In Re: SmileDirectClub, Inc. Derivative Litigation ( 2021 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN RE SMILEDIRECTCLUB,              )   C.A. No. 2019-0940-MTZ
    INC. DERIVATIVE LITIGATION          )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: February 17, 2021
    Date Decided: May 28, 2021
    Blake A. Bennett, COOCH AND TAYLOR, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware;
    P. Bradford deLeeuw, DELEEUW LAW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Lee
    Squitieri, SQUITIERI & FEARON, LLP, New York, New York; Jeffrey S. Abraham
    and Michael J. Klein, ABRAHAM, FRUCHTER & TWERSKY LLP, New York,
    New York; Donald J. Enright, Elizabeth K. Tripodi, and Jordan Cafritz, LEVI &
    KORSINSKY, LLP, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
    Edward B. Micheletti and Jenness E. Parker, SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE,
    MEAGHER & FLOM LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Scott D. Musoff, SKADDEN,
    ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for
    Defendants.
    ZURN, Vice Chancellor.
    Co-Lead Plaintiffs Kerry Harts and the Doris Shenwick Trust (“Plaintiffs”)
    hold Class A common stock of SmileDirectClub, Inc. (“SDC”). Plaintiffs acquired
    their shares through SDC’s initial public offering, through which SDC issued and
    sold 58,537,000 shares of Class A common stock at $23.00 per share (the “IPO”).
    The IPO launched on September 11, 2019, and closed on September 16. Plaintiffs
    purchased their shares on September 12.
    In connection with the IPO, SDC’s Form S-1 registration statement
    (the “Prospectus”) disclosed that SDC intended to use the IPO proceeds to
    consummate certain insider transactions at the IPO price, and that doing so would
    dilute its public stockholders. The Prospectus explained those transactions would
    occur automatically if the IPO raised sufficient funds. The IPO was successful, so
    on the day it closed, SDC used most of the IPO’s proceeds to consummate the
    intended insider transactions at the IPO price less the underwriting discount.
    Plaintiffs challenge those insider transactions as unfair, alleging derivatively
    that SDC’s board of directors (the “Board”) breached their fiduciary duties by
    causing SDC to pay an excessively high price to consummate insider transactions
    that benefitted those Board members and their affiliated entities. Plaintiffs also
    assert related derivative claims for aiding and abetting and unjust enrichment.
    The defendant Board members and their affiliates have moved to dismiss
    pursuant to Court of Chancery Rules 23.1 and 12(b)(6) (the “Motion”), contending,
    1
    inter alia, that Plaintiffs lack standing to pursue their derivative claims. For the
    reasons that follow, I agree and grant the Motion.
    I.     BACKGROUND1
    Defendants Jordan Katzman and Alexander Fenkell founded SDC
    Financial, LLC (“Financial,” and together with SDC, the “Company”) in 2014 “on
    one simple belief: everyone deserves a smile they love.”2 The Company provides
    dental support organization services with a pioneering direct-to-consumer medtech
    platform for orthodontic treatment, utilizing at-home impression kits and in-store
    scanning services. It manufactures clear aligners while using a network of state-
    licensed practitioners to approve cases remotely, disrupting conventional
    orthodontics and offering a 60% discount to doctor-directed competitors. The
    Company is the largest player in that market.
    1
    I draw the following facts from the Consolidated Verified Stockholder Derivative
    Complaint, available at Docket Item (“D.I.”) 13 [hereinafter “Compl.”], as well as the
    documents attached to and integral to it. See, e.g., Himawan v. Cephalon, Inc., 
    2018 WL 6822708
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Dec. 28, 2018); In re Gardner Denver, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    2014 WL 715705
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Feb. 21, 2014). Citations in the form of “Defs.’ Ex. —” refer
    to Defendants’ exhibits in support of the Motion, available at D.I. 18 and D.I. 21. Citations
    in the form of “Prospectus —” refer to the SmileDirectClub, Inc. Prospectus dated
    September 11, 2019, available at Defs.’ Ex. 1.
    2
    Prospectus at 1.
    2
    A.     The Company Launches The IPO, And Discloses That It Will
    Consummate Certain Reorganization And Insider Transactions
    In Connection With It.
    Before the IPO, pre-IPO investors—including Defendants and Board
    members David Katzman, Jordan Katzman, Steven Katzman, Alexander Fenkell,
    Susan Greenspon Rammelt, and Richard Schnall—held membership units in
    Financial.3 Financial and its subsidiaries in turn held and owned the Company’s
    assets and operations.
    In anticipation of the IPO, Financial prepared the post-IPO Company to
    conduct business through an “Up-C” structure.4 That structure involves two tiers of
    ownership: through the IPO, public stockholders would hold stock in SDC, a
    corporation, which in turn would hold units in Financial, a limited liability company,
    3
    The Katzmans, Fenkell, Rammelt, and Schnall served on the pre- and post-IPO Board.
    Plaintiffs have also named as Defendants post-IPO directors William H. Frist, Carol J.
    Hamilton, and Richard F. Wallman. In addition, Defendants include (1) CD&R SDC
    Holdings, L.P., which is affiliated with Schnall and received more than $49 million through
    the Insider Transactions, defined infra; (2) DBK Investments, LLC and the David Katzman
    Revocable Trust, which are entities controlled by David Katzman that received more than
    $198.4 million through the Insider Transactions; (3) the David B. Katzman 2009 Family
    Trust, for which Steven Katzman is trustee and David Katzman’s descendants, including
    Jordan Katzman, are the primary beneficiaries, and which received more than $64 million
    through the Insider Transactions; (4) the Jordan M. Katzman Revocable Trust, for which
    Jordan Katzman is the trustee and beneficiary, and which received more than $157 million
    through the Insider Transactions; and (5) the Alexander J. Fenkell 2018 Irrevocable Trust
    and Alexander Fenkell Revocable Trust, for which Fenkell is the trustee and beneficiary,
    and which received more than $143.75 million through the Insider Transactions. See
    Compl. ¶¶ 13–16, 18, 22–28.
    4
    Prospectus at 12; Compl. ¶ 41. A diagram depicting the Company’s organizational
    structure as disclosed in the Prospectus is available at Defs.’ Ex. 3.
    3
    alongside pre-IPO investors. As the first step in the Up-C reorganization, SDC was
    incorporated in Delaware in 2019 to become Financial’s holding company. Then,
    Financial executed a Seventh Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company
    Agreement, dated and effective September 13, 2019 (the “LLC Agreement”).5 That
    agreement made SDC the sole managing member of Financial and recapitalized all
    existing LLC membership units into a new class (the “LLC Units”).6 SDC also
    issued Class B stock equal to the number of pre-IPO LLC Units held by each pre-
    IPO investor.7
    SDC acquired Financial LLC Units, with each share of SDC common stock
    corresponding economically to an LLC Unit. SDC’s sole material asset became its
    27.4% equity interest in Financial.           And as SDC’s managing member, SDC
    5
    See Defs.’ Ex. 4.
    6
    See Prospectus at 13 (“Prior to the closing of this offering, (i) SDC Inc. will acquire,
    pursuant to one or more mergers (the ‘Blocker Mergers’), the Pre-IPO Units held by certain
    Pre-IPO Investors (the ‘Blockers’), and will issue to the equityholders of the Blockers
    (the ‘Blocker Shareholders’) shares of Class A common stock as consideration in the
    Blocker Mergers; (ii) the operating agreement of SDC Financial (the ‘SDC Financial LLC
    Agreement’) will be amended and restated to, among other things, modify the capital
    structure of SDC Financial by replacing the different classes of Pre-IPO Units (including
    Restricted Units) with a single new class of membership interests of SDC Financial (‘LLC
