IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
SECOND RUN, LLC f/k/a WEBATA, ) LLC ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. N25C-08-068 KMM v. ) CCLD ) 1WORLDSYNC, INC. ) ) Defendant. )
Submitted: February 9, 2026 Decided: April 24, 2026
Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss – DENIED
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
William D. Sullivan (argued), SULLIVAN NIMEROFF BROWN HILL LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Todd P. Lewis, Brian G. Thomas, CONNER & WINTERS, LLP, Fayetteville, Arkansas, Attorneys for Plaintiff Second Run, LLC f/k/a Webata, LLC.
Jared T. Green (argued), ESBROOK P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Christopher J. Esbrook, Zachary L. Sorman, ESBROOK P.C., Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Defendant 1WorldSync, Inc.
Miller, J. I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Second Run, LLC f/k/a Webata, LLC (“Webata”) entered into an
asset purchase agreement with Defendant 1WorldSync, Inc. (“1WorldSync”). The
agreement contemplated earn-out payments based on contractually defined Annual
Recurring Revenue (“ARR”) growth of certain Webata assets acquired by
1WorldSync. Webata brings a breach of contract claim arguing 1WorldSync
arbitrarily reduced revenue associated with Webata’s assets, unilaterally reducing
the earn-out payment owed. 1WorldSync seeks to dismiss Webata’s claim arguing
the parties delegated authority to resolve the dispute to an accounting firm (the
“Motion”).
In deciding the scope of authority delegated to a third-party decision maker,
courts look to the parties’ contract. Here, the parties agreed to an accountant true-
up mechanism—a form of an expert determination—limited to resolving disputes
over earn-out calculations. A review of Webata’s claim, however, shows that the
dispute is not over a calculation. Rather, the dispute centers on the correct
interpretation of ARR as defined in the parties’ contract. Because the dispute is
broader than an earn-out calculation, the accounting firm does not have the authority
to resolve it. Accordingly, 1WorldSync’s Motion is DENIED.
2 II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND 1
A. The APA
On March 7, 2023, Webata and 1WorldSync entered into an Asset Purchase
Agreement (“APA”).2 At the time of the transaction, Webata was “engaged in the
business of providing e-commerce product presentation, sales and supply chain,
digital shelf, category intelligence, benchmarking, intelligence and marketing and
promotion sales and software services (the “Business”).” 3
Under the APA, 1WorldSync acquired most of Webata’s assets including
REA products—Webata’s intellectual property in an e-commerce software and
analytics suite. 4 Rather than a one-time payment at closing, the parties agreed to
earn-out payments based on ARR growth associated with REA products (the
“Deferred Consideration Payments”) for each dollar in excess of fiscal year (“FY”)
2022. 5
The parties contemplated Deferred Consideration Payments for 2023 and
2024 6 and defined ARR as “the amount of predictable and recurring revenue
components of recurring revenue streams obtained by [1WorldSync] with respect to
1 The facts are derived from the Complaint. D.I. 1 (“Compl.”) and the documents it incorporates by reference. 2 Compl. 5, Ex. A (“APA”). 3 APA § A. 4 Compl. ¶ 6. 5 Id. ¶ 7. 6 Id.; APA § 2.9.1–2. 3 the Business (including subscriptions and maintenance revenues) normalized for a
single calendar year[.]” 7
Relevant here, APA Section 2.9.2 governs Deferred Consideration Payments
for 2024. It states in part: “[Webata] shall be eligible to receive…Deferred
Consideration [Payments]…determined as an amount equal to $1.00 for each $1.00
of ARR at December 31, 2024…in excess of FY 2022 ARR, up to a maximum (taken
together with any 2023 Deferred Consideration Payment) of $4,782,000 (the “2024
Deferred Consideration Payment”).”8 There was no 2023 Deferred Consideration
Payment due so calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment is
relatively simple, FY 2024 ARR minus FY 2022 ARR equals 2024 Deferred
Consideration Payment (up to a maximum of $4,782,000).
