Dеfendant-appellant Luis Rivera Siaca (“Rivera”) appeals a decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) subjecting him to over $3 million in liability for retaining payments in breach of trust. The *3 progenitor of this procedural gem, plaintiff-appellee DCC Operating, Inc. (“DCC”), originally brought suit in diversity in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. After obtaining a favorable summary judgment ruling, nondiverse debtors-in-possession Coachman, Inc. (“Coachman”), and its wholly-owned subsidiary Olympic Mills Corp. (“Olympic Mills”), intervened, requesting that the ease be referred to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Puerto Rico. Digesting the issue for several months, the district court eventually referred the case to the bankruptcy court, which, over a year later, awarded damages and entered final judgment. Rivera appealed the unfavorable ruling to the BAP; unsuccessful there as well, he appealed to us.
Before we reach the merits of this appeal, we must cut through a factual and procedural knot of Gordian complexity. This task calls upon us to examine at the outset whether we have subject-matter jurisdiction or if it was destroyed by the intervention of nondiverse intervenors; in turn, whether the intervenors are indispensable; and ultimately, whether remand would be appropriate to sort all this out. We cut the knot by stepping forward to address these issues without remand. Once the procedural issues are resolved we move to the merits, which by comparison present a fairly straightforward issue for resolution. After careful review, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Hampshire Venture.
This contract dispute began with a $2 million bridge loan essentially to finance the acquisition of sweaters. 1 The lender, Development Capital Ventures, LP (“DCV”), is an investment company that provides venture capital to small businesses. The borrower, now-defunct Coachman, was a small business operating in Puerto Rico. In connection with the bridge loan, which was to be made in two $1 million installments (one on February 25, 2000, the other on March 10, 2000), Coachman delivered to DCV a “CONVERTIBLE SUBORDINATED DEMAND NOTE” (the “Note”) on February 24, 2000. The Note had a maturity date of June 30, 2000, 2 and provided for the conversion of the principal amount into company stock at DCV’s option at any time before the balance was paid in full, or automatically upon the satisfaction of certain conditions.
The Note identified, described, and attached as annexes four documents that bore upon the bridge loan. Annex A was a term sheet detailing the conversion of stock; it, along with a guaranty embodied in annex C, is not involved in this dispute. Annex B was a document entitled “ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT,” which the Note identified as the “Hampshire Agreement” and defined in ¶ l.(viii) as follows:
“Hampshire Agreement” shall mean the agreement between the Company [Coachman] and Hampshire Corporation (“Hampshire”) whereby the Company establishes a subsidiary to acquire inventоry and equipment from Hampshire and Hampshire guarantees to acquire a minimum of 12 million sweaters from such subsidiary over the next five (5) years, or an average annual purchase of *4 2.4 million sweater units. See draft agreement under Annex B.
The draft version of the Hampshire Agreement identified the “subsidiary” referenced above as Glamourette/OM, Inc. (“Glamourette”). 3 The last document attached to the Note (as annex D) was a “SUBORDINATION AND STANDBY AGREEMENT” (the “Subordination Agreement”). According to the terms of the Note, Rivera, Coachman’s affluent chairman and sometimes lender, was required to execute the Subordination Agreement as a condition precedent to the bridge loan.
Rivera executed the Subordination Agreement, along with the Note (on behalf of Coachman), on February 24, 2000. At that time, Coachman owed Rivera approximately $5.75 million on past loans, but neither the Note nor the Subordination Agreement identified the particular loans to be subordinated to DCV’s bridge loan. Almost a year later, Cоachman fell into default. DCY’s corporate general partner, DCC, demanded that Coachman pay its balance. When Coachman took no action to satisfy its obligations under the Note, DCC demanded that Rivera pay all amounts due from payments he had received from Coachman or its affiliates over the previous year. (Between February 24, 2000, and October 18, 2001, Rivera made a series of loans to Coachman, Olympic Mills, and Glamourette totaling $16.6 million, and was repaid at least $5.6 million.) On November 7, 2001, DCC, alleging various state-law claims under the Subordination Agreement, sued Rivera in diversity in federal district court. Shortly thereafter, on November 26, 2001, Coachman, Olympic Mills, and Glamourette filed in bankruptcy court voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter ll. 4
