Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N v. v. Westinghouse Electric Company and WSW Acquisition Co. ( 2017 )


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  •            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    CHICAGO BRIDGE & IRON                  §
    COMPANY N.V.,                          §     No. 573, 2016
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                 §     Court Below: Court of Chancery
    Appellant,                       §     of the State of Delaware
    §
    v.                               §
    §     C.A. No. 12585
    WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC                  §
    COMPANY LLC and WSW                    §
    ACQUISITION CO., LLC,                  §
    §
    Defendants Below,                §
    Appellees.                       §
    Submitted: May 3, 2017
    Decided:   June 27, 2017
    Revised:   June 28, 2017
    Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and SEITZ, Justices.
    Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. REVERSED.
    David E. Ross, Esquire, Garrett B. Moritz, Esquire, Ross Aronstam & Moritz LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Theodore N. Mirvis, Esquire (argued), Jonathan M. Moses,
    Esquire, Kevin S. Schwartz, Esquire, Andrew J.H. Cheung, Esquire, Cecilia A.
    Glass, Esquire, Bita Assad, Esquire, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New York,
    New York, for Plaintiff Below, Appellant, Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V.
    Kevin G. Abrams, Esquire, John M. Seaman, Esquire, Abrams & Bayliss LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Peter N. Wang, Esquire (argued), Susan J. Schwartz,
    Esquire, Yonaton Aronoff, Esquire, Douglas S. Heffer, Esquire, Foley & Lardner
    LLP, New York, New York, for Defendants Below, Appellees, Westinghouse
    Electric Company LLC and WSW Acquisition Co., LLC.
    STRINE, Chief Justice:
    In giving sensible life to a real-world contract, courts must read the specific
    provisions of the contract in light of the entire contract. That is true in all commercial
    contexts, but especially so when the contract at issue involves a definitive acquisition
    agreement addressing the sale of an entire business.
    In this case, Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V. (“Chicago Bridge”) and
    Westinghouse Electric Company (“Westinghouse”) had an extensive collaboration
    and complicated commercial relationship involving the construction of nuclear
    power plants by Chicago Bridge’s subsidiary, CB&I Stone & Webster, Inc.
    (“Stone”), including two which would be the first new nuclear power plants in the
    United States in thirty years. As delays and cost overruns mounted, this relationship
    became contentious. To resolve their differences, Chicago Bridge agreed to sell
    Stone to Westinghouse. The agreement to do so was unusual in a few key respects.
    First, the purchase price to be paid at closing by Westinghouse was set in the contract
    at zero,1 a figure in Yiddish that, perhaps appropriately given Chicago Bridge’s
    Chicago connection, sounds like an iconic linebacker. The parties came to that
    figure in part by considering Stone’s historical financial statements and management
    projections and by basing it upon a target for Stone’s net working capital—its current
    1
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A64 (Verified Complaint, dated July 21, 2016 Ex. A,
    Purchase Agreement by and Among Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V., as Seller Parent,
    CB&I Stone & Webster, Inc., as the Company, WSW Acquisition Co., LLC, as Purchaser, and
    Westinghouse Electric Company LLC, as Purchaser Parent § 1.2(a)(i)) [hereinafter Purchase
    Agreement].
    assets less current liabilities—of $1.174 billion. That target is referred to in the
    Purchase Agreement as the “Target Net Working Capital Amount,” and we will refer
    to it as “the Target” for short.2 The parties also agreed Chicago Bridge might receive
    certain payments at closing if project milestones were met by that time or at a later
    date through an earnout provision.3 Given the difficulties with the nuclear projects,
    it was likely that no money would change hands at closing, or, that after closing, the
    only money to change hands would be the amount constituting the difference
    between Stone’s actual net working capital as of closing and the Target. In other
    words, if the value of Stone’s working capital stayed at the Target as of the time of
    closing, Chicago Bridge would receive zero. If the value of Stone’s working capital
    was different from the Target, Chicago Bridge would owe the delta if the difference
    was negative, and Westinghouse would owe the delta if the difference was positive.
    We refer to the process the Purchase Agreement sets out for calculating these
    payments as the “True Up” and the resulting price including the delta as the Final
    Purchase Price.4 So, at closing, Westinghouse would get Stone and might have to
    2
    Id. at A130 (§ 11.1) (defining Target Net Working Capital Amount).
    3
    Id. at A65 (§ 1.3); id. at A149 (Sch. 1.3(c)).
    4
    The Purchase Agreement uses both “Final Purchase Price” and “Closing Date Purchase Price.”
    It defines “Closing Date Purchase Price” as the zero dollar starting point adjusted by the True Up’s
    delta and transaction expenses. Id. at A64 (Purchase Agreement § 1.2(a)(i)). And, the “Final
    Purchase Price” is defined as the Closing Date Purchase Price “as finally determined pursuant” to
    § 1.4’s dispute resolution procedures. Id. at A67 (§ 1.4(d)). For most humans, the term Final
    Purchase Price is clearer and we use it to refer to whatever the ultimate purchase price turned out
    to be.
    2
    make a payment to Chicago Bridge, to account, for example, for the expectation that
    Chicago Bridge would make substantial capital expenditures before closing so
    Stone’s construction projects could continue. This was almost certain because the
    Purchase Agreement contained a covenant requiring Chicago Bridge to continue to
    run Stone, a construction firm, in the ordinary course of business until closing. But,
    regardless, Chicago Bridge would not be walking away from the deal with a check
    in hand constituting anything one could call sale profits in the colloquial sense of
    that term.
    Second, and important for understanding how this zero purchase price made
    commercial sense, although Chicago Bridge was only selling a subsidiary and would
    carry on business after the transaction concludes, Westinghouse agreed that its sole
    remedy if Chicago Bridge breached its representations and warranties was to refuse
    to close, and that Chicago Bridge would have no liability for monetary damages
    post-closing (the “Liability Bar”). Furthermore, Westinghouse agreed to indemnify
    Chicago Bridge for “all claims or demands against or Liabilities of [Stone].”5 The
    agreement was also predicated on Chicago Bridge obtaining liability releases from
    the power utilities that would ultimately own the nuclear plants being built in the
    United States.6 Thus, this transaction gave Chicago Bridge a clean break from the
    5
    Id. at A112, A115 (§§ 10.4, 11.1).
    6
    Id. at A110 (§ 8.3(c)).
    3
    spiraling cost of the nuclear projects. That view of the overall transaction is
    buttressed by the Westinghouse CEO’s apparent description of the transaction as a
    “quitclaim.”7 In other words, although Chicago Bridge was to get no profit from the
    sale at the time of closing and had little likelihood of any future upside through the
    earnout, it also got to walk away and not worry about the projects.
    The True Up also contained provisions to settle any disputes over the Final
    Purchase Price by referring them to an independent auditor who was to act “as an
    expert and not as an arbitrator,”8 had to issue its decision in the form of a “brief
    written statement” in an expedited time frame of 30 days, and had to rely on the
    parties’ written submissions as the sole basis for its decisions.9
    In contesting Chicago Bridge’s calculation of the Final Purchase Price,
    Westinghouse asserted that Chicago Bridge, which had been paid zero at closing and
    had invested approximately $1 billion in the plants in the six months leading to the
    December 31, 2015 closing, owed it nearly $2 billion! As Westinghouse admits, the
    overwhelming percentage of its claims are based on the proposition that Chicago
    Bridge’s historical financial statements—i.e., the very ones on which Westinghouse
    could make no post-closing claim—were not based on a proper application of
    generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”). By way of example, Chicago
    7
    Id. at A11 (Verified Compl., dated July 21, 2016 ¶ 2).
    8
    Id. at A67 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(c)).
    9
    Id. at A66–67 (§1.4(c)).
    4
    Bridge had historically booked as an asset certain large claims it had against
    Westinghouse for construction costs Chicago Bridge incurred on their joint nuclear
    projects, claims that Westinghouse obviously knew about and that were among the
