NetApp, Inc. v. Albert E. Cinelli

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 2, 2023
Docket2020-1000-LWW
StatusPublished

This text of NetApp, Inc. v. Albert E. Cinelli (NetApp, Inc. v. Albert E. Cinelli) 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
NetApp, Inc. v. Albert E. Cinelli, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

NETAPP, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-1000-LWW ) ALBERT E. CINELLI, AL.E.C ) HOLDING CORP., AEC CAPITAL ) CORPORATION, THE ALBERT E. ) CINELLI AND SHARON A. CINELLI ) 2014 REVOCABLE TRUST, JOHN ) CINELLI, JANET CINELLI, DAVID ) GIBSON, GRANT TERRELL and ) KELSEY MACLENNAN, ) ) Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: April 21, 2023 Date Decided: August 2, 2023 A. Thompson Bayliss, Matthew L. Miller, Joseph A. Sparco, Peter C. Cirka & Anthony R. Sarna, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Plaintiff NetApp, Inc. Robert A. Penza, Stephen J. Kraftschik & Christina B. Vavala, POLSINELLI PC, Wilmington, Delaware; Robert V. Spake, Jr., POLSINELLI PC, Kansas City, Missouri; Britton St. Onge, POLSINELLI PC, St. Louis, Missouri; Counsel for Defendants Albert E. Cinelli, AL.E.C Holding Corp., AEC Capital Corporation, The Albert E. Cinelli and Sharon A. Cinelli 2014 Revocable Trust, John Cinelli, Janet Cinelli, David Gibson, Grant Terrell, and Kelsey MacLennan

WILL, Vice Chancellor “Let the buyer beware” is a common legal maxim. In this case, “let the seller

be forthright” is more apt.

Cloud Jumper, a struggling private company, recorded internal software use

as revenue in its unaudited financial statements. The company’s management team

knew about this practice; its Chief Executive Officer had requested it. But when the

opportunity arose to sell the company to plaintiff NetApp, Inc., Cloud Jumper kept

quiet about the so-called internal billing. After closing, NetApp discovered the

problem when Cloud Jumper’s financial results fell short of expectations. This

lawsuit for breach of contract and fraud followed.

The defendants accept that Cloud Jumper breached representations about its

financial condition in the parties’ merger agreement. They insist that these

misrepresentations were inadvertent. They also aver that NetApp was not damaged

by Cloud Jumper’s silence.

After trial, judgment is entered in favor of NetApp. Cloud Jumper breached

multiple representations in the merger agreement, including that its financial

statements were GAAP-compliant and reflected bona fide transactions. These

misstatements and others amount to fraud. NetApp also proved that it was damaged

by Cloud Jumper.

That leaves the quantification of NetApp’s damages—by far the murkiest

issue before me. The parties agree in theory that expectation damages are the proper

1 approach, but they lack a shared understanding of what that means in application.

There is even less accord when it comes to their competing measures for valuing

NetApp’s expectations. After wading through this morass, I discover some firm

footing and calculate NetApp’s damages to be just under $4.6 million.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The following facts were stipulated to by the parties or proven by a

preponderance of the evidence at trial.1 Trial was held over three days, during which

four fact witnesses and three expert witnesses testified live. The trial record includes

508 exhibits and 16 deposition transcripts.

A. Cloud Jumper’s Business Lines

Cloud Jumper LLC f/k/a Cloud Jumper Corporation is a Delaware limited

liability company that provided a platform for delivering virtual desktop

infrastructure (VDI), storage, and data management across cloud-based programs.2

Defendant Albert E. Cinelli was Cloud Jumper’s Chairman and Chief Executive

Officer and owned about 90% of the company.3 Cinelli is a lawyer by training and

1 Joint Pre-trial Stipulation and Proposed Order (Dkt. 69) (“PTO”). Facts drawn from the exhibits jointly submitted by the parties are referred to by the numbers provided on the parties’ joint exhibit list (cited as “JX __” unless otherwise defined). Deposition transcripts are cited as “[Name] Dep.” Trial testimony is cited as “[Name] Tr.” See Dkts. 91-93. 2 PTO ¶ 2. 3 Id. ¶ 3; JX 267 at Tab 4. For clarity, this decision refers to Albert Cinelli as “Cinelli.” John Cinelli and Janet Cinelli are referred to by their full names. 2 worked as an in-house corporate attorney before becoming an entrepreneur. He has