B. The Litigation.
Discovery proceeded in district court for almost a year before DCC and Rivera filed cross-motions for summary judgment. DCC argued that Rivera violated his trust obligations under the Subordination Agreemеnt by retaining certain payments from Coachman or its affiliates. Specifically, DCC contended that, pursuant to ¶ 4 of the Subordination Agreement, Rivera was required to forward such payments to DCV for application against the bridge loan. Rivera responded that the Subordination Agreement covered only those loans made before January 24, 2000. The disbursements he had received, Rivera explained, were in payment of loans made after the execution of the Subordination Agreement. The district court disagreed and ruled that the Subordination Agreement unambiguously covered the repayment of all loans, whenever made, until Coachman satisfied its obligations under the Note. However, the district court reserved decision on the amount of damages hoping that, in light of its ruling, the parties would reach an agreement on their own. The district court entered partial summary judgment on December 16, 2002.
Nine days later, Rivera moved to dismiss the cаse for failure to join Coachman and Olympic Mills. Rivera argued, for the first time, that these parties were necessary, indispensable, and (importantly) non-diverse by virtue of their incorporation in Delaware. (DCC was a Delaware corpora *5 tion as well.) The next day, Coachman and Olympic Mills filed in the district court through special counsel a motion to intervene as of right under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a)(2). Citing DCC’s recent victory, Coachman and Olympic Mills argued, without actually asserting any claim, that the payments to Rivera “may be subject to the avoidance powers” granted to them as debtors-in-possession. Because their interest in these payments “may preempt” that of DCC, and because “DCC’s attempt to collect the funds for its own benefit implicate[s] numerous core bankruptcy issues,” Coachman and Olympic Mills requested that the case be referred to the bankruptcy court for further adjudication. In a text order entered on Decеmber 31, 2002, the district court granted the motion to intervene without discussion (and without addressing Rivera’s motion or soliciting DCC’s position on either motion), and ordered the parties to appear at a status conference on January 16, 2003, to address the intervenors’ referral request. DCC filed a motion opposing dismissal, intervention, and referral on January 15.
At the status conference, DCC said that it would consent to referral only if Rivera would deposit over $5 million with the bankruptcy court. The district court gave Rivera until January 24 to respond, set a briefing schedule on the referral question if Rivera declined DCC’s offer (which he did), and stated that the case would proceed to trial on May 27, 2003 if the case were not referred. Coachman and Olympic Mills submitted a memorandum on February 24 pursuant to the scheduling order, but, short-circuiting the process, initiated an adversarial proceeding (No. 03-0042) in bankruptcy court the very next day. The complaint, filed against Rivera, DCC, DCV, and others, alleged a variety of claims, including preferential payments and fraudulent conveyances.
The referral remained under advisement in the district court for the next two months. With a trial date approaching, the district court finally referred the parties’ contract dispute to the bankruptcy court on May 1, 2003. (Taking care of old business, the district court also denied as moot Rivera’s January request to file another indispensability memo.) The case proceeded in bankruptcy court as a separate adversary proceeding (No. 03-0090), despite Rivera’s motion in adversary proceeding No. 03-0042 to consolidate them. DCC moved to dismiss Coachman and Olympic Mills as intervenors, but the bankruptcy court denied the motion without discussion in a text order on February 12, 2004. After some additional discovery, DCC and Rivera filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Ruling upon the motions in August 2004, the bankruptcy court, recognizing that the “sole remaining issue” was the аmount of damages DCC should receive, rejected Rivera’s call to vacate the district court’s previous ruling on liability. 5 Calculating the appropriate figure, the bankruptcy court granted DCC’s motion, denied Rivera’s, and, several days later, entered final judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b).
