OptimisCorp v. William Atkins
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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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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,
2013, Defendants brought an employment action against Rancho (the “Employment
Action”), seeking damages for wrongful termination. 20 The Court entered judgment
in their favor in August 2018, and the judgment was affirmed on November 17,
2020. 21
While the Employment Action marched forward, in October 2015,
Defendants assumed the mantle of derivative plaintiffs and filed an action in this
Court against Optimis’s board of directors and its former outside counsel, Allen Z.
18 See Waite Tr. 273 (“It was devastating. I lost my home in a short sale . . . . So we had to sell a life insurance plan to pay the bills. I went from being [an] owner of a practice I was very proud of that I worked very hard on to not having a job. And I lost, you know, most of what I had accumulated over the years working very hard.”); Atkins Tr. 333 (“[M]y income was gone. My health insurance was gone. All of that was gone in one fell swoop . . . . Then we sold a lot of things. So we sold some cars and stopped some services. My mother had just previously died, so I received some money on inheritance that immediately was soaked into attorney bills because we had a lawsuit to fight right away.”); Smith Tr. 386 (“[I]t was humiliating and probably one of the hardest things I’ve had to go through.”). Smith Tr. 392; see also id. (“I didn’t have any guarantee of hours worked, just part time, 19
whatever I could get to provide for my family.”). 20 PTO ¶ 28; see JX 601. 21 PTO ¶¶ 32, 46.
5 Sussman (the “Derivative Action”). 22 The Derivative Action asserted claims for
legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duties arising from Sussman’s role in
Morelli’s removal from the board.23 In June, the Court granted a stipulated order to
voluntarily dismiss Sussman without prejudice for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction, based on an arbitration provision in his engagement letter. 24
The case against Sussman proceeded to arbitration. On August 30, 2016, the
Derivative Action plaintiffs—Defendants here—filed derivative claims on Optimis’s
behalf against Sussman before JAMS (the “Arbitration”).25 Optimis was not a party
to the Arbitration.26 The arbitrator issued an “Interim Award” on April 29, 2019, and
a “Final Award” on August 12.27 On September 12, the arbitrator issued an
“Amended Final Award” finding Sussman liable.28 Defendants, as derivative
claimants, secured $5,278,222.95 in compensatory damages, plus fees, costs, and
pre- and post-judgment interest on behalf of Optimis (the “Award”).29
22 Atkins, et al. v. Morelli, et al., C.A. No. 11581-VCZ, at D.I. 1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 7, 2015) [hereinafter “Deriv. Action”]; PTO ¶ 29; Arb. Award at 2. 23 JX 11. 24 PTO ¶ 30; Deriv. Action at D.I. 36. 25 JX 14; PTO ¶ 31. 26 Arb. Award at 5. 27 See JX 74; JX 159. 28 See Arb. Award. 29 Id. at 84–86 (ordering the respondent to pay $5,278,222.95 in compensatory damages plus pre-judgment interest (7% per annum) and post-judgment interest (10% per annum) plus attorneys’ fees ($1,435,107.90) plus costs ($436,550.35)).
6 On September 19, one week after the arbitrator issued the Amended Final
Award, Defendants’ counsel and Sussman’s counsel agreed amongst themselves that
in exchange for keeping the Arbitration confidential, Sussman would pay the award
to the IOLTA account of Defendants’ counsel Bayard, P.A. (“Bayard”).30 On
October 31, the full Award was remitted to Bayard’s escrow account. 31
B. Defendants Seek To Distribute The Award To Stockholders.
Upon learning of the Interim Award, Defendants believed “the best thing to
do” was to distribute the proceeds to Optimis stockholders they deemed
“innocent”—all Optimis stockholders “other than Morelli, Sussman, and the board
members” entangled in the two lawsuits.32 Those “innocent” stockholders included
Defendants’ close friends and family, who had poured substantial sums into the
Company over the years.33
30 JX 191. 31 PTO ¶ 38. 32 Waite Tr. 277–78; Atkins Tr. 342. 33 See Waite Tr. 277 (“[T]he innocent shareholders included my father, who invested money. And my brother, and my other brother. And my neighbor, who’s one of my best friends. And another very close friend of mine who invested a million dollars. And they all put their money into this. And this was an avenue to try to at least make them partially whole on their investment, try to get them something, some return.”); Smith Tr. 389–90 (“We were hoping at some point in time to provide money back to some of the shareholders that invested into the company . . . . One of them was my mother, who invested in the company. And she is now 86, and she continues to ask if she’ll ever be able to get some of her money back.”).
7 Defendants did not trust the Morelli-controlled board to use the proceeds in
the Company’s best interests. 34 During their time at Optimis, Defendants believed
“Morelli’s management of funds was very counterintuitive.”35 In Atkins’s words:
“Even when we were with Rancho . . . making [$]300 to $350,000 a month sending
it forward, [] he was still trying to borrow money.”36 He could not figure out why
Morelli was not “spending money to develop physical therapy” or Optimis’s
software business. 37 Defendants believed the board was preoccupied with loans and
legal fees, and would not use the proceeds to deliver value. 38
More fundamentally, Defendants viewed the board as “complicit” in the
events underlying the Arbitration. 39 In Defendants’ eyes, Sussman, Morelli, and the
rest of the board were on the same team: the Derivative Action underlying the
Arbitration had been “against all of them.”40 Defendants did not believe it was in
34 Waite Tr. 278; Atkins Tr. 343–44. 35 Atkins Tr. 343; see also Plenary Op. at *29, *36 (“By spring 2012, many key employees had lost faith in Morelli’s ability to manage the Company successfully . . . . Resource allocation issues were high on the list of concerns, and morale was low.”). 36 Atkins Tr. 343–44. 37 Id. at 344. 38 Waite Tr. 278; Atkins Tr. 344 (“[Y]ou know, the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior. So I thought that maybe he would be spending more money on legal things rather than on developing physical therapy and the software, which I still think is fantastic software at Optimis.”). 39 Waite Tr. 277–78; Atkins Tr. 340; Smith Tr. 388–89. 40 Atkins Tr. 341; see also Smith Tr. 389.
8 the stockholders’ best interests to hand over the Award to the few individuals who
had “hurt[] Optimis so badly.”41
After Defendants left Optimis on bad terms, they and their loved ones remain
Optimis stockholders. Defendants testified they did not intend to harm Optimis in
seeking to distribute the Award to “innocent” stockholders. 42 I believe them.
C. Optimis Struggles To Stay Afloat.
In the meantime, Optimis was “barely staying afloat.”43 The Company had
not turned a profit since at least 2015. 44 Debt was piling up and getting more
expensive, margins were lean, and “payroll was just barely able to pay everybody.”45
It was not uncommon for the Company to seek extensions on its clinics’ rent
payments. 46
One side of the problem was the clinics. The clinics were a “mess.” 47 Some
suffered from a “culture” of “low productivity.” 48 The MVP clinics in particular
41 Atkins Tr. 340. 42 Id. at 344; Waite Tr. 277–79; Smith Tr. 391. 43 Price Tr. 24; see also id. at 106 (testifying that “[t]he Company has always been in a little bit of a tough financial situation”); Smith Tr. 416 (“They’ve always been in a tough financial position.”). 44 Price Tr. 102–03; Morelli Dep. 181–82 (“I don’t think the company has been profitable since 2013.”). 45 JX 81 at 1; JX 169; Price Tr. 107. 46 Price Tr. 107. 47 JX 174; Price Tr. 112. 48 Dourney Tr. 238.
9 lagged behind industry standards in terms of patient volume. 49 According to
Optimis’s then-COO Dan Dourney, industry norms call for approximately 1.5
patients per hour, or 12 patients in a typical eight-hour workday. 50 When Dourney
joined Optimis in 2017, productivity ranged from “6 to 11 visits per day in most of
the facilities.” 51 He believed MVP’s highest-paid physical therapists were “checked
out.”52
Some clinics had racked up “extraordinary expenses.”53 During his tenure,
Dourney had catalogued approximately $750,000 worth of “questionable” expenses
at the Beachside clinics. 54 Those expenses included a private jet for a golf trip in the
Caribbean; tickets, flights, and hotels for the US Open; an iTunes account; rental
dresses from Rent the Runway; a boat slip at a yacht club; and Publix groceries on
demand. 55
49 See id. at 209, 229. 50 Id. at 229. 51 Id. at 229–30. 52 Id. at 213. 53 Id. at 232; see also JX 471. 54 Dourney Tr. 234. 55 Id. at 232–34.
10 Some clinics had trouble retaining and recruiting staff. 56 The physical therapy
labor market is highly competitive and “transient.” 57 Clinics across the country
inevitably compete for the same patients, payors, and clinical staff. 58 Optimis’s
clinics were no exception.
