SIGA Technologies, Inc. v. Pharmathene, Inc. , 2015 Del. LEXIS 678 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      EFiled: Dec 23 2015 11:23AM EST
    Filing ID 58337369
    Case Number 20,2015
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    SIGA TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,                §
    a Delaware Corporation,                 §
    §    No. 20, 2015
    Defendant Below,                  §
    Appellant/Cross-Appellee,         §    Court Below: Court of Chancery
    §    of the State of Delaware
    v.                                §
    §    C.A. No. 2627-VCP
    PHARMATHENE, INC.,                      §
    a Delaware Corporation,                 §
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                  §
    Appellee/Cross-Appellant.         §
    Submitted:   October 7, 2015
    Decided:     December 23, 2015
    Before STRINE, Chief Justice; HOLLAND, VALIHURA, VAUGHN, and SEITZ,
    Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.
    Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED.
    Stephen P. Lamb, Esquire (Argued), Meghan M. Dougherty, Esquire, Matthew D.
    Stachel, Esquire, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, Wilmington, Delaware,
    for Defendant Below, Appellant/Cross-Appellee SIGA Technologies, Inc.
    A. Richard Winchester, Esquire (Argued), Christopher A. Selzer, Esquire, McCarter &
    English, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, for Plaintiff Below, Appellee/Cross-Appellant
    PharmAthene, Inc.
    SEITZ, Justice, for the Majority:
    I.     INTRODUCTION
    This is the second appeal by SIGA Technologies, Inc. (“SIGA”) from a Court of
    Chancery judgment awarding PharmAthene, Inc. (“PharmAthene”) damages stemming
    from failed merger and license negotiations between the parties. In the first appeal, this
    Court upheld the Court of Chancery’s finding that SIGA in bad faith breached its
    contractual obligation to negotiate a license agreement consistent with the parties’ license
    agreement term sheet, known throughout this litigation as the “LATS.” This Court also
    held that where parties have agreed to negotiate in good faith, and would have reached an
    agreement but for the defendant’s bad faith conduct during the negotiations, the plaintiff
    can recover contract expectation damages, so long as the plaintiff can prove damages
    with reasonable certainty. Because the Court of Chancery ruled out expectation damages
    in its first decision, this Court remanded the case to reconsider an award of damages to
    SIGA in a decision we will call “SIGA I.” 1
    The Court of Chancery did as instructed and reevaluated the evidence, including
    evidence of expectation damages. Although the court previously found that lump-sum
    expectation damages were too speculative to recover, the Court of Chancery held on
    remand that PharmAthene met its burden of proving with reasonable certainty
    expectation damages and awarded PharmAthene $113 million. 2 The parties once again
    appealed to this Court.
    1
    SIGA Techs. Inc. v. PharmAthene, Inc., 
    67 A.3d 330
    , 347 (Del. 2013) [hereinafter SIGA I].
    2
    PharmAthene, Inc. v. Siga Techs., Inc., 
    2015 WL 220445
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Jan. 15, 2015)
    [hereinafter Final Remand Order].
    2
    SIGA raises essentially two claims of error in the current appeal: first, the Court of
    Chancery was not free to reconsider its prior holding that lump-sum expectation damages
    were too speculative; and, second, if reconsideration was permitted, the expectation
    damages awarded following remand were too speculative. After careful consideration of
    SIGA’s arguments, we find that the law of the case doctrine did not preclude the Court of
    Chancery from reconsidering its earlier determination that lump-sum expectation
    damages were too speculative. In SIGA I, this Court clarified that expectation damages
    were available, instructed the Court of Chancery to revisit its damages award, directed
    the trial court to reevaluate the helpfulness of expert testimony, and permitted the court to
    make any order in further progress of the case not inconsistent with the SIGA I decision.
    The Court of Chancery followed the law of the case by complying with the mandate in
    SIGA I.
    We also find that the court did not abuse its discretion when it awarded
    PharmAthene lump-sum expectation damages, and its factual findings supporting its new
    damages determination were not clearly erroneous. The Court of Chancery considered
    anew all issues relevant to the remedy, including the uncertainty caused by the
    wrongdoer’s breach. When a party breaches a contract, that party often creates a course
    of events that is different from those that would have transpired absent the breach. The
    breaching party cannot avoid responsibility for making the other party whole simply by
    arguing that expectation damages based on lost profits are speculative because they come
    from an uncertain world created by the wrongdoer. Rather, when a contract is breached,
    expectation damages can be established as long as the plaintiff can prove the fact of
    3
    damages with reasonable certainty. The amount of damages can be an estimate. 3 When
    awarding lump-sum expectation damages for breach of a Type II contract, the Court of
    Chancery correctly took into account all the circumstances of the breach, including the
    wrongdoer’s willfulness, 4 especially when the wrongdoer caused uncertainty about the
    economic terms of the transaction by its failure to negotiate in good faith. 5 Accordingly,
    we affirm the judgment of the Court of Chancery.
    II.     FACTUAL BACKGROUND 6
    A.     SIGA’s Development Of ST-246
    In 2004, SIGA acquired technology for ST-246, an antiviral drug for the treatment
    of smallpox. At that time, the viability, potential uses, safety, and efficacy of the drug, as
    well as the likelihood of SIGA obtaining regulatory approval or making sales to the
    government, were, as is typical in this industry, uncertain.
    By late 2005, SIGA was running out of money, its largest shareholder,
    MacAndrews & Forbes, refused to invest additional funds, and the NASDAQ threatened
    3
    Beard Research, Inc v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    , 613 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d sub. nom. ASDI, Inc. v.
    Beard Research, Inc., 
    11 A.3d 749
    (Del. 2010); Del. Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older, 
    2002 WL 31458243
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2002) (quoting Red Sail Easter Ltd. Partners, L.P. v. Radio
    City Music Hall Prods., Inc., 
    1992 WL 251380
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Sept. 29, 1992)).
    4
    Cura Fin. Servs. N.V. v. Elec. Payment Exch., Inc., 
    2001 WL 1334188
    , at *20 (Del. Ch. Oct.
    22, 2001) (citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 352 cmt. a (1981)).
    5
    
    Beard, 8 A.3d at 613
    (“Public policy has led Delaware courts to show a general willingness to
    make a wrongdoer ‘bear the risk of uncertainty of a damages calculation where the calculation
    cannot be mathematically proven.’”) (quoting Great Am. Opportunities, Inc. v. Cherrydale
    Fundraising, LLC, 
    2010 WL 338219
    , at *23 (Del. Ch. Jan. 29, 2010) (citing Duncan v. TheraTx,
    Inc., 
    775 A.2d 1019
    , 1023 (Del. 2001); Henne v. Balick, 
    146 A.2d 394
    , 396 (Del. 1958); Gotham
    P’rs, L.P. v. Hallwood Realty P’rs, L.P., 
    855 A.2d 1059
    , 1067 (Del. Ch. 2003); Dionisi v.
    DeCampli, 
    1995 WL 398536
    , at *18 (Del. Ch. June 28, 1995)).
    6
    The background facts are taken from the extensive record in both appeals.
    4
    to de-list its shares. SIGA estimated that it needed an additional $16 million to complete
    development of the drug. On top of its financial problems, SIGA was having trouble
    developing ST-246 because it had no experience or employee expertise bringing a drug to
    market.
    B.        SIGA And PharmAthene Negotiate A Business Collaboration
    In dire straits, SIGA began discussing a possible collaboration with PharmAthene.
    This was not their first attempt to work together. PharmAthene had previously backed
    out of merger negotiations between the parties in late 2003. Nevertheless, Thomas
    Konatich, SIGA’s Chief Financial Officer, contacted Eric Richman, PharmAthene’s Vice
    President of Business Development and Strategies, to begin discussions. According to
    Richman’s contemporaneous notes, due to the prior failed attempt at a merger and to
    SIGA’s need for a fast cash infusion, SIGA insisted on framing a license agreement
    before discussing a potential merger.
    Both companies put together teams to negotiate the potential business
    collaboration.     On SIGA’s side, in addition to CFO Konatich, the key participants
    included the Chairman of SIGA’s board, Donald Drapkin, who also served as the Vice
    Chairman of SIGA’s biggest stockholder, MacAndrews & Forbes; SIGA’s Chief
    Scientific Officer, Dennis Hruby, who kept SIGA’s senior management apprised of
    ST-246’s scientific developments; and then-board member and current Chief Executive
    Officer, Eric Rose.     SIGA’s financial controller, Ayelet Dugary, prepared financial
    projections that informed the negotiations. Additionally, several in-house lawyers from
    MacAndrews & Forbes took an active role in negotiating with PharmAthene on SIGA’s
    5
    behalf, including Michael Borofsky who was involved in negotiating the terms of the
    LATS; and Steven Fasman, who worked with SIGA personnel to prepare a valuation of
    ST-246, and who was involved in discussions with PharmAthene after SIGA experienced
    positive developments and backed out of the merger and the LATS negotiations. SIGA
    also hired attorney Nicholas Coch to represent it in communications with PharmAthene’s
    attorney right before SIGA breached its obligation to negotiate a license agreement
    according to the LATS.
    PharmAthene’s team, assembled by Richman, included CEO David Wright; CFO
    Ronald Kaiser; and board member Elizabeth Czerepark; as well as attorney Jeffrey
    Baumel. PharmAthene also later hired attorney Elliot Olstein who communicated with
    SIGA’s attorney Coch in the time leading up to SIGA’s breach.
    1. SIGA And PharmAthene Negotiate And Sign The LATS
    Konatich and Richman led the negotiations over the license agreement on behalf
    of their companies. The Court of Chancery found that at the end of 2005, the parties
    conservatively valued ST-246’s market potential at around $1 billion to $1.26 billion.7
    The parties reflected their negotiations in the specific terms of the LATS, with the last
    revisions dated January 26, 2006.        This final version of the LATS was titled
    “SIGA/PharmAthene Partnership” and the footer of the document read: “Non Binding
    Terms.” 8   The objective read: “To establish a partnership to further develop &
    7
    PharmAthene, Inc. v. Siga Techs., Inc., 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 22, 2011)
    [hereinafter 2011 Opinion].
    8
    App. to Answering Br. at 1498 (The License Agr. Term Sheet).
    6
    commercialize [ST-246] for the treatment of Smallpox and orthopox related infections
    and to develop other orthopox virus therapeutics.” 9 The LATS provided that SIGA
    would grant PharmAthene a worldwide, exclusive license to use, develop, sell, and
    sublicense ST-246 and related products. The LATS also contemplated a joint research
    and development committee and allocated certain roles on the committee to
    PharmAthene and SIGA. PharmAthene would also fund research at SIGA based on a
    defined research and development plan and budget.
    The LATS included a number of economic terms. PharmAthene had to pay a total
    “License Fee” of $6 million, consisting of (1) a $2 million upfront cash payment; (2) a
    $2.5 million deferred license fee to be paid 12 months after the execution of a license
    agreement upon the occurrence of certain events; and (3) a $1.5 million payment to be
    made after SIGA obtained over $15 million in financing. The LATS also required
    PharmAthene to pay up to an additional $10 million for SIGA’s achievement of certain
    milestones such as meeting specific sales targets and obtaining necessary regulatory
    approvals. Additionally, PharmAthene was required to make incremental annual royalty
    payments on net sales of “Patented Products” on a sliding percentage scale of between
    8% and 12%, depending on the amount of yearly sales. SIGA was also “entitled to
    receive 50% of any amounts by which [the] net margin exceed[ed] 20% on sales to the
    9
    
    Id. 7 [U.S.]
    Federal Government.” 10 After negotiating the LATS, the parties turned their focus
    to merger negotiations.
    2. SIGA And PharmAthene Enter Into A Bridge Loan Agreement
    And A Merger Agreement
    Due to SIGA’s precarious financial position, PharmAthene agreed to provide
    SIGA with bridge financing for continued development of ST-246 while the parties
    negotiated a merger.          On March 20, 2006, the parties entered into a Bridge Loan
    Agreement whereby PharmAthene loaned SIGA $3 million. Section 2.3(a) of the Bridge
    Loan Agreement bound the parties to negotiate in good faith a license agreement in
    accordance with the terms of the LATS if the merger was terminated or not executed, and
    imposed a 90-day exclusivity period. 11
    After executing the Bridge Loan Agreement, SIGA and PharmAthene continued to
    negotiate the merger. In connection with the merger discussions, PharmAthene created a
    financial model in February 2006 based on SIGA’s evaluation of ST-246’s market
    potential (the “PharmAthene Model”).                 On June 8, the parties signed a Merger
    Agreement. Section 12.3 of the Merger Agreement imposed a similar obligation on the
    10
    
    Id. at 1499.
    11
    App. to Opening Br. at 132 (Bridge Loan Agreement § 2.3(a)):
    Upon any termination of the Merger Term Sheet . . . , termination of the
    Definitive Agreement relating to the Merger, or if a Definitive Agreement is not
    executed . . . , SIGA and PharmAthene will negotiate in good faith with the
    intention of executing a definitive License Agreement in accordance with the
    terms set forth in the [LATS] and [SIGA] agrees for a period of 90 days during
    which the definitive license agreement is under negotiation, it shall not, directly or
    indirectly, initiate discussions or engage in negotiations with any corporation,
    partnership, person or other entity or group concerning any Competing
    Transaction without the prior written consent of the other party or notice from the
    other party that it desires to terminate discussions hereunder.
    8
    parties to negotiate in good faith a license agreement in accordance with the LATS if the
    merger was terminated. 12 The Merger Agreement had a drop-dead date of September 30.
    The parties attached the LATS as an exhibit to the Bridge Loan Agreement and the
    Merger Agreement.
    C.      ST-246’s Prospects Improve As The Drug Hits Development
    Milestones And SIGA Acquires Funding
    After the parties signed the Merger Agreement, SIGA experienced several
    positive developments, the most important of which related to developments suggesting
    that ST-246 had bright prospects. First, on June 9, SIGA’s Chief Scientific Officer,
    Hruby, received news of a $5.4 million award for ST-246 from the National Institute of
    Allergy and Infectious Disease. 13 Hruby informed Konatich of the grant in an email, to
    which Konatich responded: “[I]t is a damn shame we had to merge.” 14 Hruby stated in
    his response: “With the 5.4M grant being activated, the 10.9M BAA award on its way, an
    8M grant pending along with a couple of appropriations—we could have gone all the way
    ourselves. Instead we got sold into slave labor and if anything the [PharmAthene] gang
    will drag us down.” 15 Next, on July 13, SIGA announced that “its lead smallpox drug
    12
    
    Id. at 271
    (Merger Agreement § 12.3):
    Upon any termination of this Agreement, SIGA and PharmAthene will negotiate
    in good faith with the intention of executive a definitive License Agreement in
    accordance with the terms set forth in the [LATS] and SIGA agrees for a period
    of 90 days during which the definitive license agreement is under negotiation, it
    shall not . . . initiate discussions or engage in negotiations with any corporation,
    partnership, person or other entity or group concerning any Competing
    Transaction . . . without the prior written consent of PharmAthene . . . .
    13
    App. to Answering Br. at 807–08 (Email Chain between Hruby and Konatich).
    14
    
    Id. at 807.
    15
    
    Id. 9 candidate,
    [ST-246], has successfully completed the first planned human clinical safety
    trial.” 16 Then, on September 13, Hruby called Richman to tell him that personnel at the
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where tests of ST-246 were conducted, “are
    beside themselves—never saw anything like it.” 17
    A few months later, on September 27, Hruby emailed a number of high-level
    SIGA officials (including CEO, Donald Drapkin, and board member Adnan Mjalli) to
    inform them of the company’s recent accomplishments. In this email, Hruby lauded the
    success of recent trials of ST-246 as “excellent” and having “no adverse effects.” 18 He
    also noted that he presented to the Department of Homeland Security and the Department
    of Defense (“DoD”) the week before, and that the agencies were “very ‘impressed’ and
    both indicated acquisitions in the future.” 19 He further explained that “[the Department
    of Homeland Security] is developing an implementation plan that will be disclosed ~ Jan.
    1 that should spell out the timing and size of the acquisition. Of note, both groups also
    indicated an interest in acquiring our HFV antivirals in development.” 20 Notably, Hruby
    also announced the following:
    [W]e just received today notice of award on a $16.5M contract from the
    [National Institutes of Health] to fund all ST-246 development activities up
    to and through the NDA filing. Bottom line is the product’s entire
    16
    
    Id. at 811
    (SIGA Press Release).
    17
    
    Id. at 1133
    (Email from Richman to Wright).
    18
    
    Id. at 1135
    (Email from Hruby to Drapkin).
    19
    App. to Answering Br. at 1135.
    20
    
    Id. 10 development
    is supported, we have all the necessary partnerships and
    advocates in place, and we have the team in place to see it through. 21
    After pointing out all of SIGA’s recent successes, Hruby concluded in his email:
    I have grave concerns about the merger as it is currently going forward in
    that it appears that the merged company will not be [Small Business
    Innovation Research] compliant. In that case, we would have to shut down
    $30M in current grants and contracts and damage all the positive
    relationships we have developed to date. 22
    When Hruby testified at trial, he stated that his representation that $30 million would be
    lost “might have been an exaggeration.” 23
    D.     SIGA Terminates The Merger Agreement And Proposes A LLC
    Agreement In Place Of A Licensing Agreement In
    Accordance With The Terms Of The LATS
    Meanwhile, the Merger Agreement’s drop-dead date of September 30 approached,
    but the SEC had not yet approved SIGA’s draft of the related proxy statement. On
    October 3, Fasman emailed Hruby stating: “Here is the decision to be reached: Should
    SIGA continue with its merger plans or should it try to go it alone?” 24 SIGA’s board met
    the next day. According to the board minutes, Chairman Drapkin discussed the planned
    merger and whether SIGA should exercise its right to terminate the merger given that it
    did not close before September 30, or whether SIGA should grant PharmAthene an
    extension.   Hruby gave a presentation about SIGA’s scientific results and Konatich
    presented on SIGA’s financial status. At this meeting, the SIGA board resolved to
    terminate the Merger Agreement.
    21
    
    Id. 22 Id.
    23
    
    Id. at 2574
    (Trial Test. of Hruby).
    24
    
    Id. at 1141
    (Email from Fasman to Hruby).
    11
    Two weeks later, SIGA publicly announced that the results of a primate trial
    showed that ST-246 provided 100% protection against smallpox. On October 18, SIGA’s
    Controller, Dugary, emailed Konatich and SIGA’s legal representatives a financial
    analysis concluding that total past and future development costs equaled $39.66 million,
    and that a $40 million upfront license fee would support a 50-50 split of ST-246’s
    profits. 25 On October 19, SIGA announced a $9 million private placement whereby it
    sold two million shares of its stock at a price three times greater than SIGA’s 2005 share
    price.
    On October 26, PharmAthene attorney Elliot Olstein emailed SIGA attorney
    Nicholas Coch, advising Coch that PharmAthene was prepared to sign its proposed draft
    of the license agreement. 26      Coch responded that the nature of the negotiations
    necessitated a meeting. 27
    On November 6, the parties met for the first time since SIGA’s termination of the
    merger agreement to discuss a license agreement. Richman attended the meeting with
    PharmAthene attorneys Baumel and Olstein. Konatich and Rose were present on SIGA’s
    side along with their legal counsel, Coch and attorney Fasman. Fasman spoke to SIGA’s
    perspective, emphasizing the LATS’s reference to a “partnership” between the parties
    and the need to revise some of the economic terms of the LATS. He proposed a $40 to
    25
    App. to Answering Br. at 1166–70 (SIGA ST-246 Market Potential Presentation).
    26
    2011 Opinion at *9.
    27
    
