Leaf Invenergy Company v. Invenergy Wind LLC ( 2018 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    LEAF INVENERGY COMPANY, a                    )
    Cayman Islands exempt limited liability      )
    company,                                     )
    )
    Plaintiff,                  )
    v.                                ) C.A. No. 11830-VCL
    )
    INVENERGY WIND LLC, a Delaware               )
    limited liability company,                   )
    )
    Defendant.                   )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: January 19, 2018
    Date Decided: April 19, 2018
    Bradley D. Sorrels, Shannon E. German, Jessica A. Hartwell, WILSON SONSINI
    GOODRICH & ROSATI, P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Keith E. Eggleton, Steven D.
    Guggenheim, David A. McCarthy; WILSON SONSINI GOODRICH & ROSATI, P.C.,
    Palo Alto, California; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
    Kenneth J. Nachbar, Kevin M. Coen, Zi-Xiang Shen, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT &
    TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Bruce S. Sperling, Harvey J. Barnett, Eamon P.
    Kelly, SPERLING & SLATER, P.C., Chicago, Illinois; Attorneys for Defendant.
    LASTER, V.C.
    Leaf Invenergy Company (“Leaf”) holds Series B member interests in Invenergy
    Wind LLC (“Invenergy” or the “Company”). Under Invenergy’s limited liability company
    agreement (the “LLC Agreement”), Invenergy could not engage in an asset sale of a
    specified magnitude—defined as a “Material Partial Sale”—unless Invenergy either (i)
    obtained Leaf’s consent or (ii) paid Leaf an amount sufficient for Leaf to achieve an agreed-
    upon rate of return—defined as the “Target Multiple.”1 This decision refers to the
    requirement that Invenergy obtain Leaf’s consent as the “Series B Consent Right.”
    At the outset of the case, Leaf moved for judgment on the pleadings on the question
    of whether Invenergy had breached the Series B Consent Right by engaging in a Material
    Partial Sale without paying Leaf its Target Multiple. I granted Leaf’s motion.
    Leaf next moved for entry of a final judgment determining that the LLC Agreement
    entitled Leaf as a matter of law to damages in the amount of the Target Multiple. I denied
    the motion on the grounds that the LLC Agreement did not provide explicitly for the
    payment of the Target Multiple in the event of breach. The Series B Consent Right
    technically stated that if Invenergy paid Leaf the Target Multiple at closing, then Invenergy
    did not need to obtain Leaf’s consent. The LLC Agreement did not include a liquidated
    damages provision or specify a remedy for breach of the Series B Consent Right.
    Consequently, I concluded that determining the proper remedy for Invenergy’s breach
    The parties and their documents frequently abbreviate “Material Partial Sale” as
    1
    “MPS” and Target Multiple as “TM.”
    1
    required a trial. This post-trial decision holds that Invenergy’s breach entitles Leaf only to
    nominal damages.
    After Leaf filed this litigation, Invenergy exercised a right under the LLC
    Agreement to call Leaf’s member interests. Leaf responded by exercising a parallel right
    to put its position to Invenergy. Disputes arose over that process, and Invenergy brought
    counterclaims asserting that Leaf violated the express terms of the put-call provisions as
    well as terms implied by the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. This decision finds
    that Invenergy failed to prove those claims. In light of this decision, the parties shall
    complete the buyout of Leaf’s interests in accordance with the provisions in the LLC
    Agreement.
    I.      FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Trial took place over three days. The parties submitted 536 exhibits and lodged
    fifteen depositions. Seven witnesses testified live. The parties proved the following facts
    by a preponderance of the evidence.
    A.     Invenergy Solicits Interest In The Series B Notes.
    Invenergy “develops, owns, and operates utility-scale wind generation facilities in
    North America and Europe.”2 Michael Polsky founded Invenergy in 2001 and has served
    2
    PTO ¶ II.A.4. Citations in this format are to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order.
    Dkt. 160. Citations in the form “[Name] Tr.” refer to witness testimony from the trial
    transcript. Citations in the form “[Name] Dep.” refer to witness testimony from a
    deposition transcript. Citations in the form “JX __ at __” refer to trial exhibits using the
    JX-based page numbers generated for trial.
    2
    continuously since then as its President and CEO.3 Polsky holds a majority of Invenergy’s
    equity through two investment vehicles: Invenergy Wind Holdings LLC (“Invenergy
    Holdings”) and Invenergy Wind Financing LLC (“Invenergy Financing”).4
    In summer 2008, Invenergy began soliciting interest in an offering of Series B
    convertible notes (the “Series B Notes”). In 2007, Invenergy had raised approximately
    $250 million through a similarly structured issuance of Series A convertible notes (the
    “Series A Notes”). Two third-party investors—Liberty Mutual Insurance Company
    (“Liberty”) and Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (“Citigroup”)—purchased the bulk of the
    Series A Notes. Invenergy Financing invested alongside on the same terms and purchased
    approximately 10% of the issuance.5
    When Invenergy proposed to issue the Series B Notes, Liberty expressed interest.
    So did Leaf Clean Energy Company, a publicly held investment company that specializes
    in the clean technology and renewable energy sectors.6 Leaf Clean Energy would later form
    3
    JX 17 at 4 (Invenergy private placement memorandum).
    4
    See PTO ¶¶ II.B.1, 10-11, 13. The parties and their documents frequently
    abbreviate “Invenergy Wind Holdings” as “IWH” and “Invenergy Wind Financing” as
    “IWF.”
    5
    PTO ¶ II.B.3.
    6
    See JX 13 at 14-15; Alemu Tr. 4-5, 7-8, 10.
    3
    Leaf to participate in the offering.7 Polsky planned to have Invenergy Financing invest
    again alongside the third-party investors.
