Michael B. Garner v. Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 31, 2025
DocketC.A. No. 2024-0782-SEM
StatusPublished

This text of Michael B. Garner v. Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC (Michael B. Garner v. Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC) 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
Michael B. Garner v. Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MICHAEL B. GARNER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2024-0782-SEM ) AUTHENTICITY.AI INVESTORS, ) LLC ) ) Defendant. )

Report: March 31, 2025 Date Submitted: March 5, 2025

POST-TRIAL REPORT

Thomas A. Uebler, Sarah P. Kaboly & Allison Neff, MCCOLLOM D’EMILIO SMITH UEBLER LLC, Wilmington, DE; Counsel for Plaintiff.

Michael W. McDermott, David B. Anthony, Harry W. Shenton, IV & Charmi A. Patel, BERGER MCDERMOTT LLP, Wilmington, DE; Counsel for Defendant.

MOLINA, Senior Magistrate Through this action, an investor seeks inspection of thirty categories of books

and records related to the closely held company in which he invested. He identifies

two distinct purposes, relying heavily on his first: valuation. For any categories of

documents nonessential to his valuation purpose, he directs me to a secondary,

catchall purpose to “investigat[e] mismanagement, waste, wrongdoing, self-dealing,

improper transactions, and/or the independence of directors.”

The company contests the propriety of either purpose. For valuation, the

company argues the investor already has sufficient information to value his

investment, vitiating the need for a court-ordered production. For investigation, the

company contends the investor lacks genuine concerns and is, instead, on a fishing

expedition.

The company’s position is well taken. The investor’s demand is broad, and

his purposes appear shallow in comparison. Yet, for the reasons I will explain, I

recommend that the company be ordered to produce a very limited subset of books

and records to assist the investor in valuing his interests, and to investigate the

discrepancy in the shares the company’s related entity is apparently authorized to

issue, versus what it has purported to issue. The remainder of his request, however,

should be denied. The parties should bear their own fees, though costs should be

shifted in the company’s favor.

This is my post-trial report. I. BACKGROUND

The following facts are drawn from the parties’ stipulations in the pre-trial

order, eighty-two joint exhibits (including two deposition transcripts), argument

presented at our half-day paper-record trial on February 20, 2025, and the parties’

post-trial chart (addressed further below) submitted on February 28, 2025.1

A. The Defendant’s Business

The defendant, Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC (the “Defendant”), was

formed in 2019 as a “feeder entity that serves to aggregate investments” while

maintaining no “business operations, financials, etc. of its own.” 2 Upon formation,

the Defendant began soliciting investors to raise funds, which it ultimately used to

1 See Docket Item (“D.I.”) 50 (“Pretrial Order”), 68 (“Tr.”). The parties’ jointly submitted exhibits are cited as “JX__.” Although the parties separately lodged the deposition transcripts of Messrs. Michael Garner (the “Plaintiff”) and Alex Gregor (D.I. 58), I cite to each by its joint exhibit number (JX070 and JX072, respectively). Before trial, I addressed a couple of evidentiary issues and left one open for later adjudication. See D.I. 57 (“Pretrial Conference Tr.”). The remaining issue was the admissibility of Mr. Gregor’s deposition testimony regarding the valuation of Mr. Michael McDonald’s share of Authenticity.AI Corporation. I find the testimony admissible. It falls within the broad topics for Mr. Gregor’s 30(b)(6) deposition. See D.I. 29, Sch. A (listing deposition topics). And the questioning was not so argumentative that the testimony is inadmissible. See, e.g., JX072 at 94:13–21 (Mr. Gregor admitting that he is “perfectly capable of standing as a corporate representative and stating what happened as it relates to what documents and information was available as it related to the transaction itself”). Accordingly, the objection is overruled, and the contested testimony is admitted. I grant the evidence before me the weight and credibility I find it deserves. 2 JX031 at 1.

2 purchase stock in Authenticity.AI Corporation (“Authenticity Corp.”).3 Authenticity

Corp. is “a platform that uses artificial intelligence for language translation and

speech-to-text processing of audio and video formats, intended to support the legal,

regulatory, and compliance industries.” 4

The plaintiff, Michael B. Garner (the “Plaintiff”) was one of the roughly ten

investors who invested in the Defendant to support its interest in Authenticity Corp.

On August 12, 2019, the Plaintiff made a capital contribution of $125,000 to the

Defendant, at which point he became a membership unit owner. 5 With the other

investors, including Knox Capital, 6 the Defendant raised $1,275,000, which was

used to purchase Authenticity Corp. stock. 7

Authenticity Corp. stock remains the Defendant’s only asset,8 and the

Defendant derives value for its investors solely from Authenticity Corp.’s

3 Pretrial Order at p. 23 ¶¶ 3–4. Although at various times Authenticity Corp. was referred to as “Authenticity Inc.,” the parties clarified at our pretrial conference that Authenticity Corp. is the relevant entity. Pretrial Conference Tr. at 36:17–37:17. 4 Tr. at 13:7–11. 5 Pretrial Order at p. 23 ¶ 3. The Plaintiff’s investment initiated his 9.80% ownership of the Defendant. See JX036 at 1 (reflecting the Plaintiff’s eventual 9.80% ownership). 6 See id. (reflecting the Defendant’s cap table with named investors, including “Knox Capital”). Per the Plaintiff, Knox Capital is a small private equity firm run out of Chicago, Illinois by Messrs. Bryant and Gregor. D.I. 40 at 1–2. 7 Pretrial Order at p. 23 ¶¶ 3–4. 8 Id. ¶ 5.

3 performance. 9 This performance is tracked and gauged through less-than-formal

means. Neither the Defendant nor Authenticity Corp. have held any annual board

meetings, 10 and the Defendant does not keep paper records or have corporate

document maintenance or retention policies or procedures.11 The Defendant also has

failed to maintain board minutes or other formal board materials. 12

But the Defendant’s, and Authenticity Corp.’s, founders and day-to-day

operators are known. Michael McDonald formed and founded Authenticity Corp.

and served as its CEO until March 1, 2024. 13 As of that day, however, Mr. McDonald

was neither the CEO of Authenticity Corp., nor a member of its board of directors.14

9 JX072 at 37:18–20. As I cite to Mr. Gregor’s deposition testimony, I pause to note the Defendant’s counsel objected a borderline-obstructive number of times; my law clerk counted over two hundred and seventy-five (275) objections during the five-hour (including breaks) deposition. Many of the objections appear baseless and reflect conduct unbecoming of members of the Delaware bar. See, e.g., id. at 8:20–10:16 (objecting to the form of an administrative question asking the deponent what time he needed to leave the deposition to travel home). The objections are overruled. 10 Id. at 55:9–11, 56:7–9. 11 Id. at 22:21–32:5. In fact, Mr. Gregor frequently testified to there being no paper record of various documents, explaining that they were either maintained “via e-mail with a file folder designated for Authenticity or on . . . an Office 365 shared drive[,]” with email correspondence simply kept in inboxes. Id. at 25:15–31:12. 12 Id. at 118:3–5, 120:3–7. 13 Pretrial Order at p. 26 ¶ 21. 14 Id. ¶ 23.

4 Alex Gregor and Michael Bryant have been both the managers of the Defendant, and

sitting on the board of directors for Authenticity Corp., at all relevant times.15

B. Authenticity Corp.’s Ownership

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Bluebook (online)
Michael B. Garner v. Authenticity.AI Investors, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-b-garner-v-authenticityai-investors-llc-delch-2025.