    Units’)[.]”); Defs.’ Ex. 4 (attaching as Exhibit 10.1 the LLC Agreement, which states that
    “the Pre-IPO Members have authorized [SDC] as Manager” and defining “Manager” as
    SDC).
    7
    See Prospectus at 13 (“Prior to the closing of this offering, . . . (iii) we will issue to each
    of the Pre-IPO Investors previously holding Pre-IPO Units (including Restricted Units) a
    number of shares of our Class B common stock equal to the number of LLC Units held by
    it[.]”).
    4
    controlled and indirectly operated Financial’s business and affairs. Effectively,
    Financial served as the Company’s operating entity, and in turn was held by SDC.
    So poised, SDC launched the IPO. On September 11, 2019, the Securities and
    Exchange Commission declared the Prospectus effective.8 The Prospectus detailed
    the steps the Company took to carry out the Up-C reorganization in preparation for
    the IPO. The Prospectus disclosed that Financial’s pre-IPO investors could convert
    their LLC Units into shares of SDC stock:
    Subject to the terms and conditions of the SDC Financial LLC
    Agreement, the Continuing LLC Members will have the right to
    exchange their LLC Units (with automatic cancellation of an equal
    number of shares of Class B common stock) for shares of our Class A
    common stock on a one-for-one basis, subject to customary adjustments
    for stock splits, stock dividends and reclassifications, or for cash (based
    on the market price of shares of Class A common stock), with the form
    of consideration determined by the disinterested members of our board
    of directors.9
    The Prospectus also disclosed that if the IPO successfully raised sufficient
    funds, the Company intended to use the IPO proceeds to purchase LLC Units and
    Class A common stock from existing holders, including Board members and their
    affiliates, at the IPO price less the underwriting discount, and to purchase and cancel
    LLC Units from pre-IPO investors (the “Insider Transactions”).10 Importantly, the
    8
    See Defs.’ Ex. 2.
    9
    Prospectus at 17–18.
    10
    See, e.g., id. at 13, 16–17, 60–65.
    5
    Prospectus led with this critical information, displaying the following text
    prominently on its cover page:
    We intend to use approximately $616.3 million of the net proceeds from
    this offering (or approximately $808.2 million if the underwriters’
    option to purchase additional shares of Class A common stock is
    exercised in full) to purchase limited liability company units of SDC
    Financial LLC, our subsidiary, and shares of our Class A common stock
    from existing holders thereof, as described herein.11
    The Prospectus further disclosed and described at length how the IPO proceeds
    would finance the Insider Transactions; the exact number of LLC Units and Class A
    shares the Company would purchase from the pre-IPO investors upon the IPO’s
    closing; and the price at which the Company would purchase those LLC Units and
    Class A shares.12
    11
    Id., Cover Page.
    12
    See, e.g., id. at 13, 16–17, 60–65, 152–53, 151–57.
    6
    We intend to use substantially all of the net proceeds we receive from
    this offering (including from any exercise of the underwriters’ option
    to purchase additional shares of Class A common stock) to purchase a
    number of newly issued LLC Units from SDC Financial, as described
    under “Organizational Structure—Offering-Related Transactions.”
    We intend to cause SDC Financial to use a portion of such proceeds
    to purchase and cancel LLC Units from Pre-IPO Investors at a price
    per LLC Unit equal to the public offering price per share of Class A
    common stock in this offering, less the underwriting discount. In
    addition, we intend to use a portion of the net proceeds to purchase
    shares of Class A common stock from [insiders] at a price per share
    equal to the public offering price per share of Class A common stock
    in this offering, less the underwriting discount. See “Use of Proceeds”
    and “Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions—Purchase
    of LLC Units.”
    Subject to the terms and conditions of the SDC Financial LLC
    Agreement, holders (other than SDC Inc.) of LLC Units following the
    consummation of the Reorganization Transactions and the
    consummation of this offering and the use of proceeds therefrom
    (“Continuing LLC Members”) will have the right to exchange their
    LLC Units (with automatic cancellation of an equal number of shares
    of Class B common stock) for shares of our Class A common stock on
    a one-for-one basis, subject to customary adjustments for stock splits,
    stock dividends and reclassifications, or for cash (based on the market
    price of shares of Class A common stock), with the form of
    consideration determined by the disinterested members of our board of
    directors. As Continuing LLC Members exchange their LLC Units,
    those LLC Units thereafter will be owned by SDC Inc. and SDC Inc.’s
    interest in SDC Financial will be correspondingly increased. The
    corresponding shares of Class B common stock will be cancelled.13
    The Prospectus disclosed that SDC “intend[ed]” to use (1) approximately $585.5
    million “to purchase and cancel LLC Units from Pre-IPO Investors and shares of
    Class A common stock from [insiders]” at a price “equal to the public offering price
    13
    Id. at 13 (emphasis added).
    7
    per share of Class A common stock in this offering, less the underwriting
    discount,” and (2) approximately $111 million “to purchase and cancel LLC Units
    from the non-Series A Pre-IPO Investors pursuant to the terms of our 2018 Private
    Placement.”14 These terms were determined prior to the IPO.
    Having described SDC’s plan for the IPO proceeds, the Prospectus disclosed
    that SDC “will have broad discretion in the use of the net proceeds from this offering
    and may not use them effectively,” and that while SDC “management currently
    intends to use the net proceeds from this offering in the manner described in ‘Use of
    Proceeds’ and will have broad discretion in the application of a significant part of
    the net proceeds from this offering,” “failure by [SDC] management to apply these
    funds effectively could result in financial losses that could harm our business [or]
    cause the market price for or Class A common stock to decline.”15 The Prospectus
    also included a customary “Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
    Statements:”16
    14
    Id. at 16–17, 65 (emphasis added).
    15
    Id. at 55.
    16
    Id. at 58–59.
    8
    This prospectus contains forward-looking statements. Any statements
    about our expectations, beliefs, plans, predictions, forecasts, objectives,
    assumptions, or future events or performance are not historical facts
    and may be forward-looking. These statements are often, but not
    always, made through the use of words or phrases such as “anticipates,”
    “believes,” “can,” “could,” “may,” “predicts,” “potential,” “should,”
    “will,” “estimate,” “plans,” “projects,” “continuing,” “ongoing,”
    “expects,” “intends,” and similar words or phrases. Although we
    believe that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking
    statements are reasonable, these statements are not guarantees of future
    performance and involve risks and uncertainties which are subject to
    change based on various important factors, some of which are beyond
    our control.17
    The cautionary statement reiterated the Company’s intention to use the IPO proceeds
    to consummate the Insider Transactions at the IPO price if the IPO raised sufficient
    funds.18
    17
    Id. at 58; see also id. at 59 (“If one or more of the factors affecting our forward-looking
    information and statements proves incorrect, its actual results, performance or
    achievements could differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, forward-
    looking information and statements. Therefore, we caution not to place undue reliance on
    any forward-looking information or statements. The effect of these factors is difficult to
    predict. Factors other than these also could adversely affect our results, and the reader
