EFiled: Oct 20 2014 02:12PM EDT Transaction ID 56218350 Case No. 9006-VCN COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
JOHN W. NOBLE 417 SOUTH STATE STREET VICE CHANCELLOR DOVER, DELAWARE 19901 TELEPHONE: (302) 739-4397 FACSIMILE: (302) 739-6179
October 20, 2014
Eric M. Andersen, Esquire David L. Finger, Esquire Mark Andersen, P.A. Finger & Slanina, LLC 3513 Concord Pike, Suite 3300 One Commerce Center Wilmington, DE 19803 1201 N. Orange Street, 7th Floor Wilmington, DE 19801
Re: Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN Date Submitted: June 23, 2014
Dear Counsel:
Defendants PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. (“PCA”) and Konrad H.
Kaeding (“Kaeding,” and with PCA, the “Defendants”) have moved to dismiss or
stay Pamela Willis (“Willis”) and Physicians Interventional Pain Center, LLC’s
(“PIPC,” and with Willis, the “Plaintiffs”) complaint (the “Complaint”). 1 Through
the Complaint, Plaintiffs seek redress for Defendants’ alleged failure to proceed
with agreements intended to transfer PCA’s business to the Plaintiffs. Defendants
argue that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over what are essentially
1 PCA is a Virginia corporation, and PIPC is a Delaware limited liability company. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 2
breach of contract claims and, regardless of jurisdiction, the Court should stay the
action pending resolution of an action in Virginia filed less than one week before
the Complaint.
I. BACKGROUND2
PCA is a pain clinic franchise located in Blacksburg, Virginia. PCA focuses
on diagnosing and managing chronic pain. The company was formed on
September 21, 2011 with Kaeding as its sole stockholder. Kaeding managed PCA
as an absentee owner through 2012, while also employing a full-time practice
manager. By 2012, the pain clinic’s business was struggling and Kaeding
consulted with Willis regarding the company’s financial situation. Following their
discussions, which continued through the summer and fall of 2012, Willis
reviewed PCA’s records and contracts and eventually travelled to Blacksburg to
inspect the business first hand.
2 This factual summary is based on the well-pleaded allegations in the Complaint. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 3
On December 6, PCA held a board meeting, with Kaeding and Willis as the
two attendees. PCA retained Willis as a consultant in exchange for a percentage of
the business’s profit and a right to purchase assets or equity of PCA. At the
December 6 meeting, PCA further resolved to engage Willis as a practice manager
to replace the then current manager who had allegedly engaged in unethical
business practices.
The day after the board meeting, Willis and Kaeding traveled to Virginia to
meet with PCA’s staff and transition Willis into her new position. From then until
March 2013, Willis managed PCA, improving its financial condition. She ran the
day-to-day operations, supervised staff, paid bills, kept the books, and marketed
the business. Because of her success, Willis and Kaeding discussed how she
would be compensated for her work. These discussions allegedly included the
negotiation of a sale of PCA’s assets to Willis.
On February 1, in contemplation of the asset sale, Willis signed PIPC’s
Certificate of Formation and mailed it to the Delaware Secretary of State. On the
same day, PCA held a board meeting in part to authorize the sale of PCA’s assets
to PIPC (the “Asset Sale”). On February 5, PIPC’s Certificate of Formation was Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 4
filed by the Secretary of State and PCA passed a corporate resolution confirming
the Asset Sale and a winding down of PCA’s business.
The terms of the sale included (i) PCA retaining a right to use its assets
while still in operation and (ii) PIPC agreeing to lease a space in Ridley Township,
Pennsylvania in a building owned by a limited liability company owned by
Kaeding. PIPC would also take over PCA’s Blacksburg operations.
By the end of the month, Willis had opened bank accounts for PIPC, and in
March, she began the credentialing process to move providers from PCA to PIPC.
