OPINION
I. Introduction
This dispute is between a corporation and its stockholders over whether the stockholders were tricked into making their investments in the company. The stockholders allege that the corporation’s officers promised that, in return for investing in the company, the investors would ultimately receive shares of stock in a successor U.S. company that would be SEC-registered, unrestricted, and freely-trada-ble. That promise was allegedly broken when the stockholders were issued unregistered and restricted shares after executing the necessary investment agreements. Although the corporation and its officers dispute the merits of the stockholders’ claims, they primarily point to forum selection provisions in the investment agreements, which choose the courts of England to adjudicate disputes between the parties, and argue that this court is precluded from exercising jurisdiction over the stockholders’ claims. That is, the defendants raise the threshold question of whether this court is the proper venue to adjudicate this dispute.
After analyzing the agreements, my conclusion is that this court cannot exercise jurisdiction over the stockholders’ claims without dishonoring the parties’ contracts. Both of the investment agreements contain unequivocal language mandating exclusive jurisdiction in the courts of England. Under well-settled precedent, this court must honor such clear contractual expressions of intent to select a particular forum.
1
II. Factual Background
These are the facts as drawn from the complaint and the documents it incorporates.
A. The Parties And The Structure Of The Investment
In October 2007, defendants Jonathan Kendrick and Laurence Alexander, 2 officers and directors of a United Kingdom entity called ROK Entertainment Group Ltd. (“ROK U.K. Group”), solicited plaintiffs Ashall Homes Limited, Arthur Davies, Scott Ashall, -David Ashall, Anthony As-hall, and Thames Limited (collectively, the “Ashall Plaintiffs”) to invest in ROK U.K. Group. 3 The proposed investment in ROK U.K. Group would be the first step in a three-part deal, where ROK U.K. Group would become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cyberfund, Inc. (“Cyberfund”), an Oklahoma corporation, through a stock-for-stock exchange, and then Cyberfund would reincorporate in Delaware as ROK Entertainment Group, Inc. (“ROK Delaware”). 4 That is, the Ashall Plaintiffs allege that Kendrick and Alexander told them that, if they invested in ROK U.K. Group, their ROK U.K. Group shares would be converted to Cyberfund shares and ultimately to ROK Delaware shares. 5 Kendrick and Alexander also allegedly told the Ashall Plaintiffs that “in exchange for their investment, within fourteen days of receipt of the investment funds, they would receive ‘unrestricted,’ ‘free-to-trade’ share certificates in Cyberfund that could be immediately traded.” 6 In particular, on October 16, 2007, Kendrick allegedly confirmed to the Ashall Plaintiffs that, if they invested in ROK U.K. Group, Cyberfund would issue a registration statement for their Cyberfund shares that would make the shares unrestricted after the stock-for-stoek exchange was accomplished. 7 Later that same month, Alexander allegedly told Thames Limited that it would receive unrestricted shares in exchange for its investment in ROK U.K. Group. 8
Based on these representations, Ashall Homes Limited, Arthur Davies, Scott As-hall, David Ashall, and Anthony Ashall signed identical subscription agreements (the “Subscription Agreements”) and collectively invested approximately $500,000 in ROK U.K. Group on November 8, 2007.
9
On the same day, Thames Limited invested $1,000,000 in ROK U.K. Group.
10
At the same time, each Ashall Plaintiff except Thames Limited executed identical share sale agreements (the “Share Sale Agreements”) agreeing to swap their shares in ROK U.K. Group for shares in Cyber-
When the reincorporation of Cyberfund as the Delaware entity ROK Delaware was accomplished, Kendrick became ROK Delaware’s Chairman, Alexander was named President and CEO, and Alex Renny was named Chief Financial Officer, Secretary, and Treasurer (as well as a director). 13
B. The Subscription Agreements And The Share Sale Agreements
Two sets of agreements were required to effect the transformation of ROK U.K. Group shares into ROK Delaware shares. Under the Subscription Agreements, the Ashall Plaintiffs agreed to purchase shares in ROK U.K. Group. Then, under the Share Sale Agreements, the Ashall Plaintiffs agreed to sell and transfer their shares in ROK U.K. Group to Cyberfund. Therefore, these two agreements accomplished the first and second steps in the three-step transformation of ROK U.K. Group into ROK Delaware. The agreements were executed simultaneously. 14
Both the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements contain forum selection provisions (the “Forum Selection Provisions”) that vest jurisdiction in the English courts and choice of law clauses that require the agreements to be governed by and interpreted under English law. The relevant provision in the Subscription Agreements provides: “This Agreement shall be construed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of England and the English courts shall have jurisdiction over any disputes arising hereunder.” 15 And, the Share Sale Agreements provide: “This Agreement shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with English law and the parties submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts.” 16
In relevant part, the Share Sale Agreements also plainly provide that Cyberfund would issue shares to the Ashall Plaintiffs that were both restricted and unregistered: “The Shareholder acknowledges and agrees that the Cyberfund Shares issued to the Shareholder on Closing shall be subject to restrictions on their sale or transfer in accordance with United States law and that such Cyberfund Shares shall, unless otherwise agreed, be issued on an unregistered basis.”