    reasons principally motivating the transaction. Westinghouse now argues that those
    claims were not accounted for in Stone’s financial statements in accordance with
    GAAP. But, although Westinghouse says it believed that to be true before closing,
    Westinghouse, which had the right to refuse to close if Chicago Bridge had breached
    its representations and warranties, chose to close anyway. Westinghouse then raised
    this and other claims that were dependent on proving that the accounting practices
    that undergirded the financial statements on which no claims could be brought post-
    closing were improper, but argued that it nonetheless could do so as part of the
    contractual True Up resulting in the Final Purchase Price.
    After Westinghouse made these claims, Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse
    unsuccessfully attempted to resolve their differences. But, once it was clear that
    Westinghouse would seek to have the Independent Auditor require Chicago Bridge
    to pay over $2 billion to it based on contentions that Chicago Bridge’s historical
    accounting practices were not GAAP compliant, Chicago Bridge filed this action
    seeking a declaration that Westinghouse’s changes based on assertions that Stone’s
    financial statements and accounting methodologies were not GAAP compliant are
    not appropriate disputes for the Independent Auditor to resolve when those changes
    5
    are, in essence, claims that Chicago Bridge breached the Purchase Agreement’s
    representations and warranties and therefore are foreclosed by the Liability Bar.
    Westinghouse moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that the Purchase
    Agreement established a mandatory process for resolving the parties’ disagreements.
    The Court of Chancery held for Westinghouse, reading the True Up as providing
    Westinghouse with a wide-ranging, uncabined right to challenge any accounting
    principle used by Chicago Bridge, however consistent that principle was with the
    ones used in the financial statements represented to be GAAP compliant, and
    empowering the expert to resolve that dispute in a truncated, rapid proceeding. We
    conclude that the Court of Chancery erred in interpreting the Purchase Agreement
    this way.
    When viewed in proper context, the True Up is an important, but narrow,
    subordinate, and cabined remedy available to address any developments affecting
    Stone’s working capital that occurred in the period between signing and closing. By
    way of example, the True Up emphasizes that net working capital should be
    determined using the same accounting principles that were used in preparing the
    financial statements represented by Chicago Bridge to be GAAP compliant. It does
    so by stating that working capital was “to be determined in a manner consistent with
    GAAP, consistently applied by [Chicago Bridge] in preparation of the financial
    6
    statements of the Business, as in effect on the Closing Date.”10 This language is in
    line with other pertinent language, which requires consistency with “past practices”
    and with the basic idea that the True Up is used to set a Final Purchase Price based
    on developments after the initial price of zero was set. 11 Thus, the True Up was
    tailored to address issues that might come up if Chicago Bridge tried to change
    accounting practices midway through the transaction or if it stopped work on the
    projects, rather than continue to invest as expected.
    By reading the True Up as unlimited in scope and as allowing Westinghouse
    to challenge the historical accounting practices used in the represented financials,
    the Court of Chancery rendered meaningless the Purchase Agreement’s Liability
    Bar. The Court of Chancery also slighted the requirement in the text of the Purchase
    Agreement that Westinghouse indemnify Chicago Bridge for a broad set of claims
    related to Stone. Not only that, it then subjected Chicago Bridge to unlimited post-
    closing liability by way of an expedited proceeding before an accounting expert who
    was charged with delivering a rapid decision based solely on written submissions of
    the parties.12 By so interpreting the contract, the Court of Chancery failed to give
    adequate weight to the structure of the Purchase Agreement and the subordinate and
    confined purpose of the True Up. And, it failed to consider that the reason parties
    10
    Id. at A164 (Sch. 11.1(a)).
    11
    Id.
    12
    Id. at A67 (§ 1.4(c)).
    7
    can hazard having an expert decide disputes in this blinkered, rapid manner is
    because when considering claims under the True Up, the expert is addressing a
    confined period of time between signing and closing using the same accounting
    principles that were the subject of due diligence and contractual representations and
    warranties, and thus formed the foundation for the parties’ agreement to sign up and
    close the transaction.
    We therefore reverse and require the entry of a judgment on the pleadings for
    Chicago Bridge. The Court of Chancery should declare that, under the Purchase
    Agreement, Westinghouse’s arguments based on assertions that Chicago Bridge’s
    historical financial statements and practices did not comply with GAAP may not be
    heard in proceedings before the Independent Auditor and should enjoin
    Westinghouse from submitting to the Independent Auditor or continuing to pursue
    already-submitted claims not based on changes in facts and circumstances between
    signing and closing.
    I.
    A.13
    Chicago Bridge built nuclear power plants through its subsidiary Stone. Stone
    is an engineering and construction firm, with substantial experience in power
    13
    The facts are taken from the pleadings and Purchase Agreement. “In determining a motion
    under Court of Chancery Rule 12(c) for judgment on the pleadings, a trial court is required to view
    the facts pleaded and the inferences to be drawn from such facts in a light most favorable to the
    8
    generation projects, which Chicago Bridge purchased in 2013.                       Westinghouse
    designs nuclear power plants. In 2008, Westinghouse and Stone were hired as part
    of a consortium to build two nuclear power plants. One was to be built in Georgia
    and the other was to be built in South Carolina. Both plants would be cutting-edge
    AP1000 models designed by Westinghouse.14 These would have been the first new
    nuclear power plants built in the U.S. in over thirty years and the first to be built
    under a new regulatory regime. Indeed, the relevant regulator did not approve
    construction of the reactors until 2012. The construction suffered from delays and
    material cost overruns, driven by various factors including regulator-driven design
    changes.     This resulted in disagreements between Westinghouse and Chicago
    Bridge. To resolve those differences, they agreed that Westinghouse would acquire
    Stone from Chicago Bridge in exchange for, among other things, Chicago Bridge
    ceasing to have responsibility for the nuclear projects.
    B.
    Before they signed the Purchase Agreement, Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse held extensive negotiations. Chicago Bridge gave Westinghouse
    Stone’s financials, including the June 30, 2015 balance sheet, “[n]ear the start of
    non-moving party.” Desert Equities, Inc. v. Morgan Stanley Leveraged Equity Fund, II, L.P., 
    624 A.2d 1199
    , 1205 (Del. 1993).
    14
    Stone and Westinghouse also collaborated on AP1000 plants in China, but those projects,
    although part of the transaction, do not appear to have been material drivers of the present dispute.
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A24 (Verified Compl., dated July 21, 2016 ¶ 27).
    9
    negotiations” in July 2015.15 During negotiations leading to signing, Chicago Bridge
    and Westinghouse also agreed to a net working capital target of $1.174 billion—
    what we’ve been calling the Target—and that was referred to in documents like the
    August 13, 2015 “Aligned Positions” term sheet.16 Through the True Up process,
    Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse would compare Stone’s actual working capital to
    the Target and pay one or the other party to the extent the actual working capital
    differed from the Target. The result of the True Up would be added together with
    any earnout payments due at closing to comprise the Final Purchase Price. Thus, the
    Target was a basic building block of the exchange Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse were contemplating along with its zero value starting price.
    As part of the documents prepared for signing, the parties prepared an
    example of the calculations they would exchange as part of the True Up: Schedule
    1.4(f) of the Purchase Agreement. The Purchase Agreement defined the actual net
    working capital at closing (the “Net Working Capital Amount”) as Stone’s current
    assets less current liabilities “solely to the extent such assets and liabilities are
    described and set forth on Schedule 1.4([f]).”17 The calculation for the Target
    15
    
