Jeff Gower v. Trux, Inc. ( 2022 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    JEFFREY GOWER,                          )
    )
    Plaintiff,            )
    )
    v.                    ) C.A. No. 2020-0996-PAF
    )
    TRUX, INC., VIKING VENTURE              )
    PARTNERS, LLC, MICHAEL                  )
    SACCONE, SR., MICHAEL                   )
    SACCONE, JR., MICHAEL                   )
    WHOULEY, and RICHARD                    )
    SACCONE,                                )
    )
    Defendants.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: November 8, 2021
    Date Decided: February 23, 2022
    Brandon W. McCune, BLANK ROME LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Patrick J.
    Hannon, HARTLEY MICHON ROBB HANNON, LLP, Boston, Massachusetts;
    Attorneys for Plaintiff Jeffrey Gower.
    Richard M. Beck, Sean M. Brennecke, KLEHR HARRISON HARVEY
    BRANZBURG LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Lawrence P. Murray, Gregory
    Paonessa, BURNS & LEVINSON LLP, Boston, Massachusetts; Attorneys for
    Defendant Trux, Inc.
    Kevin J. Mangan, WOMBLE BOND DICKINSON (US) LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Hayden J. Silver, III, WOMBLE BOND DICKINSON (US) LLP,
    Raleigh, North Carolina; Attorneys for Defendant Viking Venture Partners, LLC.
    S. Michael Sirkin, R. Garrett Rice, ROSS ARONSTAM & MORITZ LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Scott C. Ford MINTZ, LEVIN, COHN, FERRIS,
    GLOVSKY & POPEO, P.C., Boston, Massachusetts; Attorneys for Defendants
    Michael Saccone, Sr., Michael Saccone, Jr., and Michael Whouley.
    Samuel T. Hirzel, Elizabeth A. DeFelice, HEYMAN ENERIO GATTUSO &
    HIRZEL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Kevin T. Peters, Michael D. Brier, GESMER
    UPDEGROVE LLP, Boston, Massachusetts; Attorneys for Defendant and
    Counterclaim Plaintiff Richard Saccone.
    FIORAVANTI, Vice Chancellor
    This action concerns alleged breaches of an agreement among stockholders of
    Trux, Inc. (“Trux” or the “Company”). The agreement, defined below as the ROFR
    Agreement, prescribes a detailed process governing any proposed transfer of shares
    and provides rights of first refusal and co-sale rights. The plaintiff, Jeff Gower,
    alleges that three other Trux stockholders sold their shares to a fourth stockholder,
    Viking Venture Partners, LLC (“Viking”), in violation of the ROFR Agreement.
    His headline claim alleges the share sales were effected without providing Gower
    and other stockholders the requisite notice as required by the ROFR Agreement.
    Gower asserts claims for breach of contract and the implied covenant of good faith
    and fair dealing. Gower also seeks a declaratory judgment that the resulting
    breaches render the share transfers null and void under the express terms of the
    ROFR Agreement. All of the defendants, except one, have moved to dismiss the
    complaint in its entirety. This opinion denies the motions to dismiss the breach of
    contract and declaratory judgment claims, but grants the motions to dismiss the
    implied covenant claim.
    I.        BACKGROUND
    Unless otherwise specified, the facts recited in this Memorandum Opinion
    are drawn from the Amended Verified Complaint and documents integral thereto.1
    A.      The Parties
    Trux is a privately held Delaware corporation based in Waltham,
    Massachusetts.2 It is a technology company that “facilitates trucking services in the
    construction industry.” 3 The other parties are or were stockholders of Trux at the
    times relevant to the claims in this case.
    Gower served as Trux’s Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) from January 2018
    until he was terminated in January 2020.4 According to the Company, Gower owned
    809,994 shares at the time of the share transfers. 5
    Defendants Michael Saccone, Sr., 6 Michael Saccone, Jr., and Michael
    Whouley owned approximately 19%, 7.5%, and 6.3%, respectively, of Trux’s stock
    1
    Exhibits attached to the Amended Verified Complaint (“Compl.”) will be cited as “Ex.”
    2
    Compl. ¶ 9.
    3
    Id. ¶ 16.
    4
    Id. ¶¶ 17, 27.
    5
    Ex. K.
    6
    Michasel Saccone Sr. was also a member of Trux’s board of directors (the “Board”).
    Compl. ¶ 11.
    2
    immediately prior to selling it to Viking. 7 Defendant Richard Saccone,8 who
    intervened as a defendant and has not moved to dismiss, owned approximately
    30.3% of Trux’s outstanding stock prior to selling his shares to Viking. 9
    Viking is a Delaware limited liability company and is based in Birmingham,
    Alabama. 10 Viking is a wholly owned subsidiary of Vulcan Materials Company,
    LLC, one of Trux’s largest customers. 11 Viking owned approximately 22.2% of
    Trux’s stock at the time of the events at issue.12
    Michael Sr., Michael Jr., Richard, and Whouley are referred to as the “Selling
    Stockholders.” Michael Sr., Michael Jr., and Whouley are referred to as the
    “Moving Sellers” and, together with Viking, the “Moving Defendants.” The Moving
    Defendants, Trux, and Richard are referred to as the “Defendants.”
    B.    The Right of First Refusal and Co-Sale Agreement
    The claims in this case all arise from a contract to which all of the litigants
    here are parties. That agreement is the Trux, Inc. Right of Refusal and Co-Sale
    7
    Compl. ¶¶ 11–13. The court calculates these figures to be 18.7%, 7.4%, and 6.2%. See
    Ex. A, Scheds. A–B.
    8
    For ease of reference, this Memorandum Opinion refers to Michael Saccone, Sr. as
    “Michael Sr.,” Michael Saccone, Jr. as “Michael Jr.,” and Richard Saccone as “Richard.”
    No disrespect or familiarity is intended.
    9
    See Ex. A (Scheds. A–B).
    10
    Compl. ¶ 10.
    11
    Id.
    12
    See Ex. A (Scheds. A–B).
    3
    Agreement (the aforementioned “ROFR Agreement”), dated as of April 6, 2018.13
    The ROFR Agreement has two categories of signatories—“Investors”14 and
    “Stockholders.”15      Viking and three non-parties to this case are identified as
    Investors.16 Gower and the Selling Stockholders are identified as being among the
    Stockholders.17 The ROFR Agreement also confers rights upon Gower, Viking, and
    the Selling Stockholders as “Closing Stockholders”—the “holders of Common
    Stock as of the closing of the transactions” on April 6, 2018, when a separate share
    purchase agreement between Trux, Viking, and the other Investors became
    effective.18
    13
    Ex. A.
    14
    Id. § 1.11 (defining “Investors” as “the persons named on Schedule A” and any assignees
    pursuant to the terms of the ROFR Agreement).
    15
    Id. (Sched. B) (identifying the “Stockholders” as of April 6, 2018); id. § 1.23 (defining
    a “Stockholder” as “any holder of Capital Stock of the Company, each person to whom the
    rights of a Stockholder are assigned pursuant to Subsection 3.1, each person who hereafter
    becomes a signatory to this Agreement pursuant to Subsection 6.9 or 6.16 and any one of
    them, as the context may require”).
    16
    Id. (Sched. A).
    17
    Id. (Sched. B).
    18
    See id. § 1.4 (defining “Closing Stockholders” as “the holders of Common Stock as of
    the closing of the transactions described in the Purchase Agreements”); id. (Recitals B–C)
    (defining the “Purchase Agreement” and identifying its effective date as the “even date
    herewith”); id. (Scheds. A–B) (identifying Gower, Viking, and the Selling Stockholders as
    holding shares as of April 6, 2018).