    B.     The Series B Term Sheet
    In fall 2008, Invenergy sent a proposed term sheet to Liberty and Leaf.8 One deal
    point, titled “Negative Covenants,” contemplated that Invenergy would have to obtain
    approval from the holders of the Series B Notes (the “Series B Investors”) before engaging
    in “a sale of all or substantially all of [the Company’s] assets” or any “merger or acquisition
    of the Company.”9 The provision also contemplated that “approval will not be required in
    the event that such transaction would provide the [Series B Investors] the Target Multiple
    as of the applicable transaction date.”10
    Another deal point, titled “Merger, Sale, etc. of the Company,” distinguished
    between “Control Transactions” and “Non-Control Transactions.” The operative language
    on “Control Transactions” stated:
    In the case of a (i) merger, consolidation, sale or reorganization of the
    Company or a sale of equity in the Company as a result of which the current
    direct or indirect holders of the Company’s equity securities immediately
    prior to such transaction will hold less than a majority of the Company’s
    equity securities immediately following such transaction or (ii) sale of
    substantially all of the assets of the Company (a “Control Transaction”)
    7
    The distinction between Leaf and Leaf Clean Energy is not material to this
    decision. Except in rare instances, this decision refers solely to “Leaf.”
    8
    JX 20.
    9
    Id. at 5.
    10
    Id. at 5-6.
    4
    which occurs prior to the date which is the earlier of (a) the Conversion
    Deadline or (b) the date on which all of the Series B Notes have been
    converted . . . , any Series B Notes which are not converted in connection
    with the Control Transaction to which the Required Holders . . . have
    consented . . . shall be prepaid at par plus accrued but unpaid interest, with
    no penalty or premium.11
    This proposal contemplated that a Control Transaction would extinguish the Series B
    Notes, either (i) through the Series B Investors converting and receiving their pro rata share
    of any distribution associated with the Control Transaction or (ii) as a result of the
    Company prepaying principal plus unpaid interest.
    By contrast, for a Non-Control Transaction, the term sheet contemplated that
    Invenergy would have the option of extinguishing the Series B Notes. The Company would
    not be obligated to obtain consent before engaging in a Non-Control Transaction, nor
    would it be obligated to make any payment as a result of a Non-Control Transaction.
    Instead, Invenergy would have the option to redeem the Series B Notes for the Target
    Multiple. The operative language on “Non-Control Transactions” stated:
    In the case of a (i) merger, consolidation, sale or reorganization of the
    Company or a sale of equity in the Company as a result of which the current
    direct or indirect holders of the Company’s equity securities immediately
    prior to such transaction will continue to hold at least a majority of the
    Company’s equity securities immediately following such transaction or (ii)
    sale of material assets of the Company that does not constitute a sale of
    substantially all of the assets of the Company (a “Non-Control Transaction”)
    which occurs prior to the Conversion Termination Date, the Company may,
    at its option, offer to prepay all outstanding principal and interest on the
    Series B Notes, together with a premium in such amount that would result in
    receipt by the holders of the Target Multiple . . . . If such offer is made, each
    holder of Series B Notes shall have the option to (a) accept such offer, (b)
    11
    Id. at 3-4.
    5
    decline such offer and convert its Series B Notes, following which the
    Company will be required to distribute to its members, pro rata, any proceeds
    from the Non-Control Transaction that are not required to be retained in the
    business of the Company pursuant to definitive documentation to be entered
    into in connection with this transaction.12
    This proposal contemplated that upon the occurrence of a Non-Control Transaction—the
    type of transaction that the final agreement would define as a Material Partial Sale—
    Invenergy could choose whether to pay the Target Multiple to redeem the Series B Notes.
    Moreover, if Invenergy did elect to make such a payment and any Series B Investors did
    not accept, the holdouts would have to convert to equity. At that point, they would only
    receive their pro rata share of any proceeds from the Non-Control Transaction distributed
    to the equity holders.
    These concepts ran counter to the definitive agreement governing the Series A Notes
    (the “Series A Agreement”). The Series A Agreement required Invenergy to obtain
    approval from the holders of the Series A Notes both for (i) a “Liquidity Event,” unless the
    transaction “would provide the holders of Notes, through the closing of such Liquidity
    Event, the Target Multiple,”13 and (ii) any Material Partial Sale, “unless the transaction
    giving rise to the Material Partial Sale yields proceeds equal to or greater than the amount
    which, if paid to the holders of the Notes would provide the holders of Notes, through the
    closing of such Material Partial Sale, the Target Multiple and the provisions of Section
    12
    Id. at 4.
    13
    JX 9 § 4.3(a).
    6
    1.5(e) (other than the last sentence thereof) are complied with.”14 In the latter scenario, the
    Series A Agreement required Invenergy to offer to repurchase the Series A Notes for the
    Target Multiple. At that point, each of the holders of the Series A Notes could choose
    whether to accept the offer or retain their notes to preserve the possibility of greater equity
    upside. The operative language stated:
    Upon the occurrence of any Material Partial Sale that has not been consented
    to by the Required Purchasers pursuant to Section 4.3(b) which (i) is not a
    Liquidity Event, (ii) occurs prior to the Third Anniversary and (iii) yields
    cash proceeds to the Company equal to or greater than the Target Multiple
    of all outstanding Notes, the Company must offer to prepay the Notes for an
    amount sufficient to cause the Holders to receive the Target Multiple, and
    each holder of the Notes may choose . . . to accept or reject such offer. . . . If
    any Material Partial Sale occurs on or after the Third Anniversary that has
    not been consented to pursuant to Section 4.3(b), the Company shall use the
    entire net proceeds of such sale to prepay the Notes together with any accrued
    but unpaid interest thereon and any applicable premium contemplated by
    Section 1.5(c) as in effect on the closing of the Material Partial Sale upon the
    closing of the Material Partial Sale.15
    In contrast to the Series A Agreement, Invenergy’s initial term sheet for the Series B Notes
    contemplated dropping the consent requirement for a Material Partial Sale. It also
    contemplated flipping the optionality so that instead of the noteholders deciding whether
    to cash out, Invenergy could choose whether to offer to buy them out.
    14
    Id. § 4.3(b).
    15
    Id. § 1.5(e); see also Murphy Tr. 589-90 (“[Section 1.5(e)] provides for payment
    in the event that the company is going to make a material partial sale, which is not a
    liquidity event, and the company has not obtained the consent of the required purchasers. .
    . . [I]f the company elected to bypass the consent right, then the noteholders, we understood,
    wanted to have the ability to make an election to be paid.”).