She also signed a lease on PIPC’s behalf for the Pennsylvania property referenced
in PCA’s February 5 board resolution. Willis continued to manage PCA and
prepare for the transfer of business to PIPC until 2013. She discovered unbilled
work of approximately $200,000 and attempted to collect that debt. PCA’s
business continued to improve and become profitable.
In July 2013, Kaeding began to interfere with Willis’s operation of PCA. He
allegedly made ill-advised promises to staff, interacted with employees managed
by Willis without her knowledge, and decided that a biller was to deal solely with
him, despite his lack of knowledge regarding the billing operation. Kaeding Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 5
supposedly slandered Willis and undermined her authority. Then, in late August,
Kaeding traveled to Virginia to take authority away from Willis more completely.
In September, he locked Willis out of the clinic and attempted to halt the transfer
of PCA’s business to PIPC by shredding electronic fund transfer agreements and
diverting money into PCA’s accounts.
Kaeding continued his course of conduct into October by canceling Willis’s
PCA credit card, closing a joint account at Bank of America, and locking Willis
out of company software, bank accounts, insurance carrier accounts, and the
company’s on-site mailbox. On October 1, 2013, Kaeding filed a certificate of
amendment for PIPC with the Delaware Secretary of State claiming that he was the
sole owner of PIPC and that Willis had formed PIPC as his personal assistant.
II. CURRENT PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiffs brought this action on October 11, 2013, shortly after Defendants
sued Willis in Virginia.3
3 Kaeding Aff. Ex. B. While the Complaint is dated October 11, 2013, it was not e-filed until October 16, 2013. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 6
Plaintiffs assert claims of fraud, equitable fraud, negligent misrepresentation,
breach of contract, conversion, and unjust enrichment. They request an order
requiring Defendants to complete the Asset Sale and seek damages for conversion
and breach of contract, and against Kaeding for fraud. To remedy their equitable
fraud and unjust enrichment claims, Plaintiffs request an equitable accounting and
a constructive trust on fifty percent of PCA’s profits from December 2012 to
present. They also seek an equitable accounting and a constructive trust on all
revenue belonging to PIPC from October 1, 2013 to present.
Defendants argue that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over these
claims, alleging that Plaintiffs have pleaded neither an equitable cause of action
nor a basis for equitable relief. They further contend that Plaintiffs’ non-contract
claims should be dismissed as duplicative of the contract claims. Even if the Court
has subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claims, the Defendants assert that
the action should be stayed pending resolution of ongoing proceedings in Virginia.
III. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
As a court of equity with limited subject matter jurisdiction, this Court has
the power to hear cases involving (i) the assertion of an equitable right, (ii) the Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 7
request for an equitable remedy, or (iii) a claim subject to a statutory grant of
jurisdiction. The “clean-up” doctrine allows the Court to hear claims involving
legal rights and remedies, but only if some other part of the case provides a basis
for equitable jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs invoke three separate theories of equitable relief and plead one
equitable cause of action. The equitable relief sought includes (i) specific
performance of the Asset Sale, (ii) an equitable accounting, and (iii) the imposition
of constructive trusts on PCA’s profits from December 2012 to present and
revenue belonging to PIPC from October 1, 2013 onward. The equitable right
asserted is the allegation of equitable fraud. While the Court has the inherent
power to hear claims invoking equitable rights, a request for an equitable remedy
only serves as a basis for the Court’s jurisdiction if a legal remedy cannot
sufficiently compensate the Plaintiffs.
A. Specific Performance
Plaintiffs seek an award of specific performance to compel Defendants to
complete the Asset Sale, as approved by PCA’s February 5, 2013 board resolution.
That resolution “approve[d] the sale of all assets of [PCA] to [PIPC]” as part of Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 8
PCA’s process of “wind[ing] down its affairs and ceas[ing] operations in the most
economically efficient manner possible.”4 Plaintiffs request an order compelling
Defendants to transfer PCA’s assets to remedy PCA’s breach of its alleged promise
to sell them. The relevant question is whether an equitable remedy may be
necessary to redress Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries.