    4
    1.     The Process for Transferring Shares of Trux Stock
    The ROFR Agreement prescribes a process that a Stockholder must follow to
    sell or transfer its shares of Trux stock (the “Sales Process”). As summarized here
    and detailed below, in the event a Stockholder wishes to sell or transfer its shares to
    a third party, the Stockholder must provide 60 days’ notice of the transaction and its
    material terms to the Company and all Closing Stockholders. Delivery of the notice
    triggers a waterfall of rights of refusal and corresponding notice obligations. Viking
    has the highest priority right of first refusal (the “Special ROFR”), subject to certain
    limitations. The Investors have the second-highest priority right of refusal (“the
    Right of First Refusal”), and the Closing Stockholders have the third-highest priority
    right of refusal (the “Secondary Refusal Right”). If there are shares remaining after
    each Stockholder has exercised (or failed to exercise) its respective right of refusal,
    the Company may exercise a right to repurchase any of the offered shares (the
    “Tertiary Refusal Right”). If the Company declines to exercise that right, the
    Stockholders that have already exercised their right of refusal may purchase any
    remaining outstanding shares on offer. If any shares remain on offer once this
    process is complete, each Stockholder has a right to participate on a pro rata basis in
    the sale of shares to the third party, and the third party may not purchase any offered
    shares unless it negotiates to purchase the requisite pro rata share from each of the
    participating Stockholders.
    5
    a.    The Notice Requirement
    In the event of a “Proposed Transfer”—defined to include any “assignment,
    sale, offer to sell” and “transfer” of Trux shares by any Stockholder19—Section
    2.1(b) of the ROFR Agreement provides:
    Each Stockholder proposing to make [the] Proposed Transfer must
    deliver a Proposed Transfer Notice to the Company, [Viking], each
    Investor other than [Viking] and each Closing Stockholder not later
    than sixty (60) days prior to the consummation of such Proposed
    Transfer. 20
    The Proposed Transfer Notice “shall contain the material terms and conditions
    (including price and form of consideration) of the Proposed Transfer, the identity of
    the Prospective Transferee and the intended date of the Proposed Transfer.”21
    2.2(b) of the ROFR Agreement provides:
    Each Stockholder proposing to make a Proposed Transfer must deliver
    a Proposed Transfer Notice to the Company and each Investor not later
    than sixty (60) days prior to the consummation of such Proposed
    Transfer. 22
    The content of the Proposed Transfer Notice required by Section 2.2(b) is the same
    as that required by Section 2.1(b): “Such Proposed Transfer Notice shall contain the
    material terms and conditions (including price and form of consideration) of the
    19
    Ex. A § 1.12.
    20
    Id. § 2.1(b).
    21
    Id. § 2.1(b).
    22
    Id. § 2.2(b).
    6
    Proposed Transfer, the identity of the Prospective Transferee and the intended date
    of the Proposed Transfer.”23
    b.    Viking’s Special ROFR
    Delivery of the Proposed Transfer Notice triggers the waterfall of rights of
    refusal (“Rights of Refusal”), starting with Viking’s Special ROFR. Upon receipt
    of the Proposed Transfer Notice, Viking has 15 days to exercise the Special ROFR.24
    To exercise that right, Viking must “deliver written notice to the selling Stockholder,
    the Company, each Investor other than the Viking Investor and each Closing
    Stockholder . . . specifying the number of shares of Transfer Stock to be
    purchased.”25 The number of shares that Viking may purchase may not cause its
    ownership of Trux stock to exceed 49% on a fully diluted basis.26
    c.    The Investors’ Right of First Refusal
    Following delivery of the Proposed Transfer Notice, Investors other than
    Viking likewise have 15 days to exercise their Right of First Refusal to purchase “all
    or any portion of” the Proposed Transfer shares subject to the Proposed Transfer
    Notice available for purchase after the exercise of any higher-priority Rights of
    23
    Id.
    24
    Id.
    25
    Id.
    26
    Id. § 2.1(a).
    7
    Refusal (such shares, the “Remaining Transfer Stock”). 27 If “any Investor does not
    provide an Investor Notice exercising its . . . Right of First Refusal with respect to .
    . . its full pro rata portion of Remaining Transfer Stock subject to a Proposed
    Transfer, such Investor must deliver a Secondary Notice to the selling Stockholder,
    the Company and each Closing Stockholder” within that same 15-day time frame.28
    d.    The Closing Stockholders’ Secondary Refusal Right
    Each Closing Stockholder has 30 days from delivery of the Proposed Transfer
    Notice to provide notice to the Company and the selling Stockholder that it wishes
    to exercise its Secondary Refusal Right to purchase any Remaining Transfer Stock.29
    If “any Closing Stockholder does not provide [notice] exercising its . . . Secondary
    Refusal Right . . . such Closing Stockholder must deliver a Tertiary Notice to the
    selling Stockholder and to the Company” within that 30-day timeframe.30
    e.    Rights of Refusal Regarding Any Unsubscribed Stock
    The Company possesses a Tertiary Refusal Right to repurchase “all or any
    portion of the Remaining Transfer Stock not purchased pursuant to Viking’s Special
    ROFR, the Investors’ Right of First Refusal or the Closing Stockholders’ Secondary
    27
    Id. § 2.2(b).
    28
    Id. § 2.2(c).
    29
    Id.
    30
    Id. § 2.2(d).
    8
    Refusal Right.” 31 To exercise that right, the Company must provide notice to the
    selling Stockholder, the Investors, and the Closing Stockholders within ten days after
    the Closing Stockholders’ deadline for delivering the Tertiary Notice—that is, 40
    days after delivery of the Proposed Transfer Notice.32
    In the event any shares of the Remaining Transfer Stock remain
    undersubscribed after the Company exercises its Tertiary Refusal Right, the
    Company must then deliver notice to any Stockholders that have exercised their
    Rights of Refusal (the “Exercising Rightsholders”) after an additional five days.33
    The Exercising Rightsholders then have 15 days to “purchase all or any part of the
    balance of any such remaining unsubscribed shares of Remaining Transfer Stock on
    the terms and conditions set forth in the Proposed Transfer Notice.” 34
    f.    The Co-Sale Process
    If any shares subject to the Proposed Transfer Notice are not purchased
    pursuant to the process outlined above and are “thereafter . . . to be sold” to a third
    party (a “Prospective Transferee”), the ROFR Agreement gives each Investor and
    Closing Stockholder the right to participate in the proposed sale of shares to the
    31
    Id.
    32
    Id.
    33
    Id. ç 2.2(e).
    34
    Id.
    9
    Prospective Transferee on a pro rata basis (the “Right of Co-Sale”).35 Section 2.3
    governs the process for exercising this Right of Co-Sale (the “Co-Sale Process”).
    Section 2.3(a) requires each Investor or Closing Stockholder that wishes to exercise
    its Right of Co-Sale (such Stockholder, a “Participating Rightholder”) to give the
    selling Stockholder written notice “to that effect within fifteen (15) days after the
    deadline for delivery of the Tertiary Notice”—that is, 55 days after delivery of the
    Proposed Transfer Notice.36
    The “terms and conditions of any Proposed Transfer” pursuant to the exercise
    of the Right of Co-Sale “will be memorialized in, and governed by” a share purchase
    agreement with “customary terms and provisions for such a transaction” (such
    agreement, a “Purchase and Sale Agreement”).37 If the Prospective Transferee
    refuses to purchase shares from any Participating Rightholder that has exercised its
    Co-Sale Right “or upon the failure to negotiate in good faith the Purchase and Sale
    Agreement satisfactory to the Participating Rightholders,” no other Stockholder may
    sell its shares to the Prospective Transferee unless “simultaneously with such sale,
    such Stockholder purchases all securities subject to the Right of Co-Sale from such
    Participating Rightholder or Rightholders on the same terms and conditions
    35
    Id. § 2.3(a).
    36
    Id.