    Id.
     at A25–26 (¶ 29).
    16
    
    Id.
     at A28 (¶ 32).
    17
    
    Id.
     at A126 (Purchase Agreement § 11.1) (emphasis added) (defining Net Working Capital
    Amount). The actual text of the definition refers to a Schedule 1.4(b), but that appears to be a
    typographical error. For one thing, the Purchase Agreement’s table of contents does not list a
    Schedule 1.4(b), only a Schedule 1.4(f). Id. at A62 (Table of Contents). For another, Section
    1.4(b) describes the procedure for Westinghouse to deliver its Closing Statement; in contrast,
    Section 1.4(f) covers the form of both the Closing Statement and Closing Payment Statement,
    10
    included accounts encompassing accounts receivable, the net Construction in
    Progress asset account which was comprised of completed but unbilled work and the
    “claim cost” asset, and accounts payable for the two nuclear projects. That Schedule
    uses the June 30, 2015 balance sheet Chicago Bridge represented was GAAP
    compliant.18 The Schedule is fairly simple:
    which are the full set of places where the Net Working Capital Amount is relevant. So, it is
    reasonable to conclude that the Purchase Agreement definition of Net Working Capital was meant
    to refer to Schedule 1.4(f) and the fact that it refers to a nonexistent Schedule should be treated
    similarly to a scrivener’s error. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Roslewicz, 
    2014 WL 4559101
    ,
    at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 2, 2014) (“Like a mutual mistake, a scrivener’s error fails to reflect the
    intentions of the parties in the written instrument. An example of a scrivener’s error is a ‘minor
    typographical mistake, such as an incorrect address.’” (quoting Envo, Inc., v. Walters, 
    2009 WL 5173807
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Dec. 30, 2009))).
    18
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A71 (Purchase Agreement § 2.6(a)).
    11
    19
    Another way of putting it is this. Assume the parties decided to close retroactively
    to the June 30 financials or closed at a date when Stone’s net working capital was
    exactly the same as on Schedule 1.4(f). If that was the case, Chicago Bridge would
    have owed Westinghouse around $147.5 million because Stone’s working capital in
    the June 30 financials was that amount below the Target. So, the Target was
    19
    Id. at A167 (Sch. 1.4(f)).
    12
    important because it was the benchmark value that the parties were to use in coming
    to the purchase price, which would have to account for, among other things, the
    reality that Chicago Bridge had to continue to spend around $1 billion on the nuclear
    projects before closing.
    C.
    On October 27, 2015, Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse signed the Purchase
    Agreement, which provided for a purchase price of $0 at closing,20 subject to the
    post-closing adjustment True Up and with the potential for deferred consideration
    and earnout payments based on project milestones in the future:
    (a) The aggregate consideration for the purchase of the
    Transferred Equity Interests shall be an amount in cash equal to:
    (i) (A) $0, less (B) the Closing Indebtedness Amount, (C) (x) if
    the amount of the Target Net Working Capital Amount exceeds the Net
    Working Capital Amount, less the amount by which the Target Net
    Working Capital Amount exceeds the Net Working Capital Amount
    and (y) if the Net Working Capital Amount exceeds the Target Net
    Working Capital Amount, plus the amount by which the Net Working
    Capital Amount exceeds the Target Net Working Capital Amount, less
    (D) the Company Transaction Expenses (the amount resulting from the
    calculation in this Section 1.2(a)(i), the “Closing Date Purchase Price”);
    plus
    (ii) any Deferred Purchase Price that becomes due and payable
    to Seller Parent or any of its Affiliates in accordance with this
    Agreement; plus
    (iii) any Net Proceeds Earnout Amounts that become due and
    payable to Seller Parent or any of its Affiliates in accordance with this
    Agreement; plus
    (iv) any Milestone Payments that become due and payable to
    Seller Parent or any of its Affiliates in accordance with this Agreement
    20
    Id. at A64, A65 (§§ 1.2, 1.3).
    13
    (together with the Closing Date Purchase Price, Deferred Purchase
    Price and Net Proceeds Earnout Amounts, the “Aggregate Purchase
    Price”).21
    In exchange, Chicago Bridge would be released from all future liabilities related to
    Stone, and especially the two still-incomplete nuclear power plants. That release
    took the form of the Liability Bar,22 indemnification by Westinghouse of Chicago
    Bridge,23 and a condition to closing that the power utilities that would operate the
    plants sign agreements releasing Chicago Bridge from claims related to the
    construction of those plants.24
    i.
    Chicago Bridge made representations as part of the Purchase Agreement,
    including that Stone’s financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2014
    and as of June 30, 2015, had “been prepared in accordance with GAAP”25 and that
    Stone had no undisclosed liabilities.26 But, as has been discussed, Section 10.1 of
    the Purchase Agreement, what we have called the Liability Bar, stated that those
    representations, along with virtually all the other representations and warranties
    made by Chicago Bridge, would not survive closing27 and Chicago Bridge would
    21
    Id. at A64 (§ 1.2(a)).
    22
    Id. at A111 (§ 10.1).
    23
    Id. at A112 (§ 10.4).
    24
    Id. at A110 (§ 8.3(c)).
    25
    Id. at A71 (§ 2.6(a)).
    26
    Id. at A71–72 (§§ 2.6(a), (e)); id. at A162 (Sch. 2.6(a)).
    27
    The Seller Fundamental Representations and the Purchaser Fundamental Representations
    survive. Id. at A111 (§ 10.1); id. at A120 (§ 11.1) (defining “Fundamental Representations”).
    14
    have “no liability for monetary damages after the Closing” absent actual fraud.28
    Provisions like the Liability Bar are unusual. The American Bar Association
    Business Law Section M&A Market Trends Subcommittee’s survey of private
    transactions completed in 2014 suggests virtually all private deals provided for some
    post-closing survival of representations and warranties.29 Indeed, “[b]y far the most
    common matter with respect to which indemnities are given is a Seller’s breach of
    the representations and warranties . . . rendered in the acquisition agreement in favor
    of the Buyer.”30 Section 10.3, however, carved out the True Up:
    This Article X shall not (i) operate to interfere with or impede the
    operation of the provisions of Section 1.4(c) providing for the
    resolution of certain disputes relating to the Final Purchase Price
    between the parties and/or by an Independent Auditor . . . .31
    ii.
    In contrast to the lack of indemnification of Westinghouse as buyer for post-
    closing breaches of the seller’s representations and warranties, the Purchase
    Those representations largely dealt with the authority of Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse to
    enter into the transaction. Id. at A128 (§ 11.1) (defining “Purchaser Fundamental Representations”
    and “Seller Fundamental Representations”); id. at A69, A70, A72, A84, A85, A86–87 (§§ 2.2, 2.3,
    2.7, 2.23, 3.2, 3.5, 3.6, 4.2, 4.6).
    28
    Id. at A111 (§ 10.1).
    29
    Compendium of Selected Authorities Cited in Appellant’s Opening Br. ex. 4 (2015 Private
    Target Mergers & Acquisitions Deal Points Study, M&A Market Trends Subcommittee, Mergers
    & Acquisitions Committee, American Bar Association Business Law Section 70 (2015)). The
    Subcommittee assessed survival based on what happened to “most” representations and warranties
    in an agreement: “certain representations and warranties may be carved out from these periods in
    order to survive for other specified periods.” Id.
    30
    LOU R. KLING & EILEEN T. NUGENT, NEGOTIATED ACQUISITIONS OF COMPANIES, SUBSIDIARIES
    AND DIVISIONS 15.02[1] (2016) (citations omitted).
    31
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A112 (Purchase Agreement § 10.3).
    15
    Agreement required Westinghouse to indemnify Chicago Bridge.                                     This
    indemnification for claims related to Stone was broad: “regardless of where or when
    or against whom such claims, demands or other Liabilities are asserted or determined
    or whether asserted or determined prior to, on or after [signing or closing].” 32 This
    too is an unusual provision. In purchase agreements, “there is invariably an article
    dealing with indemnification of the purchaser by the seller or seller’s stockholders.
    Never the other way around . . . .”33 As another commentator noted, although
    “indemnification can inure to the benefit of a Seller,” it is “generally considered in
    the context of a Buyer’s right to collect from the Seller.”34 Indeed, even where those
    commentators allow that it is conceivable that a seller might be indemnified, they
    appear to be focused strictly on indemnification for breaches of representations and
    warranties, not the broad indemnification for all liability found here.35
    The Purchase Agreement also contained an additional, material limitation on
    Chicago Bridge’s liability related to Stone’s construction projects. One condition
    precedent to closing—one of only three that was a condition to both Chicago
    Bridge’s and Westinghouse’s obligation to close—stated that neither party was
    32
    Id. at A112 (§ 10.4); id. at A115 (§ 11.1) (defining Assumed Liabilities).
    33
    JAMES C. FREUND, ANATOMY OF A MERGER 365 (1975).
    34
    KLING & NUGENT, supra note 30, at § 15.01.
    35
    Id.; see also id. at § 15.02[1][b] (“Except in transactions where the purchase price is paid
    completely or partially in securities where Buyer indemnification (and representations) tends to be
    coextensive with that granted by the Seller to the Buyer, it is less typical for the Buyer to indemnify
    the Seller with respect to breaches of its representations or other matters.”).
    16
    obligated to close if liability releases Chicago Bridge anticipated receiving from the
    power plant owners were not “valid and binding and in full force and effect” as of
    the Closing Date.36
    iii.
    It is worth summarizing where things stood when Westinghouse signed the
    Purchase Agreement on October 27. Westinghouse had copies of Stone’s financial
    statements that Chicago Bridge represented complied with GAAP. Westinghouse
    also had, in the form of Schedule 1.4(f), an indication that, at least based on those
    financials for the first half of 2015, Stone’s net working capital would have been
    slightly below the Target and so Chicago Bridge could have been expected to make
    a payment to Westinghouse if they had closed the deal on those financials. But,
    Westinghouse also knew that the Purchase Agreement obligated Chicago Bridge to
    continue to operate Stone in the ordinary course of business,37 which, given that its
    business was construction, would involve continuing to invest in the nuclear
    projects. Thus, Westinghouse would have expected that, as happened throughout
    the projects, Chicago Bridge’s continued funding of Stone’s work would result in an
    increase in net working capital. Furthermore, Westinghouse knew that the Purchase
    Agreement the parties were signing would rid Chicago Bridge at closing of current
    36
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A110 (Purchase Agreement § 8.3(c)).
    37
    Id. at A89–90 (§ 5.3(a)).
    17
    and future liability for the spiraling costs associated with Stone’s projects, and
    covering those liabilities would be the responsibility of Westinghouse and the
    projects’ ultimate owners. In exchange, Chicago Bridge would give Stone to
    Westinghouse for a price set presumptively at zero.
    D.
    i.
    After signing, Chicago Bridge continued Stone’s construction of the two
    nuclear plants, spending around $1 billion on their construction between June 30 and
    closing alone.38 Westinghouse and the ultimate plant owners didn’t pay nearly that
    amount to Chicago Bridge,39 so, as commonly occurs when a business does the thing
    that it is in business to do and doesn’t get paid immediately, Stone’s short-term assets
    like accounts receivable increased.
    The multi-step True Up process began just before closing. First, at least three
    business days before closing, Chicago Bridge had to deliver a statement to
    Westinghouse of its good faith estimate of certain amounts (the “Closing Payment
    Statement”), including the Net Working Capital Amount. The Closing Payment