Defendants rebuilt their careers at a competing Southern California-based
physical therapy company, All Star Physical Therapy, Inc. (“All Star”). All Star, a
Rancho competitor, grew its portfolio from just three clinics in 2013 to almost thirty
in 2022.59 Defendants sold All Star for $29,750,000 in 2021. 60 Nearly fifty Rancho
employees followed Defendants to All Star over the years.61 In 2017, Rancho’s San
56 See, e.g., Price Tr. 19–20; JX 189 at 4 (September 19, 2019 Board meeting minutes stating: “For Rancho, in particular, we lost a significant number of therapists. There has been a great deal of noise being generated by ‘All Star’ in the marketplace.”); JX 244; JX 315; JX 32 (April 2019 board presentation noting that “[s]taff turnover in two of our clinics led to combined losses of $200k”). 57 Waite Tr. 280–81; see also Price Tr. 20–21 (“[T]he PT market, from a staffing perspective, is extremely competitive and extremely limited. There’s just not enough people graduating PT schools to make up for the loss in physical therapists that we are getting on a day-to-day basis.”); Price Tr. 117 (confirming Washington state is a “very competitive region” because of its “high reimbursement rates”). 58 See Waite Tr. 280–81; Price Tr. 20–21, 117; Manning Tr. 172; Dourney Tr. 221, 234–35. 59 Waite Tr. 291–92; JX 400. 60 Waite Tr. 284–86; JX 400. 61 JX 276 at 4 (estimating that “at least 48 Rancho employees left to join All Star”); Price Tr. 19–20; see also Waite Tr. 291–92.
11 Jacinto clinic was “los[t] to All Star in one fell swoop.” 62 The clinic had to restaff
“everyone from the clinic director down.” 63
Optimis’s MVP clinics also suffered from turnover and competition. In 2017,
MVP’s former owner Patrick Garlock resigned due to disagreements with Optimis’s
management and joined RET, an MVP competitor. 64 MVP’s other former owner
Mike Jennings followed in late 2019, as did a handful of MVP’s clinical staff.65 In
2018, Beachside’s former owner Steve Ryland also resigned due to disagreements
with management and established his own physical therapy clinic in the area, Beach
PT. 66 Beachside subsequently lost referrals, patients, and revenue. 67
The other cause of Optimis’s problems was the cost of its poor financial
condition. Optimis had not received a traditional commercial loan since at least
2015. 68 Traditional lenders and investors were not comfortable funding a company
embroiled in litigation and struggling to stay afloat.69
62 Manning Tr. 174. 63 Id. 64 JX 610 ¶ 7; see also JX 135. 65 Price Tr. 20; JX 357. 66 Dourney Tr. 212; Price Tr. 15. 67 Dourney Tr. 235–36. 68 Price Tr. 108. 69 See id. at 38 (“Traditional loans and lenders . . . did not like our financial condition. They did not like how . . . for the last three, four years, everything was trending down from a financial p[er]spective in clinical performance. And also . . . the derivative litigation just
12 One of Optimis’s main financing sources has been accounts receivable
lending. Marble Bridge Funding Group, Inc. (“Marble Bridge”) has been Optimis’s
accounts receivable lender since 2016.70 Accounts receivable lending is not “typical
debt financing.”71 It is a type of asset-based financing in which a business sells or
borrows against its outstanding invoices to secure immediate cash flow. The lender
purchases a portion of the borrower’s outstanding accounts receivables on a regular
basis “at a discounted ‘expected collectible amount.’”72 For example, if a borrower
in the healthcare industry saw a hundred patients in one week, the lender would
purchase a hundred patients’ worth of invoices and advance a certain percentage of
that amount—typically 70 to 80%—in cash. 73 That percentage reflects the lender’s
fee and a “reserve” amount designed to account for fluctuations in billing volume.74
Accounts receivables lending is one way for healthcare providers like Optimis
to weather delays in receiving reimbursement payments from insurers, who can take
put a shadow over everything. It made it really difficult to get [] traditional lenders comfortable—even traditional investors comfortable in investing in the company.”); Dourney Tr. 217 (“There’s a long history of litigation with the Rancho group that when traditional lenders come in and look at that, they see what’s already been mentioned, the litigation that goes on. So that kind of scares them off.”). 70 See JX 41; JX 65; JX 94 at 38 (stating that Optimis “entered into a Credit Agreement with Marble Bridge for up to $4.0 million line of credit in 2016”); JX 297. 71 JX 470 at 15 n.43, 16 n.44. 72 Id. 73 Price Tr. 44–45. 74 Id.
13 months to process invoices.75 But the quick cash flow is not cheap: for every dollar
Optimis bills, Marble Bridge provides approximately eighty cents. 76 And it places
incoming payments in the lender’s control: Marble Bridge could access each Optimis
subsidiary’s bank account and “sweep it clean” once reimbursement payments hit.77
By the end of 2018, Optimis had drawn nearly $2 million in advances under its
arrangement with Marble Bridge. 78
By 2019, Optimis’s financial condition was “[b]reakeven at best.”79 In the
first quarter of 2019, Optimis’s clinics lost a total of $1.2 million. 80 That loss was
far greater than expected, even considering low visit volume at the beginning of the
year. 81 Despite having completed a Series A equity raise in January, Optimis was
struggling to make payroll. 82
75 See id. at 43–44 (“[T]he clinic bills Aetna for [] one visit. And it takes somewhere between 30 to 90 days for Aetna to process that bill and actually reimburse or pay the physical therapist for their service. And so unlike a goods business . . . you have to wait sometimes 90 days to get paid. Sometimes, if they are uninsured, you don’t get paid at all. Or sometimes if there’s issues with the insurance company, there’s delays in that billing.”). 76 Id. at 163. 77 Id. at 46; see JX 297 at 31. 78 JX 94 at 38. 79 Dourney Tr. 218. 80 JX 81 at 1; see also Manning Tr. 178 (testifying that by early 2019, “the clinics had just continued to decline, and things were not getting better”). 81 JX 81 at 1. 82 Manning Tr. 176–77; JX 81 at 1.
14 On May 3, Optimis’s board of directors (the “Board”) met to consider two
sources of capital proposed by Optimis’s finance committee (the “Finance
Committee”). 83 One option was to launch a Series A-1 preferred stock offering (the
“Series A-1”). 84 The proposed Series A-1 would be similar to the Series A offering
that Optimis had closed in January, but with a higher valuation.85 The “only other
viable option” at the time was to take out short-term “hard money loans.” 86 These
hard money loans would carry an interest rate of over 30% “and typically would
require daily remittance of repayment.”87 Optimis’s general counsel and Finance
Committee secretary Paul Price explained to the Board that hard money loans would
not only be “extremely expensive,” but would also “cause a disruption” with Marble
Bridge.88
The Board opted to go with the Series A-1 and approved a round for up to $5
million. 89 Optimis thereafter increased the maximum offering amount to $8 million,
based on the Finance Committee’s determination that it would need more than $5
83 See JX 81. 84 Id. at 2–3. 85 Id. at 2. 86 Id. at 3. 87 Price Tr. 40; JX 81 at 3. 88 JX 81 at 3. 89 Id.
15 million. 90 Despite initial interest among a few investors, the Series A-1 never got
off the ground.91 According to Optimis, one of its major stockholders did not want
to be diluted. 92 Optimis tabled the Series A-1, and leaned on Marble Bridge for
another $6 million combined financing facility. 93
By late summer, Optimis “forecasted that [it was] going to need a significant
amount of working capital . . . to get through the end of the year.” 94 At a September
19, 2019 Board meeting, Optimis’s CFO explained that “the clinics are having a
really rough time so far this year.”95 The minutes attributed the clinics’ losses to All
Star’s “attacks” on Rancho.96
90 JX 94 (draft confidential information memorandum dated May 15, 2019); Price Tr. 28– 29 (“[T]he finance committee made a determination, through the help of our finance team, that we would probably need more capital along the lines of 8 rather than 5 million.”). 91 Price Tr. 29 (“[Morelli] and another investor, preferred stock round investor, were interested in putting roughly, I think, maybe 1.5 million in . . . . [And] we received some interest from a potential institutional company that wanted to put some money in.”). 92 See Dourney Tr. 218 (“Andrew Shannahan was a large shareholder and didn’t want to be diluted.”); Manning Tr. 188–89; Price Tr. 33; see also JX 189 at 5 (September 19, 2019 Board meeting minutes explaining that the Series A-1 was initially dismissed “based on concerns from stockholders that it would cause unnecessary dilution in light of the forthcoming $6 million arbitration award”); JX 224. 93 See JX 297 at 30–36. 94 Price Tr. 38. 95 JX 189 at 3. 96 Id. at 4–5.
16 Optimis believed it had no other choice but to take out short-term hard money
loans “to bridge the Company until the arbitration award is issued.” 97 Price told the
Board about two offers he had secured, together providing $750,000 over eight
months at a cost of approximately $250,000.98 Both loans were approved by the
Board and executed that same day. 99
One was a $300,000 loan from Forward Financing LLC (“Forward
Financing”). 100 This loan required repayment of $399,000 in weekly installments of
$12,468.75, and a $2,995 processing fee to be deducted from the loan principal.101
Optimis would end up paying $111,469 in interest over 214 days, implying a 63%
simple annual interest rate.102 The other was a $450,000 loan from Fox Capital
Group, Inc. (“Fox”). 103 This loan required repayment of $598,500 in daily
installments of $3,740.63, and a $4,500 underwriting fee to be deducted from the
97 Id. at 5; see also Price Tr. 38 (“[A]t this point in time, we were getting pretty desperate, and the only options we had were hard money lenders.”). 98 JX 189 at 5. 99 Id. 100 JX 190. 101 Id. at 3–4, 5 (providing that “Purchaser will deduct the amount of the Processing Fee from the Purchase Price”); see JX 196 at 1 (bank statement showing $297,005 deposited by Forward Financing on September 23, 2019). 102 JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 103 JX 188.