    should not consider these factors to be a complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties.
    New factors emerge from time to time, and management cannot assess the impact of any
    such factor on our business or the extent to which any factor, or combination of factors,
    may cause results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking
    statement. Any forward-looking statements only speak as of the date of this document,
    and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking information or statements,
    whether written or oral, to reflect any change, except as required by law. All forward-
    looking statements attributable to us are expressly qualified by these cautionary
    statements.”).
    18
    See id. at 59 (“If we issue and sell a number of shares of Class A common stock in excess
    of the number of shares set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, we expect to use the
    additional net proceeds to purchase and cancel additional LLC Units and shares of Class A
    common stock from Pre-IPO Investors at a price per LLC Unit or share of Class A common
    stock equal to the public offering price per share of Class A common stock in this offering,
    9
    B.        The IPO Closes; SDC’s Stock Price Falls; And The Company
    Consummates The Insider Transactions As Planned And
    Disclosed.
    On September 12, SDC offered 58,537,000 shares of SDC Class A common
    stock to the public at $23.00 per share, or net proceeds of $21.85 per share after
    underwriting discounts and commissions, on the NASDAQ stock exchange. The
    Prospectus disclosed that the offering price resulted from negotiations between the
    Company and the IPO’s independent underwriters, following a price discovery
    process led by the underwriters, including roadshow presentations with prospective
    investors.19
    On opening day, SDC’s stock began trading at $20.59 and closed at $16.67
    per share. Plaintiffs purchased their shares that day. The next day, September 13,
    SDC opened trading at $16.81 and closed at $18.68 per share. On September 16,
    the IPO closed, and the underwriters delivered the shares against payment. The
    Company raised approximately $1.286 billion in net IPO proceeds. That day, SDC’s
    stock price declined and traded between $17.81 and $19.00 per share, and closed at
    $18.90 per share.
    less the underwriting discount. As a result, the total numbers of outstanding shares of Class
    A common stock, LLC Units, and shares of Class B common stock, as well as the relative
    percentages of equity ownership and voting power of the holders of Class A common stock
    and Class B common stock, will be adjusted accordingly from the information.”).
    19
    See id. at 173.
    10
    Also on September 16, having raised sufficient funds in the IPO, the Company
    “immediately used the majority of the [IPO]’s proceeds” to consummate the Insider
    Transactions as planned and disclosed in the Prospectus.20 SDC could not and did
    not carry out the Insider Transactions before that day “because SDC did not possess
    those funds.”21 The Company used over $696 million of the IPO’s net proceeds to
    purchase LLC Units and shares of Class A common stock for $21.85 each. The three
    Katzman defendants, Fenkell, Rammelt, and Schnall received approximately
    $628.6 million from the Insider Transactions, either directly or through their
    affiliates.
    On November 12, 2019, after the IPO and the Insider Transactions closed,
    SDC disclosed in public filings that “[t]here was no material change in the use of
    proceeds as described in the Prospectus.” 22 SDC stated that its management
    “exercised its ‘broad discretion’ as described in the Prospectus and acted on its stated
    ‘intent,’ using over $696 million of the [IPO]’s proceeds to acquire Units and
    Common Stock from corporate insiders for $21.85.”23 Thus, SDC did exactly what
    it disclosed it would do in the Prospectus.
    20
    Compl. ¶ 5.
    21
    Id. ¶ 50.
    22
    Id. ¶ 51.
    23
    Id. (alteration omitted).
    11
    C.     Plaintiffs File This Derivative Action.
    The Insider Transactions resulted in multiple actions in this Court, filed in late
    2019 and early 2020.24 Those actions were consolidated under the present caption,25
    and on April 8, 2020, Plaintiffs filed their Consolidated Verified Stockholder
    Derivative Complaint (the “Complaint”). Count I asserts a derivative claim for
    breach of fiduciary duty against the Defendant Board members. Counts II and III
    assert related derivative claims for aiding and abetting and unjust enrichment, which
    are premised on the same alleged wrongdoing that supports Count I.
    Plaintiffs allege the Board members breached their fiduciary duties by
    “deciding to pay an excessively high price for the Units and Common Stock
    acquired” in the Insider Transactions, and “by causing the Company to purchase
    Units and Common Stock from corporate insiders at a price of $21.85, a grossly
    inflated price, representing amounts well in excess of the market price and intrinsic
    value of the Units and Common Stock acquired.” 26 Plaintiffs allege the Board
    24
    See D.I. 1, Doris Shenwick Trust’s Verified Derivative Complaint for Breach of
    Fiduciary Duties; Harts v. Katzman et al., C.A. No. 2019-1027-MTZ, Harts’s Verified
    Derivative Complaint for Breach of Fiduciary Duties; Sammons v. Katzman et al., C.A. No.
    2020-0169-MTZ, Sammons’s Verified Derivative Complaint for Breach of Fiduciary
    Duties.
    25
    D.I. 12. After consolidation, the plaintiffs in each of the three derivative suits—the Doris
    Shenwick Trust, Kerry Harts, and Jonathan Sammons—proceeded as co-lead plaintiffs in
    this matter. See id. On May 10, 2021, after the parties briefed the Motion and the Court
    heard argument, Sammons was voluntarily dismissed from the action. See D.I. 33.
    26
    Compl. ¶ 9.
    12
    overpaid in the Insider Transactions, which were fed by an inflated IPO price that
    was supported by concealing regulatory and financial challenges facing the
    Company. Plaintiffs claim those regulatory challenges became publicly known in
    the weeks after the IPO closed, causing the stock price to drop even further.
    According to Plaintiffs, “[t]he Units and the Common Stock were never worth the
    $21.85 per share that the Company paid”; 27 “[t]he Board was aware that the
    Company was overpaying for the Units and Common Stock but failed to take any
    steps to protect the Company”;28 and “[n]o reasonable fiduciary fully informed of
    the relevant facts which the insiders selling securities to the Company knew would
    have agreed to such a windfall.”29
    On August 14, Defendants filed the Motion pursuant to Court of Chancery
    Rules 23.1 and 12(b)(6).30 The parties fully briefed the Motion as of November 6.31
    I held argument on February 17 and took the Motion under advisement.32
    27
    Id. ¶ 53 (emphasis in original).
    28
    Id. ¶ 55.
    29
    Id. ¶ 7.
    30
    See D.I. 18.
    31
    See D.I. 18; D.I. 19; D.I. 21.
    32
    See D.I. 27; D.I. 29.
    13
    II.      ANALYSIS
    On the Motion, Defendants contend Plaintiffs lack standing to pursue their
    derivative claims. Standing “refers to the right of a party to invoke the jurisdiction
    of a court to enforce a claim or redress a grievance.”33 It is required to “ensure that
    the litigation before the tribunal is a ‘case or controversy’ that is appropriate for the
    exercise of the court’s judicial powers.”34 Standing “allows Delaware courts, as a
    matter of self-restraint, to avoid the rendering of advisory opinions at the behest of
    parties who are mere intermeddlers.”35
    “Standing is properly a threshold question that the Court may not avoid,”36
    and “a legal question that is well suited to resolution on a motion to dismiss.”37 “In
    deciding whether a party has standing to bring a claim, the court shall consider who
    33
    Morris v. Spectra Energy P’rs (DE) GP, LP, 
    246 A.3d 121
    , 128 (Del. 2021) (quoting
    Stuart Kingston, Inc. v. Robinson, 
    596 A.2d 1378
    , 1382 (Del. 1991)).
    34
    