    Statement had to be “prepared and determined from the books and records of the
    Company and its Subsidiaries and in accordance with United States generally
    38
    Id. at A40 (Verified Compl., dated July 21, 2016 ¶ 54).
    39
    Id.
    18
    accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) applied on a consistent basis throughout
    the periods indicated and with the Agreed Principles.”40 The Agreed Principles
    provided:
    Working Capital . . . will be determined in a manner consistent with
    GAAP, consistently applied by [Stone] in preparation of the financial
    statements of the Business, as in effect on the Closing Date. To the
    extent not inconsistent with the foregoing, Working Capital . . . shall be
    based on the past practices and accounting principles, methodologies
    and policies applied by [Stone] and its subsidiaries and the Business (a)
    in the Ordinary Course of Business and (b) in the preparation of: (i) the
    balance sheet of the [Stone] and its Subsidiaries for the year ended
    December 31, 2014 (adjusted to reflect the Business); and (ii) the
    Sample Calculation set forth on Schedule 1.4(f).41
    So, on December 28, 2015, three days before closing, Chicago Bridge
    presented Westinghouse with its Closing Payment Statement, which included an
    estimated Net Working Capital Amount of $1.6 billion, approximately $428 million
    more than the Target.           The increase was largely a result of the substantial
    construction costs Chicago Bridge incurred during the second half of 2015. Thus,
    absent other changes, Westinghouse would have been on the hook for that $428
    million in bills Westinghouse and the utilities hadn’t paid to Stone, a contribution
    that was expected given the ongoing nature of the construction on the projects.
    Westinghouse received this Closing Payment Statement, which it concedes was
    identical in form to what the Purchase Agreement required in Section 1.4(f) and
    40
    Id. at A68 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(f)) (emphasis added).
    41
    Id. at A164 (Sch. 11.1(a)) (emphasis added).
    19
    Schedule 1.4(f).          And, with that Statement in hand, on December 31, 2015,
    Westinghouse chose to close.
    ii.
    In the second step of the True Up, Westinghouse had to deliver to Chicago
    Bridge no later than ninety days after closing its calculations of certain amounts (the
    “Closing Statement”), including the Net Working Capital Amount and its estimate
    of the Final Purchase Price, which, like the Closing Payment Statement, was to be
    “prepared and determined from the books and records of the Company and its
    Subsidiaries and in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting
    principles (‘GAAP’) applied on a consistent basis throughout the periods indicated
    and with the Agreed Principles.”42 Westinghouse asked for an extension of the
    ninety-day deadline, which it received.
    Then, on April 28, 2016, Westinghouse presented the Closing Statement to
    Chicago Bridge in which it calculated that the Net Working Capital Amount was
    negative $976.5 million, more than $2 billion less than the Target. Based on this
    calculation, and absent other changes, Chicago Bridge owed Westinghouse over $2
    billion. As Westinghouse concedes, “the majority” of its claims do not arise from
    changes in Stone’s business between signing on October 27 and closing December
    42
    Id. at A68 (§ 1.4(f)).
    20
    31.43 Similarly, Chicago Bridge admits that, of the roughly $2 billion at issue, about
    $70 million are issues that involve a change in fact or circumstance that arose
    between signing and closing and are properly before the Independent Auditor.44
    The    large    discrepancy     between      Chicago     Bridge’s     estimate    and
    Westinghouse’s calculation was mostly the result of three changes that
    Westinghouse made in its calculation. None of these large changes were based on
    events between signing and closing. First, Westinghouse recalculated the $1.16
    billion “claim cost” asset on Stone’s balance sheet.              The “claim cost” asset
    represented “the costs incurred and paid for by [Stone] for items that would be
    presented for recovery from either the project owners or Westinghouse as a matter
    of contractual entitlement or as claims for overruns for which [Stone] was not
    responsible.”45 In other words, these represent some of the very cost overruns that
    triggered Chicago Bridge’s desire to walk away from Stone and its projects.
    Chicago Bridge had historically estimated 100% collectability of the “claim
    cost” asset, including in calculating the Target and example calculation found in
    Schedule 1.4(f) because they were based on the GAAP-warranted June 2015
    financials. Westinghouse now asserted that historical approach violated GAAP.
    43
    Oral Argument at 30:06, Chicago Bridge & Iron v. Westinghouse Electric, No. 573, 2016 (Del.
    May 3, 2017).
    44
    Id. at 3:49.
    45
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A25–26 (Verified Compl., dated July 21, 2016 ¶ 29).
    21
    Instead, Westinghouse argued that the “claim cost” asset should be reduced by
    30%—to reflect that 30% of these costs would likely not be recoverable—and also
    that Chicago Bridge should have recorded a reserve liability of hundreds of millions
    of dollars for related losses Stone would have taken as a result of design changes
    going forward. In essence, Westinghouse argued that it would not have honored all
    of its obligations under the consortium agreements and would have avoided liability
    for some of Stone’s claims for recovery. Thus, Westinghouse’s argument could be
    summarized as “although our initial deal was you get a release from the spiraling
    costs of these projects going forward and we get the bulk of the potential upside,
    now we want to stick you with close to $1 billion more of those costs that you
    thought you were getting rid of when you gave us Stone.” These changes resulted
    in a $903.9 million decrease in the Net Working Capital Amount.46
    Second, Westinghouse asserted that the projects would cost approximately
    $3.2 billion more to complete than Chicago Bridge had originally predicted and,
    therefore, that Chicago Bridge should have recorded an additional liability of $956.6
    million, again based on Westinghouse’s assertion that 30% of the additional costs
    would not be recoverable from Westinghouse or the project owners. Much like the
    first item, Chicago Bridge had accounted for these costs in a consistent way in the
    past and the increase represented the precise reason Chicago Bridge was willing to
    46
    Id. at A43 (¶ 60) (citing Westinghouse’s calculation).
    22
    hand Stone over for zero dollars in the first place. And, Westinghouse did not point
    to changes after signing that are driving the increased costs.
    Third, Westinghouse asserted that Chicago Bridge omitted a margin fair value
    liability of $432 million from Stone’s balance sheet that Chicago Bridge had
    recorded in connection with its acquisition of Stone in 2013.47 The margin fair value
    liability is a non-cash account established by a purchaser to reflect a reduction of the
    net purchase price driven by the purchaser’s assumption of an unfavorable
    contract.48 This liability was included in Chicago Bridge’s financial statements, but
    it had never been included in Stone’s financial statements or the Target.49
    *       *      *
    The sum total of the logic of Westinghouse’s claims is worth stating. Based
    on challenges to large items included in the financials that Chicago Bridge
    represented were GAAP compliant, which Westinghouse knew about before closing,
    and which it did not use as a basis not to close, Westinghouse now says that it should
    keep Stone, which it got for zero dollars, and be paid by Chicago Bridge over $2
    billion for taking it!
    47
    Id. at A16 (¶ 10).
    48
    Opening Br. at 19.
    49
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A25–26 (Verified Compl., dated July 21, 2016 ¶ 67); id. at
    A167 (Purchase Agreement Sch. 1.4(f)).
    23
    iii.
    In the True Up’s third stage, Chicago Bridge had sixty days to review the
    Closing Statement and dispute elements of the Closing Statement in writing (the
    “Objections Statement”). If Chicago Bridge delivered an Objections Statement,
    Westinghouse and Chicago Bridge had to negotiate in good faith for thirty days to
    resolve its contents. Unsurprisingly, Chicago Bridge raised several objections to
    Westinghouse’s calculations, which the parties attempted to resolve through
    negotiation.
    When, as was the case, Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse could not reach an
    agreement by the end of this thirty-day period, either party was permitted to submit
    the dispute to the Independent Auditor, identified in the Purchase Agreement as
    KPMG. The Independent Auditor was to function “solely as an expert and not an
    arbitrator” and was not permitted to assign a value to any item greater than the
    highest value for the item claimed by Chicago Bridge or Westinghouse or less than
    the lowest value claimed for the item by Chicago Bridge or Westinghouse.50 The
    Independent Auditor was limited in several other ways. The Independent Auditor
    was to base its conclusions solely on written submissions from Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse, had thirty days to make its conclusion, and that conclusion was to
    50
    Id. at A66–67 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(c)).
    24
    come in the form of “a brief written statement.”51 Any determination made by the
    Independent Auditor was to be “final, conclusive, binding, non-appealable and
    incontestable by the parties.”52
    iv.
    Chicago Bridge filed this action against Westinghouse and alleged that
    Westinghouse’s calculation of the closing date adjustment breached the express
    terms of the Purchase Agreement and the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing. At that time, Westinghouse had not invoked the Independent Auditor, but,
    it seemed certain Westinghouse intended to do so.53 Chicago Bridge, therefore,
    sought an order declaring that Westinghouse’s claims over the Net Working Capital
    Amount were actually claims for breaches of the representations, which had been
    extinguished under the Liability Bar, and further declaring that Westinghouse could
    not circumvent the Liability Bar by submitting its claims to the Independent Auditor
    under the True Up. Westinghouse moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing
    that the True Up establishes a mandatory process for resolving the parties’
    disagreements. The Court of Chancery granted Westinghouse’s motion, finding that
    51
    Id. at A67 (§ 1.4(c)).
    52
    Id.
    53
    As part of the Stipulation and Scheduling Order in the Court of Chancery, Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse agreed not to submit any claims to the Independent Auditor until the case was
    resolved, but they would identify and engage the Independent Auditor. Id. at A170 (Granted
    Stipulation and Scheduling Order Concerning Case Schedule, dated August 4, 2016). And, after
    the Court of Chancery’s decision, Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse have pressed their claims
    before the Independent Auditor. Appellees’ Answering Br. at 3.
    25
    the unambiguous language of the Purchase Agreement required the Closing Payment
    Statement and Closing Statement to be GAAP compliant, and that the Independent
    Auditor’s authority extends to all disputes related to the Objections Statement and
    Closing Statement. This appeal followed.
    II.
    This Court reviews de novo the Court of Chancery’s grant of a motion for
    judgment on the pleadings.54 A motion for judgment on the pleadings may be
    granted only when no material issue of fact exists and the movant is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.55 “[J]udgment on the pleadings . . . is a proper
    framework for enforcing unambiguous contracts because there is no need to resolve
    material disputes of fact.”56
    A.
    Chicago Bridge argues that the bulk of Westinghouse’s changes to the Net
    Working Capital Amount fall outside the scope of matters that the Independent
    Auditor may resolve under the True Up because they implicate Stone’s historical
    accounting practices.        According to Chicago Bridge, the vast majority of
    Westinghouse’s claims—or around $1.93 billion57—really constitute alleged
    54
    Desert Equities, Inc. v. Morgan Stanley Leveraged Equity Fund, II, L.P., 
    624 A.2d 1199
    , 1204
    (Del. 1993).
    55
    