17 loan principal. 104 Optimis would end up paying $148,501 in interest over 219 days,
implying a 55% simple annual interest rate. 105
On October 15, the Finance Committee met to approve yet another loan.106
The next day, Optimis took out a $500,000 loan from OneFunder LLC
(“OneFunder”). 107 This loan required repayment of $650,000 in daily installments
of $5,652.20, and a $15,045 origination fee to be deducted from the loan principal.108
Optimis would end up paying $94,712 in interest over 174 days, implying a 40%
simple annual interest rate. 109
D. Bayard Receives The Award, And Rancho’s Bank Accounts Are Levied.
On October 31, the Award was transferred to Bayard’s escrow account in the
amount of $8,675,794. 110 By then, Optimis was aware “it [was] likely to require a
104 Id. at 2, 11 (providing that a 1% underwriting fee would be “paid out of the Purchase Price/funding amount”); JX 196 at 1 (bank statement showing $445,500 deposited by Fox on September 23, 2019). 105 JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 106 See JX 211 (October 15, 2019 Finance Committee meeting minutes reflecting approval of a $500,000 loan “to bridge the Company until the receipt of the arbitration award”); JX 210. 107 JX 212. 108 Id. at 3; see JX 226 (bank statement showing $484,920 deposited by OneFunder on October 17, 2019). 109 JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 110 PTO ¶ 38; JX 241 at 11 (confirming Bayard “received payment in the amount of $8,675,794.00 from Allen Sussman, in full satisfaction of the amended final award issued on September 12, 2019”).
18 motion for [the Company] to expedite the receipt of the funds.” 111 Optimis did not
take any action at that time.
On November 13, Bayard sent Optimis’s counsel a “Notice of Distribution”
proposing that Defendants distribute the Award “on a pro rata basis, to those
individuals and entities holding stock in OptimisCorp between September 21, 2012
and June 24, 2013, other than the Individual Defendants [in the Derivative Action]
and any entities owned or controlled in whole or in part by any of them.”112 The
Notice of Distribution also relayed Defendants’ intent to distribute $2,471,773.10 to
Bayard—$1,871,613.25 in attorneys’ fees and costs per the arbitrator’s ruling, and
an additional $1,036,665.20 as a contingent fee. 113 Optimis’s then-counsel
responded by letter dated November 21 objecting to Defendants’ proposed
distribution.114 The parties exchanged letters into December; Optimis’s counsel
maintained that “there is no basis under Delaware law for [Defendants] to withhold
111 JX 605 at 1–2. 112 JX 241 at 12. 113 Id. at 11–12 (“Bayard is entitled ‘to receive thirty percent (30%), net of expenses, of any gross recovery received by the [Claimants]’ . . . . Bayard is therefore entitled, pursuant to the terms of the Engagement Letter, to a contingent fee at least in the amount of $2,471,773.10. Crediting the attorneys’ fees awarded in the Arbitration, Bayard is owed an additional $1,036,665.20.”). 114 JX 246.
19 the Award proceeds which represent purely derivative recovery belonging solely to
OptimisCorp.” 115
On November 22, a third-party debt collections agency executed a levy on
Rancho’s bank accounts to enforce the judgment in the Employment Action.116
Atkins and Smith had previously assigned all rights, title, and interest in the
judgment to the agency in May. 117 As the assignee of record, the agency dictated
when and how to collect on the judgment. 118
The levy made Marble Bridge “extremely irate,” as it could not collect on the
invoices it had purchased from Optimis, and was going to have to hire an attorney
to remove the levy.119 Optimis’s then-counsel complained to Bayard that the
combination of withholding the Award, and the levy, “is placing both Rancho and
OptimisCorp in grave harm.”120
115 JX 264 at 4. 116 PTO ¶ 39; JX 245. 117 PTO ¶¶ 34–35; JX 96; JX 97. 118 See JX 245 at 4 (listing “Creative Recovery Concepts, Inc.” as “Judgment Creditor”). 119 Price Tr. 68–69; see also id. (“[T]echnically the money in those accounts belongs to them because they had already bought the billing. And so the money in those accounts represents the reimbursement that insurance companies were paying us for 30, 90 days previous. And so that money belonged to them.”); Manning Tr. 180 (“[Marble Bridge was] pretty unhappy. There were lots of phone calls during that time because they had already purchased the accounts receivable. So they were overleveraged, essentially, at that point because they had already funded, but they weren’t receiving the corresponding revenue.”); JX 264 at 4 (“Rancho’s accounts receivable purchaser is likely to commence its own steps to seek relief for the conversion of funds as they have been improperly levied.”). 120 JX 264 at 4.
20 E. Optimis Takes Out More Short-Term Loans.
As the parties’ lawyers sparred over the levy and the Award, Optimis
scrambled for cash to survive what it documented as a “working capital crisis.” 121 It
concluded its only solution was emergency and expensive short-term loans. From
November 2019 to March 2020, Optimis borrowed $7.5 million in numerous
additional loans, at the cost of $1.2 million. 122
1. On November 23, 2019, Optimis took out a $200,000 loan from Price’s childhood friend, Andrew Kim. 123 This loan came with a 15% fee.124 Optimis repaid a total of $230,000 just days later on December 3, implying a 782% simple annual interest rate. 125
2. On December 2, 2019, Optimis took out a $1 million loan from Cherry Miyake, one of the Company’s Series A investors. 126 This loan carried an interest rate of 8% until repayment and a $50,000 facility fee. 127 It also required the issuance of 250,000 warrants for Miyake to purchase shares of Optimis common stock, and a “strong personal guaranty from [Morelli] to
See, e.g., JX 244 (November 20, 2019 Finance Committee meeting minutes describing 121
Optimis’s “working capital crisis”); JX 261 (December 2, 2019 Finance Committee meeting minutes describing Optimis’s “fiscal crisis”). 122 JX 470 at 15; JX 411, Ex. F. The parties stipulated to the amounts identified in Optimis’s expert report, available at JX 470. See Trial Tr. 55. 123 JX 247 at 2; Price Tr. 60. Due to issues in wiring the funds directly to Optimis’s account, Kim wired $200,000 to Price’s joint account with his wife, and Price immediately wired the funds to Optimis. Price Tr. 58–59. That is why the Company’s November 2019 bank statement indicates the funds came from Price. JX 259 at 4. 124 JX 247 at 2. 125 JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 126 JX 261; JX 260; Price Tr. 60. 127 JX 261; JX 260.
21 secure repayment.”128 Optimis repaid a total of $1,059,425 on January 16, 2020, implying a 48% simple annual interest rate.129
3. On December 23, 2019, Optimis took out a $300,000 loan from Morelli.130 Interest would accrue at 8% per annum. 131 Because Morelli was mortgaging his home to extend this loan, Optimis agreed to provide 300% warrant coverage.132
4. On January 7, 2020, Optimis took out another $300,000 from Kim. 133 This loan carried a $45,000 facility and processing fee, and was secured by the Company’s accounts receivables up to the principal amount.134 Optimis repaid a total of $345,000 on January 16, implying a 684% simple annual interest rate. 135
5. On January 9, 2020, Optimis took out a $2.4 million loan from Fulcrum Credit Partners (“Fulcrum”). 136 This loan came with a $400,000 fee, which would be deducted from the principal amount. 137 Most of it went out the door almost
128 See JX 261; JX 260 at 6–15. 129 JX 315 at 5; JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 130 JX 288; JX 291. The loan was disbursed in the following installments: $130,000 on December 24; $80,000 on January 10, 2020; $31,000 on January 21; and $54,762 on February 10. JX 470 at 16. 131 JX 288; JX 291. 132 JX 288; JX 291. 133 JX 298; JX 299. 134 JX 298; JX 299 at 2. 135 JX 315 at 5; JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 136 JX 361; see JX 314 at 1 (bank statement showing $2 million deposited by Fulcrum on January 14, 2020). The January 30, 2020 Finance Committee meeting minutes state, contrary to the Company’s January 2020 bank statement, “that Fulcrum funding has not come in yet.” JX 313 at 2. 137 JX 361 at 2.
22 immediately to repay the Miyake and Kim loans.138 Optimis repaid a total of $2.4 million by January 9, 2022, implying a 9.5% simple annual interest rate.