Rivera timely appealed to the BAP, which, after a thorough examination of its authority to review interlocutory orders of the district court,
6
affirmed.
Luis Rivera
*6
Siaca v. DCC Operating, Inc. (In re Olympic Mills Corp.),
II. DISCUSSION
A. Subject-Matter Jurisdiction.
Before addressing the merits, we must deal with the procedural tangle and determine if we have jurisdiction, even though the parties did not originally contest our jurisdiction on appeal.
See Doyle v. Huntress, Inc.,
1.
Complete Diversity.
The district courts of the United States are “courts of limited jurisdiction. They possess only that power authorized by Constitution and statute.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. Of Am.,
The complete-diversity rule is not a constitutional requirement,
see State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Tashire,
The rule is most inflexibly applied at the time of filing, for it has long been settled that “the jurisdiction of the court depends upon the state of things at the time of the action brought.”
Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Global Group, L.P.,
We are mindful of our remark, in
B. Fernandez & Hnos., Inc. v. Kellogg USA, Inc.,
[FJederal jurisdiction is premised on the diversity of citizenship between Kellogg USA (a Michigan company) and [B. Fernandez & Hnos.] and [Carribean Warehouse Logistics] (Puerto Rico companies). But, if Kellogg Caribbean (a Puerto Rico company) is entitled to intervene as a matter of right under Rule 24(a)(2) and is an indispensable party under Rule 19(b), the litigation must be dismissed because there would not be complete diversity.
Kellogg,
In the case under review, the original and amended complaints alleged only state-law claims, observed that DCC was a Delaware corporation and Rivera a Puerto Rican resident, and thus properly invoked the district court’s diversity jurisdiction. However, intervenors Coachman and Olympic Mills, were, like DCC, Delaware corporations, and entered as (nondiverse) party defendants.
8
Because the parties, on appeal at least, do not assign error to the intervention of Coachman and Olympic Mills
per se,
we proceed directly to the Rule 19(b) analysis to determine whether that intervention divested the district court of subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Kellogg,
2.
Indispensability.
This task requires us to decide whether Coachman and Olympic Mills are indispensable; if they аre, the entire case must be dismissed for want of subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Provident Tradesmens Bank & Trust v. Patterson,
[Fjirst to what extent a judgment rendered in the person’s absence might be prejudicial to the person or those already parties; second, the extent to which, by protective provisions in the judgment, by the shaping of relief, or other measures, the prejudice can be lessened or avoided; third, whether a judgment rendered in the person’s absence will be adequate; fourth, whether the plaintiff will have an adequate remedy if the action is dismissed for nonjoinder.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(b). From these factors, the Supreme Court has identified four corresponding interests: (1) the interest
*9
of the outsider whom it would have been desirable to join; (2) the dеfendant’s interest in avoiding multiple litigation, inconsistent relief, or sole responsibility for a liability it shares with another; (3) the interest of the courts and the public in complete, consistent, and efficient settlement of controversies; and (4) the plaintiffs interest in having a forum.
H.D. Corp. of P.R. v. Ford Motor Co.,
We pause momentarily to address a wrinkle. The above factors and interests require fact-intensive analysis, “involve the balancing of competing interest^] and must be steeped in ‘pragmatic considerations.’ ”
Travelers Indem. Co. v. Dingwell,
A review of the factors and interests outlined above leads us inexorably to the conclusion that Coachman and Olympic Mills are not indispensable.