    37
    Id. § 2.3(c).
    10
    (including the proposed purchase price) as set forth in the Proposed Transfer
    Notice.”38
    2.   Other Pertinent Provisions in the ROFR Agreement
    Among other remedies, the ROFR Agreement provides that “[a]ny Proposed
    Transfer not made in compliance with the requirements of this Agreement shall be
    null and void ab initio, shall not be recorded on the books of the Company or its
    transfer agent and shall not be recognized by the Company.” 39 Any non-breaching
    party is “entitled to seek protective orders, injunctive relief and other remedies
    available at law or in equity (including, without limitation, seeking specific
    performance or the rescission of purchases, sales and other transfers of Transfer
    Stock not made in strict compliance with this Agreement).”40 If any Stockholder
    “purports to sell any Transfer Stock” in violation of the Right of Co-Sale of any
    Participating Rightholder, the Participating Rightholder may “require such
    Stockholder to purchase from such Participating Rightholder the type and number
    of shares of Capital Stock that such Participating Rightholder would have been
    entitled to sell to the Prospective Transferee had the Prohibited Transfer been
    effected in compliance” with the Co-Sale Process.41
    38
    Id. § 2.3(e).
    39
    Id. § 2.4(a).
    40
    Id.
    41
    Id. § 2.4(c).
    11
    The ROFR Agreement may be “amended, modified or terminated . . . and the
    observance of any term thereof may be waived (either generally or in a particular
    instance and either retroactively or prospectively) only by a written instrument”
    executed by the Company, Viking, and Stockholders holding a majority of Company
    stock. 42 Any “amendment, modification, termination or waiver” will be binding
    “upon the Company, the Investors, the Stockholders” and any of their assignees or
    successors in interest. 43 “The Company shall give prompt written notice of any
    amendment, modification or termination hereof or waiver hereunder to any party
    hereto that did not consent in writing to such amendment, modification, termination
    or waiver.”44
    Separately, a non-breaching party may provide a “waiver, permit, consent or
    approval of any kind or character” (a “Waiver”) to a breaching party, but the Waiver
    “must be in writing.”45 Waiver “of any single breach or default” shall not operate
    as “a waiver of any other breach or default theretofore or thereafter occurring.”46
    42
    Id. § 6.8.
    43
    Id.
    44
    Id.
    45
    Id. § 6.7.
    46
    Id.
    12
    C.     The Transactions at Issue and Gower’s Objections
    In February 2020, Trux’s Board terminated Gower as Trux’s CEO—the
    result, Gower alleges, of a “coordinated campaign to push [him] out”47 by certain
    other stockholders that disagreed with his decision to seek venture capital funding
    and instead wanted a quick sale of the Company.48 Gower alleges that he owned
    approximately 6.1% of Trux stock but that a portion of that equity was subject to
    vesting.49 Trux asserted that Gower was terminated “for cause,” which “result[ed]
    in a purported redemption of Gower’s unvested equity for an amount far less than
    fair market value.” 50 Gower maintains that he contested and intended to mount a
    legal challenge to his termination and the redemption of his unvested equity.51
    On March 13, 2020, Gower received an email from Bart Ronan, his successor
    as Trux’s CEO, informing Gower as a Trux Stockholder that the Board had approved
    an offer by Viking to acquire all the outstanding shares of Trux.52 The email
    included a form of a proposed written consent to be executed by Stockholders
    pursuant to Section 228 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “Written
    47
    Compl. ¶ 2.
    48
    Id. ¶¶ 21–26.
    49
    Id. ¶ 18.
    50
    Id. ¶ 27.
    51
    Id. ¶ 28.
    52
    Id. ¶ 30; see Ex. B.
    13
    Consent”). 53 The email requested that Gower sign and return a copy of the signature
    page of the Written Consent by the close of business on March 17, 2020.54 Among
    other recitals, the Written Consent acknowledges:
    Pursuant to Section 2.2 of the Right of First Refusal and Co-Sale
    Agreement . . . if any Stockholder (the “Transferring Stockholder”)
    proposes to transfer any of its shares of capital stock of the Company,
    such Transferring Stockholder shall first give notice and offer such
    shares of capital stock of the Company to the Investors and Closing
    Stockholders . . . . 55
    The Written Consent defines this right as the “Right of First Refusal.”56 The Written
    Consent provides that the “Stockholders hereby ratify, waive and forever release all
    of the Stockholders’ rights to the Right of First Refusal in connection with the
    Transaction.”57 Gower’s counsel informed Trux’s counsel that Gower would not be
    executing the Written Consent and asked to review a definitive share purchase
    agreement “so that any issues relating to [Gower’s] potential claims can be dealt
    with in an appropriate and timely fashion.” 58
    On April 1, 2020, Gower received another email from Ronan informing him
    as a Trux Stockholder that “Viking has entered into agreements to acquire shares of
    53
    Ex. B.
    54
    Id.
    55
    Id.
    56
    Id.
    57
    Id.
    58
    Compl. ¶ 33; Ex. C.
    14
    the Company’s capital stock” with each of the Moving Sellers (such transactions,
    together, the “Share Sales”).59 The email stated that the Moving Sellers’ shares,
    together with Viking’s existing stake, “represent a majority of the Company’s issued
    and outstanding shares of capital stock.”60 The email gave Gower 15 days—until
    April 16, 2020—to return a signed copy of an enclosed Purchase and Sale
    Agreement (the “Proposed PSA”) to sell 809,994 shares to Viking pursuant to
    Section 2.3 of the ROFR Agreement. 61 The Proposed PSA gave Gower a choice as
    to the form of consideration.62 Under “Option A,” Gower would receive a portion
    of the consideration in a cash payment at closing and the rest in the form of a
    promissory note maturing on July 1, 2021.63 As described in Ronan’s April 1 email,
    under Option A Gower would receive “$1.18 per share, with $0.52 per share paid at
    the closing of such transaction (the ‘Closing’) and $0.66 per share payable no later
    than July 1, 2021.”64     Under “Option B,” Gower would receive the entire
    consideration up front in the form of a cash payment of $0.92 per share.65
    59
    Ex. F.
    60
    Id.
    61
    Id.
    62
    Id.
    63
    Id.
    64
    Id.
    65
    Id.
    15
    Gower maintains that the terms of the Proposed PSA were “problematic” for
    him given the legal issues arising from his termination. 66 Gower cites to Section
    5(a) of the Proposed PSA, which required him to represent and warrant that he
    owned 809,994 shares of Trux stock rather than the 1,439,989 shares that Gower
    maintains he owned or to which he was otherwise entitled.67 Gower also alleges that
    the Proposed PSA contained a release of claims that “would have extinguished
    Gower’s right to pursue any and all claims arising from his termination.” 68 When
    Gower’s counsel asked for copies of the agreement executed by the Moving Sellers,
    Viking’s counsel did not provide the copies but responded that Gower “received the
    same offer” as the Moving Sellers and that the “only differences between those
    documents and Jeff Gower’s is the names, number of shares and the option A/option
    B choice that is in Jeff Gower’s (the other 3 just had option A).” 69
    Gower alleges that Viking’s original March 12 offer was “either withdrawn
    or rejected” and that Viking instead entered into direct negotiations with the Moving
    Sellers to acquire their shares.70 Gower also alleges that the ROFR Agreement was
    66
    Compl. ¶ 45.
    67
    Id.
    68
    Id.
    69
    Ex. H.
    70
    Compl. ¶ 35.
