NEXUS 1, LLC v. SIDWELL

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 14, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00216
StatusUnknown

This text of NEXUS 1, LLC v. SIDWELL (NEXUS 1, LLC v. SIDWELL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NEXUS 1, LLC v. SIDWELL, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

NEXUS 1, LLC and NEX-STOCK, LLC, : Plaintiffs, : v. CIVIL ACTION : NO. 23-0216 STEPHEN SIDWELL and NEXII : BUILDING SOLUTIONS INC., : Defendants : MEMORANDUM OF LAW Plaintiffs NEXUS 1, LLC (“Nexus”) and NEX-STOCK, LLC (“NexStock,” and collectively with Nexus, “Plaintiffs”) filed an Amended Complaint against Defendants Stephen Sidwell (“Sidwell”) and Nexii Building Solutions Inc. (“Nexii,” and collectively with Sidwell, the “Defendants”) raising claims for Declaratory Relief, Fraud, Breach of Contract, Tortious Interference, and Securities Fraud. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss all counts. For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied in part. 1. FACTUAL BACKGROUND This action is a common tale of broken-down business relationships, alleged fraud, and millions in lost investment. Plaintiffs claimed that Defendants sold false promises of a “viable, turnkey franchise business system for manufacturing panels as part of a modular building system that would revolutionize the construction industry.” ECF No. 50 § 5 [hereinafter “Am. Compl.”]. Instead, Plaintiffs griped, “[u]nfortunately, [Nexii] was a Theranos, not a Tesla.” Jd. A. Defendants’ Courtship of Plaintiffs. The beginning of this corporate love story gone awry started in October 2019. Am. Compl. 36. Sidwell invited John Wolfington to a pitch meeting in Philadelphia to encourage investment in Nexii. /d. {] 36-37. Sidwell described Nexii’s product as a modular construction

panel system that uses a concrete derivative, enabling the panels to be “strong, lightweight, low- carbon, and fire and water resistant.” Id. J] 38-39. Sidwell represented that Nexii had highly accomplished board members and advisors, had opened two successful manufacturing plants in Canada, and had quickly and cheaply completed a Starbucks and Marriot hotel. Jd. 40-46. After the investor pitch, Wolfington traveled to Canada on January 3, 2020 to discuss potential investment with Defendants. /d. 450. At this meeting, Sidwell allegedly told Wolfington that Nexii had a turnkey plant, with vetted features such as design, manufacture, equipment, assembly and operating procedures, $1.2 billion in its sale pipeline, proprietary software, accounting procedures, marketing, advertisement, and an architecture and engineering team. Jd. §§ 55,57, 61. Sidwell also represented that Nexii would use a franchised plant model to scale the business, support ramp up of a certified manufacturing plant for 12-18 months, and sacrifice margins until Plaintiffs earn 30% return on equity. Id. □ 51-52, 56. To woo Plaintiffs to invest, Defendants provided financial models that projected average annual profits of more than $20 million dollars. Jd. § 63. Eventually, after extensive negotiations, the parties signed the “Nexii Certified Manufacturing Agreement” originally entered into on October 7, 2020, in which Nexii granted Nexus the right and license to own and operate a production facility in Hazelton, Pennsylvania to manufacture, sell, and install Nexii products. /d. §§ 73-74; ECF No. 50-7 [hereinafter “Manufacturing Agreement”]. Moreover, Plaintiff NexStock signed the “Share Purchase Agreement” on May 6, 2021, which purchased 68,315 Nexii shares from Michael Dombrowski—co-founder of Nexii. ECF No. 51-3 [hereinafter “Share Purchase Agreement”. As a condition to receiving Nexii shares, Plaintiff NexStock also signed the Shareholders’ Agreement. ECF No. 51-4 [hereinafter “Shareholders’ Agreement”]. The crux of this case