    Id. 12 $45
    million upfront fee and a 50-50 profit split. Olstein insisted that the parties were
    bound by the LATS but allowed SIGA to put together a formal proposal.
    On November 9, SIGA announced that ST-246 demonstrated protection against
    the monkeypox virus in two primate trials.             Then, on November 21, SIGA sent
    PharmAthene a draft LLC Agreement that departed drastically from the terms of the
    LATS in a way that strongly favored SIGA.
    E.      SIGA’s Internal Valuation Of ST-246 Ranged Between $3 Billion And
    $5.6 Billion Before SIGA’s Breach
    With SIGA’s proposed draft of an LLC agreement in the background, in a series
    of emails on November 27 and 28, Fasman communicated with SIGA’s senior
    management—including CFO Konatich, CEO Drapkin, Controller Dugary, and two
    board members—about ST-246’s valuation. 28 Fasman’s initial email on November 27
    criticized the PharmAthene Model, which reflected sales of between $300 million and
    $700 million per year starting in 2008, calling this projection “clearly erroneous.” 29
    Fasman attached a revised revenue projection that he prepared with input from Konatich
    and Dugary, and proposed that SIGA should advocate to use the assumptions in his
    projection in its discussions with PharmAthene. 30 He concluded, “[a]s you will see, all of
    the individual assumptions are easily justified, and the result shows a $3 billion valuation
    28
    App. to Answering Br. at 1189–201 (Fasman Emails).
    29
    
    Id. at 1189
    (“Nonetheless, PharmAthene’s projection is clearly erroneous in several important
    respects. For example, PharmAthene assumes that the drug is useful only for populations where
    vaccine is contra-indicated. PharmAthene also grossly understates the potential for foreign sales.
    At the same time, PharmAthene assumes that [ST-246] can be sold for $100/treatment in the
    U.S. and $150/treatment abroad, prices that appear to us excessive.”).
    30
    
    Id. at 1190–91.
    13
    for [ST-246], which makes the financial terms that SIGA proposed in the [LLC
    Agreement between SIGA and PharmAthene] draft circulated last week a bargain.” 31
    Fasman also noted in this email that “PharmAthene assumes that [ST-246] can be sold for
    $100/treatment in the U.S. and $150/treatment abroad, prices that appear to us to be
    excessive.” 32
    A comparison of the parties’ assumption attached to Fasman’s email shows that
    SIGA assumed a price of $75 per course of treatment in the U.S. and $100 abroad (with a
    smaller net margin abroad due to greater marketing expenses). 33 The comparison table
    revealed additional differences between the parties’ assumptions.             For example,
    PharmAthene assumed a 5% contraindication rate 34 for purchase into the Strategic
    National Stockpile (the “National Stockpile”) whereas SIGA’s table stated that ST-246
    can be “therapeutic, prophylactic and adjuvant” and assumed a 20% contraindication
    rate, 35 which Fasman lowered to 15% in a subsequent email. 36 Also, as to purchase of
    ST-246 into the National Stockpile, the table reflected that PharmAthene’s view was that
    the “[r]equirement does not yet exist—dependent on DHHS ‘integration plan’ to be
    31
    
    Id. at 1189
    (emphasis added). Fasman also stated that he intended to share these documents
    with PharmAthene at a meeting the following afternoon. Id.
    32
    
    Id. at 1189
    .
    33
    
    Id. at 1190.
    34
    The Court of Chancery noted that “[c]ontraindication rate refers to the fact that, for any
    number of reasons, a vaccine will not be effective at preventing or curing a disease for some
    particular individuals.” PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc., 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *15 n.70
    (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2014) [hereinafter Remand Opinion].
    35
    App. to Answering Br. at 1190.
    36
    
    Id. at 1200.
    14
    released IQ 07,” and SIGA’s column stated “same.” 37              Additionally, relative to
    PharmAthene, SIGA assumed higher sales to the military because it assumed that the size
    of the military would grow with the population. 38            Finally, the table reflected
    PharmAthene’s position that sales of ST-246 to the [DoD] may require FDA approval,
    but SIGA’s position was that this was “[n]ot true, or not an obstacle.” 39
    In response to Fasman’s initial email, Dugary suggested that Fasman raise the
    profit margin used in his projection: “I think the excel spreadsheet you sent reflected only
    33% margin. If you recalculate (see attached revised) with the 75% margin, the net
    present value increases to $5.1 billion.” 40 Fasman replied to inform the group that he
    raised the profit margin, but that this resulted in a net present value that was
    “unreasonably high.” 41    He further explained in his email that he made additional
    adjustments to his original valuation to come up with a net present value of $5.6 billion,
    calling this “more than sufficient for [SIGA’s] needs.” 42 In another email sent later that
    day, however, Fasman noted that “accepting [PharmAthene’s] treatment and pricing
    assumptions, which would lead to a profit margin in excess of 90%, and otherwise using
    the same cost and discounting assumptions that the prior spreadsheet used, leads to a
    37
    
    Id. at 1190.
    38
    
    Id. PharmAthene assumed
    a 10% contraindication rate for military personnel, but SIGA
    assumed that the government would purchase ST-246 for 50% of the then-current military
    population because that population would grow.
    39
    
    Id. 40 Id.
    at 1193 (emphasis added).
    41
    
    Id. at 1195.
    42
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    15
    present value well in excess of $2.3 billion.” 43         He concluded that “[b]ecause this
    valuation is more than sufficient to justify our upfront and milestone payments, we will
    begin our discussions with the [PharmAthene]-based valuation model.” 44
    On December 4, SIGA attorney Coch sent a letter to PharmAthene attorney
    Olstein. Coch’s letter stated that SIGA received PharmAthene’s projections for ST-246,
    reflecting a future revenue stream of over $2 billion. He further stated that the terms in
    the proposed LLC agreement were realistic and fair given PharmAthene’s valuation,
    “[a]lthough SIGA believes the actual value of [ST-246] is well in excess of $5 billion
    (based on projected sales that incorporate more realistic assumptions of the size of the
    market and up-to-date information concerning the likely uses of [the drug]).” 45 On
    December 6, Olstein replied that PharmAthene indicated at a meeting with SIGA that it
    was “willing to consider” a 50-50 split, and that if SIGA was “married” to having an LLC
    structure it should incorporate the split into that structure. PharmAthene at no time
    indicated that it was “prepared to accept a 50-50 proposal or any other proposal in lieu of
    the binding terms of the [LATS].” 46 On December 12, Coch sent a letter back to Olstein,
    stating that SIGA was prepared to negotiate a definitive agreement “without
    preconditions,” but that if PharmAthene insisted on the terms of the LATS as binding,
    43
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    44
    
    Id. 45 Id.
    at 1204 n.1 (Letter from Coch to Olstein) (emphasis added).
    46
    
    Id. at 1205
    (Letter from Olstein to Coch).
    16
    then the parties would have “nothing more to talk about.” 47       About a week later,
    PharmAthene filed a lawsuit in the Court of Chancery.
    *****
    The reason for the end of negotiations has to be underscored to understand the
    Court of Chancery’s damages award. SIGA refused to enter into a license agreement in
    accordance with the LATS not because of any uncertainty about the strongly positive
    future results for ST-246. Rather, SIGA refused to contract on terms consistent with the
    LATS because it had come to the belief that ST-246 was worth $3 billion as a
    conservative matter—due to events that suggested that ST-246’s prospects were much
    brighter than when the parties agreed to the LATS. As is the case in any business
    situation, SIGA’s belief was based on its estimate of the future cash flow ST-246 would
    generate. This reasoned estimate led SIGA first to refuse to merge, and then refuse to
    negotiate a license agreement on the same material terms as were in the LATS.
    III.    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.     The Court of Chancery’s 2011 Decision
    In January 2011, the court held an eleven-day trial. In a September 22, 2011
    decision (the “2011 Decision”) the Court of Chancery found, among other things, that (1)
    SIGA breached its contractual obligation under the Bridge Loan Agreement and the
    Merger Agreement to negotiate in good faith a definitive license agreement in accordance
    with the terms of the LATS; (2) the parties would have agreed to a license agreement that
    47
    
    Id. at 1207
    (Letter from Coch to Olstein).
    17
    was generally in accordance with the LATS had it not been for SIGA’s bad faith
    breach; 48 (3) SIGA was liable for damages under the doctrine of promissory estoppel; and
    (4) the proper remedy under these circumstances was to impose an equitable payment
    stream based on SIGA’s future profits. 49
    The Court of Chancery declined to award lump-sum expectation damages to
    PharmAthene, finding that “a specific sum of money representing the present value of the
    future profits it would have received absent SIGA’s breach is speculative and too
    uncertain, contingent, and conjectural.” 50 The Court of Chancery additionally declined to
    order specific performance because it would impose too great a burden on the trial court
    to supervise the parties to ensure that they were faithfully carrying out their obligations to
    negotiate a license agreement in accordance with the terms of the LATS. 51
    On May 31, 2012, the Court of Chancery issued a Final Order and Judgment
    together with a Letter Opinion. SIGA appealed and PharmAthene cross-appealed to this
    Court.
    48
    On this point, the Court of Chancery stated:
    I [] find that, but for SIGA’s bad faith negotiations, the parties likely would have
    reached agreement on a transaction generally in accordance with the LATS.
    PharmAthene was willing to agree to a license agreement for ST-246 on terms
    that varied “to some extent” from the LATS. . . . Had SIGA engaged in good
    faith negotiations, I am convinced that a license agreement between PharmAthene
    and SIGA for ST–246 would have resulted in terms no less favorable to
    PharmAthene than the 50/50 profit split it already had mentioned and an increase
    in the upfront and milestone payments from a total of $16 million, as specified in
    the LATS to something in the range of $40 million.
    2011 Opinion at *38.
    49
    See 2011 Opinion.
    50
    
    Id. at *37.
    51
    
    Id. at *35.
    18
    B.    The 2013 Supreme Court Decision
    On May 24, 2013, in SIGA I, this Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s decision
    in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent with its opinion.
    To begin, SIGA I upheld the Court of Chancery’s decision that SIGA had in bad faith
    breached its contractual obligations under the Bridge Loan Agreement and the Merger
    Agreement to negotiate a license agreement in accordance with the LATS. 52
    SIGA I then reversed the Court of Chancery’s finding that SIGA was liable on a
    theory of promissory estoppel. In SIGA, this Court reasoned that “promissory estoppel
    does not apply . . . where a fully integrated, enforceable contract governs the promise at
    issue,” 53 and in this case, there were two enforceable contracts. 54 SIGA I noted that the
    Court of Chancery “must look to the contract as a source of remedy on the breach of an
    obligation to negotiate in good faith.” 55
    Next, SIGA I discussed “Type II preliminary agreements,” which are “preliminary
    agreements [where the parties] ‘agree on certain major terms, but leave other terms open
    for further negotiation.’” 56 After surveying the law adopted by federal courts, 57 SIGA I
    held:
    52
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 347
    (Del. 2013).
    53
    
    Id. at 348.
    54
    
    Id. (“The promise
    to negotiate in good faith for a definitive license agreement in accordance
    with the LATS’s terms is expressly included in both the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements.”);
    2011 Opinion at *21 (“By executing the Bridge Loan Agreement and the Merger Agreement,
    both SIGA and PharmAthene became bound by the terms of those contracts.”).
    55
    SIGA I at 348.
    56
    
    Id. at 349
    (quoting Adjustrite Sys., Inc. v. GAB Bus. Servs., Inc., 
    145 F.3d 543
    , 548 (2d Cir.
    1998)).
    19
    [W]here the parties have a Type II preliminary agreement to negotiate in
    good faith, and the trial judge makes a factual finding, supported by the
    record, that the parties would have reached an agreement but for the
    defendant’s bad faith negotiations, the plaintiff is entitled to recover
    contract expectation damages. 58
    In a footnote to this holding, SIGA I stated that “[a]n expectation damages award
    presupposes that the plaintiff can prove damages with reasonable certainty.” 59
    Based on the foregoing, SIGA I remanded to the Court of Chancery with specific
    instructions to reconsider the damages issue:
    Because we had not previously addressed whether Delaware recognizes
    Type II preliminary agreements and permits a plaintiff to recover
    expectation damages, and because it is unclear to what extent the Vice
    Chancellor based his damages award upon a promissory estoppel holding
    rather than upon a contractual theory of liability predicated on a Type II
    preliminary agreement, we reverse the Vice Chancellor’s damages award
    and remand the case for reconsideration of the damages award consistent
    with this opinion. 60
    In SIGA I, this Court also explained when instructing the Court of Chancery to
    reconsider the award of attorneys’ fees:
    On remand, the Vice Chancellor shall redetermine his damage award in
    light of this opinion and is free to reevaluate the helpfulness of expert
    testimony. Therefore, we reverse the award of attorneys’ fees and expenses
    57
    
    Id. at 349
    –50 (discussing Goodstein Constr. Corp. v. City of New York, 
    604 N.E.2d 1356
    , 1360
    (N.Y. 1992); Fairbrook Leasing, Inc. v. Mesaba Aviation, Inc., 
    519 F.3d 421
    , 428–30, 428 n.7,
    429, 430 (8th Cir. 2008) (citations omitted); Venture Assocs. v. Zenith Data Sys. Corp., 
    96 F.3d 275
    , 277, 278–79, 281 (7th Cir. 1996)).
    58
    
    Id. at 350–51.
    59
    
    Id. at 351
    n.99 (citing Callahan v. Rafail, 
    2001 WL 283012
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Mar. 16, 2001)
    (citation omitted) (“It is well-settled law that ‘a recovery for lost profits will be allowed only if
    their loss is capable of being proved, with a reasonable degree of certainty. No recovery can be
    had for loss of profits which are determined to be uncertain, contingent, conjectural, or
    speculative.”)).
    60
    
    Id. at 351
    –52.
    20
    so that the Vice Chancellor may determine on remand the proper award
    consistent with this opinion. 61
    Finally, SIGA I noted that it did not reach any of PharmAthene’s claims on cross-
    appeal, specifically acknowledging that it did not determine whether the Court of
    Chancery erred in declining to award specific performance, among other remedies:
    PharmAthene’s claims that it is entitled to (1) an alternative payment
    stream based on the LATS’s terms, (2) specific performance granting it a
    license in accordance with the LATS’s terms because the LATS is an
    enforceable contract, or (3) recover damages under the doctrine of unjust
    enrichment. All those claims are alternative contentions advanced in the
    event we do not affirm the Vice Chancellor’s judgment. Because we affirm
    the Vice Chancellor’s finding that SIGA is liable for breaching its
    contractual obligations to negotiate in good faith in accordance with the
    LATS’s terms, we do not reach these arguments.
    Significant to the present appeal, SIGA I observed that the Court had not
    determined whether the Court of Chancery erred in declining to award lump-sum
    expectation damages because such damages were too speculative, and instead remanded
    for reconsideration of the issue:
    PharmAthene also contends that the Vice Chancellor erroneously failed to
    award PharmAthene its lump-sum expectation damages on the basis that
    they would be too speculative. We do not need to reach this claim either,
    because we reverse the Vice Chancellor’s damages award and remand for
    him to reconsider it in light of this opinion. 62
    C.       The Court of Chancery’s Decision On Remand
    1. The Court Of Chancery Determined That It Was Not Bound By Its
    Prior Decision Denying Expectation Damages As Too Speculative
    61
    
    Id. at 353.
    62
    
    Id. 21 On
    remand, and over SIGA’s objection, PharmAthene moved to reopen the record
    to introduce post-breach evidence. 63 The Court of Chancery granted PharmAthene’s
    motion, but noted that it would evaluate any new evidence before admitting it. 64 After a
    two day evidentiary hearing and post-hearing briefing, on August 8, 2014, the court
    issued a Memorandum Opinion (“Remand Opinion”), as well as an accompanying Order
    instructing PharmAthene’s damages expert how to adjust the damages calculation based
    on the Court of Chancery’s findings (“Remand Order”). 65
    The Vice Chancellor first addressed the threshold questions—whether the trial
    court may reconsider conclusions made in the 2011 Decision and, if so, whether there
    was any basis to change his prior holding in those respects. On the first issue, the Vice
    Chancellor concluded that “[t]he plain language of the Supreme Court decision indicates
    that I may reconsider my prior finding that an award of lump-sum expectation damages to
    PharmAthene would be improper because such a measure of damages is too
    speculative.” 66 The Vice Chancellor based that conclusion on several aspects of SIGA I.
    He cited the fact that SIGA I did not reach PharmAthene’s claim that the Court of
    Chancery erred in not imposing lump-sum expectation damages for being too speculative.
    63
    See Ex. A to Opening Br. (Oral Arg. on Pl.’s Mot. to Reopen the R., Aug. 15, 2013).
    64
    
    Id. at 31
    (“[A]s to all this new evidence, I am going to have to decide, number one, does it
    come in at all, is it relevant, and does it meet the requirements.”).
    65
    PharmAthene, Inc. v. Siga Techs., Inc., 
    2014 WL 3893449
    (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2014) [hereinafter
    Remand Order].
    66
    Remand Opinion at *3.
    22
    He also pointed to SIGA I’s instruction that the Court of Chancery was free to “reevaluate
    the helpfulness of expert testimony.” 67
    The Vice Chancellor reasoned that the latter guidance “would be rendered largely
    superfluous if the rest of [SIGA I] is read as prohibiting [the Court of Chancery] from
    reconsidering whether PharmAthene is entitled to lump-sum expectation damages for
    SIGA’s bad faith breach.” 68 Thus, the Vice Chancellor concluded that “while I have the
    authority to reaffirm my previous decision in that regard, I am not required or bound by it
    to reach the same conclusion I did previously.” 69
    The Vice Chancellor expressed a similar sentiment where he discussed the merits
    of an award of lump-sum expectation damages. There, he stated that “the Supreme Court
    explicitly invited me to reconsider my prior holding that an award of lump-sum
    expectation damages to PharmAthene for SIGA’s bad faith was unduly speculative.” 70
    He then reasoned that a meaningful reconsideration requires a reexamination of the
    expert testimony relating to expectation damages. According to the Vice Chancellor, his
    conclusion was supported by the instruction in SIGA I to redetermine the attorneys’ fees
    and expenses award, and by SIGA I’s holding that Type II agreements could support an
    award of expectation damages, noting that the uncertainty as to this point of law was part
    of the reason that he had imposed an equitable remedy in the first instance.
    67
    Id.; SIGA I at 353.
    68
    Remand Opinion at *3.
    69
    