    7
    Liberty rejected these proposals. In its counterproposal on behalf of the investors,
    Liberty added a consent requirement for a Material Partial Sale.16 Liberty also struck the
    language that would have given Invenergy optionality on repurchasing the Series B Notes
    after a Material Partial Sale. In its place, Liberty substituted the following:
    Upon the occurrence of any Material Partial Sale (as defined herein below)
    that has not been consented to by the Required Purchasers pursuant to the
    negative covenants below which (i) is not a Control Transaction, (ii) occurs
    prior to the Conversion Deadline and (iii) yields cash proceeds to the
    Company equal to or greater than the Target Multiple of all outstanding
    Series B Notes, the Company must offer to prepay the Series B Notes for an
    amount sufficient to cause the holders thereof to receive the Target Multiple
    . . . .17
    Liberty’s counterproposal thus restored the consent requirement and gave the investors the
    optionality they enjoyed under the Series A Agreement. The final term sheet reflected
    Liberty’s changes.18
    Liberty also added to the term sheet a series of governance rights that the LLC
    Agreement would afford the Series B Investors if they converted into equity. Liberty’s
    changes contemplated that Invenergy would need to obtain approval from the holders of a
    majority of the unaffiliated interests before engaging in a long list of corporate actions,
    including: “Cause a Material Partial Sale unless the transaction would provide the holders
    of equity other than IWH with the Target Multiple. Any such transaction may be structured
    16
    JX 21 at 26-27.
    17
    Id. at 21; Alemu Tr. 29-31.
    18
    JX 32; Alemu Tr. 31-33.
    8
    to provide IWH with lower proceeds on a pro rata basis in order to yield the Target
    Multiple.”19 The final term sheet included a lengthier version of this provision.20
    Yonatan Alemu oversaw the investment for Leaf. Alemu testified without
    contradiction that the parties intended for the Series B Investors’ post-conversion
    governance rights to “function in a similar fashion” as their pre-conversion consent rights.21
    He understood that “to the extent the company did not get consent from the investors that
    had the equity, that they had an obligation to pay the target multiple.”22
    C.     The Series B Agreement
    After reaching agreement on the term sheet, the parties negotiated binding
    transaction documents. The governing agreement was the Series B Senior Subordinated
    Convertible Note Purchase Agreement dated as of December 22, 2008 (the “Series B
    Agreement”). In an initial closing, which took place on December 22, Liberty invested
    $100 million in the Series B Notes, Leaf invested $20 million, and Invenergy Financing
    invested $10 million.23 In a secondary closing in February 2009, Leaf invested another $10
    19
    JX 21 at 33.
    20
    JX 32 at 11.
    21
    Alemu Tr. 34.
    22
    Id.
    23
    PTO ¶ II.B.5.
    9
    million.24 Shortly thereafter, Banc of America Strategic Investments Corporation invested
    $20 million.25
    Under the Series B Agreement, the Series B Notes paid interest at 8% per annum
    and matured on December 22, 2014.26 Invenergy could not prepay the Series B Notes
    before December 22, 2011, a date defined as the “Conversion Deadline.” 27 After the
    Conversion Deadline, the Company could prepay the Series B Notes for principal plus
    interest. For purposes of the prepayment, principal would be calculated at 105% of the face
    amount if paid before December 22, 2012, and 102% of the face amount if paid thereafter
    until December 22, 2013, with no premium after that date.28 Any Series B Investor could
    convert “all, but not less than all” of its Series B Notes into equity at any time “on or prior
    to the Conversion Deadline,” with the resulting number of member interests determined by
    formula.29 As a practical matter, if the Company did poorly, then the Series B Investors
    would stay in the notes and preserve their debt-based rights to recover their principal and
    24
    Id.; see also JX 36 (closing set for follow-on investment); JX 40 at 1 (internal
    email seeking approval of Leaf board for follow-on investment); Alemu Tr. 16, 20; Murphy
    Tr. 591-92.
    25
    PTO ¶ II.B.6.
    26
    JX 37 § 1.4(a), (b).
    27
    Id. art. X.
    28
    Id. § 1.4(c).
    29
    Id. § 1.5(a).
    10
    interest. If the Company did well, then the Series B Investors would convert into equity
    before the Conversion Deadline to capture the equity upside.
    The Series B Agreement incorporated by reference a form of the LLC Agreement
    that would govern Invenergy once a Series B Investor converted its Series B Notes into
    member interests (the “Series B LLC Agreement”).30 The Series B LLC Agreement
    anticipated that absent some other transactional development, the Series B Investors would
    remain as members for up to three years after the Conversion Deadline, for a total
    investment period of five to six years.31 To facilitate exit, Section 11.09 of the Series B
    LLC Agreement established reciprocal put and call rights that the parties could exercise
    between December 22, 2013 and December 22, 2014. During that window, any member
    who held equity interests as a result of converting Series B Notes could “require that the
    Company purchase all but not less than all” of its interests.32 Likewise, during the same
    window, the Company could “redeem all but not less than all of the Company Interests
    held by” such members.33
    In each case, the Series B LLC Agreement defined the price for the redemption as
    “Fair Market Value.” The Series B LLC Agreement defined Fair Market Value in
    30
    See JX 38 at 75.
    31
    See JX 24 at 9 (Leaf presentation stating “Exit assumed to occur in 2013”).
    32
    JX 38 at 116.
    33
    Id.
    11
    decidedly pro-investor fashion: “the product of (x) the highest price per unit of equity
    interest which the Company could obtain from a willing buyer (not a current employee or
    director) for the Company’s Company Interests in a transaction involving the sale by the
    Company of all equity interests times (y) the number of Company Interests being valued.”34
    The definition further specified that when “there is not an active trading market, the
    appraisers shall value the interests without ascribing a minority interest or illiquidity
    discount.”35 To determine Fair Market Value, the parties first would attempt to negotiate
    in good faith. If they could not agree, then the Series B LLC Agreement provided for a
    process in which each side would choose an appraiser to value the Company and the
    resulting price would be the average of the two appraisals. If the first two appraisals varied
    by more than 20%, then the parties would jointly choose a third appraiser and the value
    would be the average of all three appraisals.36 This decision refers to these aspects of the
    LLC Agreement as the Put Right, the Call Right, and the Put-Call Provisions.