    16
    never “waived or otherwise amended in connection with the agreements referenced
    in Ronan’s April 1, 2020 email.” 71
    On April 16, 2020, Gower’s counsel informed the Moving Sellers and
    Viking’s counsel that Gower “wishes to exercise his rights under the [ROFR]
    Agreement” and that the Share Sales were “null and void” because: (1) “Gower was
    never provided with a Proposed Transfer Notice,” (2) the “proposed Purchase and
    Sale Agreement provided to Mr. Gower substantially understates his ownership
    interest,” and (3) “there has been a failure to ‘negotiate in good faith a Purchase and
    Sale Agreement satisfactory to [Mr. Gower].’” 72 Viking’s counsel responded the
    next day that “Gower was offered the same deal that each other [Stockholder] was
    provided” and that the number of Gower’s shares to be sold under the Proposed PSA
    reflected Trux’s official records.73 Viking’s counsel also extended Gower’s deadline
    to respond to Viking’s offer to the end of day on April 20, 2020.74 Gower never
    executed the Proposed PSA.
    71
    Id. ¶ 41.
    72
    Ex. I; Ex J.
    73
    Ex. K.
    74
    Id.
    17
    D.     Procedural History
    On November 19, 2020, Gower filed his Verified Complaint. 75 Trux, Viking,
    and the Moving Sellers filed motions to dismiss the Verified Complaint. 76 On April
    23, 2021, Gower filed an Amended Verified Complaint, which I refer to as the
    “Complaint.” 77 On May 24, 2021, Trux, Viking, and the Moving Sellers separately
    moved to dismiss the Complaint.78 On June 16, 2021, Richard filed a motion for
    leave to intervene as a Defendant. 79 The court granted the motion on July 9, 2021.80
    Richard has not moved to dismiss the Complaint.81 After briefing, the court heard
    oral argument via remote video on November 8, 2021.82
    75
    Dkt. 1.
    76
    Dkt. 19–20.
    77
    Dkt. 22.
    78
    Dkt. 25–27.
    79
    Dkt. 31.
    80
    Dkt. 34.
    81
    Instead, Richard has filed an answer and a “counterclaim.” Dkt. 39. In his counterclaim,
    Richard “requests that if the Court enters the judgment Gower requests declaring ‘the
    transfer of stock to Viking is ‘null and void ab initio,’ that the Court declare that [Richard]’s
    sale of 4,958,848 shares of Trux stock to Viking on April 7, 2020 is also ‘null and void.’”
    Id. at 21. On August 19, 2021, Viking filed an answer to the counterclaim, seeming to
    question whether it is appropriately styled as a counterclaim rather than as a cross-claim.
    Dkt. 52 at 1. The Moving Sellers, Viking, and Gower have not responded to Richard’s
    counterclaim. On August 19, 2021, Trux moved to dismiss Richard’s counterclaim on the
    same grounds it has sought to dismiss Gower’s claim for a declaratory judgment. Dkt. 51.
    On September 22, 2021, Richard and Trux filed a proposed order stipulating that Richard
    had not brought any claims against Trux and withdrawing Trux’s motion to dismiss as
    moot. Dkt. 56. The court granted the proposed order on the same day. Dkt. 57.
    82
    Dkt. 65.
    18
    II.    ANALYSIS
    The Complaint contains three counts. Count I is a claim for declaratory
    judgment that the transfer of stock from the Moving Sellers to Viking is void. Count
    II is a breach of contract claim. Count III alleges that the Moving Sellers breached
    the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The Complaint alleges, and no
    party contests, that the court has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims under 8
    Del. C. 111.83
    A.     Standard of Review
    On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Court of Chancery
    Rule 12(b)(6), (a) all well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as true; (b) even
    vague allegations are well-pleaded if they give the opposing party notice of the
    claim; and (c) the court must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-
    moving party. Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 
    812 A.2d 894
    , 896-97 (Del. 2002).
    “[D]ismissal is inappropriate unless the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover
    under any reasonably conceivable set of circumstances susceptible to proof.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotations omitted). To make this determination, the Court “is not required
    to accept every strained interpretation of the allegations” the plaintiff proposes, but
    “only those reasonable inferences that logically flow from the face of the complaint.”
    83
    8 Del. C. § 111(a)(3) confers upon the court the authority to “interpret, apply, enforce or
    determine the validity of the provisions of . . . [a]ny written restrictions on the transfer,
    registration of transfer or ownership of securities under §202 of this title.”
    19
    Roma Landmark Theaters v. Cohen Exhibition Co., 
    2020 WL 5816759
    , at *7 (Del.
    Ch. Sept. 30, 2020) (quoting In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 
    897 A.2d 162
    , 168 (Del. 2006)). “[A] claim may be dismissed if allegations in the complaint
    or in the exhibits incorporated into the complaint effectively negate the claim as a
    matter of law.” Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1083 (Del. 2001).
    Plaintiff’s declaratory judgment claim is dependent upon the success of his
    claims for either breach of contract or breach of the implied covenant of good faith
    and fair dealing. Therefore, I first address the breach of contract and implied
    covenant claims.
    B.     Gower Has Adequately Alleged that the Share Sales Were the
    Product of a Breach of Contract.
    Count II alleges that the Moving Sellers breached their obligations under the
    ROFR Agreement to provide Gower written notice of the terms and conditions of
    the Share Sales “not later than sixty (60) days prior to the consummation of such
    Proposed Transfer.”84 As a result, Gower maintains, the Share Sales were “not made
    in compliance” with the requirements of the ROFR Agreement. 85
    Under Delaware law, “the elements of a breach of contract claim are: (1) a
    contractual obligation; (2) a breach of that obligation by the defendant; and (3) a
    84
    Pl.’s Ans. Br. to Viking 11 (quoting Ex. A § 2.1).
    85
    Id. at 10–11; Compl. ¶¶ 56–57 (quoting Ex. A § 2.4).
    20
    resulting damage to the plaintiff.” Skye Min. Invs., LLC v. DXS Cap. (U.S.) Ltd.,
    
    2020 WL 881544
    , at *14 (Del. Ch. Feb. 24, 2020). “When addressing whether a
    plaintiff has well pled the first two elements, the court must consider, and often
    construe, the proffered contract at the heart of the claim of breach.” 
    Id.
    In    Delaware,     the   construction     of   contract    language     presents
    a question of law. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1195 (Del. 1992). The court’s “task is to fulfill the parties’ shared
    expectations at the time they contracted.”        Leaf Invenergy Co. v. Invenergy
    Renewables LLC, 
    2019 WL 1965888
    , at *6 (Del. May 2, 2019) (internal quotation
    marks and alterations omitted). The court starts with the text of the contract. Sunline
    Comm’l Carriers, Inc. v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 
    206 A.3d 836
    , 846 (Del. 2019).
    When a contract’s language is clear and unambiguous, the court will give effect to
    the plain meaning of the contract’s terms and provisions. Osborn v. Kemp, 
    991 A.2d 1153
    , 1159-60 (Del. 2010). The contract is to be read as a whole, giving effect to
    each term and provision, so as not to render any part of the contract mere
    surplusage. 
    Id. at 1159
    . “If a contract is unambiguous, extrinsic evidence may not
    be used to interpret the intent of the parties, to vary the terms of the contract, or to
    create an ambiguity.” Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 
    702 A.2d 1228
    , 1232 (Del. 1997). If, however, the contract is ambiguous, the court may
    consider extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent.         Sunline Comm’l
    21
    Carriers, 206 A.3d at 847. But “[a] contract is not rendered ambiguous simply
    because the parties do not agree upon its proper construction.” Rhone-Poulenc, 
    616 A.2d at 1196
    .
    1.    The Complaint Alleges the Moving Sellers Failed to Comply
    with the Notice Requirement of the ROFR Agreement.