Rivera’s argument that Coachman and Olympic Mills are indispensable because they have competing claims over the same
res
ignores the posture of this case. First, the causes of action involved in the district court (later adversary proceeding No. 04-0090) and the bankruptcy court (adversary proceeding No. 03-0042) were completely different. In district court, DCC pursued Rivera in his personal capacity for violating ¶4 of the Subordination Agreement, which required Rivera (1) to hold in trust any cash or collateral received from Coachman in payment of the principal of the subordinated debt, and (2) immediately to pay over to DCV the cash or collateral held in trust for application to the senior debt until the senior debt was repaid in full. Coachman and Olympic Mills had no such claim against Rivera (before or after they filed for bankruptcy), and instead sued him in bankruptcy court in adversary proceeding No. 03-0042, alleging fraudulent conveyances and other related causes of action.
See Torcise v. Cmty. Bank of Homestead (In re Torcise),
Rivera also relies unduly on Coachman’s obligations under the Subordination Agreement to support his indispensability pitch. Under the terms of the Subordination Agreement, the subordination and trust obligations ran from Rivera (the obligor) to DYC (the obligee). Coachman was a signatory to the Subordination Agreement, but its participation was perfunctory: Coachman simply promised that Rivera’s obligations under the Subordination Agreement would not impair its obligations under the Note, under which it was the sole obligor. Even if we were to conclude that Coachman was a co-obligor under the Subordination Agreement — as opposed to a mere promissor — it is clear that co-obligors generally are not indispensable parties in contract disputes that do not involve reformation, cancellation, rescission, or otherwise challenge the validity of the contract.
See, e.g., Universal Reinsurance Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
Finally, Rivera’s assertion that DCC sought injunctive relief against Coachman and Olympic Mills misrepresents the record. If true, such a request might weigh heavily in favor of indispensability.
See, e.g., Kellogg,
Under these circumstances, where pragmatism strongly militates against a finding of indispensability and Rivera has not persuaded us otherwise, the plaint falls far short of the mark.
3.
Divestiture.
Whether dispensable, nondiverse defendant-intervenors destroy complete diversity is a question we have not addressed squarely. An insensitive reading of
Kellogg
— but one that would not necessarily be inconsistent with our strict construction of the complete-diversity rule — would seem to suggest that nondiverse intervenors are incompatible with the tenets of the rule. But “[j]udges expect their pronunciamentos to be read in context,”
Wisehart v. Davis,
The circumstances surrounding the intervention of Coachman and Olympic Mills in the present case are strikingly different from those in
Kellogg.
DCC did not need the participation of Coachman or Olympic Mills to collect the money Rivera had retained in breach of the Subordination Agreement. When Coachman and Olympic Mills eventually sought intervention as of right, the interests they advanced flowed directly from their status as debtors-in-possession. Critically, these interests did not arise until Coachman and Olympic Mills filed for bankruptcy on November 26, 2001, almost a month
after
DCC filed suit against Rivera.
See Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.,
In similar situations, the weight of authority holds that claims launched by necessary but dispensable, nondiverse defendant-intervenors do not defeat the original jurisdiction (diversity) that obtained at the commencement of the action.
9
See, e.g., Mattel, Inc. v. Bryant,
Confident in our jurisdiction, we proceed directly to the merits.
B. The Contract Claims
1. Subordination. The parties dispute the capture of the term “Subordinated Debt” as defined in ¶ l.a the Subordination Agreement. DCC contends, and the lower courts unanimously agreed, that the plain language in the Subordination Agreement subordinates all of Rivera’s loans to Coachman and its affiliates, irrespective of the time they were made. Rivera disputes this conclusion and argues that the plain language subordinates only loans made be *13 fore the execution of the Subordination Agreement or, in the alternative, that the language is ambiguous аnd should thus be construed against its drafter, DCC. This distinction is critical because Rivera submits that the contested payments apply only to his loans that post-date the Subordination Agreement, not his previous loans that, under the Subordination Agreement, constitute subordinated debt.
The parties identify two provisions in the Subordination Agreement as evidence tending to support their respective positions. The first is defining “Subordinated Debt,” provided below in full:
“Subordinated Debt” shall mean all principal, interest, fees, costs, enforcement expenses (including legal fees and disbursements), collateral protection expenses and other reimbursement and indemnity obligations that the Subordinating Creditor [Rivera] has loaned to the Borrower [Coachman] or any of its affiliates.