    If a Series B Investor triggered its Put Right and Invenergy failed to repurchase the
    interests, then the Series B Investor gained additional rights, including the right to compel
    34
    Id. at 85 (emphasis added). This standard applied if Invenergy remained privately
    held and was not contemporaneously engaging in a sale transaction. If Invenergy was
    publicly traded, then Fair Market Value would equal the trading price. If Invenergy agreed
    to be acquired, then Fair Market Value would be the deal price. See id.
    35
    Id.
    36
    Id.
    12
    a sale of the Company to a third party.37 The practical effect of the Put-Call Provisions was
    to force an exit or renegotiation of the Series B Investors’ rights within six years after their
    initial investment in December 2008.38
    While their capital remained committed to Invenergy, the Series B Investors
    enjoyed various approval rights. Section 4.3 of the Series B Agreement contained a lengthy
    list of actions that the Company could not take without first securing the approval of
    holders of a majority in value of the Series B Notes.
    Section 4.3(b) specified that Invenergy had to secure the necessary vote before
    engaging in a Material Partial Sale. The relevant language stated:
    4.3   On or prior to the Conversion Deadline, without the consent of the
    Required Purchasers, the Company shall not:
    ...
    (b)    sell (in one of more transactions within any period of twelve
    (12) consecutive months) assets of the Company or assets of its Subsidiaries
    for value greater than 20% of the value of the Company (such values being
    net present values of the pro forma after tax cash flow of such assets to be
    sold as compared to the pro forma after tax cash flow of all assets of the
    Company and its Subsidiaries, in each case based on the Company’s then
    current business plan prepared in good faith and calculated as provided in the
    Projections or such other model worksheet used by the Company at such time
    and reasonably acceptable to the Holders and discounted at a ten percent
    (10%) net present value discount rate) (a “Material Partial Sale”), unless the
    transaction giving rise to the Material Partial Sale yields cash proceeds equal
    37
    See id. at 117.
    38
    Cf. JX 61 (noting in context of later negotiation in 2012 that the “put option that
    Leaf retains can be used to force some type of a liquidity or recap event”); JX 63 at 1
    (same).
    13
    to or greater than the amount which, if such cash were paid to the holders of
    the Notes would provide the holders of Notes, through the closing of such
    Material Partial sale, the Target Multiple in cash and the provisions of
    Section 1.4(e) (other than the last sentence thereof) are complied with.39
    The cross reference to Section 1.4(e) identified a provision that obligated Invenergy to offer
    to purchase the Series B Notes in the event of a Material Partial Sale. It stated, in relevant
    part:
    Upon the occurrence of any Material Partial Sale that has not been consented
    to by the Required Purchasers pursuant to Section 4.3(b) which (i) is not a
    Liquidity Event, (ii) occurs on or prior to the Conversion Deadline and (iii)
    yields cash proceeds to the Company equal to or greater than the Target
    Multiple of all outstanding Notes, the Company must offer to prepay the
    Notes for an amount sufficient to cause the Holders to receive the Target
    Multiple, and each holder of the Notes may choose . . . to accept or reject
    such offer. . . . If any Material Partial Sale occurs after the Conversion
    Deadline that has not been consented to pursuant to Section 4.4(b), the
    Company shall use the entire net proceeds of such sale to prepay the Notes
    together with any accrued but unpaid interest thereon and any applicable
    premium contemplated by Section 1.4(c) as in effect on the closing of the
    Material Partial Sale upon the closing of the Material Partial Sale.40
    These provisions documented the business agreement reached when the parties negotiated
    the term sheet for the Series B Notes. They were substantially identical to similar
    provisions in the Series A Agreement.41
    The parties have debated the implications of the presence of Section 1.4(e) in the
    Series B Agreement. In my view, its presence primarily reflected the fact that during the
    39
    JX 37 § 4.3(b).
    40
    Id. § 1.4(e).
    41
    See JX 9.
    14
    period when their investment was governed by that agreement, the Series B Investors held
    debt. Absent a provision like Section 1.4(e), Invenergy might argue that the Series B
    Investors only would be entitled to payment of principal and interest if the Series B Consent
    Right was breached. Under Section 9.1(a)(3) of the Series B Agreement, breach of the
    Series B Consent Right would be an “Event of Default,” because it would result in a
    situation in which “the Company . . . defaults in any material respect in the performance or
    observance of any other covenant term or condition [other than the payment of principal or
    interest when due] contained in the Notes, this Agreement or the Related Agreements.” 42
    The Series B Agreement provided that upon an Event of Default, the unpaid principal and
    accrued but unpaid interest on the Series B Notes would accelerate and become due. But
    that was not what the Series B Investors wanted to receive in that situation. They wanted
    the equity upside of the Target Multiple. To avoid creating a loophole that might enable
    Invenergy to extinguish the Series B Notes prematurely by engaging in a Material Partial
    Sale, the drafters of the Series B Agreement included Section 1.4(e). That section provided
    explicitly that Invenergy had to pay the investors the Target Multiple, not just principal and
    interest.
    In my view, another purpose for Section 1.4(e) was to reflect the parties’ agreement
    that the holders of the Series B Notes would have optionality as to whether they wanted to
    (i) accept the Target Multiple and exit or (ii) retain their Series B Notes and the possibility
    42
    JX 37, § 9.1(a)(3).
    15
    of greater equity upside. The parties could have drafted Section 1.4(e) to require the
    investors to transact in return for the Target Multiple. Instead, the parties required
    Invenergy to offer to purchase the Series B Notes, at which point the Series B Investors
    could choose what to do. As in the term sheet, the optionality rested with the investors.
    As noted previously, the Series B Agreement incorporated by reference the Series
    B LLC Agreement, which would govern the Series B Investors’ rights once they converted
    to equity. Under the Series B LLC Agreement, the Series B Investors would continue to
    enjoy significant governance rights comparable to those in the Series B Notes following
    their conversion into equity. In Section 8.01, titled “Significant Actions,” the Series B LLC
    Agreement contained a lengthy list of items that required the approval of at least two
    unaffiliated members holding at least 50% of the equity in the aggregate.43 The list of
    actions included a Material Partial Sale. The operative language stated:
    Without the prior written consent of . . . the Required Investor Members, the
    Company shall not:
    ...