participated in about 50 mergers and acquisitions during his career.4

Cinelli acquired Cloud Jumper in 2004. At the time, he also controlled Q

Services, which provided back-office support to Cloud Jumper, and MetroNet—a

fiber optic services company.5 In 2010, Cinelli sold Cloud Jumper’s parent company

for consideration worth $818 million, spinning off Cloud Jumper, Q Services, and

MetroNet in the process.6 He remains the Chairman of MetroNet, which he and his

son John Cinelli (MetroNet’s CEO) have built into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise.7

Before February 2018, Cloud Jumper was a Managed Service Provider (MSP)

that delivered a bundled suite of third-party software to customers and provided

ongoing support and administration.8 Cloud Jumper did not have a VDI product of

its own;9 its MSP “Legacy Business” depended on VDI software licenses from a

separate company called IndependenceIT.10 In exchange for a VDI software license,

4 Cinelli Tr. 419, 464. 5 JX 310 (“Larson Dep.”) 89; JX 339 (“John Cinelli Dep.”) 75, 124, 128; PTO ¶ 13. 6 JX 13 at 5; John Cinelli Dep. 123, 142. 7 John Cinelli Dep. 26; see JX 430. 8 PTO ¶ 23. 9 VDI technology enables desktops to be centrally hosted and managed, removing the need to maintain individual systems in data centers or server rooms. See id. ¶¶ 43-44; see also Revised Expert Report of Gary Kleinrichert (Dkt. 85; JX 341) (“Kleinrichert Revised Opening Rep.”) 20-22. 10 See Expert Report of George S. Hickey (Dkt. 85; JX 327) (“Hickey Opening Rep.”) ¶¶ 6-7; Kleinrichert Revised Opening Rep. 10-11. 3 Cloud Jumper paid IndependenceIT a monthly fee for each Legacy Business end

user.11 Cloud Jumper was responsible for 45% of IndependenceIT’s revenues.12

In February 2018, Cloud Jumper acquired IndependenceIT. The transaction

eliminated significant Legacy Business expenses. It also allowed Cloud Jumper to

pursue a second line of business using IndependenceIT’s software (the “Software

Business”) and access the growing VDI market.13 Cinelli financed the transaction

with a $5.2 million loan from his affiliated entity, the Albert E. Cinelli and Sharon

A. Cinelli 2014 Revocable Trust (the “Trust”).14

The MSP-based Legacy Business remained Cloud Jumper’s primary source

of revenue. Cloud Jumper expected to drive future growth by focusing on the

Software Business while phasing out the Legacy Business.15

B. The Internal Billing Practice

After the IndependenceIT acquisition closed, Cinelli instructed Sherri

VanFossen to track Cloud Jumper’s financial results as if the transaction had not

happened.16 VanFossen, an accountant employed by MetroNet and Q Services,

11 PTO ¶ 27. 12 Id. 13 Id. ¶ 25; see JX 424; Picarello Tr. 27; see also Kleinrichert Revised Opening Rep. 11. 14 JX 23. A yearly 5% interest rate applied. 15 PTO ¶¶ 24, 28; see Picarello Tr. 10, 19. 16 See JX 324 (“Cinelli Dep.”) 37 (“I gave her a direction that I wanted all the IndependenceIT sales included in IndependenceIT, period. I had let her figure out how to 4 acted as Cloud Jumper’s de facto Chief Financial Officer.17 Cinelli told VanFossen

to track software sales attributable to IndependenceIT, which included revenue from

the Legacy Business’s use of IndependenceIT’s VDI product.18 VanFossen

expressed concern with this approach.19 Cinelli overruled her.20

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