Specific performance for the transfer of property “is an extraordinary
remedy predicated upon the exercise of equitable discretion, and the Court will not
award it lightly.”5 “[T]o establish jurisdiction in the Court of Chancery in the first
instance . . . it is necessary for the plaintiff to demonstrate that the remedy at law is
inadequate.”6 Personal property is not generally considered unique and in cases
dealing with such property, the Court usually assumes that damages are an
4 Compl. Ex. C. 5 CC Fin. LLC v. Wireless Props., LLC, 2012 WL 4862337, at *8 (Del. Ch. Oct. 1, 2012) (citations omitted). 6 Donald J. Wolfe, Jr. & Michael A. Pittenger (“Wolfe & Pittenger”), Corporate and Commercial Practice in the Delaware Court of Chancery, § 12.03[b][2], at 12- 41 (2013). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 9
adequate award for an aggrieved party since property of equal kind and quality can
typically be purchased in the market.7
While Plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing the Court’s equitable subject
matter jurisdiction, the issue “is determined from the face of the complaint as of
the time it was filed, with all material factual allegations assumed to be true.” 8 The
Court looks beyond the language of the Complaint to determine the actual
substance and nature of the relief Plaintiffs seek.9
Plaintiffs’ arguments for specific performance essentially rest on three
theories: (i) PCA’s assets are unique, (ii) the Defendants’ insolvency makes a legal
remedy impractical, and (iii) the nature of the legal remedy would be speculative
and difficult to determine. The second and third arguments do not support the
Court’s jurisdiction in this case.
Although the Court “may consider insolvency as a factor in determining
equitable jurisdiction,” a plaintiff bears the burden of alleging “particular details as
7 Id. at § 2.03[b][2], at 2-67. 8 Prestancia Mgmt. Gp., Inc. v. Va. Heritage Found., 2005 WL 1364616, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 27, 2005) (quoting Block Fin. Corp. v. Inisoft Corp., 2003 WL 136182, at *2 n.4 (Del. Ch. Jan. 7, 2003)). 9 Id. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 10
to the financial strength” of a defendant.10 Plaintiffs have not put forward any
details of Defendants’ financial positions. The fact that Defendants have argued
that proceeding with litigation simultaneously in Delaware and Virginia would be
financially burdensome does not establish that Defendants are insolvent or
incapable of satisfying a money judgment.
There is also no support in the Complaint for the assertion that, absent a
finding that PCA’s assets are unique, a legal remedy would be impracticable or
speculative. In certain circumstances, the Court possesses equitable jurisdiction
when a legal remedy would almost certainly be incomplete due to the full scope of
a plaintiff’s damages being not readily quantifiable.11 However, “it must appear
from the face of the complaint that a trier of fact would be unable to quantify
damages.”12 The Complaint fails to indicate why damages could not be calculated
for what seems to fundamentally be a breach of contract case. Although Plaintiffs
argue that the pro forma projections that PCA’s franchisor provided PCA were
10 Hillsboro Energy, LLC v. Secure Energy, Inc., 2008 WL 4561227, at *3 (Del. Ch. May 27, 2005). 11 Wolfe & Pittenger, § 2.03[b][2], at 2-65-66. 12 Id. (citing Int’l Bus. Machs. Corp. v. Comdisco, Inc., 602 A.2d 74, 79 (Del. Ch. 1991)). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 11
“incompetent and misleading,” it is not clear why a third party would not be able to
adequately value a pain center franchise. Since Plaintiffs have provided no support
beyond conclusory statements as to why a standard damages award would be
impracticable or speculative, that argument, standing alone, fails to provide the
Court with equitable jurisdiction.