17
Notably, that language expressly contradicts the alleged earlier oral promises from Kendrick and Alexander that the shares would be registered and unrestricted. The Share Sale Agreements also state that “[i]f Closing has not taken place by 31 December 2007, then this Agreement shall be of no further force and effect and shall be automatically terminated.”
18
“Closing” is defined in the Share Sale Agreements as “when the Company shall validly allot and issue to the Shareholder the ... Cyberfund Shares.”
19
Also, the Share Sale Agreements did not include an integration clause, although the Subscription Agreements contained such a provision, stating that “[tjhis Agreement sets forth the en
C. The Stock Certificates
As planned, after the Ashall Plaintiffs invested in ROK U.K. Group, they received stock certificates for their' respective shares. 22 And, following the stock-for-stock exchange, the Ashall Plaintiffs ROK U.K. Group shares were converted to Cy-berfund shares in turn. 23 But, because of the impending reincorporation of Cyber-fund as ROK Delaware, Cyberfund gave the Ashall Plaintiffs written notice on December 19, 2007 (the “December Notice”) that it would not issue stock certificates to the Ashall Plaintiffs until that reincorporation was accomplished. 24 The letter indicated that the brief delay — reincorporation was “scheduled to occur at the end of December 2007” — was simply to avoid issuing stock certificates in Cyberfund’s name and then having to re-issue certificates in ROK Delaware’s name shortly thereafter. 25 In February 2008, after that reincorporation was completed, ROK Delaware issued the Ashall Plaintiffs stock certificates that reflected the shares issued to them in exchange for their ROK U.K. Group shares in the exchange with Cyber-fund. 26 The ROK Delaware stock certificates stated that the Ashall Plaintiffs’ shares were restricted. 27
Upon receiving the ROK Delaware shares, the Ashall Plaintiffs returned them because they were restricted and repeatedly requested that ROK Delaware issue unrestricted shares.
28
Allegedly, ROK Delaware repeatedly assured the As-hall Plaintiffs through April and May 2008 that unrestricted shares would eventually be issued.
29
On June 6, 2009, the Ashall Plaintiffs filed their complaint alleging that the defendants fraudulently induced the Ashall Plaintiffs to invest in ROK U.K. Group (Counts I and II); that ROK Delaware, as the legal successor to ROK U.K. Group and Cyberfund, breached its contract with the Ashall Plaintiffs to sell unrestricted stock (Counts III and IX); that the defendants committed deceit, negligently misrepresented, or tortiously interfered with business relations by making false statements to the Ashall Plaintiffs (Counts IV through VIII); that ROK Delaware wrongfully converted the money the Ashall Plaintiffs invested in ROK U.K.
III. Analysis
The defendants move to dismiss the Ashall Plaintiffs’ complaint under both Rule 12(b)(3) and Rule 12(b)(6). Because dismissal is mandated under Rule 12(b)(3), I do not reach the Rule 12(b)(6) argument.
A. Legal Standard
The courts of Delaware defer to forum selection clauses and routinely “give effect to the terms of private agreements to resolve disputes in a designated judicial forum out of respect for the parties’ contractual designation.” 31 Under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(3), a court will grant a motion to dismiss based upon a forum selection clause where the parties “use express language clearly indicating that the forum selection clause excludes all other courts before which those parties could otherwise properly bring an action.” 32 Forum selection clauses can be applied not only to contract-based claims but also tort claims arising out of, or depending upon, the contractual relationship in question. 33
When a contract contains a forum selection clause, this court will interpret the forum selection clause in accordance with the law chosen to govern the contract.