    Id. 70 Id.
    at *6.
    23
    The Vice Chancellor then took account of the additional guidance in SIGA I.
    Specifically, he noted that, in the 2011 Decision, he “awarded PharmAthene a payment
    stream with terms that were significantly less favorable to it than those set out in the
    LATS.” 71 And he acknowledged SIGA I’s ruling that “neither party could in good faith
    propose terms inconsistent with [the LATS] appears to place greater weight on the terms
    specified in the LATS than I afforded those terms in determining my prior damages
    award.” 72 From this, he concluded that the Court of Chancery must “[a]t a minimum . . .
    reexamine the role of the terms of the LATS in crafting any such award.” 73 Relatedly,
    the Vice Chancellor noted the reality that SIGA ended up expending materially more
    time and money to develop ST-246 without PharmAthene’s participation than the parties
    contemplated in the LATS. 74 The Vice Chancellor also observed that, after the 2011
    Decision, SIGA secured a lucrative U.S. government contract to sell ST-246 to the
    Biomedical Advanced Research Development Authority (“BARDA”).                  The Vice
    Chancellor stated that this fact “mitigates or possibly eliminates some of the concerns []
    expressed in the 2011 Decision regarding ST-246’s future prospects.” 75
    Finding that the court was not restricted from reconsidering its prior holding that
    an award of lump-sum expectation damages would be too speculative, the Court of
    Chancery proceeded to analyze the issue on the merits.
    71
    
    Id. at *4.
    72
    Remand Opinion at *4 (quoting SIGA I at 351).
    73
    
    Id. 74 Id.
    at *5.
    75
    
    Id. at *6.
    24
    2. The Court of Chancery Found That PharmAthene Met Its Burden
    Of Proving That It Was Entitled To Lump-Sum Expectation
    Damages
    At the outset, the Court of Chancery noted that the relevant inquiry for awarding
    expectation damages was: “[A]t the time of SIGA’s breach in December 2006, what were
    the parties’ reasonable expectations regarding PharmAthene’s ability to realize profits
    from the sale of ST-246 under a license agreement in accordance with the LATS[?]”76
    The Court of Chancery also acknowledged SIGA I’s observation that an award of lost
    profits “‘presupposes that the plaintiff can prove damages with reasonable certainty.’” 77
    Further, the Court of Chancery stated that “[w]hile proof of the fact of damages must be
    certain, proof of the amount can be an estimate, uncertain, or inexact.” 78 The court
    additionally noted its ability to “take into account all the circumstances of the breach,
    including willfulness, in deciding whether to require a lesser degree of certainty, giving
    greater discretion to the trier of facts.” 79 In addition to considering events that existed at
    76
    
    Id. at *8.
    77
    
    Id. at *7
    (citing SIGA I at 351 n.99).
    78
    
    Id. at *8
    (quoting Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *29 n.271 (Del. Ch.
    Feb. 18, 2010)); ROBERT L. DUNN, RECOVERY OF DAMAGES FOR LOST PROFITS § 1.3 (6th ed.
    2005); WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 64:9 (4th ed. 2000) (“Thus, it is now well established that
    the uncertainty that prevents recovery is uncertainty as to the fact of damage and not as to its
    amount.”).
    79
    
    Id. (quoting Cura,
    2001 WL 1334188
    , at *20 (internal citations omitted)); Beard Research, Inc
    v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    , 613 (Del. Ch. 2010) (“Public policy has led Delaware courts to show a
    general willingness to make a wrongdoer ‘bear the risk of uncertainty of a damages calculation
    where the calculation cannot be mathematically proven.’”) (quoting Great Am. Opportunities,
    Inc. v. Cherrydale Fundraising, LLC, 
    2010 WL 338219
    , at *23 (Del. Ch. Jan. 29, 2010));
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 352 cmt. a (1981).
    25
    the time of the breach, the trial court took into account several post-breach developments
    “‘to aid in its determination of the proper expectations at the time of the breach.’” 80
    The Court of Chancery then considered PharmAthene’s claim for expectation
    damages by considering the parties’ expectations and analyzing a damages calculation
    model prepared for the original trial by an experienced valuation expert, Jeffrey L.
    Baliban. 81 Baliban’s report stated that PharmAthene retained him “to calculate the net
    present value of expected PharmAthene earnings from sales of the antiviral ST-246, had
    SIGA executed a license agreement in accordance with the terms of the LATS.” 82 At
    trial, Baliban presented six variations of damages calculations. Noting SIGA I’s focus on
    the LATS as the appropriate yardstick for measuring damages, the court based its
    analysis on the “Basis 1 LATS Scenario,” where “Baliban calculated PharmAthene’s
    damages according to the terms of the LATS based on facts purportedly known as of
    December 20, 2006.” 83       The court also considered some information from another
    variation of Baliban’s calculations, the “Basic 2 LATS Scenario,” which was still based
    80
    
    Id. at *9
    (quoting Comrie v. Enterasys Networks, Inc., 
    837 A.2d 1
    , 17 (Del. Ch. 2003)). The
    Court of Chancery noted that “[f]or example, while it is appropriate to consider the fact that, to
    date, SIGA has sold ‘X dollars’ worth of ST-246 to evaluate whether at the time of the breach
    PharmAthene had a reasonable expectation of commercializing ST-246, it would be
    inappropriate to use ‘X dollars’ as the basis of a damages award because it was neither known
    nor knowable at the time of SIGA’s breach.” 
    Id. at *9
    .
    81
    
    Id. at *9
    –10. Baliban was a Senior Vice President in the Securities and Finance practice at
    National Economic Research Associates, Inc., a global economic consulting firm. The Court of
    Chancery observed that SIGA failed to present an alternative damages model, and instead was
    content to have its experts criticize PharmAthene’s model.
    82
    App. to Answering Br. at 1453 (Baliban’s Report).
    83
    Remand Opinion at *9.
    26
    on the LATS but used facts known as of November 2009, nearly three years after SIGA’s
    breach. 84
    To determine the value to PharmAthene of a license for ST-246, Baliban used a
    discounted future earnings model to forecast earnings ten years into the future and then
    discounted them to their net present value at the time of the breach. As with any financial
    model, this required Baliban to make certain assumptions.            A number of these
    assumptions were based on the PharmAthene Model, which was prepared by
    PharmAthene in early 2006 and used by the parties in their negotiations. 85 Specifically,
    Baliban used the PharmAthene Model’s quantity and price projections for sales of ST-
    246 over a ten-year period from 2008 to 2017. He found that, over those ten years,
    PharmAthene would have sold approximately 91.9 million courses of the drug at $100
    per course.
    Baliban then deducted research and development costs, the costs of goods sold,
    and selling, general, and administrative expenses. The LATS did not address these
    expenses, and Baliban noted that the parties did not provide “any comprehensive analysis
    of costs and expense estimates or expected margins.” 86         Thus, Baliban relied on
    “discussions with PharmAthene management personnel” and on “independent research
    supporting typical pharmaceutical costs and expenses” to come up with these figures. 87
    84
    
    Id. at *9
    n.45.
    85
    
    Id. at *10.
    86
    App. to Answering Br. at 1473 (Baliban’s Report).
    87
    
    Id. 27 Once
    Baliban calculated ST-246’s discounted future earnings, he incorporated the
    terms of the LATS before allocating the return generated from projected sales of ST-246
    to the parties, noting in his report that:
    The LATS provided that, to the extent the net margin on sales to the U.S.
    Government exceeded 20 percent, such excess margin would be split 50-50
    between PharmAthene and SIGA. The LATS also provided for license
    fees, milestone payments and royalties to be paid to SIGA in accordance
    with referenced amounts and timing schedules. We apply these rates to
    expected future ST-246 earnings . . . to yield the allocation of product
    earnings to PharmAthene and SIGA. 88
    He then applied an 84% probability of success factor to the total expected earnings from
    ST-246.    Finally, he discounted the earnings to present value using PharmAthene’s
    weighted average cost of capital. 89 This yielded a total payment due to PharmAthene of
    $1.07 billion.
    The Court of Chancery scrutinized Baliban’s assumptions and inputs to aid its own
    analysis of the parties’ reasonable expectations at the time of breach.        The court
    concluded that PharmAthene’s expectations of ST-246’s future prospects were informed
    by four primary factors: “(1) the likelihood that ST-246 ever would be sold commercially
    in meaningful quantities; (2) the timing of when any such sales would begin; (3) the price
    at which ST-246 would be sold; and (4) the quantity of ST-246 that would be sold.” 90
    For each of these factors, the court engaged in a careful and thorough analysis of how
    they affected the lost profits calculation.
    88
    
    Id. at 1475.
    89
    Because PharmAthene only had equity financing as of December 2006, the WACC rate was
    equivalent to PharmAthene’s cost of capital. 
    Id. at 1475–76.
    90
    Remand Opinion at *10.
    28
    a. The Likelihood That ST-246 Would Be Sold Commercially
    The Court of Chancery took note of the facts established at the original trial and
    upheld by SIGA I: “SIGA’s own confidence in ST-246’s prospects, which caused it
    internally to value ST-246 at the time of the breach at between three and five billion
    dollars, and SIGA’s development of ‘seller’s remorse’ which ultimately motivated its bad
    faith conduct.” 91 Based on this evidence, the court found that PharmAthene established
    that, at the time of SIGA’s breach, the parties had a reasonable expectation that ST-246
    would be commercialized in the near future. In other words, the Court of Chancery
    reasonably took into account that it was SIGA’s increasingly bullish view of ST-246’s
    prospects based on what was known in December 2006 that caused it to commit a breach
    to secure more of the drug’s future value for itself than it would have had from a deal
    consistent with the terms of the LATS.
    The trial court also noted that, even though SIGA was not awarded the BARDA
    contract until after the January 2011 trial, “the record supports a reasonable inference that
    [the parties] knew of BARDA’s imminent establishment” at the time of SIGA’s breach. 92
    The Court of Chancery further observed that, at the time of the breach, the U.S.
    government had already established requirements for procuring pharmaceuticals for ST-
    246’s target market, the National Stockpile, and that such requirements did not include
    FDA approval of the drug to be considered for acquisition.
    91
    
    Id. at *11.
    92
    
    Id. 29 The
    Court of Chancery then considered whether the 84% “probability of success”
    input used in Baliban’s damages calculation was reasonable or unduly speculative. 93
    That number was based on a report provided by PharmAthene’s pharmaceutical expert,
    Dr. Carl Peck. Dr. Peck’s report stated that, at the time of SIGA’s breach, there was an
    84% to 95% chance that ST-246 would obtain FDA approval; but a more than 95%
    chance that the drug would meet the criteria for purchase into the National Stockpile.
    The court considered the fact that PharmAthene had a reasonable expectation at the time
    of breach that ST-246 would be eligible for acquisition for the National Stockpile and hit
    certain milestones in 2006, such as “becoming the first drug to demonstrate 100%
    protection against the human smallpox virus in a primate trial [and] demonstrating
    protection against the monkey virus in two primate trials in November 2006.” 94
    The Court of Chancery also noted that post-breach sales of ST-246 to BARDA
    showed that the drug was being sold to its intended purchaser, and that this demonstrated
    that the parties in 2006 had a reasonable expectation it would be successful. Finally, the
    court noted that these facts came on top of SIGA’s own conduct and beliefs as to ST-
    246’s promising prospects, which motivated its breach, so “PharmAthene was not alone
    in reasonably believing ST-246 imminently would be commercialized with great
    success.” 95 Based on all of these factors, the Court of Chancery concluded that in
    December 2006, ST-246 had “a very high likelihood of being commercialized in the near
    93
    
    Id. 94 Id.
    at *12 n.57.
    95
    
    Id. at *12
    .
    30
    future” and thus the “84% ‘probability of success’ factor was both reasonable and
    supported by the evidence.” 96
    b. The Timing Of When Sales Of ST-246 Would Begin
    Baliban used 2008 as the time when sales of ST-246 would begin. In response,
    SIGA pointed out that the first courses of the drug were not delivered until 2013.
    PharmAthene claimed that the parties used 2008 as the start date during their negotiations
    and that the delay in delivery was caused by SIGA’s failure to develop the drug
    efficiently due to its lack of experience, whereas PharmAthene would have completed the
    process sooner. The Court of Chancery weighed the evidence and noted that, at the time
    of breach, there was no evidence as to when the drug might be procured for the National
    Stockpile. But, taking into account the “tremendous promise in preliminary studies,
    [which] enabled SIGA to raise over $20 million in development funding,” and the fact
    that ST-246 was “granted ‘orphan drug’ and ‘fast track’ status by the FDA,” all of which
    was known at the time of the breach, the Court of Chancery concluded that PharmAthene
    had a reasonable expectation that the U.S. government would start buying ST-246 for the
    National Stockpile by 2010, as opposed to 2008. 97
    c. The Price At Which ST-246 Would Be Sold
    Baliban assumed that PharmAthene would sell ST-246 for $100 per course of
    treatment. PharmAthene claimed that this number was rooted in the parties’ negotiations
    and that it was comparable to the price the U.S. government paid for other bioterrorism-
    96
    
    Id. 97 Id.
    at *13.
    31
    related countermeasures.      The Court of Chancery noted that Baliban independently
    assessed the parties’ use of the $100 per course price in their negotiations 98 and found
    that the price was consistent with the government’s prior purchases. The court also took
    into account the fact that the post-breach BARDA contract “requires the government to
    pay significantly more than $100 per course.” 99 On these bases, the Court of Chancery
    concluded that PharmAthene met its burden to show that it had a reasonable expectation
    at the time of breach that ST-246 would be commercialized at a price of $100 per course.
    d. The Quantity Of ST-246 That Would Be Sold
    Analyzing the reasonable expectation at the time of breach of the quantity of ST-
    246 to be sold, the Court of Chancery considered Baliban’s quantity inputs for three
    separate categories of sales: (1) sales to the National Stockpile; (2) sales to the DoD; and
    (3) sales outside of the U.S. to foreign nations.
    i. Sales Of ST-246 To The National Stockpile
    Baliban used the sales projections in the PharmAthene model as a starting point to
    estimate the quantity of sales to the National Stockpile. PharmAthene calculated these
    sales by multiplying the size of the National Stockpile’s smallpox vaccine stockpile by
    the percentage of the population contraindicated for the smallpox vaccine, which it
    assumed to be 5%.        Because ST-246 was intended to help the percentage of the
    98
    The parties used the $100 per course of treatment price point in their own negotiations because
    this price was incorporated into the PharmAthene Model which SIGA was comfortable using in
    negotiations before its breach, even though this price was “excessive” from SIGA’s perspective.
    App. to Answering Br. at 1189 (Fasman Email).
    99
    Remand Opinion at *14 (emphasis in original).
    32
    population that is contraindicated for the smallpox vaccine, the contraindication rate had
    a directly proportional effect on the quantity of sales to the National Stockpile. Although
    Baliban used the PharmAthene Model’s quantity figure for National Stockpile sales, he
    increased those sales from 10,300,000 courses to 14,778,000 courses. He based this
    increase on an observation that the size of the National Stockpile was roughly equal to
    the size of the U.S. population in 2002. Baliban then assumed that the size of the
    National Stockpile in 2006 would be equal to the size of the U.S. population as of the
    July 1, 2005 U.S. Census Bureau estimate. Further, even though Baliban believed that,
    based on his research, the 5% contraindication rate used in the PharmAthene Model was
    understated; he kept the conservative 5% figure.
    In assessing the reasonableness of these inputs, the Court of Chancery took
    account of the fact that the U.S. government was increasingly focused on bioterrorism
    counter-measures between 2002 and 2006 to conclude that it was reasonable that the size
    of the National Stockpile would continue to track the U.S. population during that time
    period, as opposed to decline as the PharmAthene Model assumed. As for the 5%
    contraindication rate, the court found it important that SIGA and PharmAthene appeared
    to incorporate this number in the projections used during negotiations. The court also
    noted that Baliban’s research showed a contraindication rate of between 20% and 30%,
    so the 5% figure was a relatively conservative estimate.
    Finally, the Court of Chancery addressed some of the criticisms presented by
    SIGA’s damages expert, Dr. Keith Ugone. As a general matter, the court found Dr.
    Ugone’s approach of challenging Baliban’s assumptions to be largely unpersuasive,
    33
    stating: “Dr. Ugone’s credibility was undermined by the fact that at trial he merely
    attempted to discredit Baliban’s analysis without providing an alternative calculation of
    his own.” 100 The court nonetheless still considered his criticisms.
    Dr. Ugone criticized Baliban’s calculation for failing to account for ST-246’s
    competitors and the seven-year duration of the orphan drug status, explaining that these
    considerations would have materially reduced the quantity of National Stockpile sales as
    well as the time period during which those sales would have successfully been made.
    The Court of Chancery disagreed with these assertions on the basis that “[a]t the time of
    the breach, ST-246 [appeared] to have been 8,000 times more effective than its closest
    competing product” and that SIGA pointed to no evidence to suggest that ST-246’s
    orphan drug status was the basis for the calculation’s use of a ten-year time period.101
    The court also reasoned that any overstatement on these grounds was offset by the
    conservative contraindication rate and Baliban’s use of a high discount rate of 23.1%.
    Based on these facts, the Court of Chancery found that PharmAthene proved with
    reasonable certainty that it had a reasonable expectation of the quantity of National
    Stockpile sales used in Baliban’s model. Finally, the court allocated delivery of National
    Stockpile sales to five years instead of the four used in Baliban’s model.
    ii. Sales Of ST-246 To The DoD
    100
    
    Id. at *16
    n.78. The Court of Chancery noted that the court “has been critical of such an
    approach in the past.” 
    Id. (citing Agilent,
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *29). The court further stated: “If
    the Court were to credit completely the testimony of Dr. Ugone, it would never be possible to
    award expectation damages in a case such as this one, no matter how much the underlying
    breach of contract could be attributed to the breaching party’s bad faith.” Id.
    101
    