    (b) sell [enough] assets of the Company or assets or equity of its Subsidiaries
    [to constitute a Material Partial Sale] . . . , unless the transaction giving rise
    to the Material Partial Sale yields cash proceeds equal to or greater than the
    amount that, if received, would provide the Members other than IWH, as of
    the closing of such Material Partial Sale, their applicable Target Multiple in
    cash. Any such transaction may be structured to provide IWH with lower
    proceeds on a pro rata basis as the other Members in order to yield such
    Members with their applicable Target Multiple in cash.44
    43
    See JX 38 at 34 (definition of “Required Investor Members”).
    44
    Id. at 49.
    16
    This language paralleled the Series B Consent Right that appeared in the Series B
    Agreement.
    The Series B LLC Agreement did not contain an analog to Section 1.4(e) of the
    Series B Agreement. Once again, the parties have debated the significance of this fact. In
    my view, its absence does not imply an intent that the investors would not receive their
    Target Multiple if a Material Partial Sale took place. Having considered the record, I
    believe its absence simply reflected the fact that once the Series B Investors had converted
    to equity, there was no longer any need for a contractual protection that would rule out the
    possibility of Invenergy paying off the investors for principal plus accrued interest. It is
    true that the issue of optionality still existed, but the parties do not appear to have
    contemplated that point in 2008. They seem to have thought that if the investors received
    their Target Multiple, then the investors would exit happily. The question of optionality for
    the equity would resurface in 2014.
    D.     The 2011 Amendment
    In mid-2011, Invenergy wanted to prepay a large loan and establish a new term-loan
    facility.45 As part of that process, Invenergy proposed to extend the maturity of the Series
    B Notes by two years, push out the Conversion Deadline by two years, align the terms of
    45
    See JX 47-48 (executed “Payoff of Credit Agreement and Release of Security
    Interests”); Alemu Tr. 36-37.
    17
    the Series A Notes and Series B Notes, and modify the return thresholds in light of the
    alignment and longer term.46
    The Series B Investors accepted Invenergy’s changes but insisted on better return
    thresholds than what Invenergy proposed. Under the new arrangement, the amended Series
    B Agreement would guarantee the Series B Investors an internal rate of return (“IRR”) of
    20.51% in the event of a Material Partial Sale while in the notes, which represented a higher
    amount than the original deal. After conversion, the guaranteed IRR would be 25%,
    representing a decrease from the 27% minimum IRR contemplated in the original deal, and
    the rate of return would decline by 2% each year thereafter. 47 Joseph Condo, Invenergy’s
    General Counsel, marked up the Series B Agreement and the Series B LLC Agreement to
    modify the definition of “Target Multiple” that appeared in each to reflect the new IRR
    arrangement.48
    Underlying the parties’ discussions of the Target Multiple as a return floor was the
    premise that in any scenario in which Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without
    the Series B Investors’ consent, the Series B Investors would receive their Target
    46
    See JX 49; JX 51-52; JX 54.
    47
    See JX 49 (email between Liberty and Leaf showing IRR decline following
    conversion); JX 52 (email summarizing proposed IRR structure).
    48
    See JX 53.
    18
    Multiple.49 The Liberty and Leaf investor representatives testified to that effect,50 and the
    contemporaneous documents reflect this understanding. For example in December 2011,
    when Alemu sought approval from Leaf’s board of directors to execute the amendment, he
    noted that “Series B investors will continue to get a 20.5% IRR protection while still in the
    note if Invenergy wanted to pursue a transaction/liquidity event without getting consent of
    investors.”51 He continued:
    Target multiples (designed to yield cash on cash rate of return) for Series B
    investors post a conversion to company equity were slightly modified. These
    target multiples would protect investors from a material partial sale or the
    sale of Invenergy if such a transaction was pursued without the consent of
    Series B investors.52
    Leaf’s board signed off, and the parties executed the amendment on December 21.53
    49
    See Alemu Tr. 44-46.
    50
    See, e.g., Fontanes Tr. 416-17 (agreeing that “Invenergy had basically two options
    in a material partial sale under the LLC; either get consent from Liberty or pay it its material
    partial sale amount”); Alemu Tr. 40 (“So under both. They worked exactly in the same
    fashion.”).
    51
    JX 54.
    52
    Id.
    53
    PTO ¶ II.B.7. To facilitate the amendment, the Series B Investors exchanged their
    existing securities for Series B-2 Notes, and the parties entered into a new Series B-2
    Agreement. See JX 58 § 1.5(b). For purposes of the operative provisions in this case, the
    features of the securities did not change. For simplicity, this decision continues to refer to
    the Series B Agreement and the Series B Notes.
    19
    E.     The CDPQ Investment
    At the end of 2012, Invenergy proposed to raise capital from Caisse de dépôt et
    placement du Québec (“CDPQ”), a large Canadian pension fund. Among other things,
    Invenergy would use the capital to pay off Citigroup’s Series A Notes. The capital raise
    required consent from the Series B Investors. In return for their consent, Invenergy agreed
    to extend the Conversion Deadline from 2013 to 2015.54 In January 2013, Invenergy issued
    Series C Senior Subordinated Notes (the “Series C Notes”) to CDPQ. Invenergy used the
    proceeds to redeem Citigroup’s position, leaving Liberty as the dominant holder of the
    Series A Notes.55
    F.     The Liberty Conversion
    In summer 2013, Invenergy and Liberty discussed having Liberty convert some of
    its Series A Notes and all of its Series B Notes into equity. As part of the conversion,
    Liberty wanted greater governance rights for its equity, but Liberty and Invenergy did not
    want Leaf to share in those rights. Liberty and Invenergy also expressed concern that if
    Liberty converted all of its Series B Notes, then Leaf would be the only holder of Series B
    Notes and would have the ability to control the vote necessary for certain transactions.56
    54
    JX 63 (internal Leaf email soliciting approval of the amendment); JX 64 (signed
    amendment).
    55
    PTO ¶ II.B.9.
    56
    See Murphy Tr. 597-99.