    Id. at 1205
    .
    56
    NBC Universal v. Paxson Commc’ns Corp., 
    2005 WL 1038997
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 29, 2005).
    57
    See supra note 44.
    26
    breaches of the Purchase Agreement’s representations. The calculations of the Net
    Working Capital Amount included in Chicago Bridge’s Closing Statement were
    based on Stone’s earlier financial statements, which Chicago Bridge represented
    were GAAP compliant.58 And, under the Purchase Agreement’s Liability Bar,
    Westinghouse gave up its post-closing rights to challenge the representations and
    warranties. Thus, Chicago Bridge argues that Westinghouse is trying to get around
    the Liability Bar through the True Up. Unlike Westinghouse, Chicago Bridge
    conceives of the True Up as a limited procedure for Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse to account for changes in Stone’s business during the period from
    signing to closing and maintain the benefit of the deal they struck.
    In contrast, Westinghouse argues that the True Up is a process for resolving
    any disagreement over the calculation of the final purchase price, not limited to the
    calculation of the Net Working Capital Amount, which the parties are required to
    follow. And, therefore, the fact that Westinghouse’s objections to Chicago Bridge’s
    calculation of the Net Working Capital Amount could have also been claims for a
    breach of Chicago Bridge’s GAAP representation because they relate to Chicago
    Bridge’s historical accounting practices for Stone is irrelevant. Indeed, in its
    answering brief, Westinghouse argues:
    In other words, for pre-closing purposes, [Westinghouse] agreed to
    accept the Article II Financials with their GAAP variations without
    58
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A71 (Purchase Agreement § 2.6(a)).
    27
    recourse, but only because for purposes of setting a price,
    [Westinghouse] bargained for a more objective standard. Under the
    Agreement, then, [Westinghouse] reasonably could proceed to closing
    regardless of whether [Chicago Bridge’s] representations about its
    financial state were fully GAAP-compliant, precisely because it had
    assurances that the price ultimately fixed would be rooted not in those
    representations, but in different, special-purpose, GAAP-compliant
    calculations.59
    Put bluntly, Westinghouse alleges that it gave up nothing in the Liability Bar
    because, through the True Up, it could seek monetary payments by alleging that
    Chicago Bridge’s historical accounting treatment wasn’t GAAP compliant.
    B.
    As is often true in cases involving disputes over complex agreements, Chicago
    Bridge and Westinghouse assert that each of their views of the True Up are supported
    by the unambiguous terms of the Purchase Agreement. 60 We agree with both
    Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse that the Purchase Agreement is unambiguous
    when read in full and situated in the commercial context between the parties.61 When
    59
    Answering Br. at 29 (emphasis added).
    60
    Cf. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chemicals Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1196 (Del.
    1992) (“A contract is not rendered ambiguous simply because the parties do not agree upon its
    proper construction. Rather, a contract is ambiguous only when the provisions in controversy are
    reasonably or fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or more different
    meanings.”); Nw. Nat. Ins. Co. v. Esmark, Inc., 
    672 A.2d 41
    , 43 (Del. 1996) (“Although the parties
    disagree as to the proper interpretation of the contract, their disagreement does not create an
    ambiguity.”).
    61
    “[Delaware] courts interpreting a contract ‘will give priority to the parties’ intentions as reflected
    in the four corners of the agreement, construing the agreement as a whole and giving effect to all
    its provisions.’” In re Viking Pump, Inc., 
    148 A.3d 633
    , 648 (Del. 2016) (quoting Salamone v.
    Gorman, 
    106 A.3d 354
    , 368 (Del. 2014)); see also Kuhn Const., Inc. v. Diamond State Port Corp.,
    