    Section 2.1(b) of the ROFR Agreement plainly and unambiguously imposes
    an obligation on “each Stockholder proposing to make a Proposed Transfer” to
    provide notice to “each Closing Stockholder not later than sixty (60) days prior to
    the consummation of such Proposed Transfer” (the “Notice Requirement”).86 There
    is no dispute that the Moving Sellers were Stockholders or that Gower was a Closing
    Stockholder. The definition of “Proposed Transfer” applies to any “transfer”87 of
    shares, and the definition of “Prospective Transferee” covers “any person” and thus
    also Viking.88          As this court has recognized, the plain meaning of the term
    “consummate” in the context of business transactions “refers to closing”—the time
    when the transactions contemplated by the agreement have been “completed.”
    Airborne Health, Inc. v. Squid Soap, LP, 
    984 A.2d 126
    , 138–39 (Del. Ch. 2009).
    When the Moving Sellers agreed to sell their shares to Viking, they had “proposed”
    86
    Ex. A § 2.1(b).
    87
    Id. § 1.12.
    88
    Id. § 1.14.
    22
    to make a “Proposed Transfer,” triggering an obligation to provide Gower with at
    least 60 days’ notice before the Share Sales closed.
    The Moving Defendants concede that the ROFR Agreement required the
    Moving Sellers to provide Closing Stockholders with 60 days’ notice of the
    Proposed Transfer to Viking.89 The Moving Defendants argue, however, that notice
    was only required to be provided to those Closing Stockholders that were seeking to
    “exercise primary, secondary, and tertiary first-refusal rights” and that “there is no
    suggestion in the . . . Complaint that Gower wanted to exercise—or could have
    exercised—any of those first-refusal rights.” 90 This position relies on the theory that
    the ROFR Agreement conditions the Notice Requirement on a Closing
    Stockholder’s desire or ability to exercise its Right of Refusal. Because Gower was
    looking only to exercise a Co-Sale Right, this argument runs, he was entitled to only
    15 days’ notice under Section 2.3.
    89
    Although Section 2.2(b), unlike Section 2.1(b), does not expressly provide that Closing
    Stockholders are entitled to 60 days’ notice, the Moving Defendants have proceeded as
    though 60 days’ notice was required to be provided to Closing Stockholders under both
    provisions. See Viking Opening Br. 4 (“Subsections 2.1 and 2.2 of the ROFR Agreement
    require each ‘Stockholder proposing to make a Proposed Transfer’ to ‘deliver a Proposed
    Transfer Notice to [Trux], [Viking], each Investor other than [Viking] and each Closing
    Stockholder not later than sixty (60) days prior to the consummation of such Proposed
    Transfer.’”)(emphasis added); Moving Sellers’ Opening Br. at 4 (adopting and
    incorporating by reference “the arguments stated in the Viking Brief”).
    90
    Viking Opening Br. 14.
    23
    This proposed limitation on the scope of the Notice Requirement in Section
    2.1(b) is contrary to the plain meaning of the contract. When construing a contract,
    the court must give effect to all its provisions. Salamone v. Gorman, 
    106 A.3d 354
    ,
    368 (Del. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). While “general terms of the
    contract must yield to more specific terms,” Sunline Com. Carriers, 206 A.3d at
    846, 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.” Riverbend Cmty., LLC v. Green Stone Eng’g, LLC, 
    55 A.3d 330
    ,
    335 (Del. 2012). The Moving Defendants’ sole textual basis for limiting the scope
    of the Notice Requirement is that the requirement “is found in the two subsections
    governing the right of first refusal.”91 The implication of this position is that even
    though Section 2.1(b) on its face requires 60 days’ notice “to the Company, [Viking],
    each Investor other than [Viking] and each Closing Stockholder,” the Notice
    Requirement only applies to Viking because Section 2.1 governs the Special ROFR
    right which only Viking possesses. That interpretation would render the bulk of the
    Notice Requirement in Section 2.1 mere surplusage and is not reasonable. Moving
    Defendants thus point to nothing in the text of ROFR Agreement that would justify
    limiting the scope of the Notice Requirement in the manner they propose.
    91
    
    Id.
    24
    Moving Defendants’ atextual limitation would also undermine the structure
    of the contract. The unequivocal language of the Notice Requirement reflects the
    intent of the parties to structure the Rights of Refusal around requirements that
    facilitate the flow of information downstream. See Union Oil Co. of California v.
    Mobil Pipeline Co., 
    2006 WL 3770834
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Dec. 15, 2006) (observing
    that “communication is one of the primary concerns” of a stockholders’ agreement
    containing similar right of first refusal provisions, “as illustrated by the fact that it is
    structured around the ROFR Notice”). Gower’s ability to exercise his Co-Sale
    Right, moreover, was tethered to the exercise by other Stockholders of their Rights
    of Refusal because the Co-Sale Right only vests “if any Transfer Stock subject to a
    Proposed Transfer is not purchased pursuant to Subsections 2.1 and 2.2.”92 The
    Moving Defendants’ interpretation of these provisions would instead make notice
    conditional upon the downstream actions of the contract parties. That gets things
    backwards and would rewrite the core mechanism by which the contract initiates the
    waterfall of Rights of Refusal and upon which the entire Sales Process hinges.
    The Moving Sellers also take an even more extreme position, arguing that
    Gower was not entitled to even 15 days’ notice because he never provided notice of
    his interest in selling his shares under Section 2.3(a). 93 Section 2.3(a) requires a
    92
    Ex. A § 2.3(a).
    93
    Moving Sellers’ Opening Br. 7.
    25
    Closing Stockholder to provide the requisite notice to exercise its Co-Sale Right;
    nothing in the provision conditions Gower’s right to receive notice on his taking any
    affirmative actions. Moreover, for a Closing Stockholder to be able to provide
    requisite notice of its interest in a transaction, the Closing Stockholder must know
    about the transaction in the first place. Conditioning the Notice Requirement upon
    a declaration of interest from Gower would not only contradict the Notice
    Requirement but would also undermine the contract’s basic structure. That is not a
    reasonable interpretation of Section 2.3(a). See Veloric v. J.G. Wentworth, Inc.,
    
    2014 WL 4639217
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Sept. 18, 2014) (observing that the court “should
    avoid interpreting a term in an unreasonable way that would yield an absurd result
    or that would render other contractual language superfluous”).
    2.    The Complaint Adequately Pleads that the Moving Sellers
    Failed to Provide Gower with Requisite Notice.
    Gower alleges that, when he received notice of the Share Sales on April 1,
    2020, the Moving Sellers “had . . . already purported to transfer their Trux stock to
    Viking.”94 The Moving Defendants do not argue otherwise. Gower is therefore
    entitled to the pleadings-stage inference that the Share Sales had already closed or
    94
    Compl. ¶ 5.
    26
    would close sooner than 60 days from the announcement of the transactions on April
    1, 2020.95
    The Moving Defendants insist that even if Gower was not provided with the
    contractually mandated notice of the Proposed Transfer, the Notice Requirement
    was waived pursuant to a written stockholder consent.96 This argument fails for
    several independent reasons.
    Waiver is an affirmative defense. Medek v. Medek, 
    2008 WL 4261017
    , at *10
    (Del. Ch. Sept. 10, 2008). “To prove waiver, Defendants must prove Plaintiff
    voluntarily and intentionally relinquished a known right.” 
    Id.
     There is no executed
    waiver in the record.       All that the Complaint shows is that Trux asked the
    Stockholders to execute a form of Written Consent on March 12, 2020. The Written
    95
    The stock purchase agreements governing the Share Sales between the Moving Sellers
    and Viking are not in the record. Trux and Viking refused to provide copies of those
    agreements to Gower’s counsel. See Ex. G (Trux’s counsel informing Gower’s counsel
    that “the Company has instructed us not to do so”); Ex. H (Viking’s counsel describing but
    failing to provide the agreements).
