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Earth Pride Organics, LLC v. Corona-Orange Foods Intermediate Holdings, LLC
N23C-05-009 EMD CCLD
Del. Super. Ct.
Dec 20, 2024
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Background

  • Plaintiffs Earth Pride Organics, LLC and LTG, Inc. (formerly Lancaster Fine Foods) sold their food business to defendant Corona-Orange Foods Intermediate Holdings, LLC under a Membership Interest Purchase Agreement in 2021, which included an earnout payment provision tied to EBITDA calculations.
  • Disputes arose regarding defendant’s actions post-sale, specifically concerning the calculation of the earnout payment and whether certain representations and operational decisions unfairly reduced plaintiffs’ expected compensation.
  • Plaintiffs first brought a breach of contract claim, later amending to include fraud and to add Wind Point Advisors as a defendant; these claims were partially dismissed and WPA was dropped as a defendant.
  • Plaintiffs sought leave to further amend their complaint to add a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and a new fraud claim, based on new factual allegations regarding lease negotiations and plant shutdowns.
  • The court had to determine whether the new claims were within its jurisdiction (given a narrow arbitration clause), whether there was undue delay or prejudice, and whether the new claims stated viable legal grounds.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Court Jurisdiction over Amended Claims Claims are legal and not strictly about earnout calculation—court has power Claims arise from earnout calculation—should go to independent accountant Court has jurisdiction; the clause covers only "Earnout Statement" calculation disputes.
Prejudice/Delay from Amendments No prejudice or undue delay, facts already disclosed, amendments efficient Amendments cause delay and require new discovery No undue delay or prejudice; claims stem from known facts.
Fraud (Count III): Lease/GAAP Representation Defendant misrepresented GAAP effects to induce consent to lease change No justifiable reliance; consent to lease not required Amendment allowed; fraud claim pleaded with sufficient particularity.
Implied Covenant (Count II): Facility Actions Defendant acted in bad faith to suppress earnout (shutdowns, discounts) Agreement anticipated such risks; no contractual gap/duplication Amendment denied; claim is futile—the contract covers these issues.

Key Cases Cited

  • Nemec v. Shrader, 991 A.2d 1120 (Del. 2010) (explaining the limits of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; contract cannot be rewritten by court after the fact)
  • H-M Wexford LLC v. Encorp, Inc., 832 A.2d 129 (Del. Ch. 2003) (sufficient pleading of justifiable reliance for fraud)
  • Amirsaleh v. Bd. Of Trade of City of N. Y., Inc., 2008 WL 4182998 (Del. Ch. 2008) (providing black letter law on the implied covenant in contract disputes)
  • Matrix Parent, Inc v. Audax Mgmts. Co., LLC, 2024 WL 3198380 (Del. Super. 2024) (detailing elements of common-law fraud)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Earth Pride Organics, LLC v. Corona-Orange Foods Intermediate Holdings, LLC
Court Name: Superior Court of Delaware
Date Published: Dec 20, 2024
Citation: N23C-05-009 EMD CCLD
Docket Number: N23C-05-009 EMD CCLD
Court Abbreviation: Del. Super. Ct.