34
Here, the agreements clearly chose English law to govern the parties’ relationship,
35
and it appears that most of the relevant conduct occurred in England, and that none of the conduct on which the
B. The Parties Agreed To Submit This Dispute To The Exclusive Jurisdiction Of The English Courts
The issue is whether the Forum Selection Provisions in the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements preclude this court from exercising jurisdiction over the Ashall Plaintiffs’ claims. The defendants argue that those Forum Selection Provisions clearly require the Ashall Plaintiffs to bring their claims in the courts of England. In response, the Ashall Plaintiffs make four arguments for why the Forum Selection Provisions are inoperative: first, they argue that the Share Sale Agreements terminated on December 31, 2007 because closing had not yet occurred; second, they argue that the defendants do not have standing to enforce the provisions of the Share Sale Agreements; third, they argue that the Forum Selection Provision in the Subscription Agreements does not exclusively choose English courts; and fourth, they argue that, even if the Subscription Agreements’ Forum Selection Provisions do exclusively choose the courts of England, the Forum Selection Provisions do not encompass their claims.
I analyze these arguments below. Because some of the Ashall Plaintiffs’ arguments apply to one agreement but not the other, I consider the enforceability of each agreement’s Forum Selection Provision separately. But, the conclusion as to both agreements is the same: each agreement mandates exclusive jurisdiction in the English courts.
1. The Share Sale Agreements Mandate Exclusive Jurisdiction In The English Courts
The language of the Share Sale Agreements clearly provides for the courts of England to have exclusive jurisdiction. The Share Sale Agreements’ Forum Selection Provision reads as follows: “This Agreement shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with English law and the parties submit to the
exclusive
juris
Nevertheless, the Ashall Plaintiffs make a number of arguments, why the Forum Selection Provision in the Share Sale Agreements does not apply. First, the Ashall Plaintiffs argue that the Forum Selection Provision in the Share Sale Agreements cannot be enforced because the Share Sale Agreements terminated on December 31, 2007. As noted above, the Share Sale Agreements provided that the Agreements would terminate on December 31, 2007 unless the stockholders were allotted and issued the Cyberfund shares. 38 Because the Cyberfund shares were not issued until February 2008, the Ashall Plaintiffs argue that the Share Sale Agreements terminated by their terms, and therefore the Forum Selection Provision is unenforceable. In response, the defendants argue that the Ashall Plaintiffs waived their right to enforce the Share Sale Agreements’ termination provision, and therefore the Forum Selection Provision in those agreements still has force.
The Ashall Plaintiffs’ argument must be rejected because interpretation of the Share Sale Agreements’ termination provision and application of the doctrine of contractual waiver are issues for the court identified in the Forum Selection Provisions to decide. Given the evidence in the record, it is easy to see how an English court might decide that the Ashall Plaintiffs waived their rights to enforce the termination provision. For example, under Delaware law, a waiver is found where a party had actual or constructive notice of a known right,
39
and that the party “voluntarily and intentionally relinquished [that] known right.”
40
The policy underlying the rule is that a “party cannot both accept the benefits which accrue under a contract on the one hand and shirk its disadvantages on the other.”
41
Before the termination date, the Ashall Plaintiffs received the December Notice indicating that, for simple efficiency reasons, the stock certificates would not be delivered until after Cyberfund reincorporated as ROK Delaware, which was scheduled to occur shortly thereafter.
42
Therefore, the Ashall Plaintiffs had express notice that Cyberfund intended to postpone the issuance of the stock certificates past the contractual ter
But, at this stage in the analysis — where this court is to decide whether it can exercise jurisdiction over a dispute, and not to decide the outcome of the dispute itself— coming to a conclusion as to whether the Share Sale Agreements’ termination provision was waived would be inappropriate. To do so might allow a party to circumvent duties for which the other party bargained. Deciding, for example, that the Ashall Plaintiffs did not waive their rights, and that the termination provision therefore applies, would allow the Ashall Plaintiffs to make an end-run around an otherwise enforceable Forum Selection Provision through an argument about the enforceability of other terms in the contract. Such an end-run has been denied in the analogous situation of enforcement of arbitration provisions, where courts have held that a claim that a contract was fraudulently induced is for the arbitrator, not a court, to decide. 47 Here, I cannot decide whether the termination provision applies without usurping the role of the English courts, which were expressly charged with adjudicating disputes over the Share Sale Agreements.