B. The ADR mechanism
To resolve disputes that arise from the calculation of Deferred Consideration
Payments, the parties agreed to an alternative dispute resolution (“ADR”)
mechanism. Section 2.9.3 requires 1WorldSync to “deliver to [Webata] a statement
setting forth in detail Buyer’s good faith calculation of the ARR for [FY 2024] and
the resulting calculation of the…2024 Deferred Consideration Payment[]” (the
“Deferred Consideration Statement”).9 Webata then has 30 days to review the
7 APA at Annex I-1. 8 Id. § 2.9.2. 9 Id. § 2.9.3. 4 Deferred Consideration Statement, during which 1WorldSync “shall provide, as
reasonably requested, by [Webata] and its accountants…reasonable access” to books
and records.10
Prior to the expiration of the 30-day review period, Section 2.9.4 grants
Webata the right to “upon written notice[,]…object to the calculations of the…[FY
2024] Deferred Consideration ARR…and/or the amount[] of [the 2024] Deferred
Consideration Payment” (“Objection Notice”). 11 “If [Webata] timely delivers to
[1WorldSync] an Objection Notice, [the parties] shall resolve such dispute in
accordance with the procedures set forth in Section 2.7.2.” 12
Section 2.7.2, in turn, provides that the parties
shall negotiate in good faith to resolve such dispute…. Notwithstanding such good faith effort, if [the parties] fail to resolve such dispute within [30] days after [Webata] provides such written notice of dispute to [1WorldSync], the specific matter or matters in dispute will be submitted to an independent, regionally recognized accounting firm mutually selected by [the parties] (the “Accounting Firm”), which firm will make a final and binding determination as to such matter or matters in dispute (and no other matters).13
C. The parties dispute the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment.
For FY 2024, 1WorldSync sold REA products in three configurations: (1) as
a stand-alone product; (2) as an “add-on” to existing subscriptions; and (3) as a
10 Id. § 2.9.3. 11 Id. § 2.9.4. 12 Id. 13 Id. § 2.7.2. 5 component of a “freemium package.”14 As alleged by Webata, in February 2025,
1WorldSync “validated” the amount of applicable ARR growth and that growth
entitled Webata to a 2024 Deferred Consideration Amount of $1,363,682.15 That
amount included ARR from each of the three configurations 1WorldSync sold REA
products. Despite that entitlement, and a subsequent demand by Webata for
payment,16 1WorldSync has refused to make payment.17 The basis for 1WorldSync’s
refusal, and at the center of this litigation, is 1WorldSync’s view that revenue
resulting from sales of REA products as part of an add-on or freemium package do
not count towards calculating ARR, or at a minimum, a discounted percentage
should be applied when compared to REA products sold on a stand-alone basis.
III. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
1WorldSync contends Webata’s breach of contract claim is ultimately a
disagreement concerning the calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration
Payment, which is contractually delegated to the ADR mechanism. 18
Webata responds that the dispute is not over a calculation but is one of contract
interpretation, outside the scope of the Accounting Firm’s authority. 19 Webata’s
argument is that it does not challenge the methodology utilized to arrive at the 2024
14 Compl. ¶ 9, Ex.
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
SECOND RUN, LLC f/k/a WEBATA, ) LLC ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. N25C-08-068 KMM v. ) CCLD ) 1WORLDSYNC, INC. ) ) Defendant. )
Submitted: February 9, 2026 Decided: April 24, 2026
Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss – DENIED
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
William D. Sullivan (argued), SULLIVAN NIMEROFF BROWN HILL LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Todd P. Lewis, Brian G. Thomas, CONNER & WINTERS, LLP, Fayetteville, Arkansas, Attorneys for Plaintiff Second Run, LLC f/k/a Webata, LLC.
Jared T. Green (argued), ESBROOK P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Christopher J. Esbrook, Zachary L. Sorman, ESBROOK P.C., Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Defendant 1WorldSync, Inc.
