ALEX TIGER, Plaintiff Below, Appellant, v. BOAST APPAREL, INC. (a/k/a BAI Capital Holdings, Inc.), Defendant Below, Appellee.
No. 23, 2019
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
August 7, 2019
Court Below: Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware, C.A. No. 2017-0776; Submitted: June 12, 2019; Before STRINE, Chief Justice; SEITZ and TRAYNOR, Justices.
Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED.
David A. Felice, Esquire, BAILEY & GLASSER, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware for Appellant Alex Tiger.
Kevin G. Abrams, Esquire, Matthew L. Miller, Esquire, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Brian J. Capitummino, Esquire, WOODS OVIATT GILMAN LLP, Rochester, New York, for Appellee Boast Apparel, Inc.
In a report that was adopted by the Court of Chancery, a Master in Chancery held that books and records produced to a stockholder under
We hold that, although the Court of Chancery may—and typically does—condition
I. BACKGROUND
Boast is an apparel brand created by tennis player Bill St. John in 1973. Although Boast, which featured a Japanese maple leaf logo,4 enjoyed some success in the 70s and 80s, St. John retired the brand in the 90s.
In 2010, Alex Tiger—the plaintiff in this suit—and John Dowling decided to revive the Boast Brand. The pair started Boast Investors, LLC, which would later be converted into the named defendant in this case, BAI Capital Holdings, Inc. (“BAI“), as well as Branded Boast, LLC. Boast Investors owned a majority interest in Branded Boast, which in turn purchased the Boast intellectual property from St. John‘s holding company, Boast, Inc.
Over the next several years, Tiger and Dowling had several conflicts in managing Boast Investors. In particular, Dowling increased his equity stake in Boast Investors and its successors through a series of mechanisms that Tiger opposed. First, Dowling loaned $4 million to Boast Investors. Then, after an abortive attempt, Dowling succeeded on his second try at amending Boast Investors’ operating agreement and converted his loans into additional member units in Boast Investors. As a part of this conversion, other members were required to contribute additional capital in a preemptive rights offering or their stakes would be diluted. Tiger objected to this offering and did not participate. In November 2014, Boast Investors converted itself from a limited liability company to the corporation that became BAI.5 Tiger and Dowling attempted to resolve
On December 9, 2014, Tiger delivered his first
On February 24, 2017, Tiger sent a second
In October 2017, BAI gave notice under
Tiger then filed a
The primary dispute between the parties before the Court of Chancery was the scope of Tiger‘s confidentiality obligations upon BAI‘s production of the relevant books and records. Tiger suggested a one-year confidentiality order, while BAI, citing previous cases in which the Court of Chancery issued three-year confidentiality orders on financial documents, pushed for a “default three-year period of confidentiality.”7
After considering the parties’ respective positions, the Master in Chancery submitted her report on July 23, 2018, recommending an indefinite confidentiality period lasting up to and until Tiger filed suit based on facts learned through his inspection, after which confidentiality would be controlled by the applicable court rules. Tiger took exception to the Master‘s Report, but the Master—having become Vice Chancellor—rejected Tiger‘s exceptions and adopted the Master‘s Report, including the indefinite confidentiality period.8
Tiger appealed, arguing that the indefinite nature of the confidentiality order constituted an abuse of discretion and that the Court of Chancery failed to account for his status as a market participant.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“In a
“This Court may affirm on the basis of a different rationale than that which was articulated by the trial court[] if the issue was fairly presented to the trial court.”10
III. ANALYSIS
In CM & M Group, Inc. v. Carroll,11 we held that the Court of Chancery is empowered to place reasonable confidentiality restrictions on a
Relevant to the case before us now—and especially the Master‘s reference to a presumption of confidentiality—is the Court of Chancery‘s 2004 opinion in Disney v. Walt Disney Co.14 In that case, plaintiff-stockholder Roy E. Disney had executed a confidentiality agreement with The Walt Disney Company and received books and records under
In its own words, the Court of Chancery “beg[an] its analysis with the presumption that the production of nonpublic corporate books and records to a stockholder making a demand pursuant to
The Court of Chancery then denied Mr. Disney‘s request, and Mr. Disney appealed to this Court. We found that the Court of Chancery‘s decision was unclear and remanded the case, ordering the Court of Chancery to “make specific findings as to whether the documents are confidential” and to “address the potential benefits and potential harm from disclosing the documents for [Mr.] Disney‘s stated purposes.”16 On remand, the Court of Chancery found that the documents were confidential and interpreted our command to address the potential benefits and potential harm as an order to conduct a balancing test in order to determine whether
Although the Court of Chancery reached the same final conclusion on remand as it did before Mr. Disney‘s appeal, it recast its mode of inquiry, retreating from its earlier position that there is a presumption of confidentiality. Instead, this time the Court of Chancery stated that the “analysis begins, as did the [earlier Chancery decision denying Mr. Disney‘s petition], with the observation that the provision of nonpublic corporate books and records to a stockholder making a demand pursuant to
A. There is no presumption of confidentiality in Section 220 productions
Although on remand the Court of Chancery in Disney essentially disclaimed a presumption of confidentiality, its original 2004 statement touting a presumption has, directly and indirectly, become the basis for several recent Court of Chancery decisions applying just such a presumption.18
We now clarify that there is no presumption of confidentiality in
B. The standards for placing confidentiality restrictions are not the same as those for lifting existing restrictions
The Court of Chancery also went too far when it said that Tiger needed to “suggest[] the existence of exigent circumstances” in order to receive anything less than indefinite confidentiality.23 First, given that there is no presumption of confidentiality at all, then, a fortiori, there is certainly no presumption of indefinite confidentiality as the Court of Chancery suggests. Second, simply because a party has not shown circumstances justifying modification of a judgment does not indicate that judgment would properly be entered against it in the first instance.