However, the Court may exercise equitable jurisdiction when a plaintiff
requests specific performance and the subject matter of the action is unique. In
such a case, damages at law are presumptively insufficient. Plaintiffs seem to
believe that the Court has subject matter jurisdiction to specially enforce all
business combinations, and since an asset sale can be one form of business
combination, the Court has jurisdiction to enforce the Asset Sale. However, as the
Court has made clear, the “fundamental question” in whether specific performance
to enforce a business combination is appropriate is: “is this a truly unique
opportunity that cannot be adequately monetized.”13
13 In re IBP, Inc. S’holders Litig., 789 A.2d 14, 82 (Del. Ch. 2001). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 12
The essential question in establishing the Court’s jurisdiction based on a
request for an equitable remedy is always whether there is a “complete, practical
and efficient” remedy at law.14 The Complaint is mostly devoid of allegations that
damages would not be an adequate remedy or that PCA’s assets are unique.
However, when determining whether equitable jurisdiction exists, the Court views
the allegations in the Complaint “in light of what [Plaintiffs] really seek[] to gain
by bringing [their] cause of action.”15 If the Court determines that the assets are
“unique, rare, incapable of being reproduced, or of some special value to the owner
that defies pecuniary estimate or valuation, equity may intervene . . . .” 16
Moreover, personal property may be deemed unique when one cannot purchase
replacements in the market of equal kind and quality.17
Although the Court is largely uninformed of the nature of PCA’s assets,
there are facts suggesting that Plaintiffs seek property that cannot be obtained in
the market. The Complaint alleges that Willis worked hard to turn PCA around
14 Int’l Bus. Machs., 602 A.2d at 78. 15 Reeves v. Transp. Data Commc’ns, Inc., 318 A.2d 147, 149 (Del. Ch. 1974). 16 Wolfe & Pittenger, § 2.03[b][2], at 2-66 (citing 4 J. POMEROY, A TREATISE ON EQUITY JURISPRUDENCE § 1402 (5th ed. 1941)). 17 Id. at 2-67. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 13
from a failing business to a profitable one. She presumably became familiar with
PCA’s business during her tenure with the company. Willis may be able to utilize
PCA’s assets more effectively than different, but similar, assets potentially
obtainable in the market. Therefore, PCA’s collection of assets may have special
value. Further, PCA apparently has exclusive franchise rights in Blacksburg,
Virginia. The Complaint alleges that PIPC was to take over the Blacksburg
operations of PCA after the Asset Sale, and by their very nature, exclusive rights
cannot be obtained from another source.
Plaintiffs may ultimately face issues of proof in obtaining specific
performance. In addition to establishing that the remedy at law is inadequate,
Plaintiffs will need to show that the Asset Sale agreement is clear and definite and
that Willis has substantially fulfilled, or is ready, willing, and able to fulfill, her
contractual obligations. Defendants question whether Plaintiffs are able to meet
their burdens. However, the question of whether the Complaint adequately
supports the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction should not be confused with
whether an equitable remedy is ultimately awarded on the merits. Taking all
factual allegations in the Complaint as true, Plaintiffs may be entitled to specific Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 14
performance if successful on the merits. The fact that specific performance may
ultimately be unwarranted does not change this finding.18 Once the Court
determines equitable relief is appropriate, the Court has the power to decide legal
aspects of a claim even if the Court ultimately determines that equitable relief
cannot be granted.19