Miller, J. I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Second Run, LLC f/k/a Webata, LLC (“Webata”) entered into an
asset purchase agreement with Defendant 1WorldSync, Inc. (“1WorldSync”). The
agreement contemplated earn-out payments based on contractually defined Annual
Recurring Revenue (“ARR”) growth of certain Webata assets acquired by
1WorldSync. Webata brings a breach of contract claim arguing 1WorldSync
arbitrarily reduced revenue associated with Webata’s assets, unilaterally reducing
the earn-out payment owed. 1WorldSync seeks to dismiss Webata’s claim arguing
the parties delegated authority to resolve the dispute to an accounting firm (the
“Motion”).
In deciding the scope of authority delegated to a third-party decision maker,
courts look to the parties’ contract. Here, the parties agreed to an accountant true-
up mechanism—a form of an expert determination—limited to resolving disputes
over earn-out calculations. A review of Webata’s claim, however, shows that the
dispute is not over a calculation. Rather, the dispute centers on the correct
interpretation of ARR as defined in the parties’ contract. Because the dispute is
broader than an earn-out calculation, the accounting firm does not have the authority
to resolve it. Accordingly, 1WorldSync’s Motion is DENIED.
2 II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND 1
A. The APA
On March 7, 2023, Webata and 1WorldSync entered into an Asset Purchase
Agreement (“APA”).2 At the time of the transaction, Webata was “engaged in the
business of providing e-commerce product presentation, sales and supply chain,
digital shelf, category intelligence, benchmarking, intelligence and marketing and
promotion sales and software services (the “Business”).” 3
Under the APA, 1WorldSync acquired most of Webata’s assets including
REA products—Webata’s intellectual property in an e-commerce software and
analytics suite. 4 Rather than a one-time payment at closing, the parties agreed to
earn-out payments based on ARR growth associated with REA products (the
“Deferred Consideration Payments”) for each dollar in excess of fiscal year (“FY”)
2022. 5
The parties contemplated Deferred Consideration Payments for 2023 and
2024 6 and defined ARR as “the amount of predictable and recurring revenue
components of recurring revenue streams obtained by [1WorldSync] with respect to
1 The facts are derived from the Complaint. D.I. 1 (“Compl.”) and the documents it incorporates by reference. 2 Compl. 5, Ex. A (“APA”). 3 APA § A. 4 Compl. ¶ 6. 5 Id. ¶ 7. 6 Id.; APA § 2.9.1–2. 3 the Business (including subscriptions and maintenance revenues) normalized for a
single calendar year[.]” 7
Relevant here, APA Section 2.9.2 governs Deferred Consideration Payments
for 2024. It states in part: “[Webata] shall be eligible to receive…Deferred
Consideration [Payments]…determined as an amount equal to $1.00 for each $1.00
of ARR at December 31, 2024…in excess of FY 2022 ARR, up to a maximum (taken
together with any 2023 Deferred Consideration Payment) of $4,782,000 (the “2024
Deferred Consideration Payment”).”8 There was no 2023 Deferred Consideration
Payment due so calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment is
relatively simple, FY 2024 ARR minus FY 2022 ARR equals 2024 Deferred
Consideration Payment (up to a maximum of $4,782,000).