    96
    Viking Opening Br. 12 (“The Amended Complaint also shows that a majority of Trux’s
    Stockholders waived the notice provision Gower now claims was breached.”); see also id.
    at 15 (“a majority of the Stockholders ‘waive[d] and forever release[d] all of the
    Stockholders’ rights to the Right of First refusal in connection with the Transaction’—
    including the right to ‘notice’ of the transaction”); id. (“That waiver forecloses any
    potential obligation to provide Gower with notice under subsections 2.1(b) or 2.2(b).”); id.
    (“Gower tries to circumvent that waiver . . . .”); id. at 17 (“Gower could not prevail on his
    lack-of-notice claim because Trux, Viking, and a majority of the Stockholders approved
    the transaction. While the ROFR Agreement contemplates a 60-day notice period to allow
    for various first refusal rights, the parties to that ROFR Agreement later ‘authorize[d],
    approve[d], and consent[ed] to’ the ‘transactions contemplated by the Term Sheet.’”
    (emphasis omitted)).
    27
    Consent purports to “Resolve” that Stockholders “waive and forever release all of
    the Stockholders’ rights to the Right of First Refusal in connection with the
    Transaction.”97 The Transaction to which the Written Consent refers is reflected in
    an attached Term Sheet wherein Viking proposed to purchase all of the Company’s
    outstanding shares for “approximately $.9928 per share of common stock.” 98 An
    unsigned Written Consent, which does not reflect that it was executed by
    stockholders owning a majority of the Company’s outstanding common stock, does
    not satisfy the Moving Defendants’ burden on a motion to dismiss. See Allen v.
    Prime Computer, Inc., 
    540 A.2d 417
    , 420 (Del. 1988) (“[F]or there to be valid
    stockholder action under § 228 written consents must be signed by holders of a
    majority of the outstanding voting shares.”).
    Even if the proposed Written Consent had been executed, 99 Gower’s
    allegations support a reasonable inference that the Written Consent’s waiver of the
    Notice Requirement did not extend to the Share Sales. Section 6.8 of the ROFR
    97
    Ex. B.
    98
    Id.
    99
    The unsigned March 12, 2020 Written Consent states that it is a written consent pursuant
    to Section 228 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. Ex. B. The statute requires that
    action by less than unanimous written consent be provided to non-consenting stockholders.
    8 Del. C. § 228 (e) (“Prompt notice of the taking of the corporation action without a meeting
    by less than unanimous consent shall be given to those stockholders . . . who have not
    consented and who, if the action had been taken at a meeting, would have been entitled to
    notice of the meeting . . . .”). None of the Defendants has contended that any such notice
    was provided to Gower or any other non-consenting Stockholder.
    28
    Agreement provides that “[n]o waivers of or exceptions to any term, condition or
    provision of this Agreement, in any one or more instances, shall be deemed to be, or
    construed as, a further or continuing waiver of any such term, condition or
    provision.”100 The well-pleaded allegations of the Complaint support a reasonable
    inference that the transaction proposed on March 12, 2020 to which the Written
    Consent applied was different from the actual Share Sales between Viking and the
    Moving Sellers.101 Pursuant to the transaction proposed on March 12, 2020, Viking
    would purchase “all the outstanding shares . . . of capital stock held by all
    shareholders” for a price share of approximately $0.99 per share. 102 Viking’s
    proposal indicated that it would “expire” on March 18, 2020, and that Viking
    expected the “transaction can be closed on or before March 31, 2020.” 103 Contrast
    100
    Ex. A § 6.8(a) (emphasis added).
    101
    Compl. ¶ 35. Viking’s argument that Gower understood that “there was already
    sufficient shareholder approval of the Stockholder Consent,” Viking Reply Br. 6,
    overstates an email exchange between Gower’s counsel and the Company’s counsel. In
    that email, Gower’s counsel recounts their call from the prior evening. Gower’s counsel
    stated: “To confirm, given your belief that there is no need for Mr. Gower to execute the
    Stockholder Consent (because there is already sufficient shareholder approval) and our
    concern with some of the language in the document, Mr. Gower will not be executing the
    Stockholder Consent.” Ex. C. The fact that Gower’s counsel was told that “there is already
    sufficient shareholder approval” does not establish the fact that there was sufficient
    approval, or that the Written Consent pertained to the transaction described in the April 1,
    2020 email. Id.
    102
    Ex. B.
    103
    Id.
    29
    that with Ronan’s representations in the April 1, 2020 email. 104 That email, stating
    that Viking had entered into agreements to purchase the shares of the Moving
    Sellers, offered different terms than the March 12, 2020 proposal. The April 1, 2020
    proposal gave Gower two options: he could either sell his shares for $1.18 per
    share—with $0.66 of that amount payable over 15 months—or for $0.92 per share
    in a single up-front cash payment. 105 It is reasonable to infer for pleadings-stage
    purposes that Viking’s initial proposal contemplated a different transaction and
    terms than that of April 1. When the Moving Sellers accepted Viking’s offer to
    purchase their shares, they thereby proposed a different transaction to which the
    purported waiver did not apply.
    Moving Defendants also argue that, as a practical matter, Gower had enough
    time to evaluate Viking’s proposal and therefore received the benefit of the notice
    provisions. “When confronted with less than literal compliance with a notice
    provision, courts have required that a party substantially comply with the notice
    provision. The requirement of substantial compliance is an attempt to avoid harsh
    results . . . where the purpose of these [notice] requirements has been met.” Gildor,
    
    2006 WL 4782348
    , at *7 (internal quotation marks omitted). But the Moving
    Defendants do not argue that the Moving Sellers attempted but failed to provide
    104
    Ex. F.
    105
    
    Id.
    30
    Gower with 60 days’ notice. The facts alleged in the Complaint indicate that the
    Moving Sellers made no such effort. The Moving Defendants now maintain the
    Moving Sellers did not need to try because Gower was only entitled to, at most, 15
    days’ notice. That argument is entirely inconsistent with the terms of the ROFR
    Agreement.
    For these reasons, the Complaint contains well-pleaded allegations that the
    Moving Sellers breached the Notice Requirement in the ROFR Agreement. The
    motion to dismiss Count II is therefore denied.
    C.     The Claim for Breach of the Implied Covenant of Good Faith and
    Fair Dealing Is Duplicative of the Breach of Contract Claim and Is
    Dismissed.
    Count III alleges a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing against the Moving Sellers for failure to provide notice consistent with the
    Notice Requirement of Section 2.1. The implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing inheres in every contract governed by Delaware law and requires “a party in
    a contractual relationship to refrain from arbitrary or unreasonable conduct which
    has the effect of preventing the other party to the contract from receiving the fruits
    of the bargain.” Dunlap v. State Farm Fire and Cas. Co., 
    878 A.2d 434
    , 442 (Del.
    2005) (quoting Wilgus v. Salt Pond Inv. Co., 
    498 A.2d 151
    , 159 (Del. Ch. 1995)
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). “[T]he implied covenant only applies where
    a contract lacks specific language governing an issue and the obligation the court is
    31
    asked to imply advances, and does not contradict, the purposes reflected in the
    express language of the contract.” Alliance Data Sys. Corp. v. Blackstone Cap. P’rs
    V L.P., 
    963 A.2d 746
    , 770 (Del. Ch.), aff’d, 
    976 A.2d 170
     (Del. 2009). “The doctrine
    thus operates only in that narrow band of cases where the contract as a whole speaks
    sufficiently to suggest an obligation and point to a result, but does not speak directly
    enough to provide an explicit answer.” Airborne Health, Inc. v. Squid Soap, LP, 
    984 A.2d 126
    , 146 (Del. Ch. 2009). “[T]he covenant is a limited and extraordinary legal
    remedy. As such, the implied covenant does not apply when the contract addresses
    the conduct at issue, but only when the contract is truly silent concerning the matter
    at hand.” Oxbow Carbon & Minerals Hldgs., Inc. v. Crestview-Oxbow Acquisition,
    Inc., 
    202 A.3d 482
    , 507 (Del. 2019) (cleaned up).