    990 A.2d 393
    , 396–97 (Del. 2010) (“We will read a contract as a whole and we will give each
    provision and term effect, so as not to render any part of the contract mere surplusage.”); Eugene
    28
    we do so, we conclude that Chicago Bridge’s reading of the contract is the proper
    one and that Westinghouse’s interpretation of the True Up, which the Court of
    Chancery adopted, cannot be reconciled with Purchase Agreement when interpreted
    consistently in its entirety.62
    C.
    The basic business relationship between parties must be understood to give
    sensible life to any contract.             As explained earlier, Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse had a complicated commercial relationship building nuclear power
    plants, which led to disputes. To resolve these disputes, Westinghouse and Chicago
    Bridge agreed to enter into the Purchase Agreement through which Westinghouse
    would acquire Stone. The Purchase Agreement set a purchase price of zero dollars,
    which is then adjusted through the True Up, and, unusually for a transaction selling
    A. Delle Donne & Son, L.P. v. Applied Card Sys., Inc., 
    821 A.2d 885
    , 887 (Del. 2003) (“In
    construing a contract, the document must be considered as a whole . . . .”); Nw. Nat. Ins. Co., 
    672 A.2d at 43
    ; RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 202 (1981) (“A writing is interpreted as a
    whole, and all writings that are part of the same transaction are interpreted together.”); 11
    WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 32:5 (4th ed.) (“[A] contract will be read as a whole and every part
    will be read with reference to the whole.”).
    62
    GMG Capital Investments, LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P., 
    36 A.3d 776
    , 779 (Del.
    2012) (“The meaning inferred from a particular provision cannot control the meaning of the entire
    agreement if such an inference conflicts with the agreement’s overall scheme or plan.”).
    29
    a subsidiary, contained the Liability Bar, as well as a broad indemnification for the
    seller, Chicago Bridge.
    Crucially, in exchange for receiving zero upfront consideration, Chicago
    Bridge would be released from all liability related to the projects. This reflected the
    essence of the deal: Chicago Bridge would deliver Stone to Westinghouse for zero
    dollars in up front consideration and, in return, would be released from any further
    liabilities connected with the projects. Not only would Westinghouse indemnify
    Chicago Bridge against future liabilities, but closing was contingent on Chicago
    Bridge receiving releases from the utility companies that would operate the plants
    when they were completed. The True Up works in this context to ensure Chicago
    Bridge was appropriately compensated for the work it expected to continue to do
    and Westinghouse was protected if Chicago Bridge suddenly stopped work or if
    Westinghouse and the power utilities started paying their bills owed to Stone
    unexpectedly quickly, such that Stone’s accounts receivable went down more than
    expected and thus net working capital fell. Thus, the crux of this deal was that
    Chicago Bridge was done with the nuclear projects. It would get no profit for selling
    Stone—as of closing—but the Liability Bar, indemnity, and releases meant Chicago
    Bridge would at least be rid of liability for the still-spiraling costs of the projects, a
    privilege that was valuable in that context. Now, Westinghouse says Chicago Bridge
    30
    should pay it an extra $2 billion for that privilege.63 As the key provisions of the
    Purchase Agreement show and the business context they highlight demonstrates,
    Westinghouse’s view that the Purchase Agreement gave it a free license to re-trade
    the core common basis of the exchange is beyond strained; it involves a rewriting of
    the contract embodying that exchange.
    D.
    i.
    The True Up has an important role to play, but that role is limited and
    informed by its function in the overall Purchase Agreement. Generally speaking,
    purchase price adjustments in merger agreements account for changes in a target’s
    business between the signing and closing of the merger.64 This is especially so when
    the purchase price is based on the target’s value at closing.65 As experienced
    commentators have observed, when a purchase price involves a fixed amount plus
    or minus net working capital changes, there are two main interpretations of the
    variable amount. The most common is that “the business being sold is run for the
    seller’s benefit (for better or worse) from the date on which working capital was that
    fixed dollar amount until closing. If the business sells a lot of widgets during that
    63
    See OSI Systems, Inc. v. Instrumentarium Corp, 
    892 A.2d 1086
    , 1093–94 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    64
    ABA, ABA MODEL STOCK PURCHASE AGREEMENT WITH COMMENTARY 64 (2d ed. 2010).
    65
    KLING & NUGENT, supra note 30, at § 17.01[2] (2016). “In this situation, the parties have agreed
    that the price the buyer should pay is related to the target’s financial position on the closing date
    as compared to its financial position as of a reference date.” Id.
    31
    period, and working capital increases as a result, the seller [gets] paid more.”66 This
    illustrates the fundamental nature of net working capital adjustments as existing to
    account for changes in a target business from signing until closing. Buyers want
    protection against value depletion before they take over the business, and, at the
    same time, sellers want to ensure that they will be compensated for effectively
    running the business.67 Thus, purchase price adjustments account for the normal
    variation in business from signing until closing to assure the buyer and seller that the
    purchase price accurately reflects the target’s financial condition at the time of
    closing.68
    ii.
    The True Up provision of the Purchase Agreement is consistent with the
    general role net working capital adjustments play. The plain terms of the definition
    of Net Working Capital, read in conjunction with the rest of Purchase Agreement,
    require the use of Stone’s past accounting practices, rather than a new assessment of
    66
    Id. at § 17.02. Alternatively, the “generally less relevant interpretation is that the Buyer is
    guaranteed an amount of working capital equal to such fixed amount.” Id.
    67
    Id. (“The seller and its personnel are viewed as ‘lame duck’ management and the buyer will be
    concerned that the business will languish under their direction.”); ERNST & YOUNG, SHARE
    PURCHASE AGREEMENTS: PURCHASE PRICE MECHANISMS AND CURRENT TRENDS IN PRACTICE (2d ed.
    2012) (“Purchase price adjustments aim to protect the buyer against value erosion and value
    leakage at the target company until the closing date. At the same time, they should reward the
    seller for managing the business well between the reference date and closing.”); Mark Thierfelder,
    et al., Working Capital Adjustment: At the Crossroads of Law and Accounting, N.Y.L.J. Oct. 26,
    2015 (“Buyers typically want to protect against the depletion of working capital after signing and
    ensure that an acquired business has an appropriate amount of working capital.”).
    68
    ABA, supra note 64, 64–65.
    32
    those historical practices’ compliance with GAAP. The Purchase Agreement states
    that the Closing Payment Statement and Closing Statement, of which the Net
    Working Capital estimates and Westinghouse’s disputed items are a part, must be
    “prepared and determined from the books and records of [Stone] and its Subsidiaries
    and in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles
    (‘GAAP’) applied on a consistent basis throughout the periods indicated and with
    the Agreed Principles.”69 And, the Agreed Principles require that Working Capital
    calculations be “determined in a manner consistent with GAAP, consistently applied
    by Seller Parent in preparation of the financial statements of the Business, as in
    effect on the Closing Date” and “based on the past practices and accounting
    principles, methodologies and policies” used by Stone.70 Thus, the Closing Payment
    Statement and Closing Statement have to comply with two conditions: i) they must
    be prepared from Stone’s books and records; and ii) they must use the same
    accounting approach as had been used in the past.
    The phrases “applied on a consistent basis throughout the periods indicated”
    and “based on the past practices and accounting principles, methodologies and
    policies” both require consistent accounting treatment. They recognize that GAAP
    allows for a variety of treatments and different accountants may come to differing
    69
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A68 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(f)) (emphasis added).
    70
    Id. at A164 (Sch. 11.1(a)) (emphasis added).
    33
    views on what constitutes acceptable GAAP treatment, but for the purpose of these
    calculations, both Westinghouse and Chicago Bridge must hold the accounting
    approach constant. Thus, the True Up and the Agreed Principles work together to
    establish a requirement of consistency. The Agreed Principles also do something
    else: they set the approach to GAAP as that already used by Chicago Bridge “in
    preparation of the financial statements of the Business.”71 Thus, when read together,
    these parts of the Purchase Agreement require Westinghouse and Chicago Bridge to
    continue using the accounting approach Chicago Bridge had been using in the
    normal course of business before the transaction for the calculations up to and
    through closing. This makes sense when considering the whole point of these
    statements. They are not to aid Westinghouse’s investigation of the business or to
    otherwise provide a historical picture of Stone’s operations. Rather, they account
    for changes in Stone’s business from the time when the Purchase Agreement was
    agreed on until closing. Thus, keeping all other variables constant in terms of
    accounting is crucial.
    Paying close attention to how the representations and warranties fit together
    with the True Up reinforces this point. Chicago Bridge represented that it provided
    “the financial statements of [Stone] . . . (collectively, the ‘Financial Statements’)”
    and that those Financial Statements had “been prepared in accordance with
    71
    Id.
    34
    GAAP.”72 Working Capital is defined as being determined on the basis of GAAP
    “consistently applied by Seller Parent in preparation of the financial statements of
    [Stone].”73 Thus, it would be unreasonable to interpret the definition of Working
    Capital as allowing for a different accounting approach from that used for the
    Financial Statements.74 Instead, the consistency language of the Working Capital
    definition emphasizes that there is one approach to GAAP and one set of statements
    that are appropriate for use throughout the transaction. This is, of course, common
    sense, when keeping the broader context in mind: it would be awfully difficult for
    the True Up to fulfill one of its main roles, i.e., account for changes in Stone’s
    business between signing and closing, if one accounting approach was used to
    complete the Financial Statements for signing and another one was used to complete
    the True Up calculations.
    This interpretation of the True Up gives the language of Section 1.4 an
    important role to play in the transaction, but not as wide-ranging as Westinghouse’s
    preferred interpretation. As is traditionally the case with provisions like this one,
    the True Up’s effect is that Chicago Bridge could continue operating Stone as though
    72
    Id. at A71 (§ 2.6(a)).
    73
    Id. at A164 (Sch. 11.1(a)).
    74
    See OSI, 
    892 A.2d at 1093
     (rejecting a similar argument that a reference statement of working
    capital was not specifically represented to be GAAP compliant and so the figures of that statement
    could be reassessed for GAAP compliance outside of a representation and warranty breach
    adjudication, because those reference statements were based on the financial statements that were
    represented to be GAAP compliant).
    35
    it was still its own business, but without worrying that pursuing normal construction
    operations would benefit Westinghouse to its own detriment. Westinghouse was
    also protected to the extent Chicago Bridge or Stone tried to suddenly shift course
    in how it chose to treat Stone from an accounting perspective, even though Chicago
    Bridge’s representations, and therefore liability under an indemnity or breach of
    contract theory, about Stone’s GAAP compliance lapsed at closing. Or, if Chicago
    Bridge didn’t follow through with the construction program or if Westinghouse and
    the utilities paid a bunch of their bills, Westinghouse wouldn’t end up worse off than
    it was at signing thanks to the True Up. Thus, this interpretation of the True Up
    maintains the underlying economics of the parties’ bargain.
    iii.
    Additionally, to understand the role the True Up plays in the Purchase
    Agreement, it is important to recognize the limited role of the adjudicator, here an
    auditor (called the Independent Auditor in the Purchase Agreement), that Chicago
    Bridge and Westinghouse selected. The Independent Auditor does not have a
    mandate to address any dispute that might come from the Purchase Agreement.75
    Instead, Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse identified a set of specific disputes that
    75
    Indeed, even in a situation where the Court of Chancery addressed an adjudicator in a somewhat
    similar role to the Independent Auditor, but with arguably broader powers, it observed that issues
    related to potential misrepresentations made by a seller “are not generally viewed as the kind of
    disputes that would be resolved by the person charged with ‘truing up’ the books.” Matria
    Healthcare, Inc. v. Coral SR LLC, 
    2007 WL 763303