The Ashall Plaintiffs’ second argument for why the Forum Selection Provision in the Share Sale Agreements does not apply is that the defendants do not have standing to enforce the terms of the Share Sale Agreements. As noted above, the Share Sale Agreements provide that “[n]o term of this Agreement is enforceable ... by a person who is not a party to
2. The Subscription Agreements Also Mandate Exclusive Jurisdiction In The English Couris
The language of the Forum Selection Provision in the Subscription
But, that argument overlooks precedent that reads a provision stating that a court shall have jurisdiction over any dispute as a mandatory, rather than permissive, grant of jurisdiction. For example, in Prestancia Mgmt. Group Inc. v. Va. Heritage Found., II LLC, this court interpreted an almost identical forum selection clause and concluded that it was mandatory. 53 The forum selection clause in Pres-tancia provided: “The jurisdiction for any controversy arising [under the Security Agreement] shall be in the courts of competent jurisdiction of Loudoun County, Virginia.” 54 The court focused on the use of the word “any” and reasoned that “use of the word ‘any1 ... connotes all-encompassing inclusion.” 55
Furthermore, even if the Subscription Agreements’ language did not clearly indicate exclusivity — -which it does — the rule that related contemporaneous documents should be read together
56
requires the Subscription Agreements’ Forum Selection Provision to be read as mandating jurisdiction in the English courts as the Share Sale Agreements’ Forum Selection Provi
Finally, there is an important policy reason for adjudicating all of the disputes relating to these two agreements in one court. Because the two agreements are intertwined, the wisdom of the rule that related agreements are to be read together is apparent: bifurcating this dispute — so as to send claims arising from the Share Sale Agreements to the English courts, but to keep claims arising from the Subscription Agreements here in this court — would result in obvious inefficiencies and confusion. Those inefficiencies and the potential for injustice are serious enough that long-standing doctrines, such as res judicata and the Delaware Supreme Court’s MeWane doctrine, 57 have been developed to minimize claims splitting. Res judicata minimizes inefficiency and inequity by making a judgment binding as to all claims that could and therefore should have been brought in the initial litigation. 58 And, MeWane, which generally confines litigation to one forum, 59 serves the public’s interest in the orderly administration of justice by discouraging forum shopping and by reducing the risk of conflicting verdicts. 60
Here, where it is clear that the contract claims
must
be brought in England, it makes little sense to allow the Ashall Plaintiffs’ claims to be split. Under
MeWane
and other analogous doctrines, the Ashall Plaintiffs ought to be bound for fairness and efficiency’s sake to litigate in one place, and not force the defendants to unnecessarily expend resources on what would essentially be the same defense in multiple venues. That is especially so when all the Ashall Plaintiffs claims are governed by English law, all the key parties to this case reside in the United Kingdom,
61
and all the key events took place in the United Kingdom. Because this is not an internal affairs case, the fact that ROK U.K. Group was eventually to be a Delaware entity has no important relation to the underlying claims or events. That is, the presence of a Delaware corporation in a dispute is most relevant when Dela
The Ashall Plaintiffs also argue that their claims fall outside the scope of the Forum Selection Provision in the Subscription Agreements because that provision is limited to claims “arising hereunder.”
63
The Ashall Plaintiffs’ contract-based claims, which allege breach of both the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements,
64
are obviously within the scope of Subscription Agreements’ Forum Selection Provision.
65
Therefore, the question is whether the As-hall Plaintiffs’ non-contract claims are within the scope of the Forum Selection Provision. Courts in Delaware and other jurisdictions have found that “[a] forum selection clause should not be defeated by artful pleading of claims not based on the contract containing the clause if those claims grow out of the contractual relationship.”
66
That rule not only prevents par
Here, the Ashall Plaintiffs’ non-contract claims depend upon the same set of facts as them contract claims. That is, all of the claims involve the Ashall Plaintiffs’ initial decision to invest, their execution of the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements, and the parties’ performance of their obligations under those agreements. 68 Resolution of these claims will require an analysis of the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements.