    20
    Leaf believed that having Liberty convert to equity would benefit Invenergy. It
    therefore would benefit Leaf indirectly. To facilitate the conversion, Leaf agreed to
    “[a]ppropriate modifications” to the Series B Agreement “in order to limit Leaf’s blocking
    rights.”57 Relevant to the current lawsuit, the parties agreed to separate Liberty and Leaf’s
    consent rights in the amended operating agreement that would recognize Liberty as a
    member post-conversion. Liberty’s rights remained in Section 8.01 and were supplemented
    with additional provisions.58 Leaf’s rights were relocated to what eventually became
    Section 8.04 in the operative LLC Agreement.59
    Despite being relocated, the substance of Leaf’s rights remained the same.
    Invenergy still required Leaf’s consent for any Material Partial Sale “unless the transaction
    giving rise to the Material Partial Sale yields cash proceeds equal to or greater than the
    amount that, if received, would provide [Leaf], as of the closing of such Material Partial
    Sale, with cash proceeds equal to or more than [its] applicable Target Multiple.”60
    On July 1, 2013, Liberty converted $12.5 million of its Series A Notes and all of its
    Series B Notes into equity.61 In connection with the conversion and Invenergy’s
    57
    JX 63 at 1; JX 64.
    58
    JX 85 § 8.01(b), (e), (f); see also JX 74 at 44-48 (redline reflecting changes);
    Alemu Tr. 53-54 (discussing changes).
    59
    Alemu Tr. 51-53.
    60
    JX 85 § 8.02(b).
    61
    PTO ¶ II.B.10.
    21
    recognition of Liberty as a member, Liberty, Invenergy, and Invenergy Holdings entered
    into a Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Operating Agreement.62
    G.     Leaf Explores Liquidating Its Position.
    In spring 2014, Leaf’s parent company decided to begin an orderly liquidation of its
    investments. As part of this strategy, Leaf explored ways to exit its investment in
    Invenergy. In March 2014, Alemu and other members of management prepared a
    presentation that analyzed exit scenarios for Leaf.63 The presentation showed that Leaf’s
    principals understood that Leaf would be entitled to receive its Target Multiple if Invenergy
    engaged in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent regardless of whether Leaf held
    debt or equity.64 The analysis showed that for an exit in December 2015, Leaf would
    receive greater value under the LLC Agreement than under the Series B Agreement,
    because the former called for a guaranteed IRR of 23%, whereas the latter used an IRR of
    20.5%.65
    62
    See JX 85.
    63
    JX 99 at 3; Alemu Tr. 55-57.
    64
    JX 99 at 7 (“Prior to December 22, 2015, the Investor Holders of the Series B
    notes must approve any Invenergy liquidity event or material partial sale that does not yield
    a 20.5% IRR.”); id. at 10 (“Prior to December 22, 2015, all Series B Investor Members
    must approve any Invenergy liquidity event or material partial sale that does not yield a
    cash-on-cash IRR . . . .”).
    65
    See Alemu Tr. 58-61 (explaining that LLC Agreement provided for higher IRR
    for calculating Target Multiple than Series B Agreement). Compare JX 99 at 7 (calculating
    Target Multiple of $110,670,172 for Series B Notes in December 2015 using 20.5% IRR),
    22
    On April 1, 2014, Leaf’s parent hired Mark Lerdal to oversee the orderly liquidation.
    Lerdal’s compensation consists of a base salary plus an incentive fee tied to the value of
    the returns he generates through the liquidation process.66 This arrangement gives him an
    economic interest in securing the highest possible value for Leaf’s position in Invenergy.
    One option Leaf considered was to sell its position to a third party. In May 2014,
    Leaf began interviewing investment banks to help with the sale process. The interview
    materials described the Series B Consent Right in the same terms as the March 2014 board
    presentation and depicted the same exit valuations.67
    H.     Invenergy’s CFO And Its General Counsel Confirm Leaf’s Understanding.
    In spring 2014, CDPQ, Liberty, and Invenergy were considering a recapitalization
    in which CDPQ would purchase additional equity and Liberty would convert more of its
    debt into equity. The deal contemplated changes to the LLC Agreement and the Series B
    Agreement and would require Leaf’s consent.68
    Shashank Sane was a Vice President at Invenergy who reported directly to Jim
    Murphy, Invenergy’s CFO. To assist in negotiating the revised documents, Sane prepared
    with JX 99 at 10 (calculating Target Multiple of $127,778,279 for equity in December 2015
    using 23% IRR).
    66
    See JX 100 (executed employment agreement); Lerdal Tr. 234.
    67
    See JX 108 at 2, 5; see also Lerdal Tr. 238-43 (discussing the deck).
    68
    JX 116 (Leaf internal email from Alemu summarizing discussions with
    Invenergy).
    23
    and circulated a “matrix comparing member rights in the LLC agreement.”69 The matrix
    summarized Leaf’s rights in the event of a Material Partial Sale as follows: “Consent
    required, unless paying COC amount” and “Leaf COC Amount is Target Multiple.”70 Sane
    revised the matrix several times under the supervision of Murphy and Condo, Invenergy’s
    General Counsel.71 The description of Leaf’s rights in the event of a Material Partial Sale
    never substantively changed.72
    During the negotiations, CDPQ and Liberty asked Invenergy to add language to the
    LLC Agreement that would give them the option upon the occurrence of a Material Partial
    Sale to either receive their Target Multiple or stay in the equity. In other words, their
    member interests would have the same optionality as their notes. In 2013, when the parties
    had separated Leaf’s consent rights from the other investors’ and moved them to a different
    section of the LLC Agreement, they had redefined the Target Multiple that CDPQ and
    Liberty would receive in the event of a Material Partial Sale as the “Material Partial Sale
    Amount.” Now, CDPQ and Liberty asked for the option to choose whether or not to receive
    69
    JX 109 at 1.
    70
    Id. at 5.
    71
    See JX 111-12; see also Murphy Tr. 665-72.
    72
    In the final version, Sane changed the generic “COC” to “MPS.” The relevant
    bullets read: “Consent required, unless paying MPS amount” and “Leaf MPS amount is
    Target Multiple.” JX 112.