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Mar. 1, 2007).
    36
    the Independent Auditor could resolve.                Chicago Bridge could call on the
    Independent Auditor to determine if Westinghouse had provided adequate access to
    its books and records to assist Chicago Bridge in assessing Westinghouse’s
    calculation of the Closing Statement.76 If Westinghouse wanted to change the
    purchase price allocation and Chicago Bridge disputed the change, the Independent
    Auditor could be called on to resolve that dispute.77 Similarly, if Chicago Bridge
    and Westinghouse disagreed about the calculation of earnout amounts, the
    Independent Auditor could resolve those disputes.78 And, of course, the Independent
    Auditor was charged with resolving disputes between Chicago Bridge and
    Westinghouse over the Closing Payment Statement and Closing Statement.79
    But, the Purchase Agreement further limited the scope of the Independent
    Auditor’s review even in the limited situations where it was empowered to review
    anything. For one thing, the Purchase Agreement states in multiple places that the
    auditor was acting “as an expert and not as an arbitrator.”80 That language by itself
    has been read to narrow the scope of the expert’s domain.81 The Independent
    76
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A66 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(b)).
    77
    Id. at A69 (§ 1.6).
    78
    Id. at A157–58 (Sch. 1.3(d)).
    79
    Id. at A66–67 (§ 1.4(c)).
    80
    Id. at A66 (§ 1.4(b)); A157–58 (Sch. 1.3(d)).
    81
    See, e.g., AQSR India Private, Ltd. v. Bureau Veritas Holdings, Inc., 
    2009 WL 1707910
    , at *2
    (Del. Ch. June 16, 2009). New York law has also recognized the distinction between arbitrators
    and experts; one report on the state of New York’s law on the topic notes “[w]here the parties have
    selected an expert to decide factual issues within the scope of that decision maker’s expertise, the
    parties have chosen expert determination as the dispute resolution mechanism, not arbitration,”
    37
    Auditor was to base its conclusions solely on written submissions from Chicago
    Bridge and Westinghouse, had thirty days to make its conclusion, and that
    conclusion was to come in the form of “a brief written statement.”82 Thus, the
    Independent Auditor did not have a wide-ranging brief to adjudicate all disputes
    between Chicago Bridge and Westinghouse under the Purchase Agreement, but
    rather one confined to a discrete set of narrow disputes.83 Notably, those duties never
    Compendium of Selected Authorities Cited in Appellant’s Opening Br. ex 5 (Purchase Price
    Adjustment Clauses and Expert Determinations: Legal Issues, Practical Problems and Suggested
    Improvements 24 (June 2013)), and that incorrectly treating an expert as an arbitrator can lead to
    experts “being granted broader and deeper authority than that reasonably expected by the parties,”
    id. at 49.
    82
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A67 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(c)).
    83
    Indeed, the Independent Auditor’s role as to the True Up is far different from broad arbitration
    provisions that empower an arbitrator to decide any disputes arising under or related in any way
    to a claim under a contract. E.g., Riley v. Brocade Commc’ns Sys., Inc., 
    2014 WL 1813285
    , at *2
    (Del. Ch. May 6, 2014) (“[T]he parties agree that any and all claims, disputes or controversies of
    any nature whatsoever arising out of, or relating to, this Agreement, the COC [Change of Control]
    Plan and/or the Participation Agreement, or their interpretation, enforcement, breach, performance
    or execution, Employee’s employment with the Company, or the termination of such employment,
    shall be resolved, to the fullest extent permitted by law by final, binding and confidential
    arbitration” (quoting agreement at issue in the case)). The Purchase Agreement’s specific
    delineation of areas the Independent Auditor may review stands in sharp contrast to broad
    arbitration provisions. Even where the Purchase Agreement’s language seems broad, stating that
    Westinghouse and Chicago Bridge may submit “any and all matters that remain in dispute with
    respect to the Objections Statement, the Closing Statement and the calculations set forth therein,”
    the remainder of the sentence “with respect to the Objections Statement, the Closing Statement
    and the calculations set forth therein” qualifies the universe of disputes to those embodied in those
    statements and calculations and thus only disputes properly part of the True Up. App. to
    Appellant’s Opening Br. at A67 (Purchase Agreement § 1.4(c)).
    Such broad arbitration provisions can even be used to empower the arbitrator to determine
    disputes like this about arbitrability itself. E.g., Pryor v. IAC/InterActiveCorp, 
    2012 WL 2046827
    ,
    at *5–*6 (Del. Ch. June 7, 2012) (applying a stockholder’s agreement that stated “[a]ny
    controversy concerning whether a matter is an arbitrable matter . . . shall be determined by the
    [a]rbitrator,” and concluding that the determination of what claims could be heard by the arbitrator
    was the arbitrator’s decision to make (quoting the stockholder’s agreement at issue in the case));
    see also James & Jackson, LLC v. Willie Gary, LLC, 
    906 A.2d 76
    , 80 (Del. 2006) (determining
    that arbitrators are empowered to decide arbitrability in circumstance where the “arbitration clause
    38
    included assessing if Chicago Bridge breached the representations and warranties it
    offered in the Purchase Agreement.84
    iv.
    That the Purchase Agreement’s plain meaning does not allow claims that
    could have been brought as breaches of representations and warranties to be brought
    as part of the True Up is also apparent because to allow such claims would largely
    render the Liability Bar meaningless. That section cuts off both parties’ liability for
    breaches of representations and warranties at closing. The majority of the issues
    Westinghouse disputes with respect to the Net Working Capital Amount reflect its
    position that Chicago Bridge’s historical accounting treatment of Stone was not
    GAAP compliant. Westinghouse argues that under the Purchase Agreement, it could
    accept non-GAAP compliant financial statements pre-closing and wait until the post-
    closing adjustment process to dispute Chicago Bridge’s historical accounting
    generally provides for arbitration of all disputes and also incorporates a set of arbitration rules that
    empower arbitrators to decide arbitrability”). By contrast, the agreement to arbitrate disputes from
    the True Up embodied in the Purchase Agreement addresses a narrow set of disputes, disclaims
    that the expert is an arbitrator, and thus the parties both agreed that any dispute over what claims
    may be asserted in the True Up proceeding and what claims are barred by the Liability Bar must
    be addressed by a court.
    84
    See OSI, 
    892 A.2d at 1091
     (“[The relevant purchase agreement’s provisions] appears on its face
    to simply contemplate the use of an Independent Accounting Firm if there are differences of
    opinion about the amount of Modified Working Capital . . . . OSI’s current position involves the
    Independent Accounting Firm in an entirely different and more ambitious role: that of determining
    that the Transaction Accounting Principles used in the Reference Statement were not compliant
    with U.S. GAAP.”).
    39
    methodology, despite the Liability Bar’s elimination of liability.                        Indeed,
    Westinghouse’s Answering Brief states:
    In other words, for pre-closing purposes, [Westinghouse] agreed to
    accept the Article II Financials with their GAAP variations without
    recourse, but only because for purposes of setting a price,
    [Westinghouse] bargained for a more objective standard. Under the
    Agreement, then, [Westinghouse] reasonably could proceed to closing
    regardless of whether [Chicago Bridge’s] representations about its
    financial state were fully GAAP-compliant, precisely because it had
    assurances that the price ultimately fixed would be rooted not in those
    representations, but in different, special-purpose, GAAP-compliant
    calculations.85
    But, Westinghouse’s view that such changes can be addressed through the
    True Up renders the Liability Bar meaningless and eviscerates the basic bargain
    between these two sophisticated parties.86 The financial statement representation is
    the most important representation in a typical purchase agreement. 87                          So,
    Westinghouse’s argument would mean that the Liability Bar doesn’t mean what
    plain English would suggest it means for the most important item that section
    ostensibly encompasses, because, under Westinghouse’s interpretation, the end of
    liability on the financial statements representation has no effect as to any item
    conceivably subject to change as part of the True Up because any qualm
    85
    Answering Br. at 29 (emphasis added).
    86
    See OSI, 
    892 A.2d at 1093
     (observing that accepting a seller’s argument that allowing certain
    claims to be heard in the purchase price adjustment adjudication would “undermine the limitations
    on liability and the core dispute resolution mechanism” agreed to by the parties).
    87
    FREUND, supra note 33, at 254 (observing that if a purchaser could have only one representation,
    it would be “the financial statements, of course”).
    40
    Westinghouse had about Stone’s historic accounting treatment could be brought
    before the Independent Auditor. As the Court of Chancery has observed, “where the
    contract expressly provides that the representations and warranties terminate upon
    closing . . . the parties have made clear their intent that they can provide no basis for
    a post-closing suit seeking a remedy for an alleged misrepresentation. That is, when
    the representations and warranties terminate, so does any right to sue on them.” 88 To
    accept Westinghouse’s interpretation of the True Up would require reading into this
    unambiguous agreement an unwritten, material exception to the Liability Bar, which
    this Court declines to do. Under the plain terms of the Purchase Agreement, if
    Westinghouse disagreed with the accounting methodology that Chicago Bridge
    historically used, it could refuse to close or sue for damages.89 After closing,
    Westinghouse could only use the True Up to resolve disputes arising from changes
    in facts or circumstances of Stone’s business between signing and closing.
    Westinghouse also urges that when Section 10.3 explicitly preserves the True
    Up after closing, that can only mean Westinghouse is allowed to bring any claims it
    chooses post-closing despite the Liability Bar in Section 10.1. Section 10.3 provides
    that the Liability Bar “shall not . . . operate to interfere with or impede the operation
    88
    GRT, Inc. v. Marathon GTF Technology, Ltd., 
    2011 WL 2682898
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. July 11,
    2011).
    89
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A108 (Purchase Agreement § 8.1(a)).
    41
    of the provisions” addressing the True Up.90 But, accepting that Westinghouse
    cannot close and then object, for the first time, to Chicago Bridge’s consistent
    accounting treatment in the True Up is consistent with the language of Section 10.3.
    Given the Liability Bar’s broad language cutting off liability for money damages
    after closing, Section 10.3 simply makes clear that the True Up has teeth for
    addressing changes in Stone’s business between signing and closing and that those
    changes very well might result in money changing hands between Chicago Bridge
    and Westinghouse, either for expected reasons, such as Chicago Bridge’s obligation
    to inject substantial capital into Stone, or less innocuous ones, such as Chicago
    Bridge or Westinghouse fiddling with the accounting used in the True Up’s
    statements to swing the balance in that party’s favor. Under this reading, Section
    10.3 plays its meaningful and expected, but confined, role in the Purchase
    Agreement. By contrast, Westinghouse’s strained argument that Section 10.3 is a
    broad license for Westinghouse to resuscitate claims covered by the Liability Bar in
    the True Up process is not reasonably supported by its language or its role within
    the overall context of the Purchase Agreement.
    90
    Id. at A112 (§ 10.3(a)).
    42
    v.
    Although Westinghouse argues91 that the True Up was structured after the
    analogous provision at issue in Alliant Techsystems, Inc. v. MidOcean Bushnell
    Holdings, L.P,92 the True Up differs in a material fashion. Indeed, the True Up here
    is more similar to that at issue in OSI Systems, Inc. v. Instrumentarium Corp.93 and
    in a New York case, Westmoreland Coal Co. v. Entech, Inc.94 In OSI, the Court of
    Chancery addressed a merger agreement containing one form of dispute resolution
    for disputes about the amount of working capital, without a cap on the amount of the
    dispute, and another form of dispute resolution for claims for breaches of
    representations and warranties, with a capped potential liability amount.95 There,
    the initial exchange of estimates was essentially the same as what was required here:
    the seller created one before closing and the buyer did the same after closing. But,
    the buyer’s calculation had to be “prepared in accordance with the Transaction
    Accounting Principles applied consistently with their application in connection with
    the preparation of the Reference Statement of Working Capital and the Statement of
    91
    Oral Argument at 34:25, Chicago Bridge & Iron v. Westinghouse Electric, No. 573, 2016 (Del.
    May 3, 2017) (“[T]he architecture of what the parties did, exactly as they did in Alliant . . . .”); id.
    at 35:27 (“[W]e tracked [10.3] word for word from the Alliant agreement . . . .”); see also
    Appellees’ Answering Br. at 4 (calling Alliant “remarkably analogous”).
    92
    