    Id.
     at 128–29 (quoting Dover Hist. Soc’y v. City of Dover Planning Comm’n, 
    838 A.2d 1103
    , 1110 (Del. 2003)); accord In re TerraForm Power, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    2020 WL 6375859
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Oct. 30, 2020).
    
    35 Morris, 246
     A.3d at 129 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Ala. By-Prods.
    Corp. v. Cede & Co., 
    657 A.2d 254
    , 264 (Del. 1995)).
    36
    
    Id.
     (alteration omitted) (quoting Gerber v. EPE Hldgs., LLC, 
    2013 WL 209658
    , at *12
    (Del. Ch. Jan. 18, 2013)).
    37
    In re AbbVie Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 
    2015 WL 4464505
    , at *3 (Del. Ch.
    July 21, 2015); accord TerraForm, 
    2020 WL 6375859
    , at *8 (“The issue of whether the
    Plaintiffs have standing is an issue precedent to consideration of a complaint, and is an
    issue of law.”).
    14
    is entitled to bring a lawsuit rather than the merits of the particular controversy.”38
    But “[w]here, as here, the question of standing is so closely related to the merits,”
    and asks “not whether this Court has jurisdiction to grant requested relief to any
    plaintiff, but rather whether the Court can grant the requested relief to these
    plaintiffs, the appropriate framework is under Rule 12(b)(6).”39
    On a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), this Court accepts as true all well-
    pled factual allegations, including even vague allegations if they give the opposing
    party notice of the claim, and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-
    moving party.40 The Court will deny a motion to dismiss unless, with the foregoing
    principles in mind, there is no reasonably conceivable set of circumstances under
    which the plaintiff could recover.41 Thus, I consider Plaintiffs’ Complaint through
    this lens, keeping in mind that “[t]he party invoking the jurisdiction of [this Court]
    bears the burden of establishing the elements of standing.”42
    38
    Omnicare, Inc. v. NCS Healthcare, Inc., 
    809 A.2d 1163
    , 1168 (Del. Ch. 2002)
    (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting U-H Acq. Co. v. Barbo, 
    1994 WL 34688
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 31, 1994)).
    39
    AbbVie, 
    2015 WL 4464505
    , at *3 (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting Appriva S’holder Litig. Co., LLC v. EV3, Inc., 
    937 A.2d 1275
    , 1285 (Del.
    2007)).
    40
    Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Cap. Hldgs. LLC, 
    27 A.3d 531
    , 535 (Del.
    2011).
    41
    
    Id.
    42
    Dover Hist. Soc’y, 
    838 A.2d at 1109
    .
    15
    A.     Delaware Law Mandates That A Derivative Plaintiff Satisfy The
    Contemporaneous Ownership Requirement Set Forth In
    8 Del. C. § 327.
    “The standing inquiry has assumed special significance in the area of
    corporate law.”43 This is especially true regarding a derivative claim, “a cause of
    action belonging to a corporation that another party, typically a stockholder, seeks
    to litigate on the entity’s behalf.”44 In those cases, the stockholder, as “the equity
    owner[,] acts in a representative capacity on behalf of an entity.                   In that
    representative capacity, the plaintiff steps into the shoes of the entity and asserts the
    injury on its behalf.”45 Because of the division between ownership and control of
    the claim, a derivative plaintiff’s ability to pursue that claim on the company’s behalf
    is governed by a specialized standing inquiry: “[t]he right to sue derivatively is a
    property right associated with share ownership.”46 To sue for breach of fiduciary
    duty, a plaintiff must be owed those duties, and therefore must be a stockholder.47
    
    43 Morris, 246
     A.3d at 129 (quoting Ala. By-Prods., 
    657 A.2d at 264
    ).
    44
    Urdan v. WR Cap. P’rs, LLC, 
    2019 WL 3891720
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 19, 2019), aff’d,
    
    244 A.3d 668
     (Del. 2020); see also Ala. By-Prods., 
    657 A.2d at 264
     (“In simplest terms,
    the derivative action is a litigation device that enables shareholders to sue on behalf of the
    corporation where those in control of the company refuse or fail to assert a claim belonging
    to it The derivative suit is a uniquely equitable remedy.” (citations omitted)).
    