arises out of these transactions. B. The Parties’ Relationship Troubles. After the parties entered into the contracts, the relationship began to unravel. The Court lists a few of Plaintiffs’ grievances below, though an entire recitation of the events leading up to this lawsuit is unnecessary for a disposition of the motion to dismiss. ° As Nexus began to outfit the manufacturing plant in Hazelton, Pennsylvania, Plaintiff determined that Defendants’ initial cost estimates were inaccurate. Am. Compl. § 77. Consequently, the parties amended the Manufacturing Agreement on September 3, 2021 to bring another investor to assist with start-up costs. Jd. Nexii allegedly failed to provide, as required by the Manufacturing Agreement, a workable plan layout, resulting in revisions, delays, and significant demolition. Id. {{ 86-93. e Sidwell failed to inform Plaintiffs of the numerous deficiencies with Nexii’s work for the Starbucks and Marriot projects, which took considerable time and cost to correct. Id. □□ 45, 47-48. e Plaintiffs claimed that Defendants misrepresented business deliverables such as design, manufacturing, equipment, assembly and operating procedures, certifications, prospective clients and sales, customer service, proprietary software, accounting procedures, marketing, advertisement, employee training, and a competent architecture and engineering team. Id. 111-40, 158-85. e Plaintiffs contended that the list of required equipment remained a moving target, and oftentimes the equipment list contained unnecessary equipment or failed to contain necessary equipment. /d. §§| 77, 94-99, 105. Moreover, Nexii supposedly pre-negotiated “favorable terms” for equipment purchases, but the prices were actually above market rates

because Nexii would get a rebate. /d. J] 101, 106-09. e Defendants supposedly pressured Nexus to underbid contracts with customers, resulting in millions in out-of-pocket costs for Nexus, which Nexii refused to reimburse fully. Id. 142, 197-200. C. The Breakup. As a result of the numerous transgressions listed above, Nexus issued a Notice of Default to Nexii on December 6, 2022. Am. Compl. § 207. Under the Manufacturing Agreement, a Notice of Default provides Nexii thirty days to cure a deficiency under the Manufacturing Agreement. Jd. § 208. After Nexus issued the Notice of Default, Nexii claimed that Nexus had failed to make certain payments. ECF No. 51-2 at 12 [hereinafter “Defs.’ Mot.”]. As a result, Nexii sought to exercise its rights provided under the Manufacturing Agreement to temporarily take possession of the Hazelton plant. However, Nexus refused to grant Nexii agents access to the plant. Jd. In response to the lock-out, Nexii filed a lawsuit against Nexus in the Delaware Court of Chancery on December 15, 2022, which was subsequently removed to the United States District Court of Delaware. Nexii Building Solutions Inc. v. NexUS 1, LLC, et al., Case No.: 22-cv-01619-RGA (D. Del.) [hereinafter “Delaware Litigation”]. The Delaware Lawsuit sought injunctive relief to enforce Nexii’s step-in rights to access the Hazelton facility, and monetary relief for defamation and harassment tort claims against Nexus, Wolfington, and Daniel Metzler (a part owner of the Hazelton facility). Jd. Shortly after Nexii initiated the Delaware Litigation, Nexus terminated the Manufacturing Agreement on January 6, 2023. Am. Compl. § 212. On January 19, 2023, Nexus filed this instant lawsuit. After this lawsuit was filed, the parties attempted to mediate; yet, those

negotiations were ultimately unsuccessful. Defs.’ Mot. at 13. Roughly a year after Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, Nexii—a Canadian company—initiated reorganization proceedings in Canada. Defs.’ Mot. at 13; Am. Compl. § 28. The reorganization proceedings resulted in the sale of substantially all Nexii’s assets and an order releasing Defendants of liability “in any way relating to or arising out of the assets, obligations, business or affairs of [Defendants],” except for “any claim arising out of gross negligence or willful misconduct on the part of [Defendants].” Defs.’ Mot. at 13-14. The Canadian bankruptcy order was adopted by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware under Chapter 15. Id. After Nexii’s bankruptcy was completed, Defendants sought to dismiss Plaintiffs’ lawsuit for numerous reasons.

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