6. On January 21, 2020, Optimis took out another $100,000 loan from Kim.139 This loan carried a $12,000 facility and processing fee, and was secured by the Company’s accounts receivables up to the principal amount.140 Optimis repaid a total of $112,000 a week later on January 28, implying a 730% simple annual interest rate.141
7. On February 4, 2020, Optimis took out another $400,000 loan from Kim.142 This loan carried a $48,000 facility and processing fee, and was secured by the Company’s accounts receivables up to the principal amount. 143 Kim also negotiated for a warrant to purchase 66,667 shares of Optimis common stock due to its “longer duration” relative to Kim’s previous loans. 144 Optimis repaid a total of $449,000 two weeks later on February 20, implying a 298% simple annual interest rate. 145
8. On February 6, 2020, Optimis took out another $1 million loan from Morelli.146 This loan would require Morelli to refinance his home a second time and borrow $1.3 million. 147 The Finance Committee agreed to provide 300% warrant coverage and “a reimbursement of all points, fees and other
138 JX 314 (bank statement showing $345,000 paid to Kim and $1,059,424.66 paid to Miyake on January 16, 2020); Price Tr. 83 (“And when we received 2 million working capital from Fulcrum, we basically paid Andrew back . . . and we paid Cherry Miyake back fully.”); Price Tr. 84 (“[A] lot of th[e] [Fulcrum] money was already earmarked to repay Cherry Miyake . . . as well as [to take] care of some other loan repayments.”). 139 JX 303; JX 304. 140 JX 303; JX 304. 141 JX 315 at 7; JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 142 JX 313 at 2; JX 316. 143 JX 313 at 2; JX 316. 144 JX 313 at 2; JX 316 at 3. 145 JX 334 at 6; JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. 146 JX 313 at 2–3; JX 315 at 7–8; JX 317. 147 JX 315 at 7; JX 317 at 1.
23 costs of refinancing the property.”148 Optimis repaid Morelli a total of $1,641,000 on July 29, 2020, implying a 41% simple annual rate. 149
9. On March 1, 2020, Optimis took out another $500,000 loan from Miyake.150 This loan carried an 8% interest rate and a $25,000 facility fee.151 Optimis repaid the $500,000 principal amount on May 5, 2020. 152 The record is silent as to whether it paid the finance fee or any interest.
F. COVID-19 Hits, And Clinics Close.
In March 2020, as COVID-19 gripped the world, Optimis’s clinics “went
dark.” 153 Washington was the site of the first major outbreak of COVID-19 in the
United States. 154 The city of Kirkland was “ground zero.”155 MVP’s Kirkland clinic
closed its doors first; the rest of the MVP clinics followed suit by the end of the
month. 156 The Rancho clinics also took a hit. As Price explained, “every single
148 JX 315 at 7. 149 JX 470 at 17; JX 411, Ex. F. Optimis repaid both the December 23 loan and February 6 loan on the same day. See JX 470 at 17 n.48. 150 JX 337; JX 338. 151 JX 337 at 1; JX 338. 152 JX 362 at 2; JX 470 at 17. 153 Manning Tr. 195. 154 See Price Tr. 97–98; Manning Tr. 196. 155 Price Tr. 97–98. 156 Id. at 97–98, 110; JX 346 (“As conditions got worse last week, we followed the advice of regional director, Ron McNamara, to temporarily close all MVP clinics two days ago, with the hopes that we can reopen in 6-8 weeks.”).
24 clinic [] experience[d] significant disruption secondary to COVID.” 157 In the months
the clinics were dark, visit volumes plummeted, revenues suffered, and Optimis
struggled to cover rent and make payroll.158
In June, Optimis received a $4 million Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”)
loan.159 It received an additional $2 million PPP loan in or around the last quarter
of 2020.160 All $6 million was forgiven. 161 Still, a handful of clinics were never able
to turn the lights back on. Manning testified that it was “incredibly difficult” for
MVP to recover from the impacts of COVID, and that “after March 2020, MVP
patients began visiting other competing clinics.”162 In total, five MVP clinics and
two Rancho clinics shut down permanently in 2020.163
G. Optimis Pursues The Award.
In the meantime, Optimis came to this Court to chase the derivative arbitration
Award that Defendants’ counsel had escrowed. 164 Defendants resisted, seeking delay
157 JX 345; see also JX 343 (“The COVID situation is wrecking our clinics and AR.”); JX 356 at 3 (“[T]he entire state is on lockdown and our clinics are taking a significant hit. The future of our business lies in the balance of the COVID situation.”). 158 See JX 343; JX 345; JX 346; JX 356; Price Tr. 124, 126; Manning Tr. 195–97. 159 Price Tr. 127. 160 Id. 161 Id. at 127–28. 162 Manning Tr. 196. 163 JX 470 at 20–21; Manning Tr. 183. 164 Deriv. Action at D.I. 186, D.I. 187, D.I. 188; see also D.I. 1.
25 and a distribution of the Award to a subset of stockholders.165 On June 18, 2020,
Optimis secured a declaratory judgment that the Award was derivative and should
be turned over to Optimis.166
On June 25, the parties filed a joint status report explaining that Defendants
had not yet remitted the Award to Optimis. 167 Defendants asserted Optimis’s request
for return of the Award was tantamount to a “request for mandatory injunction,” and
claimed Optimis needed to move for mandatory injunctive relief. 168 In response, the
Court reminded Defendants that its June 18 ruling “determined that the arbitration
award at issue is derivative, is based on a purely derivative claim, and must be paid
directly to Optimis, rather than a subset of individual shareholders.” 169 The Court
suggested that declaratory judgment should be adequate to compel return of the
Award, as Defendants would surely comply without a redundant injunction.170 On
June 26, Defendants wired $5,211,789.70 of the Award to Optimis’s counsel’s
escrow account. 171
165 D.I. 21. 166 D.I. 45; D.I. 46; D.I. 69. 167 D.I. 47. 168 Id. at 4–5. 169 D.I. 48 at 3. 170 Id. 171 D.I. 49; PTO ¶ 45.
26 The parties also disputed whether Optimis’s counsel was entitled to a
contingent fee over and above the fees awarded by the Arbitrator. 172 I denied
Defendants’ request for additional fees on July 15, 2021.173 The same day,
Defendants wired the remaining $1,606,954.41 of the Award to Optimis’s counsel’s
escrow account. 174
The fight over the Award spilled back into the Derivative Action. On July 19,
Optimis moved to disqualify Defendants as derivative plaintiffs and to stay the
Derivative Action pending this action.175 The parties quarreled over the scope of the
parties’ arguments and discovery through the fall.176 The Court stayed resolution of
the motion to disqualify, and therefore the Derivative Action as a whole, pending
resolution of this action.177
172 D.I. 21 at Counterclaims ¶¶ 50–57; OptimisCorp v. Atkins, 2021 WL 2961482, at *3 (Del. Ch. July 15, 2021) (“Specifically, Defendants reasoned that because the[ir] Engagement Letter’s thirty-percent contingency would entitle Bayard to $2,602,738.20 and because Bayard already had received $1,435,107.90 in attorneys’ fees, Bayard should receive at least an additional $1,167,630.30 in attorneys’ fees, subject to an upward adjustment if the Court determines Bayard is entitled to a success fee (the ‘Additional Fees’).”). 173 OptimisCorp, 2021 WL 2961482, at *12–14. 174 PTO ¶ 47. 175 Deriv. Action at D.I. 224. Deriv. Action at D.I. 236, D.I. 237, D.I. 244, D.I. 249, D.I. 253, D.I. 255, D.I. 256, D.I. 176
259, D.I. 260, D.I. 261, D.I. 264. 177 Deriv. Action at D.I. 266, D.I. 267.
27 This action advanced through discovery to summary judgment. On June 1,
2023, I granted Defendants’ motion as to Optimis’s unjust enrichment claim.178 I
denied Defendants’ motion as to Optimis’s breach of fiduciary duty claim and
entered sua sponte summary judgment in Optimis’s favor on the question of
liability. 179 I declined to rule on any damages until after trial, which was scheduled
for July 5 through 7, 2023. 180 Optimis sought a continuance,181 and trial was held
from April 17 through 19, 2024. 182 Post-trial briefing was complete as of February
7, 2025, 183 but the parties did not schedule post-trial argument until October 3.184
This post-trial opinion awards Optimis nominal damages.
II. ANALYSIS
On summary judgment, I entered judgment for Optimis on the grounds that
Defendants owed fiduciary duties as agents of the Company, and breached those
duties in connection with the Award.185 That conclusion was based on “the
178 OptimisCorp v. Atkins, 2023 WL 3745306, at *24–25 (Del. Ch. June 1, 2023) [hereinafter “Summ. J. Op.”]. 179 Summ. J. Op. at *16, 26. 180 Id. at *24 (“Plaintiff raised disputes of material fact regarding the amount of damages. Issues in that regard [] require further development at trial. Consequently, I decline to rule on any damages associated with Count II on this Motion.”). 181 D.I. 215. 182 D.I. 233. 183 D.I. 239; D.I. 241; D.I. 245. 184 D.I. 256; D.I. 257 [hereinafter “Hr’g Tr.”]. 185 Summ. J. Op. at *9–24.
