OptimisCorp v. William Atkins

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 11, 2026
DocketC.A. No. 2020-0183-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of OptimisCorp v. William Atkins (OptimisCorp v. William Atkins) 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
OptimisCorp v. William Atkins, (Del. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

OPTIMISCORP, a Delaware ) Corporation, ) ) Plaintiff, ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0183-MTZ ) WILLIAMS ATKINS, GREGORY ) SMITH, and JOHN WAITE, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: October 3, 2025 Date Decided: May 11, 2026

Theodore A. Kittila, William E. Green, Jr., HALLORAN FARKAS + KITTILA LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Stephen B. Brauerman, Sarah T. Andrade, Megan A. McGovern, BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Defendants.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor Over a decade ago, three stockholders took on the mantle of derivative

plaintiffs and filed derivative claims against the board of a company and its former

outside counsel. The claims against the former outside counsel proceeded to

arbitration, and the stockholders prevailed and were awarded monetary relief. The

stockholders tried to keep that award out of the hands of the company’s controller.

The company filed suit to reclaim it. Earlier in the case, I entered summary judgment

on the breach of fiduciary duty claim in the company’s favor, but only as to liability.

I found that the stockholders owed fiduciary duties as agents of the company, and

that they breached those duties by divesting the company of its authority to manage

the award.

The parties went to trial on the issue of damages. The company contends that

retaining the award was part of a broader scheme to drive the company out of

business. But the company failed to prove any damages caused by missing the

award. The company is entitled to nominal damages.

I. BACKGROUND 1

The parties tried damages over three days, offering the Court over 600 joint

exhibits and live testimony from six fact witnesses and two expert witnesses. The

1 Citations in the form “[last name] Tr. —” refer to trial testimony of the referenced witness, available at docket item (“D.I.”) 234, D.I. 235, and D.I. 236. Citations in the form of “PTO —” refer to the parties’ amended pre-trial order, available at D.I. 230. Citations in the form “POB —” refer to Optimis’s post-trial opening brief, available at D.I. 239. Citations in the

1 following facts were stipulated to by the parties or proven by a preponderance of the

evidence at trial.2

A. Optimis Suffers From Infighting, And Stockholders Pay The Price.

Plaintiff OptimisCorp (“Optimis” or the “Company”) is a “holding company

that develops software and acquires, manages, and operates physical therapy clinics

around the country, purchasing such business for stock and without paying cash.”3

Optimis’s physical therapy clinics are run by its wholly-owned subsidiaries,

including Southern California-based Rancho Physical Therapy, Inc. (“Rancho”),

Washington-based MVP Physical Therapy (“MVP”), and Florida-based Beachside

Physical Therapy (“Beachside”).4 At its peak, Optimis owned and operated fifty-

nine clinics out of those subsidiaries. 5 That number has dwindled to less than

twenty.6

form “DAB —” refer to Defendants’ post-trial answering brief, available at D.I. 241. Citations in the form “PRB —” refer to Optimis’s post-trial reply brief, available at D.I. 245. 2 Reynolds v. Reynolds, 237 A.2d 708, 711 (Del. 1967) (“The side on which the greater weight of the evidence is found is the side on which the preponderance of the evidence exists.”). 3 JX 173 [hereinafter “Arb. Award”] at 5. 4 See, e.g., Price Tr. 7. 5 Id. 6 Id.

2 Defendants William Atkins, Gregory Smith, and John Waite (together

“Defendants”) are current Optimis stockholders, former Optimis directors, and

former board members and executives of Rancho. After founding Rancho in 1984,

Atkins brought on his longtime friends Waite and Smith in 1990.7 In June 2007,

Defendants sold Rancho to Optimis in a stock-for-stock transaction. 8 Defendants

joined the Optimis board and stayed on as Rancho employees after the sale. 9 They

brought in their friends and family as significant equity investors, including Waite’s

father, his best friend and neighbor, Smith’s mother and younger brother, and

Atkins’s brother-in-law. 10

Defendants’ relationship with Optimis has been volatile. Factions emerged

within the Company’s board, with battle lines drawn around Optimis’s CEO,

Chairman, and controller Alan Morelli. Defendants disagreed with Morelli’s

7 Atkins Tr. 328–29; Waite Tr. 270; Smith Tr. 384–85. 8 PTO ¶ 21; Arb. Award at 5; Waite Tr. 271–72; Atkins Tr. 329–30. 9 Arb. Award at 5. 10 OptimisCorp v. Waite, 2015 WL 5147038, at *29 (Del. Ch. Aug. 26, 2015), aff’d, 137 A.3d 970 (Del. 2016) (TABLE) [hereinafter “Plenary Op.”] (“Later in 2009, Optimis started raising capital, using a private placement memorandum (‘PPM’). Waite participated and also sold his family and friends on Optimis. Smith similarly raised funds for the Company from his family, with his mother investing $80,000, his younger brother investing $200,000, and some of his friends investing a total of $500,000.”); id. at *33 (“At the end of 2011, the Company again was in need of capital. In December 2011, Optimis had another PPM prepared. The Director Defendants . . . again answered the call. Optimis raised about $860,000, almost all of which came from two people: a friend of Waite’s and Atkin’s brother-in-law.”).

3 leadership, particularly his management of corporate resources.11 Tensions came to

a head in October 2012 after a formal investigation into sexual harassment

allegations against Morelli. 12 Morelli was removed from the board, then reinstated

after litigation in this Court.13

The fallout would cost Defendants their livelihoods. On July 5, 2013,

Defendants were terminated from their roles at Rancho, ending their decades-long

careers at the company they built from scratch. 14 Defendants did not know why they

were terminated.15 Atkins testified he was “let out like a criminal in [his] own office”

in the middle of seeing patients.16 Each Defendant credibly described the

termination as emotionally and financially devastating: in an instant, they lost their

only source of income, their health insurance, their standing in the community,17 and

11 See Waite Tr. 288 (testifying that he “disagreed with the allocation of resources and the focuses of the company”). The full saga is described at length in an earlier decision. See Plenary Op. at *26–54; see also Arb. Award at 14–25. 12 See Plenary Op. at *41–51; Arb. Award at 14–16. 13 See Plenary Op. at *49–53; Arb. Award at 14–25; Morelli, et al. v. Waite, et al., C.A. No. 8001-VCMR, at D.I. 31 (Dec. 27, 2012); see also PTO ¶¶ 24–25. 14 PTO ¶ 27. 15 Atkins Tr. 331; Smith Tr. 385. 16 Atkins Tr. 332–33. 17 See id. at 331–33 (“[W]e had such a great reputation in the communities we were in. We covered football games, we covered sports events. I did a lot of coaching as well. Called to speak at the high schools and things like that. In my own practice, I continued to see patients the entire time . . . . You know, this is my small town, I’m fired from my company. It was almost inconceivable that this had happened with the reputation that we had in town and so forth. So it was extremely stressful. One of the hardest things I’ve been through.”).

4 a practice they had spent two decades nurturing.18 And they went from running a

successful practice to starting over as part-time staff therapists at the next job they

could find. 19

A chain of litigation followed, with one lawsuit inspiring another. On July 30,

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