    24
    their Material Partial Sale Amount if a Material Partial Sale took place. They proposed the
    following language:
    In the event of a Material Partial Sale, any Member who is not a Specified
    Member (excluding Leaf Invenergy Company) shall have the right to elect
    in writing, within thirty (30) days after its receipt of the 30-day notice
    referred to directly below, to receive cash proceeds equal to the Material
    Partial Sale Amount.73
    Invenergy shared the draft with Leaf.
    Leaf initially considered whether it had the right to block the recapitalization and
    could use that right to facilitate an exit. In an email dated May 21, 2014, Lerdal asked
    Alemu, “Why don’t we ask for our guaranteed return today? Do we have any blocking
    rights? If so, this is the time to tell them we will approve no change to the operating
    agreement.”74 Alemu responded that Leaf did not have blocking rights and that Leaf’s
    “guaranteed return”— its right to receive its Target Multiple—was “only triggered if they
    undertake a material partial sale (dispose [of] 20% of the assets) or [] consummate [a]
    change of control without seeking our consent.”75 Both Alemu and Lerdal testified credibly
    to their contemporaneous expectation that if Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale
    without Leaf’s consent, then Invenergy would have to pay Leaf its Target Multiple.76
    73
    JX 117 § 8.01(e).
    74
    JX 121 at 1.
    75
    Id.
    76
    Alemu Tr. 64-65 (“[T]o the extent they didn’t get our consent, the company had
    an obligation to pay, so that’s what [] I was reflecting in that email.”); Lerdal Tr. 246 (“We
    25
    Leaf retained Mike Russell at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C. to provide
    advice on the proposed changes to Invenergy’s governing documents.77 In an email dated
    May 27, 2014, Russell asked Condo why Leaf would not be included in CDPQ and
    Liberty’s proposal for new language in Section 8.01(e).78 He wanted to know “what
    happens to Leaf in this scenario?”79
    Condo responded that the section did not address Leaf because “Leaf’s rights in the
    event of an MPS are specified explicitly in Section 8.04(b).”80 That answer did not respond
    to the substance of Russell’s question, so Russell followed up by explaining that Section
    8.04(b)
    doesn’t actually provide a payout to Leaf, whereas 8.01(e) provides for a
    payout to the non-Specified Members. Is there a reason why Leaf doesn’t
    have a right to elect to receive the payout in the Material Partial Sale? If they
    can’t elect to receive it, how are they assured to receive their Target Multiple
    in the transaction?81
    thought it was guaranteed. We thought if the transaction happened and -- and we weren’t -
    - and we didn’t consent, they were obligated to pay that to us.”).
    77
    See JX 117-18; Alemu Tr. 62.
    78
    JX 128 at 4.
    79
    Id.; see also Russel Tr. 481-83.
    80
    JX 128 at 3.
    81
    Id. at 2; see also Russell Tr. 482-85 (testifying that after reviewing proposed
    Section 8.01(e), it “stood out” that Leaf did not have a “specific election right” like Liberty
    did under the provision).
    26
    Condo responded clearly and directly: “[I]t is a firm consent right that we can’t do a C of
    C absent Leaf’s consent if the Target Multiple is not reach[ed]. So unless they consent not
    to receive it, they will always get it.”82 At trial, Condo acknowledged that his reference to
    “C of C” encompassed a Material Partial Sale.83 Russell reasonably perceived Condo to be
    saying that if a Material Partial Sale took place and Leaf did not consent, then “[y]ou’ll get
    paid.”84
    Although Russell and Condo both understood the provision to work in the same
    way, Russell remained concerned that the language was not sufficiently clear. He observed
    that under the language as drafted, “Leaf does not have a consent right if the cash proceeds,
    ‘if received’, would be equal to or greater than the Target Multiple. There is no obligation
    to actually deliver the cash proceeds.”85 Condo reassured Russell: “The intent is that Leaf
    receives its TM. Do we need language to clarify?”86
    After this exchange, both lawyers asked the business principals to confirm their
    understanding about how the provision worked. Condo emailed Murphy and asked, “Jim -
    do you agree that the intent is that absent their consent not to get it, Leaf is entitled to
    82
    JX 128 at 2 (emphasis added).
    83
    Condo Tr. 440.
    84
    Russell Tr. 487 (“He said they’ll always get it, so he just seemed to be saying,
    ‘You’ll get paid.’”).
    85
    JX 128 at 2.
    86
    Id. at 1.
    27
    receive their TM? They are wrapped around the axle on a semantic game thinking we don’t
    actually have to pay them.”87 Murphy responded: “Yes I agree.”88 Condo responded, “OK
    – I will work with them on reassuring language.”89
    Meanwhile, Russell followed up with Leaf. Russell knew that Leaf believed it
    should have the right to receive its Target Multiple if Invenergy completed a Material
    Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent. His question was whether Leaf wanted to receive its
    payment automatically, or whether Leaf wanted the same optionality that it had under the
    Series B Notes and which CDPQ and Liberty were obtaining for their equity. Russell asked
    Alemu, “[I]n the situation with a material partial sale, will you want to automatically
    receive your target multiple or have the ability to elect to receive it, similar to the other
    non-Specified Members.”90 Alemu responded, “We would like to receive it
    automatically.”91 Russell passed Leaf’s response on to Condo: “Joe, Leaf confirmed that
    they would expect to receive the payout associated with the Material Partial Sale
    automatically, so we would appreciate if language could be added to clarify.”92
    87
    JX 124.
    88
    Id.
    89
    Id.
    90
    JX 126 at 1.
    91
    Id.
    92
    JX 128 at 1; see also Russell Tr. 488-89.
    28
    At this point, the business principals for both sides (Murphy and Alemu) and the
    lawyers for both sides (Condo and Russell) shared a uniform understanding about how the
    Series B Consent Right worked: If Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without
    obtaining Leaf’s consent, then “Leaf receives its TM.”93 There were no ifs, ands, or buts:
    “[U]nless they [Leaf] consent not to receive it, they will always get it.”94 The only question
    was how to make sure the language sufficiently confirmed this shared understanding.