    Id. at *16
    .
    34
    The Court of Chancery noted that there was evidence in the record that the parties
    “projected that the [DoD] would purchase ST-246” although it acknowledged that those
    projections varied materially due to their different estimates of the size of the U.S.
    military population. 102 The court noted that it was unclear what PharmAthene used to
    come up with the estimate in the PharmAthene Model, but that Baliban again relied on
    U.S. Census data. The court found that Baliban’s estimate of sales based on a military
    population size taken from the U.S. Census data was reasonable. But Baliban used a 10%
    contraindication rate for the military population, which the court rejected, finding that
    PharmAthene did not meet its burden of justifying why the higher rate was appropriate,
    and that it was reasonable to assume a 5% contraindication rate instead. The court
    ultimately found that, even if the parties’ projections of sales “differed significantly,” that
    both parties believed the DoD would buy ST-246. Based on the lowered contraindication
    rate, the court found that PharmAthene proved that “it had a reasonable expectation of
    selling approximately half of the quantities of ST-246 to the DoD that Baliban projected
    in his model.” 103
    iii. Foreign And Replacement Sales Of ST-246
    Baliban’s damages calculation assumed that foreign sales would be equal to
    National Stockpile sales. But the Court of Chancery noted that, although there was
    evidence of the prospect of sales to U.S. government agencies at the time of the breach, it
    was missing evidence to suggest material future sales to foreign countries. Further, the
    102
    
    Id. at *17.
    103
    
    Id. 35 court
    noted that there was no clear evidence presented at trial as to what criteria other
    countries would use to procure pharmaceuticals. Based on this lack of evidence, the
    court found that PharmAthene did not meet its burden to show that SIGA had a
    reasonable expectation at the time of breach of selling ST-246 to foreign nations.
    Finally, the Court of Chancery addressed Baliban’s assumption that “ST-246 had a
    shelf life of three to five years and . . . as a result, replacement purchases to replace
    courses that expired would occur every four years . . . .” 104 Dr. Ugone criticized this
    assumption on the grounds that there were too many uncertainties as to the U.S.
    government’s future plans for the purchase of bioterrorism measures and that the more
    time passed, the higher the likelihood was that a competitor would enter the market. The
    Court of Chancery found these criticisms persuasive and found there was insufficient
    evidence that PharmAthene had a reasonable expectation of sales to the U.S. government
    nine years down the road.
    *****
    Based on its exhaustive and independent analysis of the four factors, the Court of
    Chancery required Baliban to make substantial adjustments to his model, most if not all
    of which benefitted SIGA, and held that PharmAthene met its burden of demonstrating it
    was entitled to lump-sum expectation damages.           After Baliban submitted a revised
    damages calculation, on January 7, 2015, the Court of Chancery issued a Letter Opinion
    104
    
    Id. at *18.
    36
    to address additional criticisms raised by SIGA’s expert of the revised calculation. 105 In
    response to SIGA’s criticisms, the court made two additional adjustments in SIGA’s
    favor to the damages calculation. First, SIGA objected to Baliban reducing certain
    selling, general, and administrative expenses for the year 2006 in the revised calculation
    due to the December 20 date of SIGA’s breach. Second, SIGA criticized Baliban’s use
    of a “mid-year convention of discounting in calculating the present value of the relevant
    cash flows.” 106 The court noted that both changes were departures from the methodology
    used in Baliban’s original damages calculation and directed him to return to his previous
    assumptions. After making these final adjustments, the Court of Chancery awarded
    PharmAthene $113 million in contract expectation damages in a January 15, 2015 Final
    Order and Judgment. 107
    IV.    ANALYSIS
    SIGA raises two primary issues on appeal—whether the law of the case doctrine
    precluded the Court of Chancery from revisiting its earlier determination that expectation
    damages were too speculative; and if not, whether the Court of Chancery should have
    found again on remand that lump-sum expectation damages were unavailable as too
    speculative.   We review the Court of Chancery’s law of the case determination de
    105
    Re: PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc., 
    2015 WL 98901
    , at *1–2 (Del. Ch. Jan. 7, 2015)
    [hereinafter Letter Opinion].
    106
    
    Id. at *1.
    107
    Final Remand Order at *1.
    37
    novo. 108 We review its damages determination for abuse of discretion, and will uphold
    its factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous. 109
    A.     The Court of Chancery Did Not Err In Reconsidering
    Expectation Damages
    SIGA argues that the law of the case bound the Court of Chancery on remand to
    its previous determination that lump-sum expectation damages were too speculative. The
    Court of Chancery found otherwise, and held that SIGA I expressly instructed it to
    reconsider expectation damages. We agree with the Court of Chancery’s interpretation of
    SIGA I.
    The law of the case doctrine, like stare decisis, “is founded on principles of
    efficiency, finality, stability and respect for the judicial system.” 110 Where the Supreme
    Court remands for further proceedings, “the trial court must proceed in accordance with
    the appellate court’s mandate as well as the law of the case established on appeal.” 111
    The law of the case doctrine did not require the Court of Chancery to follow its
    earlier decision ruling out expectation damages. It would have been error to have done so
    because in SIGA I this Court remanded with the specific instruction to revisit damages,
    including expectation damages. In SIGA I, when discussing PharmAthene’s cross-appeal
    challenging the Court of Chancery’s refusal to award lump-sum expectation damages as
    108
    Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    884 A.2d 26
    , 36 (Del. 2005).
    109
    Gatz Props., LLC v. Auriga Capital Corp., 
    59 A.3d 1206
    , 1212 (Del. 2012) (citing William
    Penn P’ship v. Saliba, 
    13 A.3d 749
    , 758 (Del. 2001)); Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 
    457 A.2d 701
    ,
    715 (Del. 1983).
    110
    
    Cede, 884 A.2d at 39
    (citing Gannett Co. v. Kanaga, 
    750 A.2d 1174
    , 1181 (Del. 2000)).
    111
    
    Id. at 38
    (citing Ins. Corp. of Am. v. Barker, 
    628 A.2d 38
    , 40 (Del. 1993)).
    38
    speculative, this Court stated that it did not need to decide the issue and “reverse[d] the
    Vice Chancellor’s damages award and remand[ed] for him to reconsider it in light of this
    opinion.” 112 In other words, SIGA I remanded to the Court of Chancery to reconsider
    damages, which included the expectation damages now possible as a result of SIGA I.
    Further guidance in SIGA I supports the Vice Chancellor’s determination. SIGA I
    stated that the Court of Chancery was free to “reevaluate the helpfulness of expert
    testimony,” which would be a meaningless statement if the court could not review
    expectation damages on remand. 113 SIGA I also clarified that expectation damages were
    possible with Type II agreements, and acknowledged that the Court of Chancery had
    been unable to award such damages because whether they were possible was, at the time,
    an unsettled legal question. 114      Further, SIGA I expressly overturned the Court of
    Chancery’s prior finding that PharmAthene was entitled to damages based on a
    promissory estoppel theory, and directed the court to revisit damages under a contractual
    theory. 115
    On remand, the Court of Chancery was free to “make any order or direction in
    further progress of the case so long as it is not inconsistent with the decision of the
    appellate court, as to any question not settled by the decision.” 116 Consistent with and as
    required by SIGA I, the Vice Chancellor revisited the damages award, including
    112
    SIGA I at 353.
    113
    Id.; Remand Opinion at *3.
    114
    SIGA I at 350–52.
    115
    
    Id. at 347–48.
    116
    
    Cede, 884 A.2d at 39
    (citing 
    Barker, 628 A.2d at 41
    ).
    39
    expectation damages, and therefore the law of the case was not a bar to
    reconsideration. 117     The Vice Chancellor properly wrote on a clean slate when he
    reevaluated expectation damages.
    B.     The Court of Chancery Did Not Abuse Its Discretion In Finding
    That PharmAthene Met Its Burden To Show That Lump-Sum
    Expectation Damages Were Proper
    SIGA asserts that, regardless of law of the case, the Court of Chancery determined
    prior to remand that expectation damages were “speculative and too uncertain,
    contingent, and conjectural,” 118 and should have come to the same conclusion after
    remand.        It further argues that the court improperly relied on post-breach evidence
    because the same uncertainties noted by the court in its earlier decision were never
    resolved. In the alternative, SIGA argues that the new evidence was insufficient to firm
    up the earlier uncertainties in calculating expectation damages.
    PharmAthene responds that the Court of Chancery properly based its damages
    award on SIGA’s reasonable expectations at the time of its breach, evidenced by SIGA’s
    internal communications praising the company’s successes and questioning the merger,
    and by the internal analysis prepared by Fasman for SIGA’s senior officials, which
    valued the company as high as $5.6 billion. PharmAthene also contends that the Court of
    Chancery properly considered post-breach facts for the limited purpose of determining
    the reasonableness of the parties’ expectations at the time of SIGA’s breach. Finally,
    PharmAthene agreed with the Court of Chancery’s analysis of the four primary drivers of
    117
    Remand Opinion at *3–6; SIGA I at 353.
    118
    Opening Br. at 22 (citing 2011 Opinion at *37).
    40
    its expectations of ST-246’s prospects, except for the finding that PharmAthene did not
    establish foreign sales prospects with sufficient certainty. 119
    We emphasize the limited scope of appellate review of a damages award.
    Damages awards are reviewed for abuse of discretion. 120 Thus, “we do not substitute our
    own notions of what is right for those of the trial judge if that judgment was based upon
    conscience and reason, as opposed to capriciousness and arbitrariness.” 121 We also will
    uphold the Court of Chancery’s factual findings so long as they are not clearly
    erroneous. 122 The clearly erroneous standard applies to factual determinations based on
    credibility and the evidence. 123 Where there is more than one permissible determination
    to be drawn from the evidence, and the trial court chooses one, its finding cannot be
    clearly erroneous. 124
    1. The Court Of Chancery Applied The Correct Legal Standard
    SIGA argues as an initial matter that the Vice Chancellor should have simply
    followed his prior determination because expectation damages are difficult to measure for
    undeveloped products and new businesses, and especially so in the case of new drugs
    subject to regulatory approval.
    119
    PharmAthene did not cross-appeal this finding in light of the abuse of discretion and clearly
    erroneous standards of review that apply to the Court of Chancery’s decision.
    120
    
    Gatz, 59 A.3d at 1212
    (Del. 2012); 
    Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 715
    (“[The Court of Chancery
    has] broad discretion . . . to fashion such relief as the facts of a given case may dictate . . . .”).
    121
    
    Gatz, 59 A.3d at 1212
    (quoting William Penn P’ship v. Saliba, 
    13 A.3d 749
    , 758 (Del. 2001))
    (quotations omitted).
    122
    
    Id. (citing Cede,
    758 A.2d at 491); Bank of N.Y. Mellon Trust Co. v. Liberty Media Corp., 
    29 A.3d 225
    , 236 (Del. 2011).
    123
    Bank of N.Y. Mellon Trust 
    Co., 29 A.3d at 236
    .
    124
    
    Id. 41 As
    a preliminary matter, and perhaps most significant, SIGA I directed the Court
    of Chancery to reconsider its damages award. SIGA I also instructed the Court of
    Chancery to reevaluate the helpfulness of expert testimony, and reconsider an award of
    lump-sum expectation damages in light of the opinion. These instructions were not
    ambiguous. SIGA I required the Court of Chancery to take a fresh look at the expert
    testimony in light of the clarified legal point that lump-sum expectation damages were
    available.
    The Court of Chancery followed SIGA I’s mandate. First, it applied the correct
    legal standard to evaluate expectation damages. As this Court said in Duncan v. Theratx,
    Inc.:
    [T]he standard remedy for breach of contract is based upon the reasonable
    expectations of the parties ex ante. This principle of expectation damages
    is measured by the amount of money that would put the promisee in the
    same position as if the promisor had performed the contract. Expectation
    damages thus require the breaching promisor to compensate the promisee
    for the promisee’s reasonable expectation of the value of the breached
    contract, and, hence, what the promisee lost. 125
    The Court of Chancery recognized this Court’s admonition in SIGA I that
    expectation damages must be proven with reasonable certainty, and “no recovery can be
    had for loss of profits which are determined to be uncertain, contingent, conjectural, or
    speculative.” 126 But it also confirmed what has been established by our courts—that
    certain presumptions apply when evaluating harm and loss. Where the injured party has
    proven the fact of damages—meaning that there would have been some profits from the
    125
    
    775 A.2d 1019
    , 1022 (Del. 2001) (footnotes omitted).
    
    126 67 A.3d at 351
    (quotations and citations omitted).
    42
    contract—less certainty is required of the proof establishing the amount of damages. 127
    In other words, the injured party need not establish the amount of damages with precise
    certainty “where the wrong has been proven and injury established.” 128
    The Vice Chancellor found that PharmAthene firmly established the fact of
    damages. SIGA’s breach caused PharmAthene to lose out on the opportunity to develop
    the vaccine, to enhance its reputation, and to access government funding to support
    continued drug development. 129 PharmAthene “was poised to commercialize profitably
    ST-246 in a way that it was reasonably certain would be profitable and . . . SIGA
    deprived it of that opportunity.” 130 The Court of Chancery also applied the established
    presumption that doubts about the extent of damages are generally resolved against the
    breaching party. As a corollary to this presumption, the court noted it could take into
    account the willfulness of the breach in deciding whether to require a lesser degree of
    certainty. 131
    SIGA argues that the Court of Chancery applied the “wrongdoer rule” punitively,
    because it is only to those uncertainties caused by the breach that the presumption
    127
    Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    , 613 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d sub. nom. ASDI, Inc. v.
    Beard Research, Inc., 
    11 A.3d 749
    (Del. 2010); Del. Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older, 
    2002 WL 31458243
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2002) (quoting Red Sail Easter Ltd. Partners, L.P. v. Radio
    City Music Hall Prods., Inc., 
    1992 WL 251380
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Sept. 29, 1992)).
    128
    Del. Express, 
    2002 WL 31458243
    , at *17 (“Responsible estimates that lack mathematical
    certainty are permissible so long as the court has a basis to make a responsible estimate of
    damages.”).
    129
    Remand Opinion *8 n.41.
    130
    Id.
    131
    
    Id. at *8
    (citing Cura, 
    2001 WL 1334188
    , at *20 (citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    CONTRACTS § 352 cmt. a (1981) (“A court may take into account all the circumstances of the
    breach, including willfulness, in deciding whether to require a lesser degree of certainty, giving
    greater discretion to the trier of the facts.”)).
    43
    applies. SIGA is correct that the trial court did not have unbridled authority to dress up
    punitive damages as expectation damages by importing the willfulness of the breach into
    the damage award. And it is not every contract case where the court should assess the
    bona fides of the breaching party. But in a case about expectation damages caused by
    breach of a Type II agreement, where the wrongdoer caused uncertainty about the final
    economics of the transaction by its failure to negotiate in good faith, willfulness is a
    relevant factor in deciding the quantum of proof required to establish the damages
    amount. 132
    The Vice Chancellor applied the wrongdoer rule in a limited and proper way. For
    instance, as the Vice Chancellor found, if SIGA had negotiated in good faith under the
    132
    Courts in Delaware and other jurisdictions have frequently applied the “wrongdoer rule”
    where the wrongdoer’s breach contributed to uncertainty over the amount of damages. See
    
    Duncan, 775 A.2d at 1023
    (“The intuition behind this rule is that the issuer-defendant should
    bear the risk of uncertainty in the share price because the defendant’s acts prevent a court from
    determining with any degree of certainty what the plaintiff would have done with his securities
    had they been freely alienable.”) (quotations omitted); Agilent, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *26–27
    (“[I[n cases where a specific injury to the plaintiff cannot be established, the defendant’s actual
    gain may be considered.”) (citations omitted); 
    Beard, 8 A.3d at 613
    ; Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc.,
    
    1993 WL 443406
    , at *963 (Del. Ch. Oct. 29, 1993); Am. Gen. Corp. v. Cont’l Airlines Corp.,
    
    622 A.2d 1
    , 10 (Del. Ch. 1992) (“[Because the acts of a wrongdoer defendant created
    uncertainties,] fundamental justice requires that, as between [the plaintiff] and [the defendant],
    the perils of such uncertainty should be ‘laid at the defendant’s door’”) (quoting Madison Fund,
    Inc. v. Charter Co., 
    427 F. Supp. 597
    , 608 (S.D.N.Y. 1977)); Tanner v. Exxon Corp., 
    1981 WL 191389
    , at *2 (Del. Super. July 23, 1981) (citing 5 CORBIN ON CONTRACTS § 1020 (Rev. ed.
    1969)); see also Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co., 
    282 U.S. 555
    , 565
    (1931) (“[W]hatever uncertainty there may be in this mode of estimating damages is an
    uncertainty caused by the defendants’ own wrongful act; and justice and sound public policy
    alike require that he should bear the risk of the uncertainty thus produced.”) (quoting Gilbert v.
    Kennedy, 
    22 Mich. 117
    , 131 (1871)); Boyce v. Soundview Tech. Grp., 
    464 F.3d 376
    , 391 (2d Cir.
    2006) (“[W]here the existence of damage is certain, and the only uncertainty is as to its amount, .
    . . the burden of uncertainty as to the amount of damage is upon the wrongdoer.”) (quotations
    and citations omitted); 17A AM. JUR. 2d Contracts § 611; RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    CONTRACTS § 352 cmt. a (1981).
    44
    LATS, and the parties had executed a final agreement, there would have been no
    uncertainty about the research and development costs under the final license
    agreement. 133   The court resolved the uncertainties about those costs against SIGA.
    Where uncertainty could not be traced to SIGA’s breach, the Court of Chancery did not
    resolve the uncertainty against SIGA.           For example, the court rejected certain
    assumptions about foreign sales used in Baliban’s model. 134 The court found that these
    assumptions were not supported by sufficient evidence and that it was “inappropriate to
    award lost profits on foreign sales because those sales were too speculative as of
    December 2006.” 135 The court did not apply the wrongdoer rule to resolve all uncertainty
    against SIGA, where SIGA’s breach was not the cause of the lack of information.
    In addition, the LATS’s core financial terms were not in dispute and did not have
    to be construed one way or the other. SIGA I stated that “[i]n this case, the Vice
    Chancellor made [the factual finding], supported by the record, [that] the parties
    memorialized the basic terms of a transaction in the LATS.” 136 “[T]he LATS was
    intended to capture ‘the key economic components’ of any license agreement to which
    the two sides would agree regarding ST-246.” 137 The Court of Chancery did not have to
    133
    Remand Opinion at *14 n.67 (“Had SIGA negotiated in good faith, [the parties] would have
    reached a license agreement in which PharmAthene would have controlled ST-246’s
    development and would have been in a position to know the exact amount of such cost figures.”).
    134
    
    Id. at *17.
    135
    
    Id. at *17
    n.84.
    136
    SIGA I at 351. SIGA I also reiterated and affirmed that “but for SIGA’s bad faith
    negotiations, the parties would have consummated a license agreement.” 
    Id. 137 Remand
    Opinion at *5.
    45
    resort to the wrongdoer rule to construe the LATS’s financial terms, which provided the
    framework for the court’s damage award.
    2. The Court Of Chancery Relied On Post-Breach Evidence For A
    Limited And Proper Purpose
    The Court of Chancery correctly noted that “[u]nder Delaware law, the standard
    remedy for breach of contract is based on the reasonable expectations of the parties that
    existed before or at the time of the breach.” 138 The court also properly acknowledged
    that PharmAthene must show that there would be some future profits, but after this
    showing, the amount of such profits may be an estimate. 139 SIGA does not dispute that
    the court could consider post-breach evidence when determining the reasonable
    expectations of the parties before or at the time of the breach. 140 Instead, SIGA argues
    that the Court of Chancery improperly used post-breach evidence “to cure the fatally
    138
    
    Id. at *7
    (citing 
    Duncan, 775 A.2d at 1022
    (Del. 2001)). The Court of Chancery noted:
    Proof of the fact of damages in a lost profits case means proof that there would
    have been some profits. If the plaintiff’s proof leaves uncertain whether plaintiff
    would have made any profits at all, there can be no recovery. But once this level
    of causation has been established for the fact of damages, less certainty (perhaps
    none at all) is required in proof of the amount of damages. . . . [P]roof of the
    amount can be an estimate, uncertain, or inexact.
    