Furthermore, because they allege that the defendants’ fraudulent and tortious behavior has overridden the promises made in the agreements, the Ashall Plaintiffs non-contract claims necessarily raise the question of how the boundary between contract and tort is to be drawn in this case. That is, the Ashall Plaintiffs’ central argument to give weight to the defendants’ oral representations over the written contract terms requires the court to determine the extent to which the plain terms of the agreements preclude the Ashall Plaintiffs from arguing they were duped into investing in the defendants’ scheme. Because the Share Sale Agreements provide that the Ashall Plaintiffs were to receive restricted, unregistered shares and the contemporaneously-entered Subscription Agreements contain an integration clause that plainly states that those agreements supersede all prior written or oral understandings,
69
striking the appropriate balance between the competing values served by tort and contract may well require an intricate consideration of the public policies of the jurisdiction whose law controls the parties’ relationship — that is, Eng
IV. Conclusion
Because all of the Ashall Plaintiffs’ claims fall under the forum selection provisions of the Share Sale Agreements and the Subscription Agreements, and because those provisions clearly mandate that the English courts have exclusive jurisdiction over any disputes arising from the contracts, the defendants’ motion to dismiss must be GRANTED under Rule 12(b)(3). IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
.
Troy Corp. v. Schoon,
. Recently, all claims against Alexander were voluntarily dismissed. See Stipulation of Dismissal Without Prejudice (Jan. 19, 2010).
. Compl. ¶ 22.
. Therefore, all of the parties, with the exception of Cyberfund, ROK Delaware, and Thames Limited, which is incorporated and has a business address in Mauritius, reside in the United Kingdom. Id. at ¶¶ 3-14.
. Id. at ¶¶ 22-25.
. Id. at ¶ 23.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at ¶ 26.
. Id. at ¶ 29.
. I'd. at ¶ 28.
. Id. at: ¶ 31; Def.'s Reply Br. 8.
. Compl. ¶ 37.
. Compare Def.'s Op. Br. Ex. A (Share Sale Agreement (Nov. 9, 2007)) (the "Share Sale Agreements") with Def.'s Op. Br. Ex. B. (Subscription Agreement (Nov. 8, 2007)) (the "Subscription Agreements”).
. Subscription Agreements § 4(c).
. Share Sale Agreements § 8.
. Id. at § 6.2.
. Id. at § 4.2.
. Id. at § 4.1.
. Subscription Agreements § 4(b) (emphasis added).
. Share Sale Agreements § 7.
. Compl. ¶ 27.
. Id. at ¶ 33.
. In a letter dated December 19, 2007, the stockholders were informed that no Cyber-fund shares would be issued because those shares “would need to be returned and then re-issued when die company becomes ROK Entertainment Group Inc. At that stage, any documentation bearing the Cyberfund name would become invalid. It would mean the return of the Cyberfund share certificates and issuing of the new ROK Entertainment Group Inc. share certificates. Consequently, we think it is prudent and efficient that issuance occurs on completion of the name change.’’ Compl. Ex. D (the "December 19 Notice”).
. Id.
. Id. at ¶ 39.
. Id.
. Id. at ¶¶ 40, 42, 46.
. Id. at 1111 42, 45-48.
. Pl.’sAns. Br. 13-18.
.
Troy,
.
Eisenbud v. Omnitech Corp. Solutions, Inc.,
.
See Hugel v. Corp. of Lloyd’s, 999
F.2d 206, 209 (7th Cir.1993) (Regardless of the duty sought to be enforced in a particular cause of action, if the duty arises from the contract, the forum selection clause governs the action.);
Lambert v. Kysar,
.
See Del Pharm., Inc. v. Access Pharm., Inc.,
. See supra page 1243.
. On the question of whether the Forum Selection Provisions preclude this court from exercising jurisdiction over the dispute, the Ashall Plaintiffs' briefing cited only one English case, and the defendants’ briefs relied entirely on the U.S. Supreme Court’s recitation of English law in its decades-old decision in
M/S Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
. Share Sale Agreement § 8 (emphasis added).
. See supra page 1243.
.
See Realty Growth Investors v. Council of Unit Owners,
.
Danvir Corp. v. City of Wilmington,
.
Cianci v. JEM Enter., Inc.,
. See Compl. Ex. D. (explaining that, if certificates were issued under the Cyberfund name, that documentation would be invalid after Cyberfund changed its name to ROK Delaware; therefore, as a matter of practicality, certificates would be delivered after the reincoiporation and name change was completed).
. The Ashall Plaintiffs returned the certificates on February 18, 2008, but their complaint only states that they returned the certificates because the shares were restricted. See Compl. ¶¶ 40, 42. There is no mention in their complaint or their briefing that the As-hall Plaintiffs objected to the certificates because the delayed issuance terminated the Share Sale Agreements.
. See supra page 1244.
. See supra page 1243.
.
