Robert W. Seiden, Esq. v. Shu Kaneko

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 22, 2017
DocketCA 9861-VCS
StatusPublished

This text of Robert W. Seiden, Esq. v. Shu Kaneko (Robert W. Seiden, Esq. v. Shu Kaneko) 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
Robert W. Seiden, Esq. v. Shu Kaneko, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

EFiled: Mar 22 2017 02:36PM EDT Transaction ID 60372889 Case No. 9861-VCS IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ROBERT W. SEIDEN ESQ. in his capacity : as Receiver for Southern China Livestock, Inc., : : Plaintiff, : : v. : C.A. No. 9861-VCS : SHU KANEKO a/k/a JOSEPH KANEKO, : LIQIANG SONG a/k/a LIQUANG SONG : a/k/a LI SONG a/k/a SONG LIQIANG : a/k/a LI QIANG SONG a/k/a RICHARD LEE, : : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 13, 2017 Date Decided: March 22, 2017

Jonathan M. Stemerman, Esquire of Elliott Greenleaf, P.C., Wilmington, Delaware and Douglas E. Spelfogel, Esquire and Katherine R. Catanese, Esquire of Foley & Lardner LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Andrew D. Cordo, Esquire and Toni-Ann Platia, Esquire of Ashby & Geddes, Wilmington, Delaware and Adrienne M. Ward, Esquire and John B. Horgan, Esquire of Ellenoff Grossman & Schole LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Defendants.

SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor After accepting a capital infusion from United States-based investors through

a private placement, Southern China Livestock, Inc. (“SCLI” or “the Company”), a

Delaware holding company that owned a non-public, China-based operating

company, “went dark” leaving its investors scrambling to recover their money.

Unfortunately, this is a scenario that has been played out all too frequently in this

court. In this case, the investors tracked down the Company’s former President, Shu

Kaneko, here in the United States. A receiver was appointed for the Company and

the receiver initiated this action against Kaneko and others to recover, inter alia,

amounts that Kaneko allegedly diverted from Company accounts.

According to Kaneko, after he resigned from the Company but prior to the

initiation of this litigation, the Company gave him a general release of claims (the

“Release”) in exchange for his commitment to assist the Company in taking certain

steps to firm up its capital structure in anticipation of a potential sale of the Company

to a private equity firm. Kaneko has moved for summary judgment, inter alia, on

the ground that the receiver’s claims are barred by the Release. In response, the

receiver argues that the release fails for lack of consideration. After carefully

considering the undisputed evidence in the record, I am satisfied that the Release is

binding and enforceable and that it releases Kaneko from all claims asserted against

him in this litigation. Accordingly, Kaneko’s motion for summary judgment must

be GRANTED. Kaneko’s counterclaim for indemnification under 8 Del. C. §145(c)

1 is STAYED. His request for fee shifting is DENIED. A determination of Kaneko’s

entitlement to mandatory indemnification for his fees and expenses will await a final,

non-appealable judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

The summary judgment record is extensive; it is comprised of deposition

testimony and exhibits presented by both parties. For purposes of this Memorandum

Opinion, I have focused on the facts relevant to the dispute concerning the validity

of the Release.1

A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties

Robert W. Seiden, Esq. (the “Receiver”) was appointed as receiver over SCLI

by order of this Court dated January 17, 2014, following the entry of a default

judgment and subsequent contempt citation against SCLI in consolidated

Section 220 actions. Defendant, Shu Kaneko, a resident of California, was

previously President, Treasurer, Director, Secretary, and Chief Financial Officer of

Southern China Livestock International, Inc. (“SCL International”) and the

President, Treasurer, Director of Business Development and Secretary of SCLI.

1 The Court provided an extensive discussion of the background of this dispute in its decision on Kaneko’s motion to dismiss. Seiden v. Kaneko, 2015 WL 7289338 (Del. Ch. Nov. 3, 2015).

2 SCLI, formerly known as Expedite 4, Inc., is a Delaware corporation that

wholly owns SCL International. SCL International, in turn, is the holding company

for Beijing Huaxin Tianying Livestock Technology, Limited, which holds the equity

interests of its operating subsidiary, Jiangxi Yingtan Huaxin Livestock Limited. At

all relevant times, these entities were engaged in various capacities in the business

of breeding, raising and selling live hogs in the People’s Republic of China.

B. The Company Seeks to Recover Lost Shares

In 2012, the Company entered in a Business Services Agreement with HF

Capital Advisors, LLC (“HF Capital”) (defined in the agreement as “the Agent”).

HF Capital is controlled by Alan Lewis. It performs advisory services for clients

Lewis served through his employment with Hickey Freihofner, a division of Brill

Securities.2 Lewis had been previously engaged by the Company through Hickey

Freihofner when the Company was looking to mitigate the financial consequences

of its failure to consummate an initial public offering. His charge then was to solicit

a private equity buyer for the interests of the Company’s U.S. shareholders or,

alternatively, to help the company become listed on a foreign stock exchange.3 That

engagement was ultimately unsuccessful. In 2012, hope sprang anew when the

2 Aff. of Adrienne M. Ward in Supp. of Def. Shu Kaneko’s Mot. for Summ. J. (“Ward Aff.”) Ex. 32 (“Lewis Dep.”) 47:10–48:14. 3 Lewis Dep. 21:19–22:25.

3 Company contacted Lewis again to assist in the Company’s renewed efforts to

provide an exit for its U.S investors. The Company had been approached by two

separate China-based private equity firms that were interested in making a sizeable

investment and then taking SCLI public on the Chinese Main Board exchange.4

Lewis was interested in the business opportunity the Company was proposing,

particularly because his prior contingent fee arrangement with the Company had not

paid off. He was told that the focus of the engagement would be to address concerns

raised by the potential private equity investors that the Company needed “to fix [its]

structure with respect to . . . the [so-called] ‘management shares’ that were tied up

in a ‘Slow Walk Offshore Structure.’”5 Lewis offered to assist the Company in

securing the return of the management shares (at times referred to by the parties as

the “Song Held Shares”) in hopes that he might be given the opportunity to serve as

a broker-dealer on the capital raise from the two private equity firms.6

4 Lewis Dep. 43:17–44:2. 5 Lewis Dep. 44:8–16. The management shares represented 90% of the shares issued in the reverse merger transaction between SCLI and SCL International, which were to be held by Liquang Song pursuant to a lockup agreement. Song agreed to hold the shares because the Chinese stockholders could not acquire them directly due to certain Chinese laws and regulations by the State Administration of the Foreign Exchange. The stockholders, therefore, entered into earn-in agreements with Song which gave them the option to purchase the shares from Song for nominal consideration subject to the fulfillment of certain conditions. Ward Aff. Ex. 6 at 36. 6 Lewis Dep. 45:22–46:3.

4 Once engaged by SCLI, Lewis reached out to Kaneko to see if he might assist

in securing the return of the management shares.7 During the course of their initial

discussion, Kaneko made clear to Lewis that he had done nothing wrong and owed

the Company nothing.8 Nevertheless, according to Lewis, Kaneko appeared “eager

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