    Id. at *8
    (quoting Agilent, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *29 n.271 (citations omitted)). The court also
    accounted for the wrongdoer rule, noting:
    Doubts [about the extent of damages] are generally resolved against the party in
    breach. A party who has, by his breach, forced the injured party to seek
    compensation in damages should not be allowed to profit from his breach where it
    is established that a significant loss has occurred. A court may take into account
    all the circumstances of the breach, including willfulness, in deciding whether to
    require a lesser degree of certainty, giving greater discretion to the trier of the
    facts. Damages need not be calculable with mathematical accuracy and are often
    at best approximate.
    
    Id. (citing Cura,
    2001 WL 1334188
    , at *20) (emphasis in original).
    139
    Agilent, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *29 n.271.
    140
    Remand Opinion at *9.
    46
    speculative nature of the damages at the time of the breach.” 141 The record does not
    support SIGA’s argument.
    The Court of Chancery recognized that post-breach evidence could be used “in
    order to aid in its determination of the proper expectations as of the date of the breach,”
    but relied on such evidence “sparingly.” 142 According to the court, it also limited the use
    of such evidence to the parties’ expectations, and “in all other respects” determined that
    the post-breach evidence was “irrelevant” to measure expectation damages at the time of
    the breach. 143 We find after reviewing the record that the Court of Chancery properly
    limited the use of post-breach evidence to confirm its conclusions as to the parties’
    reasonable expectations at the time of breach, or used the evidence to adjust the damages
    award in SIGA’s favor.
    First, the Court of Chancery observed that even though SIGA did not secure the
    BARDA contract until after the 2011 trial, there was a reasonable inference that the
    141
    Opening Br. at 33.
    142
    Remand Opinion at *9 (citing 
    Comrie, 837 A.2d at 17
    ; Cura, 
    2001 WL 1334188
    , at *23–24
    (considering evidence of post-breach transactions to calculate a damages award); Honeywell
    Int’l, Inc. v. Hamilton Sundstrand Corp., 
    378 F. Supp. 2d 459
    , 465 (D. Del. 2005)); see also
    Sinclair Ref. Co. v. Jenkins Petroleum Process Co., 
    289 U.S. 689
    , 697–98 (1933) (“The law will
    make the best appraisal that it can, summoning to its service whatever aids it can command. At
    times the only evidence available may be that supplied by testimony of experts. . . . But a
    different situation is presented if years have gone by before the evidence is offered. Experience
    is then available to correct uncertain prophecy. Here is a book of wisdom that courts may not
    neglect. We find no rule of law that sets a clasp upon its pages, and forbids us to look within.”)
    (citations omitted).
    143
    Remand Opinion at *9.
    47
    parties knew this contract was imminent at the time of SIGA’s breach. 144 The Court of
    Chancery also found ST-246’s post-breach sale to BARDA supported its conclusion that
    PharmAthene had a reasonable expectation at the time of SIGA’s breach that the U.S.
    government would contract to buy ST-246 in the near future, because the drug was
    actually sold to its intended buyer. These inferences supported ST-246’s commercial
    viability at the time of SIGA’s breach, including SIGA’s own optimism and high
    valuation of the drug’s prospects. 145
    SIGA’s internal emails revealed that Vice President Konatich, Chief Scientific
    Officer, Hruby, and attorney Fasman, all questioned the need for a business collaboration
    with PharmAthene given the success of ST-246. 146 Additionally, Hruby’s emails showed
    that government agencies were interested in a potential acquisition in the near future, 147
    and that SIGA received over $21 million in grant money because agencies recognized the
    potential of ST-246. 148 SIGA also publicly announced the successful results of ST-246 in
    primate trials and was able to sell its stock at a premium following its positive
    developments. Additionally, PharmAthene was willing to consider giving SIGA more
    144
    
    Id. (“Although officially
    BARDA did not come into existence until roughly
    contemporaneously with SIGA’s bad faith conduct, the record supports a reasonable inference
    that both SIGA and PharmAthene knew of BARDA’s imminent establishment.”).
    145
    The Court of Chancery specifically noted the facts of SIGA’s “own confidence in ST-246’s
    prospects, which caused it internally to value ST-246 at the time of the breach at between three
    and five billion dollars, and SIGA’s development of ‘seller’s remorse’ which ultimately
    motivated its bad faith conduct.” 
    Id. 146 App.
    to Answering Br. at 807 (Email from Hruby to Konatich); 
    id. at 1141
    (Email from
    Fasman to Hruby).
    147
    
    Id. at 1135
    (Email from Hruby to Drapkin).
    148
    
    Id. at 808
    (Email from Hruby to Konatich).
    48
    favorable terms than those contemplated in the LATS, 149 likely because it recognized
    ST-246’s potential for commercial success and because SIGA was balking at going
    forward because of its self-proclaimed view that ST-246 had a conservative value of $3
    billion 150 and an optimistic value of $5.6 billion. 151 Based on these facts, there was
    substantial evidence, including post-breach information about the BARDA contract, that
    the parties had a reasonable expectation at the time of SIGA’s breach that ST-246 would
    be commercialized in the near future.
    Finally, the Court of Chancery noted that BARDA contracted to buy ST-246 for
    “significantly” more than $100 per course (SIGA is eligible to receive at least $180 per
    course under the contract) supported its conclusion that, at the time of SIGA’s breach,
    PharmAthene had a reasonable expectation of commercializing ST-246 for $100 per
    course. 152 Although around the time of SIGA’s breach, Fasman viewed PharmAthene’s
    $100 per course of treatment price as “excessive” and assumed a price of $75, 153 SIGA
    was willing to continue negotiations based on the assumptions in the PharmAthene
    Model, which used the $100 figure. 154 According to Baliban’s research, the $100 per
    course of treatment price was comparable to the price the U.S. government paid for
    similar pharmaceutical countermeasures.
    149
    
    Id. at 1205
    (Letter from Olstein to Coch).
    150
    
    Id. at 1195.
    151
    
    Id. at 1204
    n.1 (Letter from Coch to Olstein).
    152
    Remand Opinion at *14 n.66.
    153
    App. to Answering Br. at 1189 (Fasman Email).
    154
    
    Id. at 1195.
    49
    The fact that BARDA agreed to pay 80% more per course confirmed that the
    parties’ expectations at the time of SIGA’s breach were reasonable. Had the court given
    more weight to the post-breach BARDA contract, it could have concluded that the $100
    price per course expectation at the time of breach was unreasonable for being too low.
    The Court of Chancery did not give undue weight to post-breach evidence, and properly
    limited the post-breach evidence to corroborate other facts establishing the expectation of
    the parties at the time of the breach. 155
    3. The Court Of Chancery Used The LATS Economic Terms
    To Determine Expectation Damages
    SIGA argues that the Court of Chancery found in its 2011 Decision that the parties
    would have reached an agreement on terms substantially different from those set forth in
    the LATS. We read the 2011 Decision otherwise. The Vice Chancellor stated:
    I [] find that, but for SIGA’s bad faith negotiations, the parties likely would
    have reached agreement on a transaction generally in accordance with the
    LATS. PharmAthene was willing to agree to a license agreement for ST-
    246 on terms that varied “to some extent” from the LATS. . . . Had SIGA
    engaged in good faith negotiations, I am convinced that a license agreement
    between PharmAthene and SIGA for ST–246 would have resulted in terms
    no less favorable to PharmAthene than the 50/50 profit split it already had
    mentioned and an increase in the upfront and milestone payments from a
    total of $16 million, as specified in the LATS to something in the range of
    $40 million. 156
    155
    SIGA also argues that the Court of Chancery “selectively and arbitrarily” considered the post-
    breach evidence, and supposedly “ignored” post-breach evidence that proved damages were
    speculative or should have been far less than awarded. Opening Br. at 35. The weighing of
    pertinent evidence is within the discretion of the trial court, and will not be second-guessed on
    appeal. See 
    Gatz, 59 A.3d at 1212
    ; Bank of N.Y. Mellon Trust 
    Co., 29 A.3d at 236
    ; Hudak v.
    Procek, 
    806 A.2d 140
    , 150 (Del. 2002) (“The weight to be given to evidence . . . is for the trier
    of fact to determine.”).
    156
    2011 Opinion at *38 (emphasis added).
    50
    Although the parties might have agreed to modifications of the LATS in SIGA’s
    favor given ST-246’s recent successes, had SIGA not breached its obligation to negotiate
    in good faith toward a license agreement in accordance with the LATS, fairly read the
    Vice Chancellor found that the parties would still have reached an agreement that was
    “generally in accordance with the LATS.” 157 The financial terms of the LATS were a
    sufficiently certain basis to calculate damages, and the Court of Chancery did not err in
    rely on the LATS financial terms used by Baliban in his financial model.
    SIGA also argues that the Court of Chancery deviated from the material financial
    terms of the LATS. Once again the record does not support SIGA’s argument. The
    Court of Chancery used Baliban’s Basis 1 damages calculation, which incorporated the
    LATS economic terms. After Baliban prepared a projection of ST-246’s future profit
    using inputs from the PharmAthene Model as well as assumptions that were based on his
    research, he applied the key LATS economic terms to the calculation. That is, the license
    fees, milestone payments, and royalties PharmAthene owed SIGA were all applied to the
    calculation before earnings from ST-246 were allocated to the parties.            Thus, the
    economic terms of the LATS were incorporated into Baliban’s damages calculation,
    which served as the basis for the Court of Chancery’s analysis of the damages award.
    Furthermore, in its Remand Order, the Court of Chancery directed Baliban to
    apply the economic terms of the LATS to its calculation of damages and altered the
    timing of when certain upfront and milestone payments would have been made. The
    157
    
    Id. 51 court
    gave SIGA the opportunity to comment on the revised calculations. 158 The Remand
    Order accounted for the license fee payments and the milestone payments, all of which
    PharmAthene owed to SIGA under the express economic terms of the LATS. Thus, the
    court’s analysis in its Remand Opinion and its instructions in the Remand Order were
    based on the economic terms of the LATS.
    4. The Court Of Chancery’s Factual Findings Were Not Clearly
    Erroneous
    The Court of Chancery took into account SIGA’s own conduct and beliefs about
    ST-246’s prospects before the breach, and painstakingly considered the relevant factors
    underlying Baliban’s damages calculation. In evaluating the evidence, the Court of
    Chancery first took account of ST-246’s successes and SIGA’s own optimism about the
    drug’s prospects. Specifically, it noted that the criteria for purchase into the National
    Stockpile was already known at the time of SIGA’s breach, and the parties had a
    reasonable expectation that ST-246 would meet that criteria. It also noted that FDA
    approval was not one of the requirements for being considered for the National Stockpile,
    which weakened SIGA’s argument that ST-246’s prospects were too speculative because
    of the uncertainty of obtaining FDA approval. Had the parties truly believed that the
    success of the drug was premised on FDA approval, they would have been much more
    conservative in their valuations, and SIGA might not have walked away from the merger
    or a deal consistent with the LATS.
    158
    Remand Order at *2 (“SIGA shall serve on PharmAthene any objections to the revised
    calculations within ten days of receiving . . . the calculations . . . . The scope of these
    objections shall be limited to computational errors . . . .”) (emphasis in original).
    52
    Further, the Court of Chancery considered SIGA’s damages expert’s criticisms of
    Baliban’s damages calculation and either found them wanting or made the requested
    adjustments. For example, SIGA’s expert criticized Baliban’s damages calculation for
    failing to consider competitors and failing to account for the seven-year duration of the
    “orphan drug” status. The court noted, however, that the 5% contraindication rate used in
    Baliban’s model was conservative as compared to Baliban’s independent research, which
    showed contraindication rates of between 20% and 30%. 159 Thus, the court reasoned that
    the shortcomings of Baliban’s calculation were offset by the use of a conservative
    contradiction rate. It also noted that Baliban’s use of a high discount rate of 23.1%
    compensated for these criticisms.       The court considered and responded to SIGA’s
    expert’s criticisms, but could not rely on an alternative model for comparison because
    SIGA did not provide one. Also, in the January 7, 2015 Letter Opinion, the court
    directed Baliban to adhere to his original assumptions, which further reduced
    PharmAthene’s damages award. 160 In this regard, it is worth noting that this is another
    instance where SIGA faults the Vice Chancellor for using a more conservative approach
    than he could have given the evidence. When it was deciding to breach, SIGA’s internal
    valuation used a contraindication rate of 15%. 161 The Vice Chancellor would have been
    within his discretion to hold SIGA to its own contemporaneous estimate.
    159
    App. to Answering Br. at 1468 (Baliban’s Report).
    160
    Letter Opinion at *1–2.
    161
    App. to Answering Br. at 1200.
    53
    On top of the changes made in response to SIGA’s expert, the Court of Chancery
    conducted its own analysis and adjusted Baliban’s calculations. Specifically, the court
    changed the start date assumption for ST-246 sales, and adjusted the assumed sales to the
    National Stockpile, both in SIGA’s favor. The court also found that PharmAthene did
    not prove that it had a reasonable expectation of commercializing ST-246 outside of the
    U.S. at the time of SIGA’s breach. Additionally, the court lowered the contraindication
    rate for the military population from 10% to 5%, because PharmAthene failed to justify
    the higher rate. The court also amended PharmAthene’s projected recognition of its
    milestone payment obligations under the LATS to reflect the new timing of ST-246 sales.
    These changes demonstrate that the Court of Chancery carefully analyzed the factors
    used in Baliban’s model to avoid an excessive award. Ultimately, the court awarded
    PharmAthene $113 million in expectation damages—less than 11% of the $1.07 billion
    damages figure in Baliban’s model.
    SIGA is poorly positioned to argue that the parties’ expectations about ST-246’s
    prospects at the time of the breach were too speculative. At the time of the breach, SIGA
    internally valued ST-246 conservatively at $3 billion 162 and optimistically at $5.6
    billion. 163 A letter from SIGA’s attorney to PharmAthene’s attorney stated that SIGA
    valued the drug at over $5 billion. 164 Right before the breach, ST-246 received $21.9
    million in grant money from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease and
    162
    
    Id. at 1189
    (Fasman Email).
    163
    
    Id. at 1195.
    164
    
    Id. at 1204
    n.1 (Letter from Coch to Olstein).
    54
    the National Institutes of Health to address SIGA’s cash shortage, allowing SIGA to
    continue development of a drug that was demonstrating promise. 165          These grants
    reflected the organizations’ confidence in ST-246, confirming SIGA’s optimism about
    the drug’s prospects. It was precisely because SIGA believed that ST-246 was worth $3
    to $5.6 billion that it did not wish to share the upside with PharmAthene under LATS
    terms and why SIGA refused to consummate a final agreement.
    SIGA is also poorly positioned to argue that profits were entirely speculative
    because ST-246 was an experimental drug. Both of these companies were in the business
    of developing pharmaceuticals for use against biological warfare. They understood that
    the government was a likely near-term purchaser. 166 SIGA confidently announced on
    July 13, 2006 that ST-246 was “its lead smallpox drug candidate” and that it had
    “successfully completed the first planned human clinical safety trial.” 167 SIGA had met
    the scientific milestones for ST-246, and sought the bridge financing because of its
    confidence in the drug. 168 The additional government funding awarded to SIGA to
    complete development of ST-246 in September 2006 also undercuts SIGA’s argument
    that this was merely an experimental drug. 169 This was not a situation where profits were
    entirely speculative—SIGA believed it was on the cusp of bringing ST-246 to market.
    165
    
    Id. at 808
    (Email from Hruby to Konatich); 
    id. at 1135
    (Email from Hruby to Drapkin).
    166
    App. to Answering Br. at 1135 (“I presented to both DHS and DOD last week. They were
    very ‘impressed’ and indicated acquisitions in the future.”).
    167
    
    Id. at 811
    (SIGA Press Release).
    168
    
    Id. at 1135
    .
    169
    SIGA I at 338.
    55
    We respectfully disagree with the dissent that PharmAthene should be limited to
    reliance damages, which, as the Court of Chancery found, would be no remedy at all for
    SIGA’s bad faith breach. 170 Although the dissent characterizes SIGA I as “unclear,” we
    find nothing unclear about the instructions from this Court to the Court of Chancery on
    remand. We instructed the court to determine anew whether expectation damages should
    be awarded, which included a specific instruction to reconsider the helpfulness of expert
    testimony directed to expectation damages. Further, faced with PharmAthene’s argument
    that the court erred by failing to award lump-sum expectation damages, we “remand[ed]
    for him to reconsider it in light of [the SIGA I] opinion.” The Court of Chancery
    followed this Court’s mandate, painstakingly applied accepted principles of law to a
    detailed record, and exercised its broad discretion for a second time to fashion a damages
    remedy. 171
    The dissent’s extended discussion of cases from other jurisdictions, including New
    York, and its fear of falling out of step with other leading commercial jurisdictions,
    suggests that its main dissatisfaction is with SIGA I and the rule it adopted permitting the
    recovery of expectation damages for bad faith breach of Type II agreements. We note,
    however, that despite SIGA’s concerns about the precedent set in SIGA I, the decision is
    170
    Remand Opinion at *5 n.29.
    171
    The Court of Chancery crafted a remedy earlier in the case that was designed to eliminate
    uncertainty even more, by tying relief to a stream of royalties derived from sales. This Court in
    SIGA I never addressed whether that remedy was within Chancery's broad remedial discretion,
    and the dissent does not explain why that original remedy was incorrect.
    56
    the law of the case. Whether it was correctly decided was not raised by the parties and is
    not before us in this appeal. 172
    The Court of Chancery’s opinion reflects a reasoned and thorough approach to
    evaluating the evidence underlying PharmAthene’s damages claim.                    In view of our
    standard of review and of the evidence that was before the trial court, the Court of
    Chancery did not abuse its discretion or make conclusions that were clearly erroneous
    when it awarded PharmAthene lump-sum expectation damages on remand.
    V.      CONCLUSION
    The law of the case doctrine did not prevent the Court of Chancery from
    reconsidering its prior finding that lump-sum expectation damages were too speculative.
    Instead, the Court of Chancery was required to reevaluate the helpfulness of expert
    testimony and reconsider the damages award in light of SIGA I’s guidance. That is
    precisely what the Court of Chancery did. Further, the Court of Chancery did not abuse
    its discretion in finding that PharmAthene met its burden of proving its expectation
    damages with reasonable certainty, and the court’s factual findings were not clearly
    erroneous.
    The judgment of the Court of Chancery is affirmed.
    172
    See Gannett Co., Inc. v. Kanaga, 750 A2d 1174, 1181 (Del. 2000) (“there must be some
    closure to matters already decided in a given case by the highest court of a particular jurisdiction,
    particularly when (with a different composition of jurists) that same court is considering matters
    in a later phase of the same litigation.”).
    57
    VALIHURA, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    I concur with the Majority in part, and respectfully dissent in part.
    I agree with the Majority’s conclusion that the Court of Chancery’s 2011 finding
    that expectation damages were “speculative and too uncertain, contingent, and
    conjectural” 1 is not the law of the case. Rather, as the Majority says, pursuant to our
    decision in SIGA I, the trial court was free to reconsider a damages award. 2 However,
    this Court also stated clearly in SIGA I that expectation damages must be proven with
    reasonable certainty. 3    No recovery can be had for damages that are “uncertain,
    contingent, conjectural, or speculative.” 4 While it is not the law of the case, the Court of
    Chancery’s reversal of its earlier finding that expectation damages here are “speculative
    and too uncertain, contingent, and conjectural,” 5 after examining essentially the same
    information as it had in 2011, 6 is the product of certain legal errors which, in turn, are
    perhaps the result of the remand instructions from this Court in SIGA I. 7
    1
    PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc., 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *37 (Del. Ch. Sept. 22, 2011)
    [hereinafter, “PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at __”].
    2
    See SIGA Techs., Inc., v. PharmAthene, Inc., 
    67 A.3d 330
    , 351-52 (Del. 2013) (citation
    omitted) [hereinafter, “SIGA I, 67 A.3d at __”].
    3
    