B. Other Bases for Equitable Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Under the equitable “clean-up” doctrine, it is common for the Court to hear
cases that include legal claims in addition to equitable ones. “[I]f a controversy is
vested with ‘equitable features’ which would support Chancery jurisdiction of at
least a part of the controversy, then the Chancellor has discretion to resolve the
remaining portions of the controversy as well.”20 Some reasons that may persuade
the Court to exercise jurisdiction over portions of a controversy for which there is
an adequate remedy at law are “to resolve a factual issue which must be
18 Harman v. Masoneilan Int’l, Inc., 442 A.2d 487, 502 (Del. 1982); see also Wolfe & Pittenger, § 2.03[b][2], at 2-59. 19 Prestancia Mgmt. Gp., 2005 WL 1364616, at *3 (quoting Beal Bank SSB v. Lucks, 2000 WL 710194, at *2 (Del. Ch. May 23, 2000)). 20 Getty Ref. & Mktg. Co. v. Park Oil, Inc., 385 A.2d 147, 149 (Del. Ch. 1978), aff’d, 407 A.2d 533 (Del. 1979). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 15
determined in the proceedings; to avoid multiplicity of suits; to promote judicial
efficiency; to do full justice; to avoid great expense; to afford complete relief in
one action; and to overcome insufficient modes of procedure at law.”21 When the
facts involved in the equitable and legal counts are the same or interrelated, the
Court is inclined to exercise jurisdiction over the entire controversy.22 Given that
all of Plaintiffs’ claims arise from the same set of relevant facts and involve the
same parties, the Court exercises its discretion to retain jurisdiction over all
claims.23
IV. MOTION TO STAY
Defendants argue that even if the Court has subject matter jurisdiction over
Plaintiffs’ claims, the Court should stay these proceedings pending the outcome of
the lawsuit that Kaeding and PCA filed against Willis in Virginia on October 10,
2013. The parties agree that McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman
21 Id. at 150. 22 Id. 23 The Court does not have power to award punitive damages in the absence of an express statutory provision. Great Am. Opportunities, Inc. v. Cherrydale Fundraising, LLC, 2010 WL 338219, at *28 n.318 (Del. Ch. Jan. 29, 2010) (quoting Beals v. Washington Int’l, Inc., 386 A.2d 1156, 1158 (Del. Ch. 1978)). Therefore, the Court cannot entertain Plaintiffs’ requests for punitive damages. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 16
Engineering Co.24 controls the question of whether the Court should stay these
proceedings.
The Court will not stay an action as a matter of right solely because a prior
action is pending in another jurisdiction involving the same parties and issues.25
However, in certain circumstances, the Court is moved by “considerations of
comity and the necessities of an orderly and efficient administration of justice,” to
freely exercise its discretion in favor of a stay.26 A stay is favored when (i) there is
a prior action pending in another jurisdiction, (ii) that action involves similar
parties and issues, and (iii) the foreign court can render prompt and complete
justice.27 McWane’s first-filed rule recognizes that “litigation should be confined
to the forum in which it is first commenced, and a defendant should not be
permitted to defeat the plaintiff’s choice of forum in a pending suit by commencing
litigation involving the same cause of action in another jurisdiction of its own
24 263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970). 25 McWane, 263 A.2d at 283. 26 Id. 27 Xpress Mgmt., Inc. v. Hot Wings Int’l, Inc., 2007 WL 1660741, at *4 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2007). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 17
choosing.”28 Because the McWane factors are satisfied and there is no compelling
argument to overcome the attendant presumption to stay, this action will be stayed
pending the Virginia proceedings.