B. The ADR mechanism
To resolve disputes that arise from the calculation of Deferred Consideration
Payments, the parties agreed to an alternative dispute resolution (“ADR”)
mechanism. Section 2.9.3 requires 1WorldSync to “deliver to [Webata] a statement
setting forth in detail Buyer’s good faith calculation of the ARR for [FY 2024] and
the resulting calculation of the…2024 Deferred Consideration Payment[]” (the
“Deferred Consideration Statement”).9 Webata then has 30 days to review the
7 APA at Annex I-1. 8 Id. § 2.9.2. 9 Id. § 2.9.3. 4 Deferred Consideration Statement, during which 1WorldSync “shall provide, as
reasonably requested, by [Webata] and its accountants…reasonable access” to books
and records.10
Prior to the expiration of the 30-day review period, Section 2.9.4 grants
Webata the right to “upon written notice[,]…object to the calculations of the…[FY
2024] Deferred Consideration ARR…and/or the amount[] of [the 2024] Deferred
Consideration Payment” (“Objection Notice”). 11 “If [Webata] timely delivers to
[1WorldSync] an Objection Notice, [the parties] shall resolve such dispute in
accordance with the procedures set forth in Section 2.7.2.” 12
Section 2.7.2, in turn, provides that the parties
shall negotiate in good faith to resolve such dispute…. Notwithstanding such good faith effort, if [the parties] fail to resolve such dispute within [30] days after [Webata] provides such written notice of dispute to [1WorldSync], the specific matter or matters in dispute will be submitted to an independent, regionally recognized accounting firm mutually selected by [the parties] (the “Accounting Firm”), which firm will make a final and binding determination as to such matter or matters in dispute (and no other matters).13
C. The parties dispute the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment.
For FY 2024, 1WorldSync sold REA products in three configurations: (1) as
a stand-alone product; (2) as an “add-on” to existing subscriptions; and (3) as a
10 Id. § 2.9.3. 11 Id. § 2.9.4. 12 Id. 13 Id. § 2.7.2. 5 component of a “freemium package.”14 As alleged by Webata, in February 2025,
1WorldSync “validated” the amount of applicable ARR growth and that growth
entitled Webata to a 2024 Deferred Consideration Amount of $1,363,682.15 That
amount included ARR from each of the three configurations 1WorldSync sold REA
products. Despite that entitlement, and a subsequent demand by Webata for
payment,16 1WorldSync has refused to make payment.17 The basis for 1WorldSync’s
refusal, and at the center of this litigation, is 1WorldSync’s view that revenue
resulting from sales of REA products as part of an add-on or freemium package do
not count towards calculating ARR, or at a minimum, a discounted percentage
should be applied when compared to REA products sold on a stand-alone basis.
III. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
1WorldSync contends Webata’s breach of contract claim is ultimately a
disagreement concerning the calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration
Payment, which is contractually delegated to the ADR mechanism. 18
Webata responds that the dispute is not over a calculation but is one of contract
interpretation, outside the scope of the Accounting Firm’s authority. 19 Webata’s
argument is that it does not challenge the methodology utilized to arrive at the 2024
14 Compl. ¶ 9, Ex. B (“Demand Letter”) at 1. 15 Id. ¶¶ 10–11. 16 Id. ¶ 12; see generally Demand Letter. 17 Compl. ¶ 12. 18 D.I. 12 (“Mot.”) at 8–9. 19 See generally D.I. 16 (Answering Brief (“AB”)). 6 Deferred Consideration Payment.20 Instead, it challenges 1WorldSync’s
interpretation of ARR that 1WorldSync unilaterally applied that had the effect of
significantly reducing the resulting Deferred Consideration Payment. 21
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A party may move to dismiss a complaint under Superior Court Civil Rule
12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. 22 Under Rule 12(b)(1), “[t]he Court
‘need not accept the plaintiff’s factual allegations as true and is free to consider facts
not alleged in the complaint.’” 23 The plaintiff bears the burden to prove jurisdiction
exists.24
“Rule 12(b)(1) is a suitable vehicle for raising arguments about why a court
should not exercise…jurisdiction” it otherwise has. 25 Accordingly, courts entertain
motions brought under Rule 12(b)(1) that seek dismissal in favor of contracted for
alternative dispute resolution.26 “[A]nd such a motion will be granted where it
20 AB at 8; D.I. 28 (Webata’s Supplemental Brief) at 7–8. 21 AB at 7–8. 22 Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(b)(1). 23 In re Proton Pump Inhibitors Products Liab. Litig., 2023 WL 5165406, at *5 (Del. Super. Aug. 11, 2023) (quoting Appriva S’holder Litig. Co., LLC v. EV3, Inc., 937 A.2d 1275, 1284 n.14 (Del. 2007)) (cleaned up). 24 Appriva S’holder Litig., 937 A.2d at 1284 n.14. 25 Gandhi-Kapoor v. Hone Capital LLC, 307 A.3d 328, 342 (Del. Ch. 2023). 26 Buzzfeed Media Enterprises, Inc. v. Anderson, 2024 WL 2187054, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 15, 2024). 7 appears that as a matter of established doctrine the Court should not exercise its