    Id. at 351
    n.99.
    4
    
    Id. (quoting Callahan
    v. Rafail, 
    2001 WL 283012
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Mar. 16, 2001)) (internal
    quotations omitted).
    5
    PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *37.
    6
    On remand from this Court’s opinion in SIGA I, the Court of Chancery granted PharmAthene’s
    motion to reopen the record. See Op. Br. Ex. A. (Tr. 33:21-24). The Court of Chancery
    indicated that it “relied only sparingly on post-breach information . . . .” PharmAthene, Inc. v.
    SIGA Techs., Inc., 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2014) [hereinafter, “PharmAthene
    II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at __”]. At oral argument before this Court, counsel for PharmAthene
    confirmed that the only factual difference between the evidence before the Court of Chancery in
    2011 and the evidence as supplemented by reopening the record on remand was the existence of
    a post-breach contract between SIGA and the federal government via the Biomedical Advanced
    Research and Development Authority (“BARDA”). See Videotape: Oral Argument Before the
    1
    As a preliminary matter, the Majority asserts that our scope of review of a
    damages award is “limited” and that “[d]amages awards are reviewed for abuse of
    discretion.” 8 However, our review of embedded legal issues is de novo. 9 I disagree with
    the Majority’s articulation of the standard of proof required for an award of expectation
    damages, its approval of the trial court’s consideration of post-breach evidence, and its
    application of the “wrongdoer rule” to lessen the quantum of proof to the point of
    speculation and to broadly attribute to SIGA uncertainties in damages as the “but for”
    cause for failure to consummate a license agreement. Accordingly, I would reverse the
    trial court’s decision, and I respectfully dissent as to those aspects of the Majority’s
    Opinion.
    I.      THE LAW OF EXPECTATION DAMAGES
    Delaware Supreme Court, at 26:06 (SIGA Techs., Inc. v. PharmAthene, Inc., No. 20, 2015,
    October                    7,                 2015),                   archived                 at
    http://livestream.com/DelawareSupremeCourt/events/4404659/videos/101331469.
    7
    In particular, this Court’s direction to the trial court to reevaluate the helpfulness of expert
    testimony is not as clear as it perhaps could have been, as evidenced by the parties’ briefs on
    appeal. Compare SIGA’s Op. Br. at 29 (“And the Court of Chancery flatly misunderstood the
    significance of this Court’s invitation to ‘reevaluate the helpfulness of expert testimony.’ That
    invitation was extended in the context of this Court’s discussion of expert fee-shifting, and was
    limited to a reexamination of whether expert testimony was helpful in determining a damage
    award ‘in light of this opinion’—an opinion that explicitly held that speculative damages cannot
    be awarded, and left untouched the Court of Chancery’s original finding that expectation
    damages in this case are speculative.”) (internal citations omitted), with PharmAthene’s Ans. Br.
    at 26 n.12 (“Rather than affirm the Vice Chancellor’s findings that expectation damages were too
    speculative, this Court instead ordered the Vice Chancellor to reconsider his award consistent
    with the Court’s opinion and even encouraged him to ‘reevaluate the helpfulness of expert
    testimony’ in so doing.”) (citation omitted).
    8
    Maj. Op. at 41 (citations omitted).
    9
    See Schock v. Nash, 
    732 A.2d 217
    , 232 (Del. 1999) (“Whether or not an equitable remedy
    exists or is applied using the correct standards is an issue of law and reviewed de novo.”)
    (citations omitted).
    2
    Ordinarily, expectation damages are not awarded for the breach of a preliminary
    agreement due to difficulties in establishing such damages with sufficient certainty. As
    this Court acknowledged in SIGA I, “[n]o recovery can be had for loss of profits which
    are determined to be uncertain, contingent, conjectural, or speculative.” 10 The award of
    lump sum expectation damages in this case violates that basic principle—as the trial court
    correctly determined in the first instance. A review of the development of the law in the
    area of preliminary agreements provides a useful analytical backdrop for explaining why
    damages for breach of preliminary agreements are typically limited to reliance
    damages. 11
    A.      New York Develops a Conceptual Framework Regarding Preliminary
    Agreements
    In 1987, Judge Leval of the United States District Court for the Southern District
    of New York observed in Teachers Insurance & Annuity Association of America v.
    Tribune Co., that “[p]reliminary contracts with binding force can be of at least two
    distinct types.” 12 He explained that one type “occurs when the parties have reached
    complete agreement (including the agreement to be bound) on all the issues perceived to
    require negotiation.” 13 The second “expresses mutual commitment to a contract on
    10
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    51 n.99 (quoting Callahan, 
    2001 WL 283012
    , at *1) (internal quotations
    omitted).
    11
    See, e.g., E. Allan Farnsworth, Precontractual Liability and Preliminary Agreements: Fair
    Dealing and Failed Negotiations, 87 COLUM. L. REV. 217, 267 (1987) (“[T]he appropriate
    remedy [for breach of a preliminary agreement] is not damages for the injured party’s lost
    expectation under the prospective ultimate agreement but damages caused by the injured party’s
    reliance on the agreement to negotiate.”).
    12
    Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n of Am. v. Tribune Co., 
    670 F. Supp. 491
    , 498 (S.D.N.Y. 1987).
    13
    
    Id. 3 agreed
    major terms, while recognizing the existence of open terms that remain to be
    negotiated.” 14
    Two years later, in Arcadian Phosphates, Inc. v. Arcadian Corp., 15 the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit adopted Judge Leval’s bifurcated
    framework for analyzing preliminary agreements. The Second Circuit has since applied
    this dual construction, observing that “binding preliminary agreements fall into one of
    two categories[,]” 16 either a Type I preliminary agreement or a Type II preliminary
    agreement.
    As explained by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, a Type I preliminary
    agreement exists “where all essential terms have been agreed upon in the preliminary
    contract, no disputed issues are perceived to remain, and a further contract is envisioned
    primarily to satisfy formalities.” 17 Instruments of this type are “preliminary only in
    form,” such that the parties only desire “a more elaborate formalization of the agreement.
    The second stage is not necessary; it is merely considered desirable.” 18 Stated otherwise,
    Type I preliminary agreements are “fully binding,” and are “created when the parties
    agree on all the points that require negotiation (including whether to be bound) but agree
    to memorialize their agreement in a more formal document.” 19             Type I agreements
    14
    
    Id. 15 884
    F.2d 69 (2d Cir. 1989).
    16
    Adjustrite Sys., Inc. v. GAB Bus. Servs., Inc., 
    145 F.3d 543
    , 548 (2d Cir. 1998); see also
    Vacold LLC v. Cerami, 
    545 F.3d 114
    , 124 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    ).
    17
    
    Vacold, 545 F.3d at 124
    (quoting Shann v. Dunk, 
    84 F.3d 73
    , 77 (2d Cir. 1996)) (internal
    quotations omitted).
    18
    
    Tribune, 670 F. Supp. at 498
    .
    19
    
    Vacold, 545 F.3d at 124
    (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    4
    “render the parties fully bound to carry out the terms of the agreement even if the formal
    instrument is never executed.” 20
    Type II preliminary agreements are commitments that are “binding only to a
    certain degree,” as parties to such instruments “agree on certain major terms, but leave
    other terms open for further negotiation.” 21      In other words, a Type II preliminary
    agreement is “a contract ‘that expresses mutual commitment to a contract’” on certain
    agreed terms, with others to be negotiated. 22 In the context of a Type II preliminary
    agreement, the parties “recognize the existence of open terms, even major ones, but,
    having agreed on certain important terms, agree to bind themselves to negotiate in good
    faith to work out the terms remaining open.” 23 However, Type II preliminary agreements
    “do[] not commit the parties to their ultimate contractual objective but rather to the
    obligation to negotiate the open issues in good faith in an attempt to reach the . . .
    objective within the agreed framework.” 24 Therefore, a party to a Type II preliminary
    agreement “may only demand that [the] counterparty negotiate the open terms in good
    faith toward a final contract incorporating the agreed terms. This obligation does not
    guarantee that the final contract will be concluded if both parties comport with their
    obligation, as good faith differences in the negotiation of the open issues may prevent a
    20
    Id. (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    21
    Id. (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    22
    Westerbeke Corp. v. Daihatsu Motor Co., Ltd., 
    304 F.3d 200
    , 206 n.3 (2d Cir. 2002) (quoting
    
    Tribune, 670 F. Supp. at 498
    ).
    23
    
    Vacold, 545 F.3d at 124
    (quoting 
    Dunk, 84 F.3d at 77
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    24
    Brown v. Cara, 
    420 F.3d 148
    , 153 (2d Cir. 2005) (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    )
    (internal quotations omitted) (alterations in original).
    5
    reaching of final contract.” 25 However, a party to a Type II preliminary agreement is
    barred “from renouncing the deal, abandoning the negotiations, or insisting on conditions
    that do not conform to the preliminary agreement.” 26 Ultimately, “[i]f the parties ‘fail to
    reach such a final agreement after making a good faith effort to do so, there is no further
    obligation.’” 27
    This Court first applied New York’s bifurcated approach to preliminary
    agreements in SIGA I. 28 There, we held that plaintiffs who are party to a Type II
    preliminary agreement may recover reasonably certain expectation damages if “the trial
    judge makes a factual finding, supported by the record, that the parties would have
    reached an agreement but for the defendant’s bad faith negotiations . . . .” 29 SIGA I held
    that expectation damages are theoretically available, not definitively available, since our
    acknowledgement that a plaintiff might be entitled to recover expectation damages for
    breach of a Type II preliminary agreement was qualified by the associated footnote,
    which expressly stated that “[a]n expectation damages award presupposes that the
    plaintiff can prove damages with reasonable certainty.” 30 SIGA I, in that respect, does
    25
    
    Westerbeke, 304 F.3d at 206
    n.3 (quoting Tribune, 670 F. Supp at 498) (internal quotations
    omitted) (alternations in original).
    26
    
    Tribune, 670 F. Supp. at 498
    .
    27
    
    Vacold, 545 F.3d at 124
    (quoting 
    Adjustrite, 145 F.3d at 548
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    28
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    49-51.
    29
    
    Id. at 350-51.
    30
    
    Id. at 351
    n.99 (citing Callahan, 
    2001 WL 283012
    , at *1 (“It is well-settled law that ‘a
    recovery for lost profits will be allowed only if their loss is capable of being proved, with a
    reasonable degree of certainty. No recovery can be had for loss of profits which are determined
    to be uncertain, contingent, conjectural, or speculative.’”)).
    6
    not diverge from bedrock contract law establishing that reasonably certain proof is a
    predicate to an award of lost profits. 31
    Notably, the same New York courts that adopted and applied the distinction
    between Type I and Type II preliminary agreements disfavor awarding expectation
    damages in cases of a breach of a Type II preliminary agreement. 32 For example, in
    Goodstein Construction Corporation v. City of New York, a case decided after Judge
    31
    See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 352 (1981) (“Damages are not recoverable for
    loss beyond an amount that the evidence permits to be established with reasonable certainty.”)
    (emphasis added), ch. 16, topic 2, § 352, cmt. a (“Requirement of certainty. A party cannot
    recover damages for breach of a contract for loss beyond the amount that the evidence permits to
    be established with reasonable certainty. . . . The main impact of the requirement of certainty
    comes in connection with recovery for lost profits. . . . Although the requirement applies to
    damages based on the reliance as well as the expectation interest, there is usually little difficulty
    in proving the amount that the injured party has actually spent in reliance on the contract, even if
    it is impossible to prove the amount of profit that he would have made. In such a case, he can
    recover his loss based on his reliance interest instead of on his expectation interest.”); 5 CORBIN
    ON CONTRACTS § 1020 (Rev. ed. 1964) (“In order to be entitled to a verdict, or a judgment, for
    damages for breach of contract, the plaintiff must lay a basis for a reasonable estimate of the
    extent of his harm, measured in money. This applies alike to harm that consists in losses
    suffered by the plaintiff (expenditures and other subtractions from his wealth) and to harm that
    consists in gains prevented by the breach.”) (emphasis added), § 1022 (“[A] plaintiff who has
    been injured by a breach of contract frequently has a right to damages much greater in amount
    than the mere net profit that would have resulted from full performance; but such profits, when
    their amount and the fact that they have been prevented by the breach of the defendant can be
    proved with reasonable certainty, always form one of the elements in the damages that can be
    recovered.”) (emphasis added); MODERN LAW OF CONTRACTS § 14:14 (2015) (“Although the
    value of lost profits and other consequential damages do not have to be proven with precision,
    the proof must be solid enough to justify a reasonable approximation by the trier of fact. Thus,
    rules of certainty and foreseeability apply both to proof of damage and to fact of damage.”)
    (emphasis added), § 14:6 (“Proving breach is not enough to recover damages. There also must
    be proof of actual damages that flow from the breach. . . . There must be evidence of associated
    costs from which a finder of fact can determine the actual net loss—or a close approximation
    thereof—that resulted from the breach. Mathematical certainty is not required. ‘Reasonable’
    certainty, which may be based upon probabilities and inferences, will suffice.”) (citations
    omitted).
    32
    See Goodstein Constr. Corp. v. City of N.Y., 
    604 N.E.2d 1356
    , 1360-62 (N.Y. 1992); see also
    180 Water St. Assocs., L.P. v. Lehman Bros. Holdings, Inc., 
    7 A.D.3d 316
    , 317 (N.Y. App. Div.
    2004) (citing 
    Goodstein, 604 N.E.2d at 1360-61
    ) (noting that a plaintiff claiming breach of an
    agreement to negotiate in good faith was limited to damages for out of pocket losses).
    7
    Leval’s decision in Tribune and the Second Circuit’s adoption of his analytical
    framework in Arcadian Phosphates, the New York Court of Appeals considered whether
    a plaintiff could recover damages in the amount of profits it might have earned in the
    event that a preliminary agreement to negotiate a final contract evolved into a complete
    instrument. 33   The court disallowed expectation damages under the circumstances, 34
    reasoning that awarding such damages would require it to “transform[] an agreement to
    negotiate for a contract into the contract itself” and “give the injured party the benefit of
    the bargain that was not reached.” 35 Goodstein reflects the general rule that “lost profits
    are not available where no agreement is reached, out-of-pocket costs incurred in the
    course of good faith partial performance are appropriate[.]” 36
    Although some federal cases in New York have awarded expectation damages for
    breach of preliminary agreements, those cases are distinguishable.                 In Network
    Enterprises, Inc. v. APBA Offshore Productions, Inc., 37 for example, the parties entered
    into a fully enforceable contract for airtime to present ten telecasts of boat races. That
    contract incorporated an option to renew, which the court characterized as a Type II
    33
    
    Goodstein, 604 N.E.2d at 1359-60
    .
    34
    The Goodstein Court noted that the conclusion of a final agreement was far from certain
    because the City of New York had the ability to terminate the preliminary agreement. 
    Id. at 1361.
    Here, by contrast, the Court of Chancery found that the LATS would have matured into a
    final agreement but for SIGA’s breach. PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *38.
    Nevertheless, as discussed below, other factors present here contribute to the speculative nature
    of PharmAthene’s asserted profits, including the revenue-based economic terms of the LATS.
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *4 n.20; see A352-53. Further, Goodstein involved the
    development of real property, the object of the LATS was to research, test, and market a new
    drug—an undertaking that embraces greater business risk and uncertainty.
    35
    
    Goodstein, 604 N.E.2d at 1361
    (internal quotations omitted) (citations omitted).
    36
    L-7 Designs, Inc. v. Old Navy, LLC, 
    647 F.3d 419
    , 431 (2d Cir. 2011) (citing 
    Goodstein, 604 N.E.2d at 1361
    ) (citation omitted).
    37
    
    427 F. Supp. 2d 463
    (S.D.N.Y. 2006), aff’d, 264 F. App’x 36 (2d Cir. 2008).
    8
    preliminary agreement to negotiate the “number, dates[,] and times” of the next season’s
    telecasts in good faith and which contained a “limited” number of open terms. 38 The
    court, in view of the certainty of the damages calculus and the successful negotiating
    history between the parties, granted expectation damages by multiplying the fee per
    telecast set forth in the option by ten, as the option stated that the existing agreement
    would be renewed under “the same terms and conditions.” 39
    Similarly, in Teachers Insurance & Annuity Association of America v. Ormesa
    Geothermal, 40 a borrower breached a commitment agreement it entered into with a lender
    to obtain a long-term loan. The agreement included “all of the crucial economic terms of
    the loan,” including the principal, term, interest rate, security, repayment schedule, and
    penalties. 41 The open terms “were terms that customarily are left for later negotiation”
    between loan parties. 42 After the borrower breached the commitment agreement by
    insisting on a lower interest rate, the court awarded expectation damages to the lender in
    the amount as measured by the difference between the interest income it would have
    earned had the contract been performed and that it “would be deemed to have earned by
    timely mitigating its damages—i.e., by making an investment with similar characteristics
    at the time of the breach.” 43
    38
    