A. The Virginia Action Was Filed First
Plaintiffs filed the Complaint with this Court within a week after Defendants
filed suit against Willis in Virginia. When actions are filed within a very narrow
time frame, the Court will sometimes consider the actions to have been filed
contemporaneously.29 “[T]he McWane doctrine does not denude a trial court of all
discretion simply based on the fact that one party won a filing race in a photo-
finish.”30
While “the McWane ‘first-filed’ analysis is not applied mechanistically or as
a ‘bright-line’ rule,” an action filed shortly before another may deserve “first-filed”
deference so long as there are no “special circumstances” urging the Court to treat
28 McWane, 263 A.2d at 283. 29 In re IBP, Inc., 2001 WL 406292, at *7 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 2001). 30 Id. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 18
the actions as contemporaneous.31 Special circumstances may exist when a second
action is filed independently of, and very shortly after, another action that was
technically filed first.32 In such a case, both parties engage in independent decision
making and a race to the courthouse results in a second filing made shortly after
the first.33
“McWane most clearly applies when an individual plaintiff sues a defendant
in a convenient forum and is then met with a responsive suit by the defendant in
another forum.”34 When actions are filed at about the same time, as they were
here, it is difficult to ascertain whether the second complaint was filed by someone
who reacted to the first complaint or whether the filer of the second complaint
simply lost the race to the courthouse. In the circumstances of this case, the first-
31 Dura Pharm., Inc. v. Scandipharm, Inc., 713 A.2d 925, 928-29 (Del. Ch. 1998) (finding that since both parties had been free to file suit for weeks and this was not a case of a “‘race to the courthouse’ following the expiration of a standstill agreement,” the fact that the two complaints were filed within one business day of each other did not prevent the first from being considered “first-filed”). 32 Id. at 928 (discussing the facts in Tex. Instruments Inc. v. Cyrix Corp., 1994 WL 96983 (Del. Ch. March 22, 1994), that led the Court to refuse to consider a Delaware action as “first-filed” where it was filed only five hours before an action in another forum). 33 Id. 34 In re Topps Co. S’holders Litig., 924 A.2d 951, 956 (Del. Ch. 2007). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 19
filed status is entitled to some weight, but it perhaps would be more significant if
the other pertinent factors collectively provided little guidance.35
B. The Delaware and Virginia Actions Involve Similar Parties and Issues
The second consideration of the McWane analysis is whether the same
parties and issues are involved in the two actions. In most cases, competing
litigations do not involve exactly identical parties and issues.36 In these situations,
the Court “balance[s] the lack of complete identity of parties [and issues] against
35 The Court’s discretion is guided by balancing the McWane factors. Some precedent suggests that it is not prudent to give great weight to the fact that a foreign action was filed a day before a Delaware action when ruling on a motion to stay. See id. at 957. In re Topps, of course, was decided in the representative action context where McWane may be less important. For a consolidated shareholder class action suit, “[w]hat is most important is not that the filing plaintiff get her way, but that the stockholders she seeks to represent have their legitimate expectations upheld.” Id. at 956. Other opinions conclude that actions filed in roughly the same time period should be considered contemporaneous. See, e.g., In Re Chambers Dev. Co., Inc. S’holders Litig., 1993 WL 179335, at *7 (Del. Ch. May 20, 1993). In any event, the circumstances of each case are relevant in deciding whether “first-filed” status is warranted. In this case, the Virginia action was technically filed first, and Plaintiffs have not argued either against its “first- filed” status or for treating the two actions as filed contemporaneously. 36 Choice Hotels Int’l, Inc. v. Columbus-Hunt Park DR. BNK Investors, LLC, 2009 WL 3335332, at *7 (Del. Ch. Oct. 15, 2009). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 20
the possibility of conflicting rulings which could come forth if both actions were
allowed to proceed simultaneously.”37
The issues in competing proceedings are sufficiently similar to support a
stay under the McWane analysis when they arise out of a “common nucleus of
operative facts.”38 There is no question that the Delaware and Virginia actions are
related and arise from a common nucleus of facts. In the Virginia action, Kaeding
and PCA charge Willis with wrongful conduct during her tenure at PCA, including
interference with PCA’s business, unauthorized acts, conversion of money and
property, and breach of contract. In the action filed with this Court, Willis and
PIPC paint a very different picture of the events leading up to her separation from
PCA. The allegations in both actions involve the same parties, events, and
conduct.