See Julian,
. See, e.g., Karish v. SI Intern., Inc.,
. See supra page 1244.
. Compl. 11 10 (emphasis added).
. Share Sale Agreements § 6.3.
.
BNY AIS Nominees Ltd. v. Quan,
. Subscription Agreements § 4(c).
.
. Id. (alteration in original).
.
Id.
The Ashall Plaintiffs argue that the Forum Selection Provision in the Subscription Agreements is "materially identical” to the forum selection clause at issue in
Eisenbud v. Omnitech Corp. Solutions, Inc.
.
See Crown Books Corp. v. Bookstop Inc.,
.
McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Eng’g Co.,
.
See Betts v. Townsends,
[T]he judgment, if rendered upon the merits, constitutes an absolute bay to a subsequent action. It is a finality as to the claim or demand in controversy, concluding parties and those in privity with them, not only as to every matter which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim or demand, but as to any other admissible matter which might have been offered for that purpose.
Cromwell v. County of Sac,
.
McWane,
.
Lisa,
S.A. v.
Mayorga,
. See supra note 4.
.
See Edgar v. MITE Corp.,
. See supra page 1243.
. See Compl. ¶ 73 (“Plaintiffs have suffered damages as a direct and proximate result of ROK’s breach of the contracts between the parties for the purchase of unrestricted stock.”) (emphasis added).
. In their answering brief, the Ashall Plaintiffs nevertheless make the argument that, because the dispute is over ROK Delaware shares, the Subscription Agreements, which addressed the issuance of ROK U.K. Group shares, are not implicated at all, and therefore none of their claims — contract or otherwise— arise under the Subscription Agreements. Pl.'s Ans. Br. 9. But this argument must be rejected because — as the Ashall Plaintiffs' own complaint alleges — the Subscription Agreements and the Share Sale Agreements are part of a single, integrated investment scheme. See Compl. ¶¶ 54-55, 116-18, 125, 129, 130. The Ashall Plaintiffs cannot on one hand argue that the Subscription Agreements should be rescinded because they are part of a single scheme, and on the other hand argue that the Subscription Agreements are not implicated at all when they want to avoid the agreements' Forum Selection Provision. See id. atl 125.
. Simon,
A forum selection clause should not be defeated by artful pleading of claims not based on the contract containing the clause if those claims grow out of the contractual relationship, or if ‘the gist’ of those claims is a breach of that relationship.... Thus, the circuit courts have held that a contractually-based forum selection clause will also encompass tort claims if the tort claims ultimately depend on the existence of a contractual relationship between the parties ... or if resolution of the claims relates to interpretation of the contract, ... or if the tort claims involve the same operative facts as a parallel claim for breach of contract. ... [The] common thread running through these various formulations [of the rule] is the inquiry whether the plaintiff'sclaims depend on rights and duties that must be analyzed by reference to the contractual relationship.
Direct Mail Prod. Serv. Ltd. v. MBNA Corp.,
.The balancing of the public's interest in truthfulness with its interest in the predictability afforded by consistent enforcement of contractual promises that occurs when courts examine the extent to which contractual provisions, such as integration clauses, can exculpate fraud claims is an example of the policy issues that arise at the intersection of contract and tort.
See Abry Partners V, L.P. v. F & W Acquisition LLC,
.
Cf. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Petroleo Brasilero S.A.
— Petrobras,
. See supra page 1243-44.
. The choice of law clauses in the Subscription Agreements and Share Sale Agreements, which choose English law to govern the agreements, are also applicable to the non-contract claims because the claims arise from the parties’ contractual relationship.
See Abry,
. In its Abry decision, this court explored many of the difficult issues raised by fraud claims that arguably involve representations of fact contrary to or disclaimed by an integrated contract, or which seek a remedy for a misrepresentation of fact incorporated in the contract that is barred by the contract’s limitations on remedies. Id. at 1055-65. For example, in that case, the court acknowledged the Restatement’s rule that "[a] term exempting a party from tort liability for harm caused intentionally or recklessly is unenforceable on grounds of public policy.” Id. at 1059 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts 195 (1981)). But, the court eschewed the broad recklessness standard in the Restatement as Delaware common law and embraced a more contractarian rule based upon Delaware public policy that a contractual remedy limitation is effective to bar a rescission claim based on reckless misstatements, and will be overridden as a matter of public policy only if the plaintiff proves that the defendant intentionally lied about a representation of fact. Id. at 1064.