28 undisputed facts under a simple negligence standard and an agent’s duties of
loyalty.” 186 What remains to be resolved is Optimis’s entitlement to damages for any
losses flowing from that breach. Optimis bears the burden of proving those damages
by a preponderance of the evidence. 187
“An agent’s breach [of fiduciary duty] subjects the agent to liability for loss
that the breach causes the principal.” 188 Optimis’s burden to prove its requested
damages included the burden to prove a proximate “causal linkage exists between
the breach of duty and the remedy sought.” 189 “Delaware recognizes the traditional
‘but for’ definition of proximate causation” 190—i.e., a “direct cause without which
186 Id. at *16. 187 Martin v. Med-Dev Corp., 2015 WL 6472597, at *10 (Del. Ch. Oct. 27, 2015). 188 Restatement (Third) of Agency § 8.01 cmt. d(1) (A.L.I. 2006) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 874 (A.L.I. 1979)); see also id. cmt. b (“Tort law subjects the agent to liability to the principal for harm resulting from the breach.” (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 874 (A.L.I. 1979)). 189 Metro Storage Int’l LLC v. Harron, 275 A.3d 810, 859 (Del. Ch. 2022) (citing In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 906 A.2d 766, 773, 775 (Del. 2006)); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 454 cmt. b (A.L.I. 1979) (“The same rules which determine whether the actor’s conduct is or is not a legal cause of another’s harm are applicable irrespective of whether the relation of legal cause and effect is necessary to establish liability or to establish the amount of damages to be paid where liability is admitted or proved.”); Medek v. Medek, 2009 WL 2005365, at *12 (Del. Ch. July 1, 2009) (“[A] plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendant caused the injury and present a reasonable and factually supported basis for determining damages.” (citations omitted)); J.P. Morgan, 906 A.2d at 773 (noting that the “fundamental principle governing entitlement to compensatory damages” is that “the damages must be logically and reasonably related to the harm or injury for which compensation is being awarded” (citations omitted)). 190 Duphily v. Del. Elec. Co-op., Inc., 662 A.2d 821, 828 (Del. 1995).
29 the [injury] would not have occurred.”191 “Although there may be more than one
proximate cause of [the] plaintiff’s injury, ‘our time-honored definition of proximate
cause’ has been the ‘but for’ rule.”192
On summary judgment, I concluded Optimis had sufficiently shown the fact
of damages to sustain a finding of liability: “Defendants’ breaches of their duty of
care caused damage to Optimis. The nine-month delay in receiving the bulk of the
Award proximately injured Optimis by depriving them of an asset to which they had
a right.”193 On the amount of damages, Optimis is correct that “Delaware does not
‘require certainty in the award of damages where a wrong has been proven and injury
established.’” 194 “Responsible estimates of damages that lack mathematical
certainty are permissible so long as the court has a basis to make such a responsible
191 Chudnofsky v. Edwards, 208 A.2d 516, 518 (Del. 1965). 192 Russell v. K-Mart Corp., 761 A.2d 1, 5 (Del. 2000) (citing Duphily, 662 A.2d at 828– 29). 193 Summ. J. Op. at *21. 194 Beard Rsch., Inc. v. Kates, 8 A.3d 573, 613 (Del. Ch. 2010) (quoting Del. Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older, 2002 WL 31458243, at *15 (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2002)), aff ’d sub nom. ASDI, Inc. v. Beard Rsch., Inc., 11 A.3d 749 (Del. 2010); see also Reis v. Hazelett Strip- Casting Corp., 28 A.3d 442, 466 (Del. Ch. 2011) (“[O]nce a breach of duty of loyalty is established, uncertainties in awarding damages are generally resolved against the wrongdoer.” (citation omitted)); see also Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc., 676 A.2d 436, 445 (Del. 1996) (“Delaware law dictates that the scope of recovery for a breach of the duty of loyalty is not to be determined narrowly.”).
30 estimate.”195 But speculation and conjecture are insufficient. 196 While “damages
resulting from a breach of fiduciary duty are liberally calculated, the trial court
cannot substitute its best guess at harm for actual evidence of harm.” 197
This Court “cannot create what does not exist in the evidentiary record, and
cannot reach beyond that record when it finds the evidence lacking. Equity is not a
license to make stuff up.”198 Optimis has “failed to prove a causal link between its
claimed damages and the proven breaches of fiduciary duty.” 199
A. Optimis Is Entitled To Nominal Damages.
Optimis seeks over $12 million in damages from a nine-month delay in
receiving the Award. It contends the one-two punch of that delay and the levy on
Rancho’s accounts drove Optimis to close clinics and and incur expensive short-term
debt. For the clinics, Optimis seeks lost business value damages, representing the
going concern value of seven clinics that permanently closed in 2020. 200 For the
195 Beard Rsch., 8 A.3d at 613 (citing Del. Express Shuttle, 2002 WL 31458243, at *15). 196 See id. (“[T]his Court may not set damages based on mere ‘speculation or conjecture’ where a plaintiff fails to adequately prove damages.” (quoting Medek, 2009 WL 2005365, at *12 n.78)). 197 Macrophage Therapeutics, Inc. v. Goldberg, 2021 WL 2582967, at *18 (Del. Ch. June 23, 2021) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). 198 Ravenswood Inv. Co., L.P. v. Est. of Winmill, 2018 WL 1410860, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 21, 2018), aff’d, 210 A.3d 705 (Del. 2019). 199 Macrophage Therapeutics, 2021 WL 2582967, at *19. 200 JX 470 at 19–22.
31 debt, Optimis seeks the costs incurred as a result of “the Company’s need for
alternative debt financing in lieu of the Award.”201
To support the requested damages, Optimis grabs at conduct, events, and
actors predating, and exogenous to, Defendants’ breach. It aggregates losses
allegedly stemming from a broad “years-long scheme to dismantle and loot
Optimis’s clinics, which began while Defendants were serving as board members
and executives of Optimis.” 202 Everything that went wrong with Optimis’s clinics
and finances since at least 2013, Optimis blames on Defendants: not just from the
withheld Award, but also from the levy and competition for staff. 203
Optimis’s saga begins in 2013, when Defendants allegedly conspired with
MVP’s former owners to “take control of Optimis” and “drive Optimis into
bankruptcy” by soliciting its employees and assets.204 Optimis’s management
testified repeatedly at trial about “attacks on Rancho” by All Star and a similar
“playbook” at MVP.205 Price testified that when Defendants “left [Rancho] to go to
All Star” in 2013, they solicited payor contracts, referrals, landlords, and nearly fifty
201 Id. at 7, 8–18. 202 PRB 1. 203 See id. at 11. 204 POB 36, 42–44. 205 Price Tr. 19–20, 35.
32 employees through “unfair” competition.206 Manning added that Rancho’s San
Jacinto clinic was “los[t] to All Star in one fell swoop” in November 2017.207 As
for MVP, Dourney testified that dissatisfaction with Optimis’s management led its
founders to “check[] out” of their roles and tank the MVP clinics’ productivity.208
By 2019, both had left to join a competitor. 209 Optimis’s expert quantified losses
caused by this broader scheme, not the missing Award, relying on Board meeting
minutes that attribute Optimis’s pain to “extensive attacks from the former owners”
and do not mention the Award a single time.210
The breadth of Optimis’s theory has two consequences for damages. First, it
cuts against the notion that the missing Award caused all that harm: by Optimis’s
own account, and on the record before me, the claimed losses are attributable to cash
and staffing constraints that had nothing to do with the Award. Optimis has not
206 Id. at 23–24; see also id. at 35 (“The patient volume that we were getting was from extremely low-paying payors, as All Star was taking and undercutting our higher-end payors.”); id. at 91 (“[T]here were even situations where All Star was offering special incentives . . . if the employee was actually coming from Rancho.”); Manning Tr. 175 (“There were a couple of times where we weren’t allowed to renegotiate our lease; they would just end our lease. And All Star would take it over.”). 207 Manning Tr. 174. 208 Dourney Tr. 213, 215; see also JX 174 at 1 (September 14, 2019 email from Morelli stating that “Pat [Garlock] and Mike [Jennings] are trying to implode MVP from within, and Boris and RET have been poaching our peeps, apparently with assistance from your boy Mike [Jennings]”). 209 JX 357; Price Tr. 53. 210 JX 315; see JX 470 at 19 (citing JX 276); id. at 20 (citing JX 315).
33 proven Defendants caused the levy wrongfully, or at all; liability for the levy is not
at issue in this case. Nor did this case address any decade-long scheme by
Defendants. 211 I found Defendants liable for breach only in connection with
withholding the Award. 212
Second, Optimis’s sweeping theory forecloses a “responsible estimate” of
damages. 213 Optimis “has given me no way to separate the actual harm to the
Company” flowing directly from Defendants’ withholding of the Award.214
Optimis has not proven that withholding the Award caused the damages it
seeks, or any lesser quantum. Optimis did not prove a “sufficient causal connection
211 Optimis sued Defendants in this Court in 2013, asserting a series of claims tied to a similar theory—that “everything that has gone wrong at Optimis since at least 2012 is Defendants’ fault.” See Plenary Op. at *56. Optimis sought over $50 million in damages resulting from, among other things, Defendants’ alleged conspiracy to “sabotage the Company’s strategic plan; attempt to gain control of Optimis by ambush; [and] try to steal Rancho.” Id. The case went to trial. Vice Chancellor Parsons concluded that most of Optimis’s claims failed, and that Optimis was not entitled to any relief. Id. at *80–83. Optimis also sued MVP’s founders in 2021 in the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington alleging, among other things, that they “breached the[ir] fiduciary duties through their participation in the scheme to bankrupt MVP and OptimisCorp.” JX 607 ¶ 97. 212 Summ. J. Op. at *24 (“Defendants exceeded their authority as derivative plaintiffs by purporting to manage a monetized derivative award, and breached their duty of care. It is also undisputed that Defendants withheld the Award to distribute it . . . to the exclusion of Optimis stockholders Defendants did not deem ‘innocent.’ Defendants breached their duty of loyalty.”). 213 Beard Rsch., 8 A.3d at 613. 214 CSH Theatres, L.L.C. v. Nederlander of San Francisco Assocs., 2018 WL 3646817, at *29 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2018), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds sub nom. In re Shorenstein Hays-Nederlander Theatres LLC Appeals, 213 A.3d 39 (Del. 2019).