jurisdiction.” 27
V. ANALYSIS
A. What is the ADR mechanism?
“Binding alternative dispute mechanisms fall along a spectrum[.]” 28 The
Court’s first task is to determine where along the spectrum the parties’ ADR
mechanism falls.
At one end is an arbitration that has the look and feel of a judicial proceeding, except that it is handled privately and with less formality. At the other end is an expert determination in which an expert with technical skills or knowledge makes a determination, largely on its own, and with only limited party input.29
Between an arbitration and expert determination is the accountant true-up
mechanism, a “beefed-up expert determination.” 30 Where, “[i]n one standard use
case, the parties agree that any dispute concerning the values reported in the financial
schedules used by the parties to determine the amount of any price adjustment are to
be submitted to an independent accounting firm for a final and binding
determination.”31
27 Id. 28 Paul v. Rockpoint Group, LLC, 2024 WL 89643, at *10 (Del. Ch. Jan. 9, 2024). 29 Archkey Intermediate Holdings Inc. v. Mona, 302 A.3d 975, 989 (Del. Ch. 2023). 30 Id. at 995. 31 Id. at 991 (internal quotations and citation omitted). 8 To place a parties’ ADR mechanism somewhere on that spectrum, Delaware
courts employ the authority test. 32 To do so, courts look to the plain language of the
parties’ agreement to “examine the nature and scope of the authority that the
agreement provides.”33 Here, the parties’ ADR mechanism grants the Accounting
Firm the authority to make a “final and binding” determination only as to the specific
matter(s) raised in the Objection Notice. The Objection Notice itself grants Webata
the limited right to object to calculations of the FY 2024 ARR or the 2024 Deferred
Consideration Amount. Those features are emblematic of an accountant true-up
mechanism. It includes a dispute resolution process for challenging the calculations
of a financial statement where the parties—after a negotiation period—submit those
disputes to an independent accountant firm for a final and binding determination.34
That makes clear that the Accounting Firm is not an arbitrator and is thus without
the broad legal authority typically designated for arbitration. Accordingly, the ADR
mechanism here calls for a beefed-up expert determination by way of an accountant
true-up.
B. Can the Accounting Firm determine the parties’ dispute?
Having determined the role of the Accounting Firm, the Court’s next task is
to decide whether the Accounting Firm can determine the parties’ dispute. The
32 Id. at 993; see also Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, 297 A.3d 610, 617–20. (Del. 2023). 33 Archkey, 302 A.3d at 993. 34 See id. (discussing the typical characteristics of an account true-up mechanism). 9 parties offer opposing views. 1WorldSync argues that the ARR dispute is ultimately
a dispute concerning the calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment,
thus it is delegated to the Accounting Firm for determination.35 Webata contends
that its allegations are primarily a dispute over contract interpretation, not a
calculation.36 This is because, as alleged, 1WorldSync unilaterally and drastically
decreased the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment by discounting ARR
attributable to REA products sales as part of subscription add-ons and freemium
packages in contravention of the APA defined ARR.