While the issues in the two actions clearly arise from the same common
nucleus, the Court must also be satisfied that the actions involve sufficiently
similar parties. Willis, Kaeding, and PCA are parties to both actions; however,
37 Id. (quoting Xpress Mgmt., 2007 WL 1660741, at *4). 38 Schnell v. Porta Sys. Corp., 1994 WL 148276, at *4 (Del. Ch. Apr. 12, 1994). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 21
PIPC is not currently a defendant in Virginia. However, when the only party to a
Delaware action that is not named in the foreign action is owned by a party to both
actions, “[t]here is substantial or functional identity of all parties in both actions.”39
The Complaint alleges that Willis is the sole member of PIPC, thus satisfying the
Court that the parties in both actions are substantially identical. Furthermore,
Defendants have represented that they will not object to the addition of PIPC as a
counterclaim-plaintiff in Virginia. The fact that PIPC could be joined in the
Virginia action provides a further basis for a finding that the parties in the
litigations are sufficiently similar to meet the McWane standard.40
Even when there is not identity among the various parties and issues in
competing litigations, the Court must consider “whether allowing the cases to
progress in tandem would either risk conflicting rulings or foster an ‘unseemly race
39 Brookstone P’rs Acq. XVI, LLC v. Tanus, 2012 WL 5868902, at *3 (Del. Ch. Nov. 20, 2012). 40 See id. at *3 n.37 (citing Delaware plaintiff’s ability, based on defendant’s representations that it would not object, to assert counterclaims in a foreign jurisdiction against a party not yet joined in that jurisdiction as relevant to the McWane analysis). Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 22
to judgment’ in each forum.”41 The Court is also always concerned about the
efficient administration of justice. Allowing litigation to proceed in both Delaware
and Virginia could potentially lead to conflicting rulings. Through the Virginia
complaint, Kaeding seeks a declaratory judgment that he is the sole stockholder,
director, and officer of both PCA and PIPC, and that Willis has no ownership
interest in either entity. The court in Virginia has already decided against Willis on
her forum non conveniens motion. The fact that the Virginia litigation has gone
forward advises the Court to stay these proceedings.
C. The Virginia Court Can Render Complete and Prompt Justice
The third McWane factor relevant to determining whether a stay is
appropriate is the foreign court’s ability to render prompt and complete justice.
Defendants have indicated that they would not object to the addition of PIPC as a
counterclaim-plaintiff in Virginia. There is no reason to doubt that the Virginia
court can resolve the claims at issue. Cases that fail to meet this McWane factor
often deal with important or unsettled issues of Delaware law or the internal affairs
41 Xpress Mgmt., 2007 WL 1660741, at *5. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 23
of Delaware corporations.42 In those cases, Delaware’s strong interest in the
subject matter of the litigation is relevant to the Court’s determination of which
forum is best suited to decide the claims.
Although this case does involve a Delaware limited liability company, it also
involves a Virginia corporation. Further, the core issues in the Complaint revolve
around breach of contract claims and do not implicate important questions of
Delaware corporate law or issues of internal corporate governance. The
controversy has many connections with Virginia, and there is no reason to believe
that only this Court could render complete and prompt justice.
V. NON-CONTRACT CLAIMS
Defendants have also moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ non-contract claims,
arguing that those claims are duplicative of the contract ones. Given the Court’s
decision to stay the Delaware proceedings, the viability of the non-contract claims
will not now be considered.
42 See Wolfe & Pittenger, § 5.01[d], 5.28. Willis v. PCA Pain Center of Virginia, Inc. C.A. No. 9006-VCN October 20, 2014 Page 24
VI. CONCLUSION
This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claims because of
Plaintiffs’ request for an equitable remedy, i.e., an order for the specific
performance of the Asset Sale. The Court has the power to hear Plaintiffs’ legal
claims under the “clean-up” doctrine. However, since a competing litigation is
ongoing in Virginia, the Court will exercise its discretion to stay these proceedings
based on its application of the McWane doctrine. Accordingly, Defendants’
Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, to Stay is denied as to the Motion to
Dismiss and granted as to the Motion to Stay.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Very truly yours,
/s/ John W. Noble
JWN/cap cc: Basil C. Kollias, Esquire Darrell J. Baker, Esquire Register in Chancery-K