    45 Morris, 246
     A.3d at 129.
    46
    Urdan, 
    2019 WL 3891720
    , at *8.
    47
    See In re MAXXAM, Inc./Federated Dev. S’holders Litig., 
    698 A.2d 949
    , 956–57 (Del.
    Ch. 1996) (“A derivative claim belongs to the corporation, not to the shareholder plaintiff
    who brings the action. The shareholder plaintiff’s interest is limited to compelling the
    corporation (by ‘standing in its shoes’) to assert the corporation’s right to seek redress for
    16
    “That is why plaintiffs who seek to assert breach of fiduciary duty claims of this kind
    have been persons to whom such fiduciary duties were owed, i.e., stockholders of
    the [] corporation.”48
    Against this background, Delaware has adopted “two similarly sounding
    doctrines that both affect the ability of stockholders to bring derivative claims—the
    contemporaneous        ownership      requirement    and    the   continuous     ownership
    requirement[.]” 49      “The contemporaneous ownership requirement arose as a
    limitation on the ability of stockholders to bring derivative actions on behalf of
    50
    corporations.”          In 1945, the Delaware General Assembly codified the
    contemporaneous ownership requirement in Section 327 of the DGCL:
    In any derivative suit instituted by a stockholder of a corporation, it
    shall be averred in the complaint that the plaintiff was a stockholder of
    the corporation at the time of the transaction of which such stockholder
    complains or that such stockholder’s stock thereafter devolved upon
    such stockholder by operation of law.51
    the alleged wrongdoing. The stockholder plaintiff’s claim for redress in a derivative action
    is not personal. It is derivative, and exists solely because of the plaintiff’s interest as a
    shareholder.” (citations omitted)).
    Omnicare, 
    809 A.2d at
    1171–72 (quoting Emerson Radio Corp. v. Int’l Jensen Inc., 1996
    
    48 WL 483086
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 1996)).
    49
    Urdan, 
    2019 WL 3891720
    , at *8.
    50
    Bamford v. Penfold, L.P., 
    2020 WL 967942
    , at *24 n.18 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2020).
    51
    8 Del. C. § 327; see also Bamford, 
    2020 WL 967942
    , at *24 n.18 (discussing Delaware’s
    adoption of the contemporaneous ownership requirement and recognizing that it has been
    criticized); Urdan, 
    2019 WL 3891720
    , at *10 (discussing the history, origin, and adoption
    of the contemporaneous ownership requirement in Delaware).
    17
    “Section 327 is clear that stock ownership at the time of challenged conduct is a
    prerequisite to maintaining a derivative action . . . .” 52 As interpreted, the
    requirement was meant “to prevent what has been considered an evil, namely, the
    purchasing of shares in order to maintain a derivative action designed to attack a
    transaction which occurred prior to the purchase of the stock.”53 “This policy has
    been vigorously enforced through recent times.” 54             Rule 23.1 procedurally
    implements Section 327, and requires a derivative plaintiff to allege that she owned
    stock at the time of the complained-of transaction or that her shares devolved upon
    her by operation of law.55 If the derivative plaintiff alleges facts establishing she
    was a stockholder at the time of the challenged transaction, then she has standing to
    pursue a derivative claim on the entity’s behalf.
    B.     Plaintiffs Have Failed To Allege Facts Sufficient To
    Demonstrate Contemporaneous Ownership Under Section 327.
    For Plaintiffs to have standing to assert their derivative claims, they must have
    been SDC stockholders at the time of the challenged conduct. Defendants argue that
    Plaintiffs cannot challenge the Insider Transactions, including the price at which
    they were carried out, because their terms were determined before the IPO through
    52
    Desimone v. Barrows, 
    924 A.2d 908
    , 927 (Del. Ch. 2007).
    53
    Rosenthal v. Burry Biscuit Corp., 
    60 A.2d 106
    , 111 (Del. Ch. 1948); accord Desimone,
    
    924 A.2d at
    926–27; Omnicare, 
    809 A.2d at
    1169–70; MAXXAM, 
    698 A.2d at
    956–57.
    54
    Omnicare, 
    809 A.2d at 1169
    .
    55
    See AbbVie, 
    2015 WL 4464505
    , at *3.
    18
    which Plaintiffs bought their stock and were implemented automatically upon the
    IPO’s closing, as fully disclosed in the Prospectus.56 In response, Plaintiffs contend
    “[t]he Company’s purchase of the LLC Units and Common Stock did not take place
    until September 16, 2019,” and “Plaintiffs became stockholders four days before the
    crucial event giving rise to Plaintiffs’ claims.” 57 To support their respective
    positions, the parties spar over the applicability of two cases: 7547 Partners v.
    Beck58 and Leung v. Schuler,59 which considered the proper moment at which the
    Court should consider whether a plaintiff is a stockholder with derivative standing.
    1.      Beck Provides The General Rule; Leung Provides
    The Exception.
    For standing purposes, the “time of the challenged conduct” is measured by
    the precise action the plaintiff challenges in the complaint. Where the plaintiff
    complains of the transaction’s terms, rather than the technicalities of its actual
    56
    See D.I. 18 at 23–29.
    57
    D.I. 19 at 9.
    58
    
    682 A.2d 160
     (Del. 1996) (applying Section 327 strictly to bar a derivative suit and
    holding that standing should be measured from the moment a transaction’s terms were
    determined, rather than the moment the transaction was complete).
    59
    
