, are former directors and

officers of EMSI. Davis was President, CEO and Chairman of the board of directors.

Brook was a director and Executive Vice President of EMSI and President of its

HealthCare Division.

Defendant, EMSI, is a Delaware corporation. Non-party EMSI Acquisition,

Inc. (the “Buyer”) is a Delaware corporation that acquired EMSI through the SPA

1 Weinstock v. Lazard Debt Recovery GP, LLC, 2003 WL 21843254, at *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2003) (deciding motion for summary judgment in advancement case based on underlying complaint and applicable corporate documents).

2 (the “Acquisition”) and subsequently sued Plaintiffs in the underlying action for

fraud in connection with that transaction.

B. The Underlying Action

The factual allegations of the underlying action are complex. A thorough

discussion of these facts appears in the Court’s opinion on defendants’ motion to

dismiss that action which has been issued simultaneously with this opinion.2 An

abridged version will suffice to provide context to Plaintiffs’ demands for

advancement.

Plaintiffs and others have been sued by the Buyer for indemnification and to

confirm a Settlement Auditor’s award related to post-closing net working capital and

revenue adjustments. The Buyer bases its claim for indemnification on what it

alleges was a multi-faceted accounting fraud that arose in connection with the

Acquisition. Essentially, the Buyer avers that, in an effort to keep the Buyer engaged

in the sales process and to extract from the Buyer more than EMSI was actually

worth, EMSI fraudulently inflated financial statements in order to hide the effects of

a dramatic slowdown in revenue and profitability that it experienced in the ramp up

to closing of the Acquisition. To accomplish this complex and brazen fraud, EMSI

purportedly engaged in a variety of different types of financial manipulation that

2 EMSI Acq., Inc. v. Contrarian Funds, LLC, C.A. No. 12648-VCS (Del. Ch. May 3, 2017).

3 created over $4.6 million of fabricated EBITDA. The Buyer alleges that Davis and

Brook knowingly participated in this financial fraud through their positions at EMSI.

Damages to the Buyer are alleged to be approximately $40 million.

C. The Company’s Bylaws and the Relevant Provisions of the SPA

The documents that are relevant to resolving the dispute over Plaintiffs’ right

to advancement are the EMSI Holding Company bylaws and the SPA. To begin,

Section 7.1 of the bylaws states, in relevant part:

Each person who was or is made a party or is threatened to be made a party to or otherwise is involved in any action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (a “Proceeding”), by reason of being or having been a director or officer of the Corporation or serving or having served at the request of the Corporation as a director, trustee, officer, employee or agent of another corporation . . . whether the basis of such proceeding is alleged action or failure to act in an official capacity as a director, trustee, officer, employee or agent or in any other capacity while serving as a director, trustee, officer, employee or agent, shall be indemnified and held harmless by the Corporation to the fullest extent authorized by the DGCL . . . against all expense, liability and loss (including attorneys’ fees, judgements, fines, ERISA excise taxes or penalties and amounts paid in settlement) reasonably incurred or suffered by such Indemnitee in connection therewith . . . . The right to indemnification conferred in this Article VII shall be a contract right and shall include the right to be paid by the Corporation the expenses (including attorneys’ fees) incurred in defending any such Proceeding in advance of its final disposition (an “Advancement of Expenses”); provided, however, that, if the DGCL so requires, an Advancement of Expenses incurred by an Indemnitee shall be made only upon delivery to the Corporation of an undertaking (an “Undertaking”), by or on behalf of such Indemnitee, to repay all amounts so advanced if it shall ultimately be determined by final judicial decision from which there is no further right to appeal (a

4 “Final Adjudication”) that such Indemnitee is not entitled to be indemnified for such expenses under this Article VII or otherwise.3

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Bluebook (online)
Mark S. Davis v. EMSI Holding Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-s-davis-v-emsi-holding-company-delch-2017.