Neil Smith v. Promonotory Financial Group, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 30, 2019
DocketCA 11255-VCG
StatusPublished

This text of Neil Smith v. Promonotory Financial Group, LLC (Neil Smith v. Promonotory Financial Group, 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
Neil Smith v. Promonotory Financial Group, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

NEIL SMITH and NTS, LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs/Counterclaim Defendants, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 11255-VCG ) PROMONTORY FINANCIAL GROUP, ) LLC, a Delaware limited liability ) company and PROMONTORY ) GROWTH AND INNOVATION, LLC, a ) Delaware limited liability company, ) ) Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: January 9, 2019 Date Decided: April 30, 2019

David A. Jenkins and Laurence V. Cronin, of SMITH KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

Bruce E. Jameson and Eric J. Juray, of PRICKETT, JONES & ELLIOTT, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Robert M. Cary, Alexander S. Zolan, and Robert M. Belden, of WILLIAMS & CONNOLLY LLP, Washington, District of Columbia, Attorneys for Defendants.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor This matter involves the withdrawal of a member from an LLC, which (per

the de facto LLC agreement) entitles him to a percentage of the value of the LLC’s

business, as of the time of withdrawal, as valued without the continuing services of

that member. This post-trial Memorandum Opinion, then, necessarily involves a

valuation exercise. Arriving at a valuation is complicated here by several factors.

First, the withdrawing member, Neil Smith, was essentially a key man of the

business, so the effect of the loss of his services is large. Next, the entity’s unusual

business model was to provide consulting services to large enterprises in a way that,

the parties explain, would need to be done only once; therefore, repeat business was

not a factor. Developing clients, in essence, resembled a kind of mining or hunting

operation; like game, clients were bagged but once. Clients, moreover, were

available sporadically and fortuitously; akin, according to the Plaintiffs, to finding

the proverbial “needle in a haystack.” Perhaps due to all these factors, the short life

of the business was marked by highly variable successes; the game bagged was

episodic, variable in size, and included one enormously profitable unicorn. These

factors create a difficult entity on which to make revenue projections, and thus, I

find, preclude a reliable cash flow analysis.

Fortunately for the completion of my task here, the parties did negotiate a

buyout of a portion of the Plaintiff’s equity shortly before his withdrawal. The

parties dispute whether the buyout was consummated. I find it was not. It is, however, useful evidence for valuation purposes. The results of my valuation, as

well as the value of an offsetting claim demonstrated by the Defendants, are below,

preceded by the facts as found post-trial.

I. BACKGROUND

This is a post-trial Memorandum Opinion. The following facts were

stipulated by the parties or proven by a preponderance of evidence at trial.

A. The Parties

Plaintiff Neil Smith (“Smith”) is a resident of New York.1 He was one of two

members of Defendant Promontory Growth and Innovation, LLC (“PGI”), a

Delaware limited liability company. 2 Smith co-founded PGI, and then assigned his

membership interest in PGI to Plaintiff NTS, LLC (“NTS”). 3 NTS is a New York

limited liability company and is wholly owned by Smith. 4

Defendant PGI was formed “to provide management consulting services to

enhance the earnings and all-around business performance of financial service and

other companies.” 5 PGI’s other member (besides Smith/NTS) is Defendant

Promontory Financial Group, LLC (“Promontory”), a Delaware limited liability

company. 6 Promontory was founded by Eugene Ludwig (“Ludwig”), who serves as

1 Joint Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order [hereinafter, “PTO”] ¶ 10. 2 Id. 3 Id. ¶ 11. 4 Id. 5 Id. ¶ 15; see also JX 16, at 1. 6 PTO ¶ 13.