    2000 WL 264328
     (Del. Ch. Feb. 29, 2000) (measuring standing from the moment the
    challenged transaction closed in view of the specific facts presented, and holding that a
    stockholder had standing to pursue a derivative suit for purposes of Section 327).
    19
    consummation, the “time of the challenged transaction” is the time when the
    transaction’s terms were established.60
    In Beck, the Delaware Supreme Court held “the timing of the allegedly
    wrongful transaction must be determined by identifying the wrongful acts which [the
    plaintiffs] want remedied and which are susceptible of being remedied in a legal
    tribunal.”61 The Court considered the derivative claims of a plaintiff that bought
    stock in an initial public offering at a price much higher than that paid by corporate
    executives in an accompanying private placement.62 From the complaint, the Court
    determined the plaintiff challenged and sought a remedy for the private placement’s
    terms, rather than the technicality and execution of its consummation; and so the
    60
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at
    162–63; see also In re Beatrice Cos. Inc., Litig., 
    1987 WL 36708
    , at
    *3 (Del. 1987) (TABLE) (holding that, to properly challenge a proposed merger, a plaintiff
    must have been a stockholder at the time its terms are agreed upon, because it is those terms
    which are challenged, not the technicalities of the merger’s consummation); Newkirk v.
    W.J. Rainey, Inc., 
    76 A.2d 121
    , 123 (Del. 1950) (holding that the wrongful act occurred
    when the defendants diverted three corporate opportunities to purchase stock, not when the
    merger was subsequently consummated); Omnicare, 
    809 A.2d at
    1169 n.11 (“A
    stockholder-plaintiff is barred from bringing claims when she purchases stock after the
    board of directors has approved a transaction and the transaction has been publicly
    disclosed.”); Dieter v. Prime Comput., Inc., 
    681 A.2d 1068
    , 1072 (Del. Ch. 1996) (“It is
    not the Merger that constitutes the wrongful act of which Plaintiffs complain; it is the fixing
    of the terms of the transaction.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Brown v. Automated
    Mktg. Sys., Inc.,
    1982 WL 8782
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 22, 1982) (“[I]t is not the merger itself
    that constitutes the wrongful act of which plaintiff complains, but rather it is the fixing of
    the terms of the transaction which will be finalized by the consummation of the merger
    which provides the foundation for the suit.”).
    61
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at 162
     (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
    Newkirk, 76 A.2d at 123).
    62
    See id. at 161.
    20
    challenged transaction took place when the terms of the private placement “were
    established.”63 The Court concluded the plaintiff, who bought stock in the public
    offering, lacked standing to challenge the private placement’s pricing because the
    plaintiff was not a stockholder when its terms were established.64 This Court, as
    well as Delaware’s sister courts, have applied Beck to conclude that “[a]s a general
    matter, when the terms of a transaction are established—not when the transaction is
    carried out—is the proper time for assessing whether a breach of fiduciary duty
    occurred.”65
    Beck itself recognized exceptions to this general rule. When the plaintiff
    challenges “the technicality of [a transaction’s] consummation,” rather than the
    terms of the transaction itself, the Court will measure standing from the time the
    transaction was completed.66 For example, in Maclary v. Pleasant Hills, Inc.,67 the
    63
    Id. at 163.
    64
    Id.
    65
    In re Nine Sys. Corp. S’holders Litig., 
    2013 WL 771897
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2013)
    (citing Beck, 
    682 A.2d at
    162–63); see also Montgomery v. Aetna Plywood, Inc., 
    231 F.3d 399
    , 406–07 (7th Cir. 2000); CarrAmerica Realty Corp. v. Kaidanow, 
    331 F.3d 999
    ,
    1000–01 (D.C. Cir. 2003); In re Facebook, Inc., IPO Sec. & Deriv. Litig., 
    922 F. Supp. 2d 445
    , 463–67 (S.D.N.Y. 2013), aff’d sub nom. In re Facebook, Inc., Initial Pub. Offering
    Deriv. Litig., 
    797 F.3d 148
     (2d Cir. 2015); Umbach v. Carrington Inv. P’rs, 
    2009 WL 413346
    , at *9 (D. Conn. Feb. 18, 2009); AIG Ret. Servs., Inc. v. Altus Fin. S.A., 
    2006 WL 8436486
    , at *3–5 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 8, 2006); O’Neill v. O’Neil, 
    30 N.E.3d 134
     (Mass. App.
    Ct. 2015) (TABLE).
    66
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at 163
     (quoting Beatrice Cos., 
    1987 WL 36708
    , at *3).
    67
    
    109 A.2d 830
     (Del. Ch. 1954).
    21
    plaintiff brought a derivative action seeking, among other things, the cancellation of
    one hundred shares of stock allegedly issued without consideration. The board
    passed the resolution authorizing the issuance of those shares before the plaintiff
    inherited the stock. The issuance itself, which the plaintiffs alleged also constituted
    wrongdoing, occurred after the plaintiffs inherited their shares (and three years after
    the resolution). The Maclary Court held that, based on the allegedly unlawful and
    delayed issuance, the challenged transaction should not be deemed complete until
    the stock certificates were issued:
    [T]here is nothing in the policy behind [Section 327] which would call
    for a construction favoring its application in situations where
    inexcusable inaction on the part of corporate personnel might make it
    less likely that wrongdoing would be discovered. It would seem more
    likely that a wrongful issuance of stock would be discovered if the
    issuance thereof and the stockholdings appeared of record. To consider
    this transaction as having been completed prior to the issuance of the
    certificates would sanction an application of the statute not required by
    its language and not fairly required to effectuate its purpose. On the
    contrary, it would place a premium on corporate conduct which might
    run counter to desirable standards.68
    Later, in Beck, the Delaware Supreme Court echoed the trial court’s conclusion that
    Maclary “was a special case in which a rule was crafted to meet unusual
    circumstances.”69
    68
    
    Id. at 833
    .
    69
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at 162
    .
    22
    Leung v. Schuler presented this Court with the occasion to apply Maclary’s
    narrow exception.70 There, the plaintiff brought derivative claims based on a stock-
    for-stock and note-for-note merger, issued at an allegedly below-market price. That
    merger was accompanied by an insider sale that was not disclosed to stockholders
    until after their shares and notes had been automatically converted and diluted.
    The Leung plaintiff was originally a stockholder and noteholder of the target
    company, which had been experiencing significant financial difficulty and was on
    the verge of bankruptcy. The target was acquired through a merger. In connection
    with the merger, the plaintiff was informed that there was a substantial likelihood
    that the target’s stockholders would receive no consideration in the merger, and that
    its noteholders would likely only receive convertible subordinated notes in exchange
    for their existing notes.      The target stockholders approved the merger.        As
    consideration, the plaintiff received exchange notes that entitled him, at any time
    within thirty days after closing, to convert his debt into the post-merger company’s
    common stock. If he did not make any election regarding conversion, then half of
    the principal amount of his exchange notes would automatically be converted into
    common stock. The plaintiff made no election, so half of the face amount of his
    exchange notes was automatically converted.
    70
    
    2000 WL 264328
     (Del. Ch. Feb. 29, 2000).
    23
    Unbeknownst to the plaintiff at the time he voted to approve the merger and
    allowed his exchange notes to convert, the acquirer’s board had approved insider
    stock issuances that would ultimately constitute 26.5% of the acquirer’s equity. The
    initial issuance was approved one month before the merger was consummated, and
    at a second meeting held on the day the target stockholders approved the merger, the
    acquirer’s board increased the number of shares to be issued to insiders. The insider
    issuance closed three months after the merger. But the plaintiff did not learn of it
    until it was disclosed for the first time nearly seven months after its initial
    authorization, in a prospectus issued in connection with the acquirer’s initial public
    offering. In his complaint, the plaintiff alleged that had he known of the dilutive
    issuances, he would have elected not to convert any of his exchange notes into
    acquirer shares. As the Court observed, the thrust of the plaintiff’s claims was that
    the acquirer’s board breached their duties by completing the insider issuance, which
    it failed to disclose to the then-target stockholders and noteholders.71
    The defendants argued that the derivative claims should be dismissed for lack
    of standing because the insider issuance concluded when the acquirer’s directors
    authorized it, and the plaintiff did not become a stockholder until two months after.72
    The plaintiff pressed that the complained-of insider issuance was not completed until
    71
    Id. at *3, *7–8.
    72
    Id. at *7.
    24
    almost two months after he became a stockholder.73 The Court agreed with the
    plaintiff, concluding that Maclary applied. 74         The Court determined that the
    challenged stock issuance was independently actionable and that standing should be
    assessed when it was actually “completed,” not when its terms were set.75 While the
    acquirer’s directors may have authorized the insider issuance before the merger
    closed, no claim could or did arise (because the transaction was not complete) until
    the shares were actually issued, months after closing.76 By then, the plaintiff was a
    stockholder and therefore had standing to challenge that issuance.77
    In reaching this conclusion, the Leung Court distinguished Beck:
    The claim advanced in Beck is different from the claims asserted here
    and in Maclary. In Beck, the alleged wrong was the board’s decision
    to fix a below-market price for the stock being offered in the IPO. Once
    that price was fixed, the transaction was completed, and there was
    nothing further for the board to do. But, here (as in Maclary), the
    alleged wrong is the issuance of the stock to the Insiders in April and
    May 1996, rather than its authorization by the board two months
    before.78
    73
    Id.
    74
    Id. at *8.
    75
    Id.
    76
    Id.
    77
    Id.
    78
    Id. (emphasis added).
    25
    Most recently, this Court echoed Maclary’s exception in In re Nine Systems
    Corp. Shareholders Litigation. 79 The defendants argued the plaintiffs lacked
    standing to assert derivative dilution claims because “the decisions that resulted in
    the dilution were made before they were owed fiduciary duties.” 80 The Court
    disagreed with the defendants. Contrasting Beck, the Court pointed out that “this is
    not a matter where events occurring after that date were simply a matter of
    implementing a transaction with previously fixed terms.” 81 The board formally
    reviewed and approved the dilutive transaction’s terms before the plaintiffs became
    stockholders, but modified those terms after the plaintiffs became stockholders.82
    That the board did so informally did not matter.83 Although the board established
    the “path” to the dilutive recapitalization before the plaintiffs acquired stock,
    “arguably significant terms evidently were not established” until thereafter.84 The
    Court concluded the plaintiffs had standing to challenge the issuance.85
    In view of Beck’s cabining of Maclary to its facts, I consider Leung through
    the same lens: as an exception to Beck’s general rule, to be applied sparingly when
    79
    
