Brex Inc. v. Dizhe Su
C.A. No. 2022-0758-MTZ
COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
May 22, 2024
MORGAN T. ZURN, VICE CHANCELLOR
Ballard Spahr LLP
919 N. Market Street, 11th Floor
Wilmington, DE 19801
Sean Meluney, Esquire
Meluney Alleman & Spence LLC
1143 Savannah Road, Suite 3-A
Lewes, DE 19958
RE: Brex Inc. v. Dizhe Su,
C.A. No. 2022-0758-MTZ
Dear Counsel:
I write to address plaintiff Brex Inc.‘s motion to disqualify counsel for defendant and counterclaim plaintiff Dizhe Su. The motion is based on facts that are down in the weeds; I write for the parties who are already among them.
Brex seeks to disqualify Su‘s trial counsel under
Brex also seeks disqualification under
I. Background
This action arises out of Brex‘s acquisition of Pry Financials, Inc. (“Pry“), which Su founded. The parties dispute (1) whether Su disclosed to Brex that Pry was involved in litigation before the acquisition closed, and (2) whether Brex terminated Su for cause after the acquisition closed. The parties refer to the litigation at issue as the “Beowawie Litigation,” and I do the same. Gregory Patterson, Esquire, represented Pry and Su in the Beowawie Litigation.
Patterson and Su each communicated with Brex about Su‘s knowledge of the Beowawie Litigation. Part of this dispute is animated by purported differences in what they said. Su maintains that he had forgotten about the Beowawie Litigation during due diligence, and that he had had no contact with Patterson between October 2021 and March 2022.2 Brex‘s counsel, Ryan Marsh, testified that on a May 9, 2022 call, Patterson “indicated” Patterson had spoken to Su in the two to three months prior.3 Marsh passed along his impressions of his call with Patterson
Patterson has represented Su in this litigation since it was filed in August 2022. He was admitted pro hac vice on September of 2022.6 On July 21, 2023, Brex raised its belief that Patterson was “a material witness in this case.”7 Patterson was undeterred, and continued to serve as Su‘s lead counsel.8 Brex sought to depose Patterson, and Su resisted; addressing Brex‘s motion to compel, the special discovery master in this case concluded Patterson‘s knowledge about his communications with Su warranted a limited deposition.9 No party took exception. At his deposition, Patterson testified that he does not remember the May 2022 call with Marsh, and that if he did say he spoke to Su three to four months before the call, he “was wrong.”10
When I granted Brex‘s motion to compel, I asked Brex for its position on
II. Analysis
Disqualification is a harsh result; the basis must be proven by clear and convincing evidence.13 “[M]otions grounded on [
The rule‘s standard requiring disqualification if the lawyer is “likely to be a necessary witness” was introduced to raise the standard from “ought to be called as a witness,” in an effort to reduce the rule‘s use in gamesmanship.18 Courts have discussed the “necessary” standard in terms of whether the lawyer or her testimony will be “central” or “essential” to the issues.19 Courts have concluded the rule is
Su does not intend to call Patterson in his case-in-chief.23 Brex intends to call Patterson in its case-in-chief to bolster evidence that Patterson told Marsh that Patterson spoke with Su during the due diligence period, which Brex claims goes to whether Su was terminated for cause.24 Certainly, the reasons why Brex‘s board terminated Su are central to this case. But Patterson‘s testimony is cumulative of and peripheral to Marsh‘s: Marsh shared his own impression with the board. Patterson‘s testimony is further peripheral to the issue of what the board did with
Brex also intends to call Patterson to demonstrate that in this litigation, he contradicted his statement to Marsh.25 Patterson has not done that: he testified he does not remember the call, and that if he said he spoke to Su in that time period he was wrong. And the argument that someone is a necessary witness because they can be impeached presupposes that his testimony is necessary. As explained, it is not.
Brex also intends to call Patterson to demonstrate the board investigation Su is attacking as inadequate was deficient because Patterson gave Marsh “wrong” information.26 This is a peripheral rebuttal argument, not a central case-in-chief argument.
I cannot conclude that Patterson is likely to be a necessary witness under
Brex also seeks disqualification under
III. Conclusion
Brex‘s motion for disqualification is DENIED.
Sincerely,
/s/ Morgan T. Zurn
Vice Chancellor
MTZ/ms
cc: All Counsel of Record, via File & ServeXpress