34 exists” between the missing Award and the damages Optimis seeks.215 “Because
there is no proven harm, there is no basis to award compensatory damages.” 216
1. Lost Business Value Damages
Optimis seeks between $7,629,656 and $10,096,744 in lost business value
damages, representing the going concern value of the seven closed clinics.217 It
argues if the Company had timely received the Award, it would have been adequately
capitalized; and if it had been adequately capitalized, it could have retained staff and
emerged from the pandemic unscathed; and if it had done that, it would have sold
the clinics for a profit instead of shutting them down. Optimis’s expert Gregory
Cowhey quantified what Optimis would have received in those sales by multiplying
the clinics’ 2019 revenues by revenue multiples derived from an investment bank’s
analysis of “small-scale multi-clinic transactions completed by U.S. Physical
Therapy, Inc. (‘USPH’)” in or around 2021. 218
Running its theory in reverse, Optimis needed to prove that the closures were
caused by lost staff; that the staff left or were let go because Optimis was
undercapitalized; and that Optimis would have been adequately capitalized if it had
215 Metro Storage, 275 A.3d at 862. 216 Macrophage Therapeutics, 2021 WL 2582967, at *18 (citations omitted). 217 JX 470 at 19–22. 218 Id. at 21, App’x F; Cowhey Tr. 445 (“[W]e were asked to calculate what would the value of these operations be that were shuttered if the Court concludes that they had an alternative strategy to sell these and receive money on the sale of these facilities.”).
35 timely received the Award. That causal chain is contradicted by Optimis’s own
financial and payroll records, and the story it told at trial.
The evidence showed the closed clinics’ finances were not harmed by a
staffing shortage while the Award was missing. Defendants’ rebuttal expert Brett
Margolin demonstrated that convincingly. He analyzed each closed clinic’s
financials and payroll data between January 2019 and March 2020,219 and made the
following observations:
• Palm Desert (Rancho): November 2019 posted the highest EBITDA margin in the thirteen-month period ending January 2020. January 2020 revenues closely approximately January 2019 revenues. Payroll from November 2019 through February 2020 largely remained consistent with the prior ten months.
• San Jacinto (Rancho): January and February 2020 saw the third and seventh highest revenues, and the second and fifth highest EBITDA margins in the fourteen-month period ending February 2020. While it lost all clinical staff in September, before Defendants’ breach, the clinic was successfully restaffed to pre-September levels by December, after the breach. No physical therapists left between November 2019 and June 2020. 220
• Bremerton (MVP): The Bremerton clinic was MVP’s “highest-profit clinic.”221 But starting in June 2019, its revenue and EBITDA margins began a steady decline.222 At the same time, payroll increased and peaked in January 2020. In other words, the clinic became overstaffed after Defendants’ breach.223
219 JX 411 at 14–21, Ex. C, Ex. E1–E7. 220 JX 357. 221 Margolin Tr. 582. 222 Id. 223 Id.
36 • Kirkland (MVP): The Kirkland clinic realized higher revenues in January 2020 than in January 2019. 224 January and February 2020 posted the third and fourth highest EBITDA margins in the fourteen-month period ending February 2020. And payroll during that period remained consistent from prior months.
• Lakewood (MVP): Revenues experienced steady, steep declines from April 2019 through January 2020. EBITDA margins were consistently negative from June 2019 onward. While the clinic experienced staffing shortages through September 2019, payroll shot up in October; November through January 2020 had the third, fourth, and fifth highest payroll in the fifteen- month period ending March 2020.
• Port Orchard (MVP): December 2019 saw the highest revenue and the second-highest EBITDA margin in the fourteen-month period ending February 2020. November 2019 through January 2020 posted the highest payroll, and there were no employee departures from November 2019 through June 2020. 225
• Starfire (MVP): October and November 2019 revenues were higher than the clinic’s September revenues. November 2019 through January 2020 posted the highest payroll during the thirteen-month period ending January 2020. Revenues and payroll plummeted only after Jennings, MVP’s then-COO and the face of the Starfire clinic, left the Company. 226
Overall, the closed clinics’ performance and payroll during the relevant time period
were consistent with, and in some cases better than, the ten months before
Defendants’ breach. 227 Optimis had internally benchmarked labor costs at 60% of
224 See JX 398 (showing total revenues of $25,757.31 in January 2019 and $26,938.73 in January 2020). 225 See JX 357. 226 JX 411 at 23–27. 227 Id. at 21.
37 revenue. 228 At six of the seven closed clinics, payroll consistently exceeded that
60% benchmark: those clinics were overstaffed, not understaffed, while Defendants
withheld the Award. At the remaining clinic, payroll had consistently remained
under 60% since April 2019.
Optimis also failed to acknowledge other obvious causes for the closures. The
most glaring was COVID-19.229 Optimis’s expert does not mention COVID-19 at
all: a remarkable omission for businesses at the epicenter of North America’s
COVID-19 outbreak that are reliant on in-person visitors, and that closed within
weeks of cases being reported.230 And the record makes plain that the pandemic
substantially contributed to the clinic closures. When COVID-19 required clinics to
temporarily close, “there were several months where there was no patient care at
all.”231 For clinics that managed to remain open or reopen at some point during the
pandemic, a single staff member’s exposure to COVID-19 “could wipe out an entire
clinic for a week.” 232 Price acknowledged COVID-19 was a “major factor in the
228 See JX 272 at 3. 229 DAB 19–23, 50–51. 230 See Price Tr. 97–98; Manning Tr. 195–96; JX 346. 231 Manning Tr. 196. 232 Manning Tr. 197.
38 decline” in both visit and patient volume.233 So did Optimis’s COO. 234 And so did
Morelli.235
Staffing problems had other causes as well. Price testified at trial that he
believed Optimis “wouldn’t have lost any staff” if it were adequately capitalized.236
But he also testified that the Company had “lost quite a few physical therapists
countrywide during COVID because they decided to . . . follow [their] passion.”237
Dourney likewise testified that 22,000 physical therapists left the profession during
the pandemic. 238 That evidence suggests at least some of Optimis’s staff departures
had nothing to do with capital constraints from the missing Award.
At bottom, Optimis argues the Award would have positioned the Company to
weather Defendants’ “attacks” on its clinics and emerge from the pandemic
unscathed.239 That argument is far too speculative to support a damages award. And
the preponderance of the credible evidence suggests otherwise. By March 2020,
233 Price Tr. 124, 126. 234 Manning Tr. 197 (confirming that “Rancho’s business trended downward in March of 2020 . . . primarily [because of] COVID”). See Price Tr. 126 (confirming that Morelli’s estimate of a 20% to 25% COVID-related 235
impact on clinic revenue in Southern California was “fair”). 236 Id. at 96. 237 Id. at 21. 238 Dourney Tr. 221; see also Waite Tr. 280. 239 See Hr’g Tr. 9; PRB 27 (“Having an influx of $6.8 million at the start of COVID would have given the[] clinics a competitive edge over other competitors in the region, including All Star, allowing them to prosper during the pandemic.”).
39 Optimis had obtained a total of $7.5 million in debt financing; 240 by July, Optimis
had received $5.2 million of the Award; 241 and by the end of the year, Optimis had
received $6 million in PPP loans, which were forgiven.242 It still could not avoid the
closures. If the missing Award played any role at all in Optimis’s harm, it is that the
closed clinics may have survived a little longer. But Optimis has not offered any
nonspeculative basis for the Court to quantify that harm. Optimis is not entitled to
lost business value damages.
2. Debt Damages
Optimis seeks $2,281,692 in debt damages “resulting from the Company’s
need for alternative capital, in lieu of the Award.”243 Its expert divided the debt
damages into three phases. Phase One comprises $1,623,759 in fees, interest, and
charges incurred between October 31, 2019, when Bayard received the Award, and
June 26, 2020, when Optimis received $5,211,789.70 of the Award. Phase Two
comprises $303,394 in fees, interest, and charges incurred in connection with Marble
240 See JX 470 at 15–17. Margolin also pointed out the inherent contradiction in requesting both lost business value damages and debt damages, calling the two categories “mutually exclusive.” JX 411 at 35. In requesting the former, Optimis claims Defendants’ breach stripped the Company of cash to compete. In requesting the latter, Optimis claims it got the cash it needed by borrowing. So, having borrowed the money it purportedly needed, “Optimis mitigated the former.” Id. at 36; Margolin Tr. 535. 241 PTO ¶ 45. 242 Price Tr. 127–28. 243 JX 470 at 15–17.