    2015 WL 1897659
     (Del. Ch. Apr. 24, 2015).
    93
    
    892 A.2d 1086
     (Del. Ch. 2006).
    94
    
    794 N.E.2d 667
     (N.Y. 2003).
    95
    
    892 A.2d at 1094
    .
    43
    Estimated Closing Modified Working Capital . . . .”96       The term “Transaction
    Accounting Principles” meant “U.S. GAAP; provided, however, that: (i) with respect
    to any matter as to which there is more than one principle of U.S. GAAP, Transaction
    Accounting Principles means the principles of U.S. GAAP applied in the preparation
    of the Financial Statements . . . .”97
    In OSI, the buyer’s statement altered many of the accounting methods that the
    seller used in preparing the Reference Statement and Statement of Estimated Closing
    Modified Working Capital because the buyer alleged that those statements did not
    comply with GAAP. As a result, the buyer’s calculation differed substantially from
    the seller’s. The parties disputed whether the question of GAAP compliance should
    be resolved by an independent auditor under the purchase price adjustment
    provision, or if it needed to be resolved by a court under the agreement’s
    indemnification provision.
    OSI’s merger agreement required the working capital adjustments to be
    prepared “in accordance with the Transaction Accounting Principles applied
    consistently with their application in connection with the preparation of the
    Reference Statement of Working Capital and the Statement of Estimated Closing
    Modified Working Capital.”98 The Transaction Accounting Principles definition
    96
    
    Id. at 1091
    .
    97
    
    Id.
    98
    
    Id.
    44
    included a requirement that they comply with GAAP, but as in this case, the party
    seeking the dramatic change as part of the working capital adjustment conceded that
    its grievances were not the result of changes between signing and closing, but rather
    existed before signing.99 Thus, in OSI, like this case, there were historic financials
    that carried with them an approach to GAAP and a representation that the approach
    complied with GAAP. The language for the working capital adjustment similarly
    did not establish a separate GAAP compliance test, but instead a consistency test:
    the adjustment was to be “in accordance with the Transaction Accounting Principles
    applied consistently with their application in connection with the preparation of the
    [statements based on historical financials].”100
    The seller’s financial statements as of signing were also subject to a
    representation that they complied with GAAP and so the Court of Chancery
    concluded that the assertion that the Reference Statement of Working Capital did
    not comply with GAAP necessarily asserted a claim for a breach of that
    representation.101 Like the True Up provisions here, “[t]he process set forth in [the
    OSI purchase agreement] was not intended to be used to resolve [contentions that
    the seller’s historical accounting was materially inaccurate], it was designed to
    handle disputes about the extent of change in [target’s] Modified Working Capital
    99
    
    Id.
    100
    
    Id.
    101
    
    Id. at 1092
    .
    45
    between . . . the ‘as of’ date of the Reference Statement[] and . . . the Closing Date[]
    when measured under the same accounting principles used in preparing the
    Reference Statement.”102      Because the Court of Chancery read the purchase
    agreement to bar the buyer from “bypass[ing] the contractual Indemnification
    process, [and] ignor[ing] the contractual requirement to prepare its Initial Modified
    Working Capital Statement using accounting principles consistent with those used
    in the Reference Statement,”103 and found that “the buyer’s claims rest
    fundamentally on its assertion that the seller premised its financial statements and
    estimates of working capital on accounting judgments that violated generally
    accepted accounting principles,” it determined that those claims involved claims for
    breaches of representations and warranties and could only be properly presented in
    the contractual indemnification process.104
    New York State’s highest court confronted a similar dispute in Westmoreland
    where the merger agreement required comparable closing date financial statements
    to be prepared “in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis with past
    practices.”105    Westmoreland treated that language as establishing a test for
    consistency. Indeed, Westmoreland observed that “[w]hat is most important is that,
    102
    
    Id. at 1095
    .
    103
    
    Id.
    104
    
    Id. at 1087
    .
    105
    794 N.E.2d at 670.
    46
    when preparing financial statements intended to be used for comparative purposes,
    the methodology be consistent applied . . . .       [The Agreement’s] emphasis on
    consistent treatment can only reflect a purpose to flag changes in value between . . .
    the date of acquisition pricing[] and the closing date.”106 Westmoreland determined
    that the buyer’s attacks on GAAP compliance implicated the initial financial
    statements, and such claims constituted only a breach of the representation that those
    initial statements were GAAP compliant.107 Those claims could “only be pursued
    in a court of law, with its attendant protections of discovery, rules of evidence,
    burdens of proof, and full appellate review.”108
    In contrast, in Alliant the definition of Net Working Capital was that it was a
    relevant set of assets less liabilities on a consolidated basis “and calculated in
    accordance with GAAP and otherwise in a manner consistent with the practices and
    methodologies      used    in   the   preparation   of   the   [benchmark    financial
    statements] . . . .”109 The Chancellor found that the use of two separate “and”s
    created two separate tests.110 The first test was if the calculation complied with
    GAAP. The second test was if the calculations were “otherwise” consistent with
    how the seller had prepared its financial statements. That is rather different from the
    106
    Id. at 671.
    107
    Id. at 671–72.
    108
    Id.
    109
    
    2015 WL 1897659
    , at *7 (emphasis added).
    110
    Id. at *8.
    47
    language present in OSI, Westmoreland, and here where the Closing Payment
    Statement and Closing Statement are simply required to use the same approach to
    GAAP as Chicago Bridge and Stone had employed historically; the Purchase
    Agreement’s plain terms do not establish two separate tests.
    III.
    For the reasons described, any argument by Westinghouse that the Closing
    Date Purchase Price should be adjusted due to assertions that Chicago Bridge’s
    historical financial statements and accounting practices did not comply with GAAP
    may not be heard in a proceeding before the Independent Auditor. The Court of
    Chancery should enjoin Westinghouse from submitting claims to the Independent
    Auditor or continuing to pursue already-submitted claims based on arguments that
    also would have constituted arguments that Chicago Bridge breached the Purchase
    Agreement’s representations and warranties. This leaves Westinghouse free to make
    any argument to the Independent Auditor that addresses a change in facts or
    circumstances that occurred between signing and closing relevant to the Closing
    Date Purchase Price. Thus, the judgment of the Court of Chancery dated December
    5, 2016 is reversed. We remand this matter to the Court of Chancery and direct it to
    grant Chicago Bridge’s requested declaratory relief.
    48