2 its chief executive officer.7 Ludwig co-founded PGI with Smith; thereafter, Ludwig

assigned his membership interest in PGI to Promontory. 8

B. Smith and Ludwig Form PGI

1. Smith and Ludwig Meet and Agree to Form PGI

Before co-founding PGI, Smith worked for EHS Partners, LLC (“EHS”). 9

Smith has made a career of providing management consulting services, including

while employed at EHS, with a focus on profit-improvement projects.10 Ludwig,

who previously served as the United States Comptroller of the Currency, 11 founded

Promontory, a global advisory firm focused on financial services.12 Ludwig first

met Smith when Smith worked for EHS; at that time Ludwig helped introduce EHS

to potential clients.13 Promontory first explored a joint venture with EHS.14

However, negotiations with EHS failed, and instead Smith left EHS and formed PGI

with Ludwig.15

Smith and Ludwig signed a Letter of Intent (the “Letter of Intent”) in order to

form PGI, 16 according to which PGI’s goal was “to provide management consulting

7 Id. ¶ 14. 8 Id. 9 Id. ¶ 12. 10 Trial Tr. 115:19–116:24, 117:12–123:7 (Smith). 11 Id. at 264:14–265:9 (Ludwig). 12 Id. at 266:8–11, 266:12–24 (Ludwig). 13 Id. at 21:14–22:3 (Smith); id. at 272:9–273:20 (Ludwig). 14 Id. at 23:5–24:5 (Smith); id. at 479:15–480:6 (Moses); see also JX 8, at 1–3. 15 Trial Tr. 24:1–15 (Smith); id. at 479:19–480:16 (Moses). 16 JX 16.

3 services to enhance the earnings and all-around business performance of financial

service and other companies.”17 Ludwig considered Smith to be an expert in the

profit improvement field,18 and Smith considered Ludwig to be a potential

“rainmaker,” given his extensive contacts at financial institutions.19 According to

Smith, PGI’s business model had three steps.20 First, “finding CEOs to meet;”

second, “closing the deal once you’ve met that CEO;” and third, “actually doing the

deal.” 21 The “deal” was Smith’s process of harvesting ideas for improvement from

a client’s own employees, and then advising the client on how to implement those

ideas.22

Per Smith, PGI was a “partnership made in heaven,”23 a sentiment Ludwig

seemed to share. 24 Ludwig knew the CEOs of many financial services companies,25

personally helped to pitch PGI,26 and had Promontory personnel market PGI’s

services whenever possible.27 Smith’s expertise in the profit improvement field was

17 Id. at 1. 18 Trial Tr. 277:12–278:4 (Ludwig). 19 Id. at 22:20–22, 29:17–30:11 (Smith). 20 Id. at 29:3–29:4 (Smith). 21 Id. at 29:4–7 (Smith). 22 Id. at 29:17–23 (Smith). This process was the same Smith had helped develop at his previous employments, including at EHS. Id. at 116:1–123:7 (Smith). 23 Id. at 30:7 (Smith). 24 Id. at 285:10–286:19 (Ludwig). 25 Id. at 22:20–23:4 (Smith); id. at 412:6–414:4 (Ludwig). 26 See, e.g., id. at 310:7–314:3, 315:24–320:14, 321:2–322:2 (Ludwig); JX 26; JX 31; JX 32; JX 39; JX 55. 27 See, e.g., Trial Tr. 174:11–176:9 (Smith); id. at 279:14–280:14, 315:14–23, 324:17–325:19 (Ludwig); JX 96.

4 important to getting clients to sign on,28 and, of course, was critical to PGI actually

performing projects for clients.

Smith negotiated the Letter of Intent with Alfred Moses (“Moses”),29

Promontory’s Chief Operating Officer. 30 Smith and Ludwig then signed the Letter

of Intent in May 2009. 31 However, Smith and Ludwig were subsequently unable to

negotiate a formal operating agreement for PGI.32 In April 2010, NTS and

Promontory (Smith and Ludwig had, by then, transferred their membership interests

in PGI to NTS and Promontory, respectively) agreed in writing that the Letter of

Intent would serve as PGI’s operating agreement.

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Related

§ 18-111
Delaware § 18-111

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Bluebook (online)
Neil Smith v. Promonotory Financial Group, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-smith-v-promonotory-financial-group-llc-delch-2019.