    Id. at 478,
    485.
    39
    
    Id. at 487.
    40
    
    791 F. Supp. 401
    (S.D.N.Y. 1991).
    41
    
    Id. at 414-15.
    42
    
    Id. at 415.
    43
    
    Id. at 416.
    9
    In Network Enterprises and Ormesa Geothermal, the terms left open in the
    preliminary agreements were limited to details of a logistical nature. These agreements
    allowed the courts to calculate damages based on the terms therein. Here, by contrast, the
    terms set forth in the LATS provided a “nuanced, revenue-based approach” to calculating
    royalties. 44 In addition, other payments would only be made upon the occurrence of
    certain milestones. A meaningful degree of speculation concerning the success of the
    project, the occurrence of various contingencies, and the extent of the ensuing profits, if
    any, would be required to ascertain the extent of PharmAthene’s expectation damages.
    In the context of a Type II preliminary agreement, lost profits damages, as a
    general rule, are inherently speculative. This case is no exception. Accordingly, I would
    hold that damages for SIGA’s breach of its obligation to negotiate the license agreement
    in good faith are limited to PharmAthene’s reliance damages.
    B.     The Majority Misapplies SIGA I and Now Places Delaware Out of Step with
    Other Major Commercial Jurisdictions
    This Court has imported New York’s recognition of the binding force of
    preliminary agreements without adopting its concomitant limitations on expectation
    damages.      Where parties have not established expectation damages to a reasonable
    certainty, limiting parties’ damages for breach of a Type II preliminary agreement to
    reliance damages is necessary to prevent recovery in excess of the reasonable
    expectations of the parties at the time of breach. The Majority’s decision, allowing non-
    reliance damages for breach of a Type II preliminary agreement absent sufficient
    44
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *4 n.20; see A352-53.
    10
    evidence establishing such damages to a reasonable certainty, is a misapplication of SIGA
    I, which now places Delaware out of step with other important commercial jurisdictions.
    i.     New York Courts Disfavor Expectation Damages for Breach of a Preliminary
    Agreement
    As observed above, New York courts have hesitated to award expectation
    damages for the breach of a preliminary agreement, except in narrow cases where
    damages are ascertainable with reasonable certainty. 45 In L-7 Designs, Inc. v. Old Navy,
    LLC, 46 the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in addressing the
    District Court’s grant of a motion for judgment on the pleadings which rejected a claim
    for failure to negotiate a licensing agreement in good faith, commented that “[u]nder New
    York law parties who enter into binding preliminary agreements . . . ‘accept a mutual
    45
    See, e.g., Bulldog N.Y. LLC v. Pepsico, Inc., 
    8 F. Supp. 3d 152
    , 175 (D. Conn. 2014) (“In
    situations where a defendant has breached a Type II [a]greement by failing to negotiate in good
    faith, ‘lost profits are generally not available where no agreement is reached, [but] out-of-pocket
    costs may still be appropriate.’ . . . The only damages [that the plaintiff] appears to claim relate
    to its expected profits . . . which are unavailable for breach of a Type II agreement.”) (citation
    omitted) (alterations in original and added) (applying New York law); Learning Annex Holdings,
    LLC v. Whitney Educ. Grp., Inc., 
    765 F. Supp. 2d 403
    , 417 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (“Although it is true
    that lost profits are generally not available where no agreement is reached, out-of-pocket costs
    may still be appropriate.”) (citations omitted); Fairbrook Leasing, Inc. v. Mesaba Aviation, Inc.,
    
    519 F.3d 421
    , 429-30 (8th Cir. 2008) (“This is a difficult, largely unsettled question of remedies.
    . . . [But] we have no difficulty affirming the district court’s decision that expectancy damages
    may not be recovered in this case. . . . The same reasoning [that applied in Goodstein for
    denying expectation damages] applies in this case. The Term Sheet was silent on significant
    issues . . . . The parties were not obligated to agree on these issues, nor can the missing terms be
    judicially determined by objective criteria in the Term Sheet itself or in commercial practice,
    usage, or custom. In effect, [the appellant] asks us to do what New York law prohibits—
    transform a binding preliminary agreement to negotiate for a contract into the contract itself.”)
    (applying New York law). Cf. Worldwide Servs., Ltd. v. Bombardier Aerospace Corp., 
    2015 WL 5671724
    , at *20 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 22, 2015) (“The Court recognizes that the Second Circuit
    has explained that although out-of-pocket costs incurred in the course of good faith partial
    performance are appropriate, lost profits are not available where no agreement is reached.”)
    (citing L-7 
    Designs, 647 F.3d at 431
    ).
    46
    
    647 F.3d 419
    (2d Cir. 2011).
    11
    commitment to negotiate together in good faith in an effort to reach final agreement . . .
    .’” 47 Consistent with the decisions noted above, it then observed that, “[a]lthough lost
    profits are not available where no agreement is reached . . . out-of-pocket costs incurred
    in the course of good faith partial performance are appropriate[.]” 48
    ii.     California Courts Disfavor Expectation Damages for Breach of a Preliminary
    Agreement
    California courts have consistently declined to award expectation damages for the
    breach of a preliminary agreement. 49 In Copeland v. Baskin Robbins U.S.A., 50 the parties
    entered into a preliminary agreement regarding a Baskin Robbins plant, whereby
    “Copeland would purchase the plant’s manufacturing assets and sublease the plant
    property. Baskin Robbins would purchase seven million gallons of ice cream from
    47
    
    Id. at 430
    (quoting 
    Tribune, 670 F. Supp. at 498
    ).
    48
    
    Id. at 431
    (citing 
    Goodstein, 604 N.E. at 1361
    ) (citation omitted). See also ICBC (London)
    PLC v. Blacksands Pac. Grp., Inc., 
    2015 WL 5710947
    , at *9 n.94 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 29, 2015),
    notice of appeal filed, Oct. 23, 2015 (No. 15-3387) (citing L-7 
    Designs, 647 F.3d at 431
    )
    (observing that “lost profits are not available as a remedy for [breach of a Type II preliminary
    agreement]; recovery is limited to out-of-pocket costs incurred in partial performance of good
    faith negotiations”).
    49
    See, e.g., Advanced Thermal Scis. Corp. v. Applied Materials, Inc., 
    2010 WL 2015236
    , at *52
    (C.D. Cal. May 18, 2010) (discussing the uncertainty of lost profits damages and awarding
    reliance damages); In re ECC Sys., Inc., 
    2009 WL 1028061
    , at *2 (9th Cir. Apr. 17, 2009)
    (denying expectation damages in view of the fact that they were “not the reliance damages that
    under California law as set forth in [Copeland v. Baskin Robbins U.S.A.] are the only damages
    available for breach of a contract to negotiate an agreement”) (emphasis added); Original S.F.
    Toymakers, Inc. v. Trendmasters, Inc., 
    2003 WL 22384771
    , at *7 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 7, 2003) (“The
    appropriate remedy for a breach of an agreement to negotiate are those damages which the
    plaintiff incurred in reliance on the defendant to negotiate in accordance with the covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing implied in every contract. This measure includes the ‘plaintiff’s out
    of pocket costs in conducting the negotiations’ but may not include ‘lost expectations
    (profits).’”) (internal citations omitted); Vestar Dev. II, LLC v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 
    249 F.3d 958
    , 962 (9th Cir. 2001) (affirming the denial of expectation damages in connection with a
    preliminary agreement on the grounds that any such award would require “impermissible
    speculation”).
    50
    
    117 Cal. Rptr. 2d 875
    (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).
    12
    Copeland over a three year period.” 51 The agreement was contingent upon the ice cream
    purchase arrangement, referred to as a “co-packing” agreement, which the parties
    understood to be a material aspect of the deal. 52 “Among the issues to be settled were the
    price Baskin Robbins would pay for the ice cream, the flavors Copeland would produce,
    quality standards and controls, who would bear the loss from spoilage, and trademark
    protection.” 53 However, Baskin Robbins later wrote to Copeland, explaining that “‘the
    proposed co-packing arrangement [was] out of alignment with [its] strategy.’ Therefore,
    Baskin Robbins informed Copeland, ‘we will not be engaging in any further negotiations
    of a co-packing arrangement.’” 54
    In a suit for breach of contract, Copeland alleged that the preliminary agreement
    “constituted a contract to negotiate the remaining terms of the co-packing agreement and
    Baskin Robbins breached this contract by refusing without excuse to continue
    negotiations or, alternatively, by failing to negotiate in good faith.” 55     The court,
    however, observed that “[a]rguing bad faith is an uncertain concept which could cost the
    defendant millions of dollars in expectation damages [and] is also without merit. . . .
    [T]he appropriate remedy for breach of a contract to negotiate is not damages for the
    injured party’s lost expectations under the prospective contract but damages caused by
    the injured party’s reliance on the agreement to negotiate.” 56 Accordingly, the court held
    51
    
    Id. at 877.
    52
    
    Id. 53 Id.
    at 878.
    54
    
    Id. 55 Id.
    at 880.
    56
    
    Id. at 883
    (citation omitted).
    13
    that “damages for breach of a contract to negotiate an agreement are measured by the
    injury the plaintiff suffered in relying on the defendant to negotiate in good faith. This
    measure encompasses the plaintiff’s out-of-pocket costs in conducting the negotiations
    and may or may not include lost opportunity costs. The plaintiff cannot recover for lost
    expectations (profits) because there is no way of knowing what the ultimate terms of the
    agreement would have been or even if there would have been an ultimate agreement.” 57
    iii.    Other Jurisdictions Disfavor Expectation Damages, Particularly in the
    Pharmaceutical Context
    Particularly in the pharmaceutical context, the courts of other jurisdictions appear
    to disfavor expectation damages. 58         In AlphaMed Pharmaceuticals Corp. v. Arriva
    Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 59 in the context of a patent infringement suit, the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of Florida observed that “only a minuscule
    percentage of drugs in development ever reaches the commercial market—and of those,
    only a subset ever prove profitable for their manufacturer. Accordingly, reliance on a
    multitude of assumptions is endemic to any valuation of the prospective profitability of
    57
    
    Id. at 885
    (citations omitted). Notably, in PharmAthene I, the trial court found that “the parties
    did not intend the LATS as attached to [the Bridge Loan Agreement and Merger Agreement] to
    be a binding license agreement or to require that any later formal agreement include exactly the
    same terms as the LATS.” PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *16. But, on remand, the trial
    court observed that this Court’s opinion in SIGA I “place[d] greater weight on the terms specified
    in the LATS than [it] afforded those terms in determining [the] prior damages award.”
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *4.
    58
    See, e.g., PharmaNetics, Inc. v. Aventis Pharms., Inc., 
    2005 WL 6000369
    , at *12, *16
    (E.D.N.C. May 4, 2005), aff’d, 182 F. App’x 267 (4th Cir. 2006) (affirming exclusion of expert
    testimony and noting that there was “no clear error in ruling the new technology’s lost sales to be
    too speculative”).
    59
    
    432 F. Supp. 2d 1319
    (S.D. Fla. 2006), aff’d, 294 F. App’x 501 (11th Cir. 2008).
    14
    new pharmaceutical products.” 60 In view of the intrinsic unpredictability underlying the
    development of pharmaceuticals, the District Court noted that “inherent uncertainty
    makes the recovery of lost profits for anticipated sales of a new drug exceedingly
    difficult.” 61
    In Microbix Biosystems, Inc. v. BioWhittaker, Inc., 62 the United States District
    Court for the District of Maryland, in the antitrust context, found that a plaintiff’s request
    for lost profits related to the production of a pharmaceutical ranging between $60 and $95
    million, even before trebling, was too speculative. In so holding, the District Court stated
    that “for the damages to be of the amount claimed (or any amount for that matter), one
    must assume that [the p]laintiff would have successfully secured a manufacturing facility,
    obtained FDA approval, developed the [drug’s essential protein enzyme] in commercial
    quantities, and marketed the product during the relevant time frame.” 63 Because the court
    concluded that the plaintiff failed to present evidence of damages “with a sufficient
    degree of certainty,” it granted summary judgment. 64
    60
    
    Id. at 1345
    (internal citation omitted). See also Schonfeld v. Hilliard, 
    218 F.3d 164
    , 172 (2d
    Cir. 2000) (explaining that under New York law, “evidence of lost profits from a new business
    venture receives greater scrutiny because there is no track record upon which to base an
    estimate”) (citing Kenford Co., Inc. v. Erie Cnty., 
    493 N.E.2d 234
    , 235 (N.Y. 1986)).
    61
    
    Id. at 1346.
    In AlphaMed, the plaintiff failed to prove the fact of damages, i.e., that it would
    have earned a profit (of any amount) but for the defendant’s conduct.
    62
    
    172 F. Supp. 2d 680
    (D. Md. 2000), aff’d, 11 F. App’x 279 (4th Cir. 2001).
    63
    
    Id. at 698.
    64
    
    Id. at 699.
    15
    Further, this Court has recognized the desirability of maintaining symmetry of
    laws in important areas. 65 In SIGA I, we acknowledged that there were two enforceable,
    relevant contracts.    We stated that “[t]he promise to negotiate in good faith for a
    definitive license agreement in accordance with the LATS’s terms [was] expressly
    included in both the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements.” 66                   The Bridge Loan
    Agreement was governed by New York law 67 and the Merger Agreement was governed
    by Delaware law. 68       The asymmetry between New York and Delaware law, now
    enhanced by the Majority’s Opinion, is undesirable, particularly since it is common for
    financing agreements to be governed by New York law, and for merger and other related
    transaction agreements to be governed by Delaware law.
    II.    ERRONEOUS RELIANCE ON POST-BREACH EVIDENCE
    The Court of Chancery erroneously looked to post-breach evidence to determine
    what the parties’ expectations were at the time of the breach seven years earlier. Such
    evidence included the award of the BARDA contract in 2011, several years after the
    breach, despite the reality that BARDA is a government agency that did not come into
    existence until the day before the breach. The trial court then decided that sales of ST-
    246 would have begun in 2010, ignoring the undisputed fact that it was first delivered in
    65
    See Stewart v. Wilmington Trust SP Servs., Inc., 
    2015 WL 6672222
    , at *2 (Del. Nov. 2, 2015)
    (discussing the beneficial impact of synchronizing laws of “sister states, such as New York,
    whose laws are often involved in situations involving Delaware corporations”). Harmonizing the
    laws of sister states is useful where, as here, we adopt a portion of the sister state’s law as our
    own.
    66
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    48.
    67
    A147 (Bridge Loan Agreement § 7.11).
    68
    A273 (Merger Agreement § 13.5).
    16
    2013.    Further, in the model adopted by the Court of Chancery, the calculation of
    damages is extremely sensitive to changes in the timing of ST-246 sales. 69
    Uncertainty with respect to the success of the project, the occurrence of
    contingencies, and the extent of the profits to be gained, if any, were the basis of the
    Court of Chancery’s 2011 determination that calculating expectation damages was
    “speculative and too uncertain, contingent, and conjectural.” 70 As the Court of Chancery
    then ruled, the fact of damages was even uncertain: “The evidence adduced at trial
    proved that numerous uncertainties exist regarding the marketability of ST-246 and that it
    remains possible that it will not generate any profits at all.” 71 The following chart
    illustrates that the trial court’s consideration of post-breach evidence reversed this
    important conclusion:
    The trial court’s view in            The trial court’s          The trial court’s 2014 view of
    2011 of the fact of           consideration of post-             the fact of damages
    damages                      breach evidence
    “The evidence adduced at      “[S]ince I issued the Post-      “Having        considered       the
    trial     proved       that   Trial Opinion, SIGA has been     competing       arguments      and
    numerous uncertainties        awarded a contract to sell ST-   relevant case law, I have decided
    exist    regarding      the   246 to the United States         that this Court should take note of
    marketability of ST-246       government via BARDA. The        SIGA’s success in procuring a
    and that it remains           parties dispute the extent to    contract with BARDA (i.e., its
    possible that it will not     which I can and should           actual commercialization of ST-
    69
    In 2011, by contrast, the trial court had found that “[t]he disparity of outcomes between, on the
    one hand, the Basis I and 2009 Basis II models and, on the other hand, the 2010 Basis II model
    highlights the inherently speculative nature of Baliban’s damages calculations.” PharmAthene I,
    
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *37 n.224 (“With the benefit of slightly more current information,
    PharmAthene’s estimated damages diminished by over $600 million, or more than 50%.”). The
    trial court, specifically, had found Baliban’s analysis to be too speculative due to its sensitivity to
    the timing of sales. See 
    id. (“[W]ere sales
    to commence one year later than assumed . . . the
    ultimate damages amount would decrease by over $90 million, a decrease of over 20%.”).
    70
    
    Id. at *37.
    71
    
    Id. 17 generate
    any profits at consider an event such as this,   246). In particular, that fact
    all.” 72                which occurred several years      mitigates or possibly eliminates
    after SIGA’s bad faith            some of the concerns I expressed
    breach.” 73                       in the Post-Trial Opinion
    regarding      ST-246’s        future
    prospects,        including       the
    possibility that the drug might not
    generate any profits at all.” 74
    That the Court of Chancery came to the opposite conclusion in 2014 suggests that it gave
    undue weight to evidence of ST-246’s performance in the intervening years. The future
    performance of ST-246 could not have been known to the parties at the time of breach.
    The Majority holds that the Court of Chancery properly “recognized that post-
    breach evidence could be used ‘in order to aid in its determination of the proper
    expectations as of the date of the breach,’ but relied on such evidence ‘sparingly.’” 75
    Yet, the chance in 2006 of an event occurring years later is not altered by subsequent
    knowledge that the event did or did not occur.
    Moreover, consideration of post-breach information in the chart below—although
    this is admittedly “20/20 hindsight”—only illustrates the speculative nature of
    PharmAthene’s claimed expectation damages and highlights the unreliability of crafting
    an award of damages based on the expectations of parties in cases such as this:
    72
    
    Id. 73 PharmAthene
    II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *6.
    74
    
    Id. (citation omitted).
    75
    Maj. Op. at 47 (citing PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *9).
    18
    Court of Chancery          PharmAthene’s 2006 and 2009              Eventual Result 78
    Factors 76                   Assumptions 77
    The likelihood that ST-246    84%    probability    of   FDA       No FDA approval, and no
    would         be       sold   approval, forecasted to occur in     indication of when or if FDA
    commercially.                 2012.                                approval will occur.
    When such sales were          Between 2008 and 2011.               First delivery in 2013.
    likely to begin.
    The price at which ST-246     $100 per course 79                   At least $180 per course 80
    would be sold.                                                     under the BARDA contract.
    The quantity of ST-246        Sales to the Strategic National      1.7 million courses of
    that would be sold.           Stockpile of between 14.778          treatment under the BARDA
    million and 18.9 million courses     contract; 81 no sales to the
    of treatment; sales to the           Department of Defense; and
    Department of Defense of             no sales to the rest of the
    between 250,490 and 600,460          world.
    courses of treatment; and sales to
    the rest of the world of between
    14.778 million to 17.2 million
    courses of treatment.
    The Court of Chancery recognized in 2011 that expectation damages were likely
    speculative because the legislation enacting BARDA was less than a day old at the time
    of breach and “predictive models for regulatory success [were] difficult to come by for
    ST-246 both because there [were] no other treatments for smallpox to compare it to and
    76
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *10-18.
    77
    Unless otherwise indicated, these figures are drawn from the assumptions made by
    PharmAthene expert Jeffrey L. Baliban in his “Basis I” and “Basis II” damages estimates.
    Baliban conducted a discounted future earnings analysis on two different bases, “forecasting
    over a ten-year period the earnings PharmAthene would have received under a license for ST-
    246 consistent with the terms of the LATS. . . . Basis I employed data inputs derived from
    information the parties knew as of December 2006, and Basis II updated those inputs to account
    for new information the parties had learned as of a date shortly before trial.” PharmAthene I,
    