    2013 WL 771897
     (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2013).
    80
    Id. at *7.
    81
    Id.
    82
    Id. at *3–5, *7
    83
    Id. at *7.
    84
    Id.
    85
    Id.
    26
    a plaintiff specifically challenges the mechanics of delayed implementation of a
    transaction that the board both failed to disclose before the plaintiff became a
    stockholder, and modified after the plaintiff became a stockholder. The Court
    measures standing from the board’s decision to approve a transaction where the
    board’s post-decision actions “were simply a matter of implementing a transaction
    with previously fixed terms.”86 Where the plaintiff acquired stock after “th[e] price
    was fixed, the transaction was completed, and there was nothing further for the board
    to do,”87 the plaintiff lacks standing to bring a derivative claim.
    2.       This Case Falls Squarely Under Beck And Does Not
    Trigger Maclary and Leung.
    Plaintiffs press that they have standing to challenge the Insider Transactions
    under Leung and that Beck is inapposite.88 Plaintiffs argue that, as in Leung, “the
    wrongful act forming the basis of the derivative claim took place when the [Insider
    Transactions] w[ere] completed, after Plaintiffs became stockholders,” as “no claim
    could have arisen until the Company’s intent was manifested despite changed
    circumstances,” namely the continuously declining stock price and the allegedly
    undisclosed regulatory challenges that were publicly aired only after the IPO
    86
    Id.
    87
    Leung, 
    2000 WL 264328
    , at *8; see also Beck, 
    682 A.2d at
    162–63.
    88
    See D.I. 19 at 12–13.
    27
    closed.89 In support of their preferred timing, and despite carrying the burden to
    establish standing, Plaintiffs posit that “Defendants have not pointed to any pre-
    existing agreement requiring the Company to purchase the LLC Units and Common
    Stock for $21.85, or requiring the [Board] to proceed with the sale of the Units or
    Common Stock at that price on September 16, 2019.” 90 Rather, the Prospectus
    disclosed only the Company’s “intent” to consummate the Insider Transactions in
    connection with the IPO, which was “subject to change based on various important
    factors.”91 Plaintiffs further argue that “the Purchase could not possibly have been
    effectuated until after the IPO had closed,” because “SDC had not received the IPO
    proceeds until the IPO closed, and thus did not possess the funds necessary to
    effectuate the purchase of the LLC Units and Common Stock prior to that time.”92
    The facts of this case bear no resemblance to Leung, Maclary, or
    Nine Systems, “special case[s] in which a rule was crafted to meet unusual
    circumstances.”93 Plaintiffs’ primary issue is that the Board (1) fixed the Insider
    Transactions’ price together with the IPO, knowing both prices were inflated; and
    (2) consummated the Insider Transactions at those prices, even as the market
    89
    Id. at 13.
    90
    Id. at 9–10.
    91
    Id. at 11–12 (citing and quoting Prospectus at 13, 16, 58, 62–65, 152–53).
    92
    Id. at 9.
    93
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at 162
    .
    28
    reflected the price’s unfairness and responded to overdue disclosures of regulatory
    issues.      The Complaint alleges the Board’s decision to pursue the Insider
    Transactions was set before the IPO, as the “[IPO]’s premium price allowed
    Defendants to effectuate the use of the [IPO]’s proceeds” to complete the anticipated
    Insider Transactions.94
    As in Beck, Plaintiffs allege that SDC’s Board knew, during the IPO pricing
    negotiations, that the stock was “never worth the $21.85 per share that the Company
    paid” in the Insider Transactions when it set that price before the IPO.95 The Board
    decided before launching the IPO to use the outsized IPO proceeds to repurchase
    insider equity, knowing the price was excessive. Unlike Maclary, Leung, and
    Nine Systems, Plaintiffs do not allege the Board made a conscious decision, modified
    any terms, or delayed in carrying out their disclosed plans to complete the Insider
    Transactions after the IPO closed and the market price dropped. Plaintiffs do not
    allege, for example, that the Board learned the price was too high only upon the
    market’s unfavorable response to the IPO.96 Rather, the Complaint alleges the Board
    implemented its pre-IPO plan to repurchase pre-IPO investors’ equity at the inflated
    IPO price, which the Prospectus fully disclosed would have a dilutive and negative
    94
    Compl. ¶ 54.
    95
    Id. ¶ 53 (emphasis in original).
    96
    See id. ¶¶ 5, 53, 55.
    29
    impact on the public stockholders. 97 Plaintiffs are “challenging the terms of the
    [Insider Transactions] rather than the technicality of [their] consummation.”98
    Plaintiffs attempt to hang their claim on the mechanics of the post-IPO
    consummation by alleging the Board “caus[ed]” the Company to pursue the Insider
    Transactions at the inflated IPO price after the IPO closed and the stock price
    continued to drop.99 Here, the verb “caused” does no work. The Complaint does
    not distinguish “causing” the Insider Transactions,100 as a discretionary intentional
    decision, from “caus[ing]” other pre-close steps Plaintiffs describe as “mandatory,”
    like executing the LLC Agreement.101 The Complaint’s allegations do not give rise
    97
    See Beck, 
    682 A.2d at
    162–63; Nine Sys., 
    2013 WL 771897
    , at *7; Montgomery, 
    231 F.3d at
    406–07; CarrAmerica Realty, 331 F.3d at 1000–01; Facebook, 922 F. Supp. 2d at
    463–67; Umbach, 
    2009 WL 413346
    , at *9; AIG Ret. Servs., 
    2006 WL 8436486
    , at *3–5;
    O’Neill, 
    30 N.E.3d 134
    .
    98
    Beck, 
    682 A.2d at 163
     (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Beatrice Cos., 
    1987 WL 36708
    , at *3).
    99
    Compl. ¶ 9 (“Members of the Board breached their fiduciary duties by withholding
    material adverse information from the stockholders and by causing the Company to
    purchase Units and Common Stock from corporate insiders at a price of $21.85, a grossly
    inflated price, representing amounts well in excess of the market price and intrinsic value
    of the Units and Common Stock acquired.”); see D.I. 19 at 8 (“Despite the true value of
    Common Stock, and thus LLC Units, being closer to $8.74, Defendants caused the
    Company to purchase the LLC Units and Common Stock in the Insider Transaction for
    $21.85, diverting significant amounts of the Company’s funds to insiders in exchange for
    patently insufficient consideration.”).
    100
    Compl. ¶ 9.
    101
    Id. ¶ 36 (“Also in connection with the IPO, SDC caused SDC Financial to amend and
    restate its operating agreement . . . .” (emphasis added)); id. ¶ 42 (describing the execution
    of the LLC Agreement as “mandatory”).
    30
    to the reasonable inference that the Board “caused” the Insider Transactions after the
    IPO closed by doing anything other than implementing its set and disclosed plan.
    Plaintiffs point out that the Prospectus describes the Insider Transactions in
    terms of what the Board “intends” to do. 102 Plaintiffs rely on the Prospectus’s
    explicit recognition that the use of “intends” or similar phrases in its disclosures
    should indicate a forward-looking statement that is subject to change. But the
    Prospectus’s necessary use of “intends” to describe future transactions that are
    dependent on raising capital does not change the fact that the pricing of those
    transactions—which is Plaintiffs’ principal complaint—was set.             The Insider
    Transactions were necessarily structured and disclosed in forward-looking terms, as
    the Company could not have completed them if the IPO flopped, and could not
    complete them until the Company received its proceeds.103
    As evidenced by the disclosures, the Board “must have approved or
    acquiesced in the pricing” before Plaintiffs purchased stock in the IPO.104 That price
    102
    See D.I. 19 at 10–12.
    103
    In that sense, Plaintiffs correctly observe that “the Purchase could not possibly have
    been effectuated until after the IPO had closed,” because “SDC had not received the IPO
    proceeds until the IPO closed, and thus did not possess the funds necessary to effectuate
    the purchase of the LLC Units and Common Stock prior to that time.” Id. at 9.
    104
    7547 P’rs v. Beck (Beck I), 
    1995 WL 106490
    , at *2–3 (Del. Ch. Feb. 24, 1995), aff’d,
    