The second details “Subordination,” and reads in pertinent part:
7. Subordination. The Senior Debt [DCV’s $2 million bridge loan] and the Note and any and all other documents and instruments evidencing or creating the Senior Debt and all guaranties, mortgages, security agreements, pledges and other collateral guarantying or securing the Senior Debt or any part thereof shall be senior to the Subordinated Debt irrespective of the time of the execution, delivery or issuance of any thereof.
Both DCC and Rivera agree (ignoring Rivera’s alternate argument for the moment) that these provisions are unambiguous, but in opposite ways. Displaying its conjugative prowess, DCC argues that “shall mean” indicates “the future progressive tense and, as the main verb phrase in this definitional section, use of the those words require that the entire definition is to be read at the time the [Subordination Agreement] is being enforced, not the time at which it was executed.” Not to be syntactically outplayed, Rivera responds that “has loaned” can only refer to loans outstanding as of the date of the Subordination Agreement, and cannot possibly encompass loans madе after that date. The grammatical acrobatics continue with competing interpretations of the “Subordination” clause, specifically with respect to the following language: “irrespective of the time of the execution, delivery or issuance of any thereof.” DCC posits that this language modifies “Subordinated Debt,” which is the closest noun; Rivera argues that it modifies “Senior Debt,” which is the direct object of “shall be senior.”
DCC also invokes two provisions in the Note to support its interpretation of the Subordination Agreement. The first is the Note’s definition of the Subordination Agreement, which is attached to the Note as an annex, provided in ¶ l.(xiv):
“Subordination and Standby Agreement” shall mean the agreement (Annex D) by Mr. Luis Rivera to subordinate and defer repayment of the principal of any loan by him to the Company [Coachman], Olympic Mills Corp., Olympic Group, Inc. or the new entity pursuant to the Hampshire Agreement until this Note is converted and repaid.
The second, a condition precedent to DCV’s loan under the Note, is provided in ¶ 5.1:
Subordination and Standby Agreement. Mr Luis Rivera Siaca shall execute an irrevokable Subordination and Standby Agreement, in the form attached here to as Annex D, whereby his loans to the Company [Coachman] or its affiliates are subordinated to this Note and he agrees to defer payment of prin *14 cipal on such loans until this Note is either converted into Series E preferred Stock or is repaid.
Using this language, and corresponding language in the Subordination Agreement that it claims expressly incorporates the Note by reference (i.e., the recital that identifies the execution of the Subordination Agreement as a “condition precedent to the Lender’s [DCV] willingness to make a loan to the Borrower [Coachman] pursuant to the Note”), DCC argues that the “Subordinated Debt” unambiguously applies to all of Rivera’s loans to Coachman and its affiliates. Rivera concеdes that the Subordination Agreement “refers to and describes the Note,” but denies that it incorporates the Note by reference. Also, Rivera argues that the Note is “outside the four corners” of the Subordination Agreement, and, for the purposes of deciding their contract dispute, constitutes extrinsic evidence.
We review
de novo
the decisions of the district court (liability) and the bankruptcy court (damages) granting summary judgment, and owe no particular deference to the conclusions of the BAP.
See Razzaboni v. Schifano (In re Schifano),
It is undisputed that, pursuant to ¶ 12 of the Subordination Agreement (and ¶ 16 of the Note), Delaware provides the governing substantive law. Under Delaware law, “[t]he basic rule of contract construction gives priority to the intention of the parties.”
