Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 5, 2024
DocketC.A. 2023-0318-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc. (Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc.) 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
Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE MORGAN T. ZURN LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER VICE CHANCELLOR 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734

February 5, 2024 Brian E. Farnan, Esquire Rudolf Koch, Esquire Farnan LLP Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A. 919 North Market Street, 12th Floor 920 North King Street Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801

RE: Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., Civil Action No. 2023-0318-MTZ

Dear Mr. Farnan and Mr. Koch: As you are aware, plaintiff Mercury Partners Management (the “Representative”), representing the securityholders of Courier Therapeutics, Inc. (the “Company”), asserts the Company’s buyer, defendant Valo Health, Inc. (the “Buyer”), breached its promise in a Securities Purchase Agreement (the “SPA”) to “use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to develop and obtain marketing approval by the FDA” for the Company’s novel cancer therapeutic.1 The SPA defined “Commercially Reasonable Efforts” as

the level of efforts consistent with the efforts that a similarly situated, early stage biotechnology company would typically devote to a similar product of similar market potential, at a similar stage in its development or product life, taking into account development, commercial, legal and regulatory factors, such as [1] efficacy, [2] safety, [3] patent and regulatory exclusivity, [4] product profile, [5] cost and availability of supply, [6] the time and cost required to complete development, [7] the competitiveness of the marketplace (including the proprietary position and anticipated market share of the product), [8] the patent position with respect to such product (including the ability to obtain or enforce, or have obtained or enforced, such patent rights), [9] the third-party patent landscape relevant to the product, [10] the regulatory structure

1 Docket Item (“D.I.”) 1, Ex. A [hereinafter “SPA”] § 1.6(d). Mercury Pr’s Mgmt., LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., Civil Action No. 2023-0318-MTZ February 5, 2024 Page 2 of 12

involved, [11] the likelihood of obtaining marketing approval, [12] the anticipated or actual profitability of the applicable product, [13] anticipated or approved labeling, [14] present and future market potential, [15] Competitive Products and market conditions, [16] pricing and reimbursement considerations, [17] costs for development and costs for obtaining, prosecuting, maintaining and licensing relevant Intellectual Property rights, and [18] other technical, commercial, legal, scientific, regulatory, and medical considerations, all based on conditions then prevailing.2

On March 15, 2023, Representative brought two counts against Buyer: a “first cause of action for specific performance, and a “second cause of action for damages for breach of contract.”3 Representative sought an order of specific performance compelling Buyer to fulfill its promise to use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to develop the Company’s product into a safe and effective FDA-approved therapy to treat cancer, for up to ten years. After Buyer moved to dismiss, Representative filed an amended complaint.4 Buyer again moved to dismiss the first count for failure to state a claim (the “Motion”) on the grounds that (1) the request for damages was tantamount to an admission that it had an adequate remedy at law, and (2) the proposed relief was too open-ended to support an order of specific performance.5 The parties briefed the Motion, and I granted it from the bench after argument on January 5, 2024 (the “Ruling”).6 The Ruling concluded the requested remedy of specific performance to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop and commercialize a cancer therapy for up to ten years was too indefinite, as it could not offer Buyer the necessary notice as to the requirements of that order and what actions might be contemptuous under that

2 Id. § 7.1. 3 D.I. 23 ¶¶ 79–88. 4 D.I. 3; D.I. 20; D.I. 23. 5 D.I. 25; D.I. 31. 6 D.I. 34; D.I. 43; D.I. 49; D.I. 50 Ex. 1 [hereinafter “Tr.”]. Mercury Pr’s Mgmt., LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., Civil Action No. 2023-0318-MTZ February 5, 2024 Page 3 of 12

order.7 The Ruling relied on Carteret Bancorp, Inc. v. Home Group, Inc., which concludes specific enforcement of a promise to use best efforts to cause regulatory approvals to a corporate merger to be obtained was unavailable in view of the future, evolving complex commercial realities, as such an order would inappropriately involve the Court in the details of performance and be too indefinite to identify contemptuous conduct.8 The Ruling also relied on 26 Capital Acquisition Corp. v. Tiger Resort Asia Ltd., which concludes “the complexity of the undertaking and the associated difficulty of providing meaningful judicial oversight,” the need to monitor compliance, and the risk of an order too vague to give any specific direction to the defendant, counseled against granting specific performance.9 And the Ruling relied on AbbVie Endocrine Inc. v. Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.,10 which explains that where a court is unable practically to enforce an order of specific performance due to “[t]he complexity of the business judgments involved,” and the “involvement of the Court required to differentiate contemptuous from non- contemptuous failure to comply,” a request for injunctive relief is “unworkable” and will not be awarded, and denying an injunction to speed up drug production on those grounds. The Ruling noted the order Representative sought, to compel best efforts for years of drug development, was meaningfully more complex and open-ended than orders of specific performance to use best efforts, or to engage in a significant undertaking, to close a merger.11 The Ruling concluded that specific performance was so plainly unavailable that it could be rejected at the pleading stage.12

The Ruling reached that conclusion after engaging with SPA Section 8.6, which permits Representative to seek specific performance of Buyer’s covenants

7 Tr. at 38–42. 8 1988 WL 3010, at *8–9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 1988). 9 2023 WL 5808203, at *26–28 (Del. Ch. Sept. 7, 2023) (citing Cartaret, 1988 WL 3010, at *1). 10 2021 WL 4059793, at *7–8 (Del. Ch. Sept. 7, 2021). 11 Tr. at 39 (distinguishing Snow Phipps Grp., LLC v. KCAKE Acq., Inc., 2021 WL 1714202 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2021) and Level 4 Yoga, LLC v. CorePower Yoga, LLC, 2022 WL 601862 (Del. Ch. Mar. 1, 2022)). 12 Id. at 40 (distinguishing Pharmathene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc., 2010 WL 4813553, at *10–11 (Del. Ch. Nov. 23, 2010)). Mercury Pr’s Mgmt., LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., Civil Action No. 2023-0318-MTZ February 5, 2024 Page 4 of 12

and agreements.13 The Ruling recognized “a court is not required to enforce a specific performance provision” and that where a party agrees to such a provision, “the party must establish a persuasive case-specific [reason] by the clause should not be respected.”14 The Ruling concluded Buyer had met that burden.15 Without specific performance, Representative had no hook for this Court’s equitable jurisdiction, so the Ruling dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction subject to transfer to the Superior Court under 10 Del. C. § 1902.

On January 16, Representative filed an Application for Certification of an Interlocutory Appeal (the “Application”).16 Buyer timely filed its opposition on January 26.17 Interlocutory appeals are “exceptional, not routine,” and “generally not

13 Id. at 39, 40; SPA § 8.6 (“Specific Performance. Each party hereto acknowledges that the parties hereto will be irreparably harmed and that there will be no adequate remedy at law for any violation by any party of any of the covenants or agreements contained in the Transaction Documents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Mercury Partners Management, LLC v. Valo Health, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercury-partners-management-llc-v-valo-health-inc-delch-2024.