    “Because express contractual provisions ‘always supersede’ the implied
    covenant, an implied covenant claim will not survive a motion to dismiss if it
    duplicates breach of contract claims.” Bandera Master Fund LP v. Boardwalk
    Pipeline P’rs, LP, 
    2019 WL 4927053
    , at *22 (Del. Ch. Oct. 7, 2019). In his
    answering brief, Gower clarifies that he asserts his breach of the implied covenant
    claim in the alternative, in the event the court were to determine that the Complaint
    failed to state a claim for breach of contract.106 Because the court has determined
    106
    Pl.’s Ans. Br. to Moving Sellers 11–12.
    32
    that Count II states a claim for breach of contract, the implied covenant claim is
    “duplicative and not viable.” Edinburgh Hldgs., Inc. v. Educ. Affiliates, Inc., 
    2018 WL 2727542
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. June 6, 2018). As such, the claim “fails as a matter of
    law and must be dismissed.” 
    Id.
    D.     Plaintiff Has Stated a Claim for Declaratory Relief.
    Count III seeks a declaratory judgment that the Share Sales are void. Gower
    argues that the failure to provide the contractually mandated notice under the ROFR
    Agreement renders any non-compliant transaction void under Section 2.4: “Any
    Proposed Transfer not made in compliance with the requirements of this Agreement
    shall be null and void ab initio, shall not be recorded on the books of the Company
    or its transfer agent and shall not be recognized by the Company.”107 Moving
    Defendants do not dispute that the notice requirements in the ROFR Agreement
    constitute “requirements” for purposes of Section 2.4.
    Defendants raise three arguments specific to Gower’s declaratory judgment
    claim. First, the Moving Defendants argue that the court should dismiss the claim
    on equitable grounds because Gower waited too long to seek a declaratory judgment.
    Second, the Moving Defendants argue that Gower is not entitled to declaratory relief
    107
    Ex. A § 2.4(a) (emphasis added).
    33
    because he has not alleged harm to his stock. Third, Trux argues that it should be
    dismissed from this action because it is not a proper party.
    The Declaratory Judgment Act, 10 Del. C. § 6501 et seq., gives the court the
    power to issue declaratory judgments. A declaratory judgment is a creature of statute
    and “not a purely equitable remedy.” Kraft v. WisdomTree Invs., Inc., 
    145 A.3d 969
    ,
    985 (Del. Ch. 2016). When “declaratory relief is sought, all persons shall be made
    parties who have or claim any interest which would be affected by the declaration,
    and no declaration shall prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the proceeding.”
    10 Del. C. § 6511. This court has found occasion not to dismiss a declaratory
    judgment claim where the defendant’s “interest in the controversy” was not “so
    attenuated that it could not properly have been named as a defendant.” Sprint Nextel
    Corp. v. iPCS, Inc., 
    2008 WL 2737409
    , at *14 (Del. Ch. July 14, 2008).
    The court’s power to issue declaratory judgments is limited by the well-settled
    principle that a declaratory judgment must “address an actual controversy between
    parties with affected rights.” Lynch v. Gonzalez, 
    2020 WL 5648567
    , at *6 (Del. Ch.
    Sept. 22, 2020). For the case or controversy requirement to be satisfied:
    (1) [The case] must be a controversy involving the rights or other legal
    relations of the party seeking declaratory relief; (2) it must be a
    controversy in which the claim of right or other legal interest is asserted
    against one who has an interest in contesting the claim; (3) the
    controversy must be between parties whose interests are real and
    adverse; [and] (4) the issue involved in the controversy must be ripe for
    judicial determination.
    34
    Rollins Int’l, Inc. v. Int’l Hydronics Corp., 
    303 A.2d 660
    , 662–63 (Del. 1973). The
    case or controversy requirement serves to ensure that an “application for declaratory
    relief” does not turn into “a contingent, speculative venture that would require the
    Court to issue an advisory opinion.” K&K Screw Prod., L.L.C. v. Emerick Cap.
    Invs., Inc., 
    2011 WL 3505354
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Aug. 9, 2011). Even when the
    requirement is met, the court may dismiss a defendant if it would be “inequitable for
    this Court to require [the defendant] to remain as a defendant in [the] action.” Sprint
    Nextel Corp., 
    2008 WL 2737409
    , at *14.
    1.   Moving Defendants’ Thinly Veiled Laches Argument Cannot
    Be Decided at this Stage.
    Moving Defendants argue that the court should exercise its discretion to deny
    Gower a declaratory judgment on equitable grounds. Declaratory judgment would
    be inequitable, Moving Defendants aver, because Gower waited 232 days to file his
    lawsuit and unwinding the Share Sales would cause substantial prejudice to the
    Moving Defendants and Trux. 108 Moving Defendants’ appeal to equity and the
    exercise of discretion is nothing short of a laches defense. “[D]ismissal of the
    complaint based upon an affirmative defense is inappropriate” under Delaware law
    “[u]nless it is clear from the face of the complaint that an affirmative defense exists
    and that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts to avoid it.” Reid v. Spazio, 
    970 A.2d 108
    Id.
     at 27–28.
    35
    176, 183–84 (Del. 2009). “[L]aches generally requires proof of three elements: first,
    knowledge by the claimant; second, unreasonable delay in bringing the claim; and
    third, resulting prejudice to the defendant.” Whittington v. Dragon Grp., L.L.C., 
    991 A.2d 1
    , 8 (Del. 2009) (quoting Reid, 970 A.2d at 182–83) (cleaned up). Whether
    Gower unreasonably delayed in filing his complaint and whether the Moving
    Defendants and Trux would suffer prejudice due to Gower’s inaction is a factual
    question to be resolved at a later stage in the proceedings. See Reid, 970 A.2d at 183
    (“In ruling on a motion to dismiss under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6), the Court
    is generally limited to facts appearing on the face of the pleadings. Accordingly,
    affirmative defenses, such as laches, are not ordinarily well-suited for treatment on
    such a motion.”). In that regard, the Moving Defendants do not address Gower’s
    argument that any claim of unreasonable delay fails under the express terms of the
    contract. Section 6.7 provides that “no delay or omission to exercise any right,
    power or remedy accruing to any party under this Agreement, shall impair any such
    right, power or remedy of such non-breaching or non-defaulting party.”109
    “Delaware courts do not lightly trump the freedom to contract and, in the absence of
    some countervailing public policy interest, courts should respect the parties’
    bargain.” Gildor, 
    2006 WL 4782348
    , at *11. I need not definitively decide the
    109
    Ex. A § 6.7.
    36
    applicability of that provision on this motion. The parties have not fully briefed it.
    For present purposes, it is not “clear from the face of the complaint that an
    affirmative defense exists and that the Plaintiff can prove no set of facts to avoid it.”
    Reid, 970 A.2d at 183. In any event, it is premature for me to deny the Plaintiff the
    discretionary remedy of declaratory relief based upon a thinly veiled laches defense
    on a motion to dismiss.
    2.    Gower’s Request for an Alternative Remedy of Damages
    Does Not Compel Dismissal of His Request for Relief.
    Moving Defendants argue that Gower is not entitled to declaratory judgment
    because Gower has not alleged any “damage to the value of his holding resulting
    from the transaction.” 110 The Moving Defendants confuse the arguments and the
    relief sought in the Complaint. Plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment that the Share
    Sales are void under the ROFR Agreement. 111 Damages is sought “[i]n the
    alternative.” 112 Moving Defendants, as parties to the ROFR Agreement, ignore that
    they have already stipulated that “any breach of this Agreement would result in
    substantial harm to the other parties hereto for which monetary damages alone could
    not adequately compensate.”113 Gower’s claim requires a “determination of rights
    110
    Viking Opening Br. 11.