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Shell Oil Co.,
To our knowledge, the Delaware Supreme Court has not yet hаd occasion to apply, as we have, the long-recognized principle that,
in the absence of anything to indicate a contrary intention, instruments executed at the same time, by the same contracting parties, for the same purpose, and in the course of the same transaction will be considered and construed together as one contract or instrument, even though they do not in terms refer to each other. 11
*15
11 Richard A. Lord,
Williston on Contracts
§ 30:26 at 239-42 (4th ed.1999) (citing
Bailey v. Hannibal & St. Joseph R.R. Co.,
The language of the Subordination Agreement quickly comes into focus when viewed through the lens of the Note. The most obvious blow to Rivera’s interpretation of the Subordination Agreement is the Note’s use of “any loan” in ¶ l.(xiv), without any accompanying prospective limitation. In fact, subsequent language in ¶ l.(xiv) shows that such a limitation could not have been intended. In pertinent part, ¶ l.(xiv) explains that the Subordination Agreement would require Rivera “to subordinate and defer repayment of the principal of any loan by him to the Company [Coachman], Olympic Mills Corp., Olympic Group, Inc. or the new entity pursuant to the Hampshire Agreement until this Note is converted and repaid.” (Emphasis sup *16 plied.) However, prior to February 24, 2000, Rivera had extended loans to Coachman and Olympic Mills only; he did not extend any loans to the “new entity” (a/ k/a/ Glamourette) until afterwards. (It is unclear even whether Glamourette existed on the date of the signing.) Further, ¶ 5.1 provides that DCV’s loan would issue only if Rivera would agree that “his loans to the Company [Coachman] or its affiliates [not simply “and its affiliate Olympic Mills”] are subordinated to this Note.” (Emphasis supplied.) The Subordination Agreement uses similarly broad language in ¶ l.(xiv): “the Subordinating Creditor [Rivera] has loaned to the Borrower [Coachman] or any of its affiliates.” (Emphasis supplied.)
We are unwilling to endorse, as Rivera would have us do, an interpretation of “has loaned” that would render the above language meaningless or superfluous,
see Croiue,
2.
Equitable Estoppel.
In a last-ditch attempt to avert liability, Rivera contends that the doctrine of equitable estoppel precludes DCC from enforcing the Subordination Agreement. Specifically, Rivera argues that president of DCC and then Coachman director Wayne Foren “expressly consented to or knowingly acquiesced in” the repayment of Rivera’s loans.
16
To support his argument, Rivera touts (1) an April 14, 2000 letter in which Foren
proposed
that Rivera provide a $3 million short-term credit line that would be
*17
exempt from the Subordination Agreement, and (2) the December 12, 2000 board minutes that do not indicate whether For-en objected to the
prospect
that Coachman would use proceeds from the Puerto Rico Industrial Incentive Fund to repay Rivera’s $4 million loan that pre-dated the Subordination Agreement. Ignoring the fact that Rivera did not present the April 14 letter to the district court in his opposition to DCC’s summary judgment motion, the dispositive flaw in this evidence is that it fails to show how Rivera was induced to rely — let alone detrimentally — on Foren’s conduct.
See VonFeldt v. Stifel Financial Corp.,
3.
Damages.
Rivera’s contention that the bankruptcy court’s award does not accurately reflect expectation damages,
see Duncan v. Theratx, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
To sum up, we hold first that the intervention of nondiverse Coachman and Olympic Mills has not destroyed diversity jurisdiction, and that we have jurisdiction to decide the merits of this appeal as a result; second, that the Subordination Agreement, when properly read in tandem with the Note, unambiguously governs the loans disputed in this case; and third, that Rivera’s remaining arguments are either without merit (equitable estoppel) or waived (damages). The judgment of the BAP is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. A bridge loan, also known as a swing loan, is a short-term high-interest loan to finance a discrete, typically time-sensitive, project or venture.
. An amendment to the Note extended the maturity date to January 31, 2001, and increased the principal amount to $2.5 million.
. The record reflects that, at some point after January 24, 2000, the entity’s name was changed to Glamourette/OG, Inc.
. The separately-filed bankruptcy petitions were consolidated within a week. On December 19, 2002, the bаnkruptcy court granted Glamourette’s motion for conversion to chapter 7 liquidation; Coachman and Olympic Mills followed suit on May 4, 2004.