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at * 36. The trial court, on remand, considered some information from the
    Basis II scenario, using facts known as of November 2009—almost three years post-breach.
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *9 n.45. SIGA’s expert, Keith R. Ugone, opined in his
    2009 expert report that an 84% probability of success was “too high,” and that, in view of the
    “developmental stage and regulatory uncertainties associated with ST-246,” forecasted sales
    beginning in 2008 under Basis I and 2010 under Basis II were “highly uncertain and
    unreasonable.” AR613-14.
    78
    The eventual result is current as of December 2013. See A808.
    79
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *14.
    80
    
    Id. at *14
    n.66.
    81
    PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *12.
    19
    very few drugs have been approved under the Animal Efficacy Rule[.]” 82 Also, based
    upon the trial record, the Court of Chancery in 2011 denied expectation damages as
    impermissibly speculative in part because “ST-246 might [have] never receive[d] FDA
    approval, there [were] no guaranteed purchasers of ST-246, and research delays or
    problems in animal trials might [have] prevent[ed] ST-246 from reaching a viable market
    in a timely fashion[,]” 83 and, as of April 2010, “no final contract with BARDA yet
    existed.” 84   I believe that the trial court’s reliance on post-breach evidence to resolve
    uncertainties that it had previously ruled were fatally speculative was error.
    III.   THE WRONGDOER RULE
    The Court of Chancery relied on the so-called “wrongdoer rule” to resolve, or
    compensate for, uncertainties in establishing damages payable by SIGA. In doing so, the
    Court of Chancery erroneously used SIGA’s breach of its duty to negotiate a commercial
    contract in good faith as a basis to relieve PharmAthene of its duty to prove non-
    speculative damages.
    While I agree with the Majority’s conclusion that the fact of damages must be
    proven with reasonable certainty, I disagree with its holding that the amount of damages
    does not have to be proven with reasonable certainty. 85 Here, the Majority observes that
    82
    PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc., 
    2010 WL 4813553
    , at *11 n.64 (Del. Ch. Nov. 23,
    2010).
    83
    PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *31.
    84
    
    Id. at *37
    n.224.
    85
    See Cole v. Homier Distrib. Co., Inc., 
    599 F.3d 856
    , 864 (8th Cir. 2010) (“[A] plaintiff in a
    contract action generally has the burden of proving ‘the existence and amount of . . . damages
    with reasonable certainty.”) (citation omitted) (emphasis added); 
    Schonfeld, 218 F.3d at 172
    (“In
    an action for breach of contract, a plaintiff is entitled to recover lost profits only if he can
    20
    where the fact of damages has been proven, less certainty is required to establish the
    amount of damages. It then adds that “where the wrongdoer caused uncertainty about the
    final economics of the transaction by its failure to negotiate in good faith, willfulness is a
    relevant factor in deciding the quantum of proof required to establish the damages
    amount.” 86 Even if mathematical precision is not required to establish the amount of
    damages and even if reasonable estimates are permissible, I believe the Majority
    understates the level of certainty required for an award of expectation damages, 87 and
    then compounds the error by relying on the wrongdoer rule to lessen the burden of proof
    and sanction an award of speculative damages.
    As we said in SIGA I, lost profits damages must be proved with reasonable
    certainty. 88 “The general rule, followed in Delaware law and elsewhere, is that future lost
    profits must be established by ‘substantial evidence’ and not by speculation.” 89 Thus,
    establish both the existence and amount of such damages with reasonable certainty.”) (citing
    Kenford 
    Co., 493 N.E.2d at 235
    ) (emphasis added); Summit Props. Int’l, LLC v. Ladies Prof’l
    Golf Ass’n, 
    2010 WL 2382405
    , at *2 (S.D.N.Y. June 14, 2010) (“In order to recover loss of
    future profits as damages for breach of contract under New York law, the plaintiff must establish
    the existence and the amount of lost profits with reasonable certainty . . . .”) (citing 
    Schonfeld, 218 F.3d at 173
    ) (emphasis added); Am. Commc’ns Network, Inc. v. Steuben Assocs., 
    2005 WL 1355070
    (E.D. Mich. Apr. 5, 2005) (“In general, damages must be proved by the plaintiff by
    establishing both the existence and amount of such damages with reasonable certainty.”)
    (citation omitted).
    86
    Maj. Op. at 44 (collecting cases).
    87
    See 5 CORBIN ON CONTRACTS § 1022 (Rev. ed. 1964) (“[T]he term ‘speculative and uncertain
    profits’ is not really a classification of profits, but is instead a characterization of the evidence
    that is introduced to prove that they would have been made if the defendant had not committed a
    breach of contract. The law requires that this evidence shall not be so meager or uncertain as to
    afford no reasonable basis for inference . . . .”).
    88
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    51 n.99. See also Chrysler Corp. v. Quimby, 
    144 A.2d 123
    , 139 (Del.
    1958).
    89
    Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *29 n.271 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 2010)
    (quoting Mobile Diagnostics, Inc. v. Lindell Radiology, P.A., 
    1985 WL 189018
    , at *4 (Del.
    21
    while estimates are permissible, the calculus for such estimates must exclude evidence
    founded upon speculation or conjecture, and rely, instead, on reasonably certain evidence
    which enables the factfinder to determine estimated expectancy damages.
    Accordingly, I believe that the trial court’s and the Majority’s application of the
    wrongdoer rule to compensate for the lack of requisite certainty is error. The Majority,
    for example, relies on Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates 90 for the proposition that if the
    plaintiff can prove the fact of damages with reasonable certainty, the amount of damages
    can be an estimate that is not reasonably certain. 91 Beard Research is distinguishable, in
    that the case involved misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary duty, aiding
    and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with contractual relations,
    and tortious interference with prospective business relations.         That is to say, Beard
    Research was not a case that centered on a breach of contract, let alone a breach of a
    preliminary agreement. “Courts have traditionally required greater certainty in the proof
    of damages for breach of a contract than in the proof of damages for a tort.” 92 In SIGA I,
    we instructed that the trial court “must look to the contract as the source of a remedy on
    the breach of an obligation to negotiate in good faith.” 93 Further, while the Beard
    Super. July 29, 1985) (“The general rule is that loss of future profits must be established by
    substantial evidence and can’t be left to speculation.”); Re v. Gannett Co., Inc., 
    480 A.2d 662
    ,
    668 (Del. Super. 1984), aff’d, 
    496 A.2d 553
    (Del. 1985) (“Courts have required that loss of
    future profits be established by substantial evidence and not be left to speculation.”) (internal
    citations omitted)).
    90
    Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d sub. nom., ASDI, Inc. v.
    Beard Research, Inc., 
    11 A.3d 749
    (Del. 2010).
    91
    Maj. Op. at 4, 25, 43, 44.
    92
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS ch. 16, topic 2, § 352, cmt. a (1981).
    93
    SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    48.
    22
    Research court observed that “‘[t]he quantum of proof required to establish the amount of
    damage is not as great as that required to establish the fact of damage[,]’” 94 the court’s
    immediately succeeding qualifier with respect to the required certainty of damages states:
    “Nevertheless, when acting as the fact finder, [the Court of Chancery] may not set
    damages based on mere ‘speculation or conjecture’ where a plaintiff fails to adequately
    prove damages.” 95
    The Majority relies upon Delaware Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older 96 for the same
    proposition.       Like   Beard Research, Delaware              Express    involved claims of
    misappropriating trade secrets and breach of fiduciary duties, in addition to claims with
    respect to breach of a non-competition agreement, defamation, and tortious interference
    with existing and prospective business relationships. The plaintiff sought injunctive
    relief as well as damages. The court entered an injunction and awarded damages of “only
    $6,000.” 97    As in Beard Research, the Court of Chancery acknowledged in Delaware
    Express that “[t]he law does not require certainty in the award of damages where a wrong
    has been proven and injury established. Responsible estimates that lack mathematical
    certainty are permissible so long as the court has a basis to make a responsible estimate of
    94
    Beard 
    Research, 8 A.3d at 613
    (citation omitted) (alteration in original).
    95
    
    Id. (quoting Medek
    v. Medek, 
    2009 WL 2005365
    , at *12 n.78 (Del. Ch. July 1, 2009)). The
    Majority also cites to 24 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 64:9 (4th ed. 2000) for the proposition that
    “it is now well established that the uncertainty that prevents recovery is uncertainty as to the fact
    of damage and not as to its amount.” Williston’s immediately succeeding qualifying language,
    however, provides: “In other words, where substantial damage has been suffered, the
    impossibility of proving its precise amount provides no basis for denying the recovery of
    substantial damages altogether.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    Indeed, damages need not be denied
    merely because the plaintiff cannot establish their exact amount, but that is not to say, as the
    Majority suggests, that damages may be awarded based on speculative estimations.
    96
    
    2002 WL 31458243
    (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2002).
    97
    
    Id. at *1.
    23
    damages.” 98   But, in the immediately succeeding sentence, the court reiterated that
    “[s]peculation is an insufficient basis” for an award of damages. 99 Further, the court
    rejected the plaintiff’s argument that any uncertainties must be resolved against the
    defendants as wrongdoers. 100
    This Court’s decision in Duncan v. Theratx, Inc. 101 illustrates that uncertainties not
    attributed to the wrongdoer in a breach of contract case should be excluded from the
    damages calculus.     There, the defendant’s breach of a merger agreement caused a
    temporary restriction on the ability of certain stockholders to sell their shares. The
    uncertainty in calculating damages—“‘what the plaintiff[s] would have done with [their]
    securities had they been freely alienable’”—was caused by the breach. 102 The court
    calculated damages based upon the difference between the “highest intermediate price”
    achieved while the restriction was in effect and the average price during the period
    immediately after the restriction was lifted, in order to approximate the effect on share
    values caused by the restriction. Notably, the court rejected a calculation of damages
    based on the actual price later obtained for the plaintiffs’ stock—or, for the plaintiffs who
    retained their shares, the trading price at the time of trial—because such an approach
    would shift to the defendant the risk of fluctuations in the stock price that were not
    98
    
    Id. at *15
    (internal quotations omitted) (citation omitted).
    99
    
    Id. (internal quotations
    omitted) (citation omitted).
    100
    
    Id. at *15
    n.88.
    101
    
    775 A.2d 1019
    (Del. 2001).
    102
    
    Id. at 1023
    (quoting Am. Gen. Corp. v. Cont’l Airlines Corp., 
    622 A.2d 1
    , 10 (Del. Ch.
    1992)).
    24
    correlated with the breach. Thus, the award in Duncan was tailored to the scope of the
    injury caused by the breach, and it excluded uncertainties caused by external factors.
    Risks of uncertainty concerning future events that are “impossible to know” do not
    shift to the defendant in a breach of contract case. 103 Here, the uncertainties that bar
    expectation damages were caused by neither SIGA nor its breach. Rather, they were the
    result of the same externalities and third-party decisions that compelled the Court of
    Chancery to find such damages to be too speculative in 2011.           These uncertainties
    include: (i) whether, when, or how FDA approval would be achieved; (ii) feasibility and
    cost of manufacturing; (iii) potential toxicities; (iv) whether or when sales would occur
    and the amount of such sales; and (v) the state of the economy, which has limited
    government spending on biological threat countermeasures. SIGA’s bad faith conduct
    does not absolve PharmAthene of its burden to prove expectation damages with
    reasonable certainty.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    SIGA I allowed for the theoretical availability of expectation damages for breach
    of a preliminary agreement. It added the important qualifier that such damages must be
    established with reasonable certainty. Such requirement is presently firmly grounded not
    only in New York and California law, but in Delaware’s as well. In my view, the
    Majority erodes the “reasonable certainty” requirement by applying a “presumption that
    doubts about the extent of damages are generally resolved against the breaching party” to
    103
    See 
    id. at 1023-24
    (citing Madison Fund, Inc. v. Charter Co., 
    427 F. Supp. 597
    , 608
    (S.D.N.Y. 1977)).
    25
    the point of speculation, and then taking “into account the willfulness of the breach” in a
    manner that imposes responsibility on SIGA for uncertainties beyond those that it
    caused. 104
    I believe that this Court’s remand instructions in SIGA I were unclear, perhaps
    prompting the trial court to interpret them in a fashion that essentially ignores the
    important qualifier regarding the standard of proof. 105         Consequently, it applied the
    analytical framework borrowed from New York law, without properly accounting for the
    concomitant limitations on expectation damages, including the requirement that they be
    established with reasonable certainty.       The Majority states that the Dissent’s “main
    dissatisfaction is with SIGA I and the rule it adopted permitting the recovery of
    expectation damages for bad faith breach of Type II agreements.” 106 The Majority is
    incorrect. I do not believe that SIGA I’s adoption of New York’s analytical framework
    with respect to preliminary agreements was error. Rather, I respectfully suggest that it is
    the Majority’s application of SIGA I that is problematic for the reasons expressed herein.
    104
    Maj. Op. at 43.
    105
    The Majority Opinion suggests that the remand instructions were clear because they
    instructed the trial court to “determine anew whether expectation damages should be awarded”
    and to “reconsider the helpfulness of expert testimony directed to expectation damages.” 
    Id. at 56.
    But the trial court, perhaps understandably, appears to have interpreted the instructions as a
    hint that this Court believed that expectation damages were likely available. Yet, this Court, in
    SIGA I, expressly stated that it was not reaching the question of whether such an award “would
    be too speculative.” SIGA 
    I, 67 A.3d at 3
    53. Since we made clear in footnote 99 of SIGA I that
    an award of expectation damages “presupposes that the plaintiff can prove damages with
    reasonable certainty,” the remand instructions, to the extent they suggested that an award of
    expectation damages would likely be available, are inconsistent with SIGA I’s recognized need to
    reach the issue of speculation first—which this Court expressly did not do. 
    Id. at 351
    n.99.
    106
    Maj. Op. at 56.
    26
    I appreciate that the trial court, having fashioned two remedial orders, should not
    be asked to act again to fashion a third remedial order. Nor should the parties be delayed
    further in obtaining a final resolution in this long-running dispute. But to further push
    our law in the wrong direction and out of alignment with other major commercial
    jurisdictions is a more significant error, and one which has far greater consequences than
    the impacts felt by the parties in this case alone. I would prefer that this Court accept
    responsibility for its less-than-clear guidance to the trial court in fashioning a remedial
    order on remand.
    I would vacate this Court’s prior order and remand with an instruction that, based
    upon this record, expectation damages for breach of this Type II preliminary agreement
    are “speculative and too uncertain, contingent, and conjectural[,]” 107 and, as a
    consequence, only reliance damages are available. 108
    107
    PharmAthene I, 
    2011 WL 4390726
    , at *37 (citing PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc.,
    
    2010 WL 4813553
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Nov. 23, 2010)).
    108
    The Majority states that the Court of Chancery found that reliance damages “would be no
    remedy at all for SIGA’s bad faith breach.” Maj. Op. at 56 (citation omitted). In fact, the trial
    court stated that, “[b]ased on the evidence presented at trial . . . reliance damages here appear to
    be in the range of only about $200,000, a nominal sum relative to PharmAthene’s claimed
    damages of hundreds of millions of dollars.” PharmAthene II, 
    2014 WL 3974167
    , at *6 n.29.
    SIGA maintains that PharmAthene made a strategic decision not to proffer any evidence of
    reliance damages at trial. The record reflects that, on remand, PharmAthene predominantly
    sought lump sum expectation damages as relief. Compare PharmAthene’s Pre-Trial Br. on
    Remand at B638 (urging that PharmAthene is entitled to its “expectation and not simply its
    reliance interest”), with PharmAthene’s Post-Hearing Response Br. at B715 (same), and SIGA’s
    Op. Br. on Remand at A817 (“If the only reliance damages in the record are de minimis (SIGA
    contends they are not), it is the consequence of a strategy PharmAthene adopted in an effort to
    press the Court [of Chancery] to make an inappropriately larger award.”). The Majority also
    claims SIGA is “poorly positioned” to argue that the parties’ expectations at the time of breach
    were too speculative. Maj. Op. at 54. As support, it points to SIGA’s internal valuations of ST-
    246, which ranged from $3 billion to $5 billion. 
    Id. Yet, its
    affirmance of a lump sum award of
    27
    For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully DISSENT.
    $113 million undercuts the credibility of those valuations as a tool to appropriately measure
    damages.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20, 2015

Citation Numbers: 132 A.3d 1108, 2015 Del. LEXIS 678, 2015 WL 9467037

Judges: Strine, Holland, Valihura, Vaughn, Seitz

Filed Date: 12/23/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024

Authorities (40)

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Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co. , 51 S. Ct. 248 ( 1931 )

Re v. Gannett Co., Inc. , 1984 Del. Super. LEXIS 600 ( 1984 )

Alphamed Pharmaceuticals Corp. v. Arriva Pharmaceuticals, ... , 432 F. Supp. 2d 1319 ( 2006 )

Network Enterprises, Inc. v. APBA Offshore Productions, Inc. , 427 F. Supp. 2d 463 ( 2006 )

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American General Corp. v. Continental Airlines Corp. , 1992 Del. Ch. LEXIS 103 ( 1992 )

Sinclair Refining Co. v. Jenkins Petroleum Process Co. , 53 S. Ct. 736 ( 1933 )

Gannett Co., Inc. v. Kanaga , 2000 Del. LEXIS 184 ( 2000 )

Gotham Partners, L.P. v. Hallwood Realty Partners, L.P. , 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 73 ( 2003 )

Insurance Corp. of America v. Barker , 1993 Del. LEXIS 181 ( 1993 )

Chrysler Corporation v. Quimby , 144 A.2d 123 ( 1958 )

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Schock v. Nash , 1999 Del. LEXIS 207 ( 1999 )

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Weinberger v. UOP, Inc. , 1983 Del. LEXIS 371 ( 1983 )

Honeywell International, Inc. v. Hamilton Sundstrand Corp. , 378 F. Supp. 2d 459 ( 2005 )

Madison Fund, Inc. v. Charter Co. , 427 F. Supp. 597 ( 1977 )

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