40 Bridge funding between June 27, 2020, and July 15, 2021, when Optimis received
the remainder of the Award. Phase Three comprises $354,539 in fees, interest, and
charges incurred in connection with Marble Bridge funding after July 15, 2021.
a. Phase One
The Phase One debt damages represent the cost of taking out thirteen short-
term loans from Forward Financing, Fox, OneFunder, Kim, Miyake, Morelli, and
Fulcrum, and factoring receivables through Marble Bridge until June 26, 2020. 244
Some of the fees identified must be excluded off the bat. The Phase One debt
damages analysis includes three fees Optimis paid on September 23 and October 17,
before Bayard received the Award.245 Optimis is not entitled to recover those fees
because their payment predated the breach. 246 The analysis also includes a $25,000
finance fee charged by Miyake.247 But the record does not show that fee was ever
244 JX 470 at 15–17. 245 Id. at 16; JX 190 at 5 (providing that the $2,995 processing fee would be “deduct[ed] . . . from the Purchase Price that is to be paid” to Optimis); JX 188 at 11 (providing that a 1% underwriting fee would be “paid out of the Purchase Price/funding amount”); JX 212 at 3 (providing that the $15,045 origination fee would be “deducted from the Purchase Price”). 246 Cowhey appeared to have recognized this, given he subtracted interest payments made before October 31 from the total Phase One debt damages. See JX 470 at 17 (subtracting $62,344 in interest payments made on the Forward Financing loan; $112,219 in interest payments made on the Fox loan; and $63,339 in interest payments made on the OneFunder loan). It is unclear why Cowhey’s analysis includes pre-breach fees, but excludes pre- breach interest payments made on those same loans. 247 Id. at 17.
41 paid, and it seems it was not: Cowhey writes that “[b]ased on discussions with
Optimis’[s] management, Ms. Miyake’s finance fee was not paid to her upon the
loan principal repayment on May 5, 2020; although, Optimis has accrued on its
balance sheet the finance fee.” 248
On a more fundamental level, Optimis has not demonstrated Defendants’
breach caused its Phase One borrowing. Optimis’s theory assumes a timely receipt
of the Award would have eliminated the need to borrow at the level it did, or at all.
When asked about the factual bases for that assumption, Cowhey responded that “by
inference, I don’t think people borrow money . . . unless [there is] a need for it.”249
That abstract inference falls far short of proving Defendants’ breach created the need
to take out the Phase One loans.
By 2015, Optimis was already struggling to obtain “traditional financing.”250
With limited access to equity financing,251 Optimis turned to “expensive” accounts
receivable lending through Marble Bridge and other sources of debt by 2016. 252 By
September 2019, Optimis had amassed $21.7 million in outstanding debt, mostly in
248 Id. at 17 n.50. 249 Cowhey Tr. 488. 250 Price Tr. 108; see also id. at 38, 69; Dourney Tr. 217. 251 Price Tr. 38 (testifying that it was “really difficult to get . . . traditional investors comfortable in investing in the company”). 252 Id. at 163.
42 short-term instruments. 253 The cost of that debt grew year over year. As Margolin’s
rebuttal report explains, from 2016 to 2018, Optimis’s interest rates went from those
typically applied to short-term commercial loans for creditworthy customers, then to
those consistent with “junk” and “speculative” grade debt, and then to those
consistent with the “worst rated public debt.”254 Put another way, Optimis entered
2019 already heavily leveraged and constrained to the most expensive corners of the
debt markets. By the time the Award was issued, Optimis was borrowing to keep up
with its borrowing. 255
Optimis repeatedly papered its Phase One debt as necessary to bridge the
Company’s “working capital crisis,”256 and labeled the loans “working capital
253 JX 169 at 2; JX 411 at 40. 254 Margolin Tr. 543; JX 411 at 42. 255 See JX 411 at 41 (explaining that Optimis was borrowing “primarily to service prior debt”); see also JX 189 at 3 (September 19, 2019 Board meeting minutes stating the Company’s “significant” losses during the first eight months of the year are attributable to “the high interest rates to be paid”). 256 See, e.g., id. at 5 (September 19, 2019 Board meeting minutes stating: “Mr. Price told the Board we don’t have any other choice but to borrow funds from so called ‘hard money lenders’ to obtain necessary interim working capital.”); JX 244 at 2 (November 20, 2019 Finance Committee meeting minutes stating: “Mr. Camp expressed some concern about the high interest rate, however, he acknowledged that there were no better options available to the Company” given “the need for lots of capital.”); JX 276 at 6 (December 12, 2019 Board meeting minutes stating: “The Finance Committee provided an extensive update on the background of the efforts to obtain working capital and explained to the Board that the loan by Fulcrum was approved . . . in the amount of $2MM (as a principal) with an effective cost of 20%.”).
43 loans.”257 But Margolin calculated the Company’s monthly cash burn to be
approximately $240,000, which implies operating and “working capital” needs of
$2.9 million per year. 258 Optimis’s actual Phase One borrowing far exceeded those
baseline liquidity needs. Over just six months, Optimis incurred $7.5 million in total
loan principal, with as much as $4.5 million outstanding in February—on top of
weekly accounts receivable funding from Marble Bridge. 259 The excess was not to
provide additional “working capital.”260 It was to keep up with a “debt death spiral”
that began before the Award was issued. 261
Optimis insists its preexisting financial condition is irrelevant. It invokes the
“eggshell skull” rule, asserting “the defendant [must] take the plaintiff as he finds
him.” 262 The eggshell skull rule is, as Optimis says, “a longstanding principle of
Delaware tort law.”263 But that “rule does not excuse [Optimis] from having to
257 See, e.g., JX 291 (executed “working capital loan” term sheet with Morelli); JX 299 (executed “working capital loan” term sheet with Kim); JX 304 (executed “working capital loan” term sheet with Kim); JX 316 (executed “working capital loan” term sheet with Kim). 258 JX 411 at 41. 259 Id. at 41 & n.39. 260 Cowhey’s Phase One debt damages analysis did not address Optimis’s monthly cash burn, or how Optimis spent the proceeds of the Phase One loans. See Cowhey Tr. 479–80, 487–88. 261 Margolin Tr. 545. 262 PRB 17 (quoting Lipscomb v. Diamiani, 226 A.2d 914, 918 (Del. Super. 1967)). 263 Reese v. Home Budget Ctr., 619 A.2d 907, 910 n.1 (Del. 1992).
44 present evidence that [its] damages were proximately caused by the [breach].”264
And it does not require Defendants to answer for the consequences of Optimis’s past
business decisions.265 Those decisions included foregoing an $8 million Series A-1
equity raise in May and again in September 2019, despite recognizing that a debt
raise “would have been too expensive and would have wasted too much money.”266
Optimis has not shown it needed to take on expensive debt because the Award was
missing. The preponderance of the evidence shows it needed to take on expensive
debt to pay off expensive debt.
In short, Optimis has failed to prove a sufficient and nonspeculative “causal
linkage” between Defendants’ breach and the Phase One debt damages.267 The
preponderance of the credible evidence does not show Defendants’ withholding of
264 Johnson v. Gov’t Empls. Ins. Co., 2014 WL 2708300, at *3 (D. Del. June 16, 2014). 265 As Defendants point out, Optimis has not cited to any authorities expanding the rule’s application from an individual’s preexisting physical or mental conditions to a company’s preexisting financial vulnerabilities. The eggshell skull rule traditionally subjects a tortfeasor “to liability for harm to another although a physical condition of the other which is neither known nor should be known to the actor makes the injury greater than that which the actor . . . should have foreseen as a probable result of his conduct.” Restatement (Second) Torts § 461 (A.L.I. 1979) (emphasis added). Optimis’s authorities, which involve workers’ compensation and personal injury claims, are consistent with that traditional framing. See Reese, 619 A.2d at 910; Lipscomb, 226 A.2d at 918. 266 Price Tr. 27; see JX 189 at 1 (September 19, 2019 Board meeting minutes explaining that the Series A-1 was initially dismissed “based on concerns from stockholders that it would cause unnecessary dilution”); Dourney Tr. 218 (“Andrew Shannahan was a large shareholder and didn’t want to be diluted.”); Manning Tr. 188–89; JX 224. 267 Metro Storage, 275 A.3d at 859.
45 the Award created any “working capital crisis,” or a need to borrow that was not
already there. While the withheld Award may have added borrowing pressures at
the margins, Optimis has offered no reliable method to quantify that effect.
b. Phase Two And Phase Three
The Phase Two and Phase Three debt damages represent $657,933 in fees and
costs associated with continued reliance on Marble Bridge from June 27, 2020,
onward.268 Optimis claims the interest and fees incurred in Phase One required the
Company to seek additional financing from Marble Bridge.269 Optimis is not
entitled to recover those costs.
First, Optimis has not shown its continued reliance on Marble Bridge after
receiving the lion’s share of the Award was caused by Defendants’ breach. Marble
Bridge was the Company’s long-time accounts receivable lender since 2016.270
Optimis had relied on accounts receivable lending even before that. 271 Optimis
offers no evidence that, absent the breach, it would have exited that relationship or
ceased to rely on accounts receivables lending as a working capital source. And it
offers no evidence that, because of the breach, it relied on Marble Bridge on worse
268 JX 470 at 18, Ex. 5, Ex. 6. 269 POB 48. 270 See JX 41; JX 65; JX 94 at 38; JX 297. Price Tr. 43 (testifying that Optimis had “switched from another AR lender before” 271
Marble Bridge).
46 terms or more than it did before. Defendants did not cause Optimis to continue
drawing on a preexisting credit facility.