Simply put, an indefinite period of confidentiality protection should be the exception and not the rule. And while indefinite confidentiality may well be reasonable in a given case,24 a party demanding
C. The Court of Chancery‘s confidentiality conditions were reasonable under the circumstances
We do not find, however, that the Court of Chancery‘s references to presumptions and exigent circumstances themselves warrant reversal. Although we might have decided the issue differently, especially when BAI offered a three-year confidentiality period, Tiger has not made an adequate showing of reversible error.
Tiger argues that an indefinite confidentiality order, in combination with the process to lift confidentiality, “could be used to unfairly burden a stockholder seeking to exercise its inspection rights.” Though that is theoretically possible, Tiger has not shown that it is reasonably probable in this particular case. The hypothetical burden that Tiger posits consequent to the Court of Chancery‘s decision is that a stockholder might be required to seek court permission before offering the documents to an accountant or trust attorney for valuation purposes. But the confidentiality order entered by the Court of Chancery permits Tiger to share the documents with his accountants and tax preparers—subject to their agreement to maintain confidentiality—so that he might value his shares.25 Therefore, Tiger‘s supposed concerns are unfounded. Accordingly, under our deferential standard of review, the Court of Chancery‘s decision does not warrant reversal.
D. The Court of Chancery did not err by crediting BAI‘s concerns over Tiger‘s market participant status
As mentioned, Tiger also appealed the Court of Chancery‘s alleged “fail[ure] to account for Tiger‘s status as a market participant” when issuing its order for indefinite confidentiality. According to Tiger, the Court of Chancery “credited BAI‘s alleged concern that Tiger might improperly use the books and records over Tiger‘s concern that BAI might use an indefinitely confidentiality obligation to interfere with his . . . work in the . . . [apparel] market.”26
Crediting one concern over another is well within the discretion of the Court of Chancery, and there is sufficient evidence to support the Court of Chancery‘s exercise of discretion. We find no error here.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court of Chancery is affirmed.
ROY E. DISNEY, Plaintiff Below, Appellant, v. THE WALT DISNEY COMPANY, Defendant Below, Appellee.
No. 380, 2004
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
March 31, 2005
Court Below: Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware in and for New Castle County
APPENDIX
O R D E R
This 31st day of March, 2005, upon consideration of the briefs and arguments of the parties, it appears to the Court that:
1) Roy E. Disney appeals from a decision of the Court of Chancery denying his application to lift the confidentiality restrictions on certain documents he obtained in a successful books and records case brought under
2) The Company contends that the trial court did review each document and determined that they all should continue to be designated “confidential.” Disney disagrees. Disney reads the trial court decision to be that any document designated “confidential” when produced under
3) After carefully reviewing the trial court‘s decision, we are unable to determine which of these two interpretations is correct. We are not unmindful of the trial court‘s statements that: i) “the documents at issue all relate to the private communications among or deliberations of the Company‘s board of directors,” and ii) “[t]here is little doubt that those who participated in these communications had a reasonable expectation that they would remain private....” If those statements constitute findings of fact after reviewing the disputed documents, they still do not explain what, if any, balancing the trial court undertook in deciding that the Company‘s confidentiality interest outweighed Disney‘s stockholder communication interest.
4) Because further explanation may resolve, or at least clarify, some of the issues presented, we conclude that the appropriate course is to remand this matter. On remand, the trial court should make specific findings as to whether the documents are confidential. If so, the court should address the potential benefits and potential harm from disclosing the documents for Disney‘s stated purposes, and reach a conclusion as to whether the confidentiality designation should be removed or reduced to allow for specified communications. To the extent that several documents can be considered together because of their similarities, the trial court need not make separate findings for each one.
5) Finally, if the trial court takes the position that no review of the disputed documents is appropriate because Disney may only seek a change of designation in the course of a subsequent substantive lawsuit, the court should so advise this Court. Nonetheless, we ask that the trial
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that this matter is REMANDED to the Court of Chancery for further action in accordance with this Order. Jurisdiction is retained.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Carolyn Berger
Justice