“In the case of a typical expert determination, the authority granted to the
expert is limited to deciding a specific factual dispute concerning a matter within the
special expertise of the decision maker, usually concerning an issue of valuation.”37
“That does not mean, however, that an expert has no ability to interpret contract
terms.”38 Rather, “[i]t may be necessary for the expert, in order to decide the point
which has been referred to him, to decide a disputed point of interpretation of the
contract between the parties.”39 Thus, “in each case it is necessary to examine the
contract itself in order to decide what the parties intended should be a matter for the
exclusive decision of the expert.”40 Delaware courts reject contractual parties’
35 Mot. at 7–9. 36 AB. at 1, 7–9. 37 Penton Bus. Media Holdings, LLC v. Informa PLC, 252 A.3d, 464 (Del. Ch. 2018) (cleaned up). 38 Paul, 2024 WL 89643, at *11. 39 Archkey, 302 A.3d at 997–98 (internal quotations and citations omitted). 40 Penton, 252 A.3d at 465 (internal quotations and citations omitted). 10 efforts to escape the authority of third-party decision makers by couching delegable
disputes as questions of law. 41
The parties’ grant of authority makes clear that the Accounting Firm has the
exclusive authority to determine disputes as to the calculation of the 2024 Deferred
Consideration Payment. It is also true that, at a glance, the parties’ dispute here is
over the calculation of the 2024 Deferred Consideration Payment. But just as
couching delegable disputes in law will not allow a party to escape an alternative
dispute mechanism, 42 couching a dispute in law as a dispute of fact will not operate
to cause this Court to forbear exercising subject matter jurisdiction over a claim. 43
Here, the crux of the parties’ dispute is their competing interpretations of
ARR. That is, Webata’s contention is not that 1WorldSync miscalculated the FY
2024 ARR—in fact, Webata argues the opposite.44 Webata’s contention is that after
1WorldSync calculated the FY 2024 ARR and “validated the amount” it arbitrarily
discounted ARR attributable to sales of REA products as part of an add-on or
freemium package.45 While an expert may be able to interpret a contractual
41 Stone v. Nationstar Mortgage LLC, 2020 WL 4037337, at *8 (Del. Ch. July 6, 2020). 42 Id. 43 See I Am Athlete, LLC v. IM EnMotive, LLC, 2024 WL 4904685, at *7 (Del. Super. Nov. 27, 2024); see also Fortis Advisors, LLC v. Demantic Corp., 2022 WL 18359410, at *16 (Del. Super. Dec. 29, 2022) (finding an alternative dispute resolution mechanism inapplicable because the dispute concerned a contested meaning of a contractually defined term, not a “calculation that an accounting firm would be equipped to resolve[.]”). 44 AB at 4–5, 7. 45 Id. at 4–5, 7–8. 11 provision when deciding a factual dispute, there must be a question of fact to decide.
And as 1WorldSync acknowledges “[t]he dispute here turns on the definition and
application of the term ‘ARR,’ which the APA define[s]….” 46 Here, the parties
delegated disputes concerning calculations, they did not delegate disputes where the
only question to be answered is the correct interpretation of a contractual term.
The inability to delegate the parties’ dispute to the Accounting Firm is further
confirmed by the APA’s ambiguity as to direct versus add-ons or freemium package
sales of REA products. “A provision in a contract is ambiguous when the provision
in controversy is reasonably or fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may
have two or more different meanings.”47 ARR is defined generally to include “the
amount of predictable and recurring revenue components of recurring revenue
streams obtained by [1WorldSync] with respect to the Business….”48 That
definition does not differentiate between types of sales, nor does it foreclose such
differentiation. Both parties offer different, but reasonable, interpretations of how
the APA intended to treat ARR in this context. Thus, if the Court followed
1WorldSync’s view, the Accounting Firm would be tasked with resolving an
46 D.I. 27 (1WorldSync’s Supplemental Brief) at 5. 47 BitGo Holdings, Inc. v. Galaxy Digital Holdings, Ltd. 319 A.3d 310, 323 (Del. 2024) (internal quotations and citations omitted). 48 APA at Annex I-1. 12 ambiguity in the APA. That is a task well outside the Accounting Firm’s authority
to resolve disputes concerning calculations.
VI. CONCLUSION
Because the parties’ dispute is one that purely concerns the correct
interpretation of a contract and is absent a dispute of fact, the Accounting Firm is
without authority to decide it. That conclusion is further confirmed by the ambiguity
of the very term that the parties dispute. Accordingly, 1WorldSync’s Motion is
DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/Kathleen M. Miller Kathleen M. Miller, Judge