This appeal is a sequel to our reversal earlier this year of the district court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ suit for failure to state a claim.
Citrin then asked IAC — and when IAC refused brought suit in the Delaware Chancery Court for an order compelling IAC — to advance him money for the attorneys’ fees and other expenses that he was incurring to defend against IAC’s suit. Citrin’s employment contract required IAC to indemnify him for any damages he might incur if he was sued based on acts performed in connection with the company’s business and prevailed in the suit, but also to pay his expenses of defending any suit based on such acts “in advance of the final disposition of such action ... upon receipt of an undertaking by [him] to repay such amount plus reasonable interest in the event that it shall ultimately be determined that [he] was not entitled to be indemnified.” Thus, if and when Citrin is found in our case to have breached his fiduciary duty to IAC, he will not be entitled to indemnity and therefore he will have to repay any money advanced to him by the company. His Delaware suit seeks advancement of the $1.3 million in attorneys’ fees that he claims to have incurred already.
IAC is chartered in Delaware and concedes that Delaware law governs Citrin’s contractual entitlement to the advance that he is seeking. Nevertheless it asked the district court to enjoin him from litigating the Delaware suit, on the ground that the suit is a collateral attack on our ruling that IAC has stated a claim against him under the federal computer fraud statute. The district court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction, and IAC has appealed.
The Delaware suit is not a collateral attack on our ruling. Citrin is not asking the Delaware court to hold, contrary to our decision, that IAC has failed to state a claim under the federal computer statute. He is not asking to be indemnified on the ground that he is innocent of the charge of breach of fiduciary obligation. That would require a ruling on the merits of IAC’s claim and he is not asking for that. All he is asking is that in advance of the final disposition of the suit in federal district court he receive his litigation expenses in accordance with the terms of his employment contract. And since entitlement to advancement is independent of the merits of the suit for which the money is sought,
Ridder v. CityFed Financial Corp.,
It is true that Citrin could have asked the district judge to order the advancement of fees, since the federal district court would have subject-matter and personal jurisdiction of a suit by Citrin against IAC arising out of the contract, though this would have required the judge to interpret Delaware law. But requiring *752 IAC to defend the advancement suit in Delaware, the state whose law governs, can hardly be thought a hardship to the company or otherwise inappropriate. The only issues in the Delaware suit are the applicability of the contractual advancement clause to Citrin’s defense in the district court proceeding (specifically, whether IAC’s suit concerns a matter arising out of Citrin’s employment by the company) and the amount of litigation expense that Citrin has incurred. If any evidentiary hearing is required, it will surely be brief.
What is true is that “advancement” is rather a Delaware specialty, see, e.g.,
Homestore, Inc. v. Tafeen,
The federal Anti-Injunction Act provides, moreover, a compelling alternative ground for the district judge’s denial of IAC’s motion for an injunction. The Act forbids, with narrow exceptions, a federal court’s enjoining litigation in a state court. 28 U.S.C. § 2283. Although one of the exceptions is for cases in which the grant of an injunction by the federal court is “necessary ... to protect or effectuate [the federal court’s] judgments,” there is no indication that the Delaware court is hostile to the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and will express that hostility by seeking to reexamine our ruling that IAC has stated a claim under the Act. If it did, moreover, its judgment would be denied preclusive effect in the federal litigation.
In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., Tires Products Liability Litigation,
Affirmed.