    111
    Compl. ¶ 6.
    112
    Id. ¶ 7.
    113
    Ex. A § 2.4(a) (emphasis added).
    37
    as between the defendant and . . . other stockholders as to their respective interests
    in the corporation’s assets.” Highlights for Child., Inc. v. Crown, 
    193 A.2d 205
    , 207
    (Del. Ch. 1963). As a party to the ROFR Agreement, Gower has an interest in
    resolving the question of whether the Share Sales were invalid and to know from
    whom he has a right to purchase shares (and to whom he may sell his shares) under
    the agreement.114
    3.    Is Trux a Proper Defendant in this Action?
    Trux argues that it is not a proper party to this action because it “has no stake
    in the outcome of this case and any declaratory relief that could be awarded does not
    relate in any way to Trux’s actions or interests.”115
    In support of that proposition, Trux cites two cases. In Lynch v. Gonzalez, the
    court held that a Delaware limited liability company lacked standing to prosecute a
    declaratory judgment claim as to the validity of a purported share transfer between
    two of its stockholders. 
    2020 WL 5648567
    , at *7. The court so held because the
    114
    Moving Defendants also argue that Gower’s declaratory judgment claim should be
    dismissed because Gower’s dispute is “over Gower’s termination and the redemption of
    his unvested shares.” Viking Opening Br. 26–27. But Gower asserts no such claim and
    seeks no corresponding relief in this action. Pl.’s Ans. Br. to Viking 20. The mere fact
    that Gower may have legal rights related to his termination under a different agreement has
    no bearing on whether he may bring claims under the ROFR Agreement. As the “master
    of [his] complaint,” Gower “can choose what [he] wants to plead.” Amalgamated Bank v.
    Yahoo! Inc., 
    132 A.3d 752
    , 797 (Del. Ch. 2016), abrogated on other grounds, 
    214 A.3d 933
     (Del. 2019).
    115
    Trux Opening Br. 3.
    38
    plaintiff was not involved in the transfer and had not “suffered any cognizable harm
    from the purported private transfer.” 
    Id.
     Lynch relied on SolarReserve CSP
    Holdings, LLC v. Tonopah Solar Energy, LLC, in which the court held that the
    plaintiff lacked standing to bring breach of contract claims under an LLC agreement
    because it had assigned its “right, title, and interest in and to all actions” against the
    defendant to a third party. 
    2020 WL 4251968
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. July 24, 2020), order
    vacated, appeal dismissed, 
    258 A.3d 806
     (Del. 2021), vacated, (Del. Ch. 2021),
    order vacated, appeal dismissed, 
    258 A.3d 806
     (Del. 2021). “As such,” the court
    held, “SolarReserve would not be the beneficiary of any relief that might be achieved
    in this action.” 
    Id.
    Gower first argues that these cases are not applicable because, unlike the
    parties without standing in Lynch and SolarReserve, Trux is a defendant and not a
    plaintiff in this action. 116 The court in Lynch made clear, however, that it was
    addressing the third prong of the case or controversy requirement—that “the
    controversy must be between parties whose interests are real and adverse.” Lynch,
    
    2020 WL 5648567
    , at *7 (emphasis in the original). That prong applies to plaintiffs
    and defendants alike. See K&K Screw Prod., 
    2011 WL 3505354
    , at *8 (discussing
    whether defendant had an interest that was “real and adverse” to the plaintiff “in
    116
    Pl.’s Ans. Br. to Trux 4.
    39
    contesting this action”). Lynch therefore supports the proposition that a corporation
    has no real and adverse interest in a declaratory judgment action between its
    stockholders if it “does not hold any rights [or obligations] at issue in the dispute”
    or does not stand to receive “the fruits of the purported bargain.” Lynch, 
    2020 WL 5648567
    , at *6 n.52.
    Gower’s other argument is more persuasive. Gower argues that Trux does
    have a stake in this dispute because Trux is a party to the ROFR Agreement and
    because judgment for the Plaintiff would impose an obligation on Trux.117 The
    ROFR Agreement provides that “[a]ny Proposed Transfer not made in compliance
    with the requirements of this Agreement shall be null and void ab initio, shall not be
    recorded on the books of the Company or its transfer agent and shall not be
    recognized by the Company.”118 The Declaratory Judgment Act provides that, when
    “declaratory relief is sought, all persons shall be made parties who have or claim
    any interest which would be affected by the declaration, and no declaration shall
    prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the proceeding.” 10 Del. C. § 6511
    (emphasis added). The statute thus codifies
    [Equity]’s fundamental principle concerning parties . . . that all persons
    in whose favor or against whom there might be a recovery, however
    partial, and also all persons who are so interested, although indirectly,
    in the subject-matter and the relief granted, that their rights or duties
    117
    Id. at 3–4.
    118
    Ex. A § 2.4(a).
    40
    might be affected by the decree, although no substantial recovery can
    be obtained either for or against them, shall be made parties to the suit.
    Sprint Nextel, 
    2008 WL 2737409
    , at *13 (emphasis omitted) (quoting 1 Pomeroy’s
    Equity Jurisprudence § 114 (5th ed. 1941). 119 It is not the case that Trux has no
    interest in the outcome of this dispute. 120
    Trux argues that it is not named as merely a nominal defendant, and should
    not be subjected to discovery and other expenses as if it were an adversarial party.121
    That argument misses the mark. First, it is inevitable that Trux will be subjected to
    discovery in this case, either through discovery as a party or through a subpoena.
    Second, as a practical matter, it became apparent through the briefing and argument
    119
    Trux argues that Gower’s dispute as to Trux is purely hypothetical, relying on
    Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corp., 
    73 A.3d 934
     (Del. Ch. 2013).
    In Boilermakers, plaintiffs challenged forum selection clauses in corporate bylaws,
    presenting the court with “purely hypothetical situations in which they sa[id] that the
    bylaws of Chevron and FedEx might operate unreasonably.” 
    Id. at 940
    . The court refused
    to consider the hypothetical scenarios, explaining “it would be imprudent and inappropriate
    to address these hypotheticals in the absence of a genuine controversy with concrete facts.”
    
    Id.
     Unlike in Boilermakers, Gower’s complaint presents a genuine controversy with
    concrete facts.
    120
    When asked at oral argument whether Trux would void the Share Sales on the
    Company’s books if the court were to enter judgment in favor of Plaintiff, Trux’s counsel
    equivocated. Dkt. 65 (Hrg. Tr.) at 33:4–7 (“The only thing I can say at this point, Your
    Honor, is it is an extremely remote possibility that there would ever be a dispute about this
    if Mr. Gower prevails in this lawsuit.”).
    121
    
    Id.
     at 26:17–21 (“Trux is not named as a nominal party here. We are named as an actual
    party in the declaratory judgment case, claim. And, therefore, we would have to defend
    the case in some way.”); 
    id.
     at 26:12–15 (“It would be unfair to require Trux to engage in
    this litigation, to engage in discovery, to take positions on matters that we really have no
    interest in.”).
    41
    that Trux effectively is a nominal defendant, even though not denominated as such
    in the Complaint. Accordingly, the court does not anticipate that Trux will be a
    participant in these proceedings to the same extent as the remaining Defendants. In
    that respect, Trux “has not shown that it would suffer any additional mutual burden
    or difficulty in remaining a defendant in this action.” Sprint Nextel, 
    2008 WL 2737409
    , at *14.
    Trux has staked its motion to dismiss solely on the theory that it has absolutely
    no interest in this action. For the reasons stated above, I am not persuaded that the
    Company is an improper party with no interest in the outcome of this action. Trux’s
    motion to dismiss is therefore denied.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, the motions to dismiss Count I and Count II are denied, and
    the motions to dismiss Count III are granted for failure to state a claim.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    42