Production Resources Group, L.L.C. v. NCT Group, Inc.

863 A.2d 772, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 174, 2004 WL 2647593
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 17, 2004
DocketC.A. 114-N
StatusPublished
Cited by154 cases

This text of 863 A.2d 772 (Production Resources Group, L.L.C. v. NCT Group, Inc.) 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
Production Resources Group, L.L.C. v. NCT Group, Inc., 863 A.2d 772, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 174, 2004 WL 2647593 (Del. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiff Production Resources Group, L.L.C. (“PRG”) has been trying to collect a debt from defendant NCT Group, Inc. since 1999. PRG sought and obtained a judgment against NCT for approximately $2,000,000, plus interest, in the Connecticut court system. But PRG has been unsuccessful in collecting on the judgment, despite continuing legal proceedings in Connecticut to compel payment.

In the meantime, however, NCT continues to operate. The means by which it does so are unusual. NCT’s primary creditor, Carole Salkind, is the wife of a former NCT director and purportedly continues to put in new capital to permit the company to pay some of its bills (and its payroll). The source of funding is odd in several respects, including that: 1) Salkind allegedly has no means of her own to support investments of the level she has putatively made; 2) no fewer than eight companies controlled by her family allegedly act as paid consultants to NCT; 3) her latest cash financing has been placed into a company subsidiary to avoid the claims of creditors including PRG; and 4) Salkind has personally been issued preferred debt and warrants convertible into nearly a billion shares — a number far in excess of that authorized by the NCT charter. Perhaps most important, Salkind has allegedly been permitted to secure her status as a creditor by obtaining liens on NCT’s assets and therefore to stake out a claim superior to PRG and other NCT creditors. Given the massive number of shares pledged to her and her right to foreclose to collect the *775 defaulted debt NCT owes her, Salkind is fairly regarded as the company’s de facto controlling stockholder.

These facts, if true, are even more problematic because NCT’s own public filings reveal that it is balance-sheet insolvent and that it has been unable to pay several debts that came due. To compromise some of these debts, NCT has pledged or issued billions of shares of its stock— which trades in pennies — shares far in excess of what is authorized by its charter. At the same time, NCT has failed to hold an annual meeting since 2001 because, it says, the company cannot afford the cost. Perhaps for these reasons, NCT has been unable to secure approval from the SEC for its request to register certain shares it has pledged to PRG and others; NCT’s registration statement is on its ninth edition and has not yet received approval.

By this action, PRG is attempting to protect its interests (and it says, the interests of other creditors) by seeking the appointment of a receiver for NCT under 8 Del. C. § 291. According to PRG, NCT long ago became insolvent. Additionally, PRG alleges that NCT’s board and a top non-director officer have committed various breaches of fiduciary duty. Because NCT is insolvent, PRG argues that it may press these claims as direct claims that are not subject to the heightened pleading standard of Rule 28.1 and without overcoming the exculpatory charter provision that protects NCT directors from due care claims.

The defendants — NCT, its directors (who include its Chief Executive Officer as well as its President) and one of its officers, the company’s Chief Financial Officer — have responded with a motion to dismiss. For reasons that are not immediately apparent, the defendants did not move to stay this action under the McWane 1 doctrine. Instead, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

The defendants argue that PRG’s complaint fails to state a claim under § 291 or for breach of fiduciary duty. As to the § 291 claim, the defendants contend that PRG has failed to allege that NCT is insolvent and, alternatively, that even if NCT is insolvent, PRG has failed to allege additional facts that, if true, would invoke this court’s statutory discretion to appoint a receiver. All this case is, say the defendants, is a debt collection action, and the fact that a single creditor is unhappy does not, without more, provide grounds for the appointment of a receiver under § 291.

The defendants similarly argue that PRG has failed to plead facts that state a fiduciary duty claim. They say the complaint’s allegations of breach of duty, at most, plead a duty of care claim that is exculpated by a provision (authorized by 8 Del. C. § 102(b)(7)) within NCT’s certificate of incorporation. Even if NCT must be deemed insolvent for pleading purposes, the defendants argue that the fiduciary duty claims remain claims belonging to the corporation and within the scope of the exculpatory charter clause. Alternatively, the defendants argue that the complaint’s allegations of fiduciary breaches are entirely conclusory and fail even lenient notice pleading standards.

In this opinion, I largely deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss.

The § 291 claim is sustained because PRG has pled facts that, if true, show that *776 NCT is insolvent, both in the sense that its liabilities far exceed its assets and that it has been unable to pay its debts when they have come due. 2 Indeed, NCT’s pleading-stage arguments to the contrary come dangerously close to causing the court to invoke Rule 11 3 on its own motion as the company’s own public filings are, in themselves, sufficient to create a pleading-stage inference of insolvency.

Furthermore, the complaint sufficiently states a basis for the possible discretionary appointment of a receiver. The facts as pled suggest that PRG and its de facto controlling stockholder Salkind are engaging in bad faith conduct designed to advantage Salkind to the detriment of PRG and other NCT creditors. The allegations, when read in the plaintiff-friendly manner required by Rule 12, support an inference of self-dealing and deceptive conduct rather than a good-faith attempt to deal in an even-handed manner with all company creditors. Given the well-pled facts supporting an inference of insolvency, one evident purpose of § 291 — to protect creditors of insolvent corporations — is fairly implicated by the complaint. Therefore, the count in the complaint seeking a receiver is sustained.

The fiduciary duty count’s sustainability is a bit more problematic. PRG is not a stockholder. PRG has standing to raise fiduciary duty claims, however, because it has pled that NCT is insolvent. PRG believes that the insolvency of a corporation fundamentally transforms the liability threat that directors face. According to PRG, once a company becomes insolvent, the directors may not look to the protections of an exculpatory charter clause to insulate them from fiduciary duty claims brought by creditors even if the claims are predicated on an injury to the firm and would therefore be classified as derivative. 4 PRG says this result flows from the text of § 102(b)(7) which does not mention claims by creditors as being within the statute’s reach. Therefore, PRG asserts that it is free to press claims for breach of the duty of care against NCT’s directors.

In this opinion, I reject PRG’s reasoning on this point. Some of PRG’s fiduciary duty claims rest largely on generalized and conclusory assertions that NCT’s board and officers have mismanaged the firm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
863 A.2d 772, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 174, 2004 WL 2647593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/production-resources-group-llc-v-nct-group-inc-delch-2004.