    682 A.2d 160
     (Del. 1996); see also Montgomery, 
    231 F.3d at
    406–07 (“Here, the class
    complains only about one of the terms of the restructuring plan—the price at which the
    board of directors sold control of Aetna Plywood—a term that was announced (and
    therefore established) one month prior to final approval of the parties’ settlement
    agreement. Thus, the challenged transaction took place before the class came into actual
    31
    was baked into the IPO, and Plaintiffs were aware of it before buying SDC stock.
    Thus, Plaintiffs allege that the events surrounding the IPO and Insider Transactions
    unfolded exactly as disclosed in the Prospectus and thereafter: the IPO raised
    sufficient proceeds, and the Company “immediately” used those proceeds to
    effectuate the Insider Transactions at the IPO price on the day the IPO closed.105
    To challenge the Insider Transactions, Plaintiffs must establish that they were
    SDC stockholders when the Board established the Insider Transactions’ terms—
    before the IPO. Plaintiffs cannot, as they purchased their stock in the IPO. And they
    have cited no authority in support of a theory of how the wrong alleged in the
    Complaint could have occurred when they were stockholders.106 “Such a theory
    would have the curious result of permitting a party to complain in the name of the
    corporation about the transaction in which that party purchased stock from the
    corporation.” 107       In view of the Prospectus’s thorough disclosures about the
    Company’s plans to complete the Insider Transactions at the IPO price, “it would
    seem to follow that plaintiff would be barred from suing by reason of its knowledge
    possession of the Aetna Plywood stock promised to it.” (applying Beck, 
    682 A.2d at
    162–
    63)).
    105
    Compl. ¶ 5; see also 
    id.
     ¶¶ 50–52.
    106
    See Beck I, 
    1995 WL 106490
    , at *2 (citing Folk on the Delaware General Corporation
    Law § 327.3.1 (1992) (“Generally, the determinative issue is when the specific acts of
    alleged wrongdoing occurred, and not when their effect is felt.”)).
    107
    Id.
    32
    of the alleged wrong when it purchased the stock.”108 This does not mean Plaintiffs
    are without recourse; it simply means that Plaintiffs do not have the authority to
    pursue these derivative claims on SDC’s behalf.109
    III.    CONCLUSION
    The Motion is GRANTED and the Complaint is DISMISSED. Because I
    grant the Motion for lack of standing, it is not necessary to reach Defendants’ other
    arguments in support of dismissal.110
    108
    Id. at *3.
    109
    See id. at *2 (“A party who purchases stock in an initial public offering may of course
    sue individually. A claim of inadequate disclosure is often made when the market price
    drops below the offering price.”).
    110
    E.g., Bonime v. Biaggini, 
    1984 WL 19830
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 7, 1984) (“Because I
    grant the defendants’ motion to dismiss on the ground of lack of standing, it is not necessary
    to reach the defendants’ other arguments in support of their motion to dismiss.”), aff’d, 
    505 A.2d 451
     (Del. 1985); Beck I, 
    1995 WL 106490
    , at *3 (“[H]aving concluded that the
    complaint does not adequately allege standing as a stockholder at the time of the transaction
    of which plaintiff complains, I need not decide defendants’ alternative ground for
    dismissal.”). Because Plaintiffs lack standing to pursue a predicate derivative claim for
    breach of fiduciary duty, they also lack standing to pursue their derivative aiding and
    abetting claim. Likewise, they lack standing to pursue their derivative unjust enrichment
    claim, which invokes the same fundamental challenge to the Insider Transactions by
    alleging the Defendants were “unjustly enriched, at the expense of and to the detriment of
    SDC, as a result of selling Common Stock and redeeming LLC Units for materially more
    than those Common Stock and LLC Units were worth.” Compl. ¶ 99.
    33