. Rivera made the same argument in adversax-y proceeding No. 03-0042, with the same result.
. Judge Arthur N. Volotato dissented from the majority's decision to review the district court’s interlocutory order granting partial summary judgment, arguing that, under our opinion in
Brandt v. Wand Partners,
. DCC's argument that the district court's original jurisdiction continued uninterrupted from diversity of citizenship to bankruptcy jurisdiction is unsupported and mischaracterizes the circumstances of this case. The theory appears to rely on the tortured applicatiоn of a limited exception to the complete-diversity rule when a plaintiff joins a nondiverse defendant sued under federal law with a diverse defendant sued in diversity.
See Romero v. Int’l Terminal Operating Co.,
. Coachman and Olympic Mills appear to have entered the contract dispute (later adversary proceeding No. 03-0090) as defendant intervenors, although their alignment is not entirely clear from the record. We have the authority to determine this matter for ourselves,
see City of Indianapolis v. Chase Nat'l Bank,
. From this perspective, the proper alignment of Coachman and Olympic Mills becomes more than an academic exercise, see
supra
note 8, because the intervention of a nondiverse party as a
plaintiff
raises a suspicious judicial eyebrow under § 1332.
See, e.g., Aurora,
. In its supplemental brief, DCC suggests that, were we to hold that intervention had defeated the district court's jurisdiction (which we do not), we should exercise our power under Fed.R.Civ.P. 21 and, to preserve diversity, dismiss the case as to Coachman and Olympic Mills.
See Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain,
. This principle is associated with but distinct from a court's consideration of a separate writing expressly incorporated by reference — something the Delaware Supreme Court has recognized (but with material limitations) and what DCC argues should permit
*15
this court to read the Subordination Agreement along side the Note.
Compare
11
Williston on Contracts
§ 30:25 ("Writing Expressly Incorporated By Reference”),
with id.
§ 30:26 ("Writing Implicitly Incorporated By Reference”);
see Delaware v. Black,
. We observe that Delaware’s Chancery courts, in the figurative trenches of contract interpretation, have recognized and applied this precept in making ambiguity determinations.
Gildor v. Optical Solutions, Inc.,
No. 1416-N,
. Rivera’s argument that the phrase "pursuant to the Hampshire Agreement” in ¶ l.(xiv) of the Note limits subordination to "specific indebtedness” lacks merit. As an initial matter, it is debatable whether this language imports a subject-matter restraint on the Subordination Agreement or simply associates the "new entity” with the Hampshire venture. But even giving Rivera the benefit of the doubt, he admits that the loans that post-date the Subordination Agreement were to provide additional capital for the acquisition of Hampshire assets, presumably after the depletion of DCV's loan.
. We reach this conclusion in spite of DCC’s assertion that "shall mean,” as it is used to define "Subordinated Debt” in ¶ l.b of the Subordination Agreement, independently denotes the veiy specific intention that DCC assigns tо it (without any further indication here that "shall mean” bears on the question presented). Such language is common in defining contractual terms, as exemplified by the very contracts in this case: both defined terms in the Subordination Agreement (“Senior Debt” is the other, in ¶ l.a), and all fourteen in the Note, employ "shall mean” to convey the terms' intended meaning.
. We need not, and therefore do not, address the parties' competing interpretations of the "Subordination” clause in ¶ 7 of the Subordination Agreement. Assuming without deciding that "irrespective of the time of the execution, delivery or issuance of any thereof” modifies the term “Senior Debt,” this interpretation is not at all inconsistent with our holding with respect to the definition of "Subordinated Debt” in ¶ l.b and the related provisions in the Note.
. Foren was elected to Coachman's board of directors as a condition precedent to the bridge loan, pursuant to ¶ 5.3 of the Note. Although his term in office was to continue "as long as any amount is outstanding” under the Note, Foren resigned in February 2001 when Coachman defaulted.