Alternatively, Optimis has not shown why or whether post-Award Marble
Bridge funding was necessary at all. Optimis had repaid several of its Phase One
loans before Phase Two. 272 And by Phase Three, Optimis had received the full
Award along with $6 million in PPP loans.273 It appears Optimis may have needed
to seek additional debt financing to navigate declines in clinical performance coming
out of the pandemic. Defendants did not cause the harm attributable to those
exogenous factors.
3. Nominal Damages
“In the absence of sufficient proof of a specific injury, the court will issue a
declaration that the defendant breached his fiduciary duties and award nominal
damages.”274 “Nominal damages are not given as an equivalent for the wrong, but
272 See JX 470 at 17. 273 PTO ¶¶ 45, 47; Price Tr. 127–28. 274 Macrophage Therapeutics, 2021 WL 2582967, at *19 (citations omitted); see, e.g., Lake Treasure Hldgs., Ltd. v. Foundry Hill GP LLC, 2014 WL 5192179, at *13 (Del. Ch. Oct. 10, 2014) (“Because the plaintiffs failed to provide a basis for a responsible estimate of damages reasonably related to their injuries from the breach of fiduciary duties, this decision awards nominal damages of $1.00.”); CSH Theatres, 2018 WL 3646817, at *30 (“Any attempt by the Court to determine the harm caused by these actions would be entirely speculative conjecture, and thus, I award only nominal damages for the breaches of fiduciary duty.”); Ravenswood, 2018 WL 1410860, at *25 (awarding nominal damages where the Court “found a breach of the duty of loyalty but [was] unable to award any other form of relief”).
47 rather merely in recognition of a technical injury and by way of declaring the rights
of the plaintiff.”275 Optimis “failed to prove anything more than nominal damages
resulting from [Defendants’] fiduciary duty breaches.”276 Defendants are liable to
Optimis in the amount of $1.00 for breaching their fiduciary duties as agents of the
Company.
B. Optimis Is Entitled To Costs, But Not Attorneys’ Fees.
“Under the American Rule and Delaware law, litigants are normally
responsible for paying their own litigation costs.” 277 “Delaware courts grant
exceptions to the rule cautiously.” 278 One recognized exception lies where “a
fiduciary has engaged in an ‘egregious breach of the duty of loyalty,’ but the harm
flowing from the breach was ‘not readily capable of quantification.’” 279 Another lies
where a party has acted in bad faith.280
275 Oliver v. Boston Univ., 2006 WL 1064169, at *34 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2006) (quoting Penn Mart Supermarkets, Inc. v. New Castle Shopping LLC, 2005 WL 3502054, at *15 (Del. Ch. Dec. 15, 2005)). 276 Macrophage Therapeutics, 2021 WL 2582967, at *2. 277 Mahani v. Edix Media Gp., Inc., 935 A.2d 242, 245 (Del. 2007). 278 Enhabit, Inc. v. Nautic P’rs IX, L.P., 2024 WL 4929729, at *43 (Del. Ch. Dec. 2, 2024) (citing Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 517 A.2d 653, 654 (Del. Ch. 1986)). 279 Metro Storage, 275 A.3d at 867 (quoting Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. v. Cantor, 2001 WL 536911, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 11, 2001)); see also William Penn P’ship v. Saliba, 13 A.3d 749, 758 (Del. 2011). 280 See HMG/Courtland Props., Inc. v. Gray, 749 A.2d 94, 124 (Del. Ch. 1999) (explaining that feeshifting under the bad faith exception may be appropriate “if a prevailing party demonstrates that the losing defendants: i) engaged in bad faith conduct that increased the
48 The party invoking the bad faith exception bears the stringent evidentiary burden of producing clear evidence of bad-faith conduct by the opposing party. The standard is arduous: situations in which a party acted vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.281
“To justify an award under the bad faith exception, ‘the Court must conclude
that the party against whom the fee award is sought has acted in subjective bad
faith.’”282 “Ultimately, the bad faith exception is applied in extraordinary
circumstances primarily to deter abusive litigation and protect the integrity of the
judicial process.”283 “A lesser breach of fiduciary duty alone will not merit departing
from the American Rule.” 284 “Otherwise, every adjudicated breach of fiduciary duty
would automatically result in a fee award.” 285
Defendants breached their fiduciary duties as agents by withholding a
derivative award that belonged to their principal.286 They continued to withhold the
costs of the litigation; or ii) engaged in pre-litigation conduct of a sufficiently egregious nature”). 281 Marra v. Brandywine Sch. Dist., 2012 WL 4847083, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 28, 2012) (quotations omitted). 282 K & G Concord, LLC v. Charcap, LLC, 2018 WL 3199214, at *1 (Del. Ch. June 28, 2018) (quoting Reagan v. Randell, 2002 WL 1402233, at *3 (Del. Ch. June 21, 2002)). 283 Nichols v. Chrysler Gp., LLC, 2010 WL 5549048, at * 3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2010). 284 Deputy v. Deputy, 2020 WL 1018554, at *56 (Del. Ch. Mar. 2, 2020) (citing HMG/Courtland Props., 749 A.2d at 124–25); see also VGS, Inc. v. Castiel, 2001 WL 1154430, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 25, 2001) (“[M]erely being adjudicated a wrongdoer under our corporate law is not enough to justify fee shifting.”). 285 Ryan v. Tad’s Enters., Inc., 709 A.2d 682, 706 (Del. Ch. 1996). 286 See Summ. J. Op. at *16–23.
49 Award after Optimis took legal action to reclaim it, and even after I determined the
Award “must be paid directly to Optimis.”287 They had no authority to do so, and
that conduct was wrong. But I do not believe Defendants’ subjective motivations,
which were immaterial to my finding of liability on summary judgment, 288 reflect a
“degree of scienter” that warrants feeshifting.289
Defendants credibly testified at trial that they did not know the depths of
Optimis’s financial distress during and after the Arbitration, and that they did not
intend to harm Optimis.290 They testified to their real, albeit mistaken, belief that
there was a way to distribute the Award to Optimis stockholders “who have done
nothing but simply invest money in the hope of a return.” 291 That distribution was
intended to exclude only Morelli and his confederates, whose actions gave rise to
287 D.I. 48 at 3. 288 Summ J. Op. at *23 (explaining that disputes about the “reasons why Defendants pursued this self-interested distribution” are “immaterial to the foundational conclusion that Defendants withheld the Award without authority to do so . . . in breach of their duty of loyalty”). 289 In re Straight Path Commc’ns Inc. Consol. S’holder Litig., 2024 WL 4602914, at *7 (Del. Ch. Oct. 29, 2024) (emphasis omitted); see also Ryan, 709 A.2d at 706 (“The plaintiffs must carry the burden of persuading the Court that the defendants acted with scienter sufficient to warrant a finding of bad faith.” (emphasis in original)). 290 Atkins Tr. 342–44; Waite Tr. 277–78; Smith Tr. 391. 291 Waite Tr. 323; see also id. (“We simply desired to have the proceeds from the derivative action, which was sort of a noneffort reward [for] OptimisCorp . . . go to the stockholders.”); id. at 315 (“It was found money. I would assume they were trying to run the company effectively, and that . . . this was for the stockholders.”).
50 the Derivative Action and in turn, the Arbitration. 292 Defendants viewed those
individuals as unfaithful fiduciaries responsible for Optimis’s pain, and likely to
squander or siphon the money instead of investing it back into Optimis for its
stockholders.293 Indeed, that is what happened. 294
Based on their testimony at trial, I do not find that Defendants subjectively
believed they were “acting against the interests of [Optimis] stockholders” in a
campaign “to advance their own interests solely.”295 I do not find Defendants acted
egregiously or in bad faith.296 With no circumstances warranting shifting fees, each
party bears their own.
292 JX 11. See Atkins Tr. 341 (“[T]he way I still see it is that [Sussman] and Morelli and the board 293
were completely tied together because [the Derivative Action] was against all of them.”); Smith Tr. 389; see also JX 11. 294 $2,400,000 of the Award was immediately used to repay the Fulcrum loan. See Price Tr. 155. Another $1,641,000 was used to repay Morelli. See JX 470 at 16; Price Tr. 156. The balance was used to repay Marble Bridge, legal fees, and vendors. See Price Tr. 156– 57. 295 Straight Path, 2024 WL 4602914, at *8. 296 See id. at *7–8 (“In other words, Jonas believed that he knew better than the Special Committee what was in the interests of both Straight Path and IDT; based on that belief, he bullied the Special Committee into giving up the Indemnification Claim, against its business judgment, and at a price set without any semblance of a fair process . . . . In other words, Jonas flagrantly breached his duties with respect to the indemnification asset. I do not find, however, that Jonas believed he was acting against the interests of Straight Path stockholders . . . . I find the exception to the American Rule unwarranted on that basis, therefore.” (emphasis in original)).
51 As the prevailing party on the merits of this action, Optimis is entitled to have
reasonable costs shifted in its favor under Court of Chancery Rule 54(d). 297
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Optimis is awarded $1.00 in nominal damages.
Within 30 days, the parties shall submit a proposed stipulated order implementing
this decision and, I believe, closing this case.
297 Ct. Ch. R. 54(d).
Related
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