    Condo asked for Murphy’s sign-off on the following language:
    [Invenergy shall not] participate in or permit a Material Partial Sale, unless
    the transaction giving rise to the Material Partial Sale yields cash proceeds
    equal to or greater than the amount that, if received, would provide the Series
    B Non-Voting Investor Members, as of the closing of such Material Partial
    Sale, with cash proceeds equal to or more than their applicable Target
    Multiple, with such Target Multiple to be paid upon such closing of the
    Material Partial Sale.95
    With Murphy’s approval, Condo sent the language to Russell.96
    Russell was “satisfied with the language” that Condo had proposed,97 but it occurred
    to him that if a Material Partial Sale resulted in proceeds that could support a distribution
    greater than the Target Multiple, then Leaf should receive the greater value and not be
    93
    JX 128 at 1 (Condo).
    94
    JX 128 at 2 (Condo).
    95
    JX 125 at 1.
    96
    JX 128 at 1; see also Alemu Tr. 70; Russell Tr. 489-90.
    97
    Russell Tr. 490.
    29
    capped at its Target Multiple. He wrote to Alemu: “Not sure that you should only be paid
    your Target Multiple – i.e. if the payout is higher, shouldn’t you receive the full amount?”98
    Alemu understandably liked that idea and responded: “We should have the ability to take
    the greater of the target multiple or pro rata value of a transaction.”99 Russell informed
    Condo that Leaf believed that “[t]he payout shouldn’t be limited to the Target Multiple if
    the transaction would result in a higher payout based on their then pro-rata ownership.”100
    Russell asked Condo to “modify [his proposed language] to provide for a payout of the
    greater of the Target Multiple or their pro rata share of the transaction value.”101
    Condo correctly perceived that Leaf was now asking for something more than what
    everyone had understood the deal to be. He emailed Murphy:
    Now Leaf wants to not be limited to the Target Multiple if an MPS would
    result in a higher payout based on their then pro-rata ownership. They want
    a payout of the greater of the Target Multiple or their pro rata share of the
    transaction value. I don’t think that was the deal – maybe you should talk
    with Yoni [Alemu] directly?102
    98
    JX 129 at 1.
    99
    Id.
    100
    JX 132 at 1.
    101
    Id.
    102
    JX 127 at 2.
    30
    Murphy initially wondered why Leaf would need language giving them a right to greater
    transactional proceeds, asking “don’t they get the pro rata payout by just agreeing to the
    transaction?”103 Condo explained that for a Material Partial Sale that was not the case.
    No. The agreement generally does not specifically say so. Unless you are
    referring to the general distribution clause. But that has nothing to do with a
    Member consent – there is no direct benefit for a member to consent to an
    MPS. If they consent, it just means we can do the MPS at less than the TM.104
    At this point, Murphy cut to the chase by laying out his understanding of the fundamental
    business deal:
    My understanding is:
     If we do a material partial sale with their consent, we do the deal and
    if we have a distribution as a result we pay pro rata.
     If we try to do an MPS and they don’t consent, then we can transact
    anyway as long as we pay them the TM at which point they are out.
    Probably in this case we pay them more than their pro rata amount to
    get them to TM.
    That was the deal. No way we agree to modify. Should I call Yoni
    [Alemu]?105
    Condo agreed and told Murphy, “Your understanding is right.”106
    103
    Id. at 1.
    104
    Id.
    105
    Id.
    106
    JX 133 at 1.
    31
    Murphy scheduled a call with Alemu.107 Ahead of the call, Murphy sent Alemu a
    summary of how he understood the current provision to operate. After quoting the language
    of Section 8.04(b) of the LLC Agreement, Murphy stated:
    To summarize,
     If we do a material partial sale with your consent, the value is captured
    by the Company to the pro rata benefit of the members. And if we
    have a distribution as a result the value is pro rata.
     If we desire to do an MPS without your consent, then we can transact
    anyway as long as we pay you your Target Multiple, at which point
    you would no longer be a member.108
    Murphy then moved on to the new point Leaf had raised: “My understanding is that there
    is a new request to modify the non-consent case such that your shares would need to be
    redeemed at the greater of (a) your Target Multiple and (b) your pro rata share of the
    transaction value?”109 Murphy said that the ask “makes no sense to me” because “[i]f a
    Material Partial Sale is for say 20% of the Company value, how could your pro rata share
    realistically . . . exceed your Target Multiple? And why would you redeem 100% of your
    membership interest for 20% of your value?”110
    107
    See id. (Murphy agreeing to call Alemu); JX 134 (Murphy and Condo discussing
    call).
    108
    JX 135 at 1.
    109
    Id.
    110
    Id.
    32
    Internally, Murphy and Condo debated whether there was confusion over the fact
    that Invenergy would be redeeming Leaf’s interests in return for paying the Target
    Multiple.111 At Murphy’s request, Condo drafted changes to the LLC Agreement that
    clarified that Invenergy would pay the Target Multiple in exchange for the member’s equity
    interest; in other words, the payment would operate as a redemption.112 Condo
    accomplished this by defining the Target Multiple as an amount that a Series B Investor
    would receive “in exchange for its portion of the Company Interests.”113
    Meanwhile, Alemu reviewed Murphy’s email and agreed with his analysis. Alemu
    forwarded the email on to Russell and let him know that Leaf would not pursue the new
    point.114 Russell viewed the point as a business matter involving economics rather than a
    legal issue and hence was “[f]ine deferring to you on this.”115 On May 29, 2014, Alemu
    111
    See JX 140 at 2.
    112
    Id. at 1-2; see also JX 147 at 1 (Condo writing to Murphy and Sane, “My take
    on this is simply that if they are entitled to a C of C Amount, MPS Amount or Target
    Multiple, they give up all Company interest.”); id. (Sane agreeing, “If they trigger a COC
    amount, MPS amount or Target Multiple, it has to be the entire position.”).
    113
    JX 140 at 1.
    114
    JX 136 at 1 (Alemu writing, “I will go back to him and accept their original
    proposal”).
    115
    Id.
    33
    told Murphy that Leaf was “fine with the language below (target multiple for MPS without
    consent).”116
    Later that day, Condo sent Murphy and Sane a revised draft of the LLC Agreement
    containing the proposed language. In his cover email, he explained that based on his
    revisions, “8.04(b) reflects that Leaf actually gets paid the TM.”117 Murphy and Sane
    signed off.118 Condo then circulated the changes to CDPQ and Liberty. He characterized
    the revisions as “minor changes at Leaf’s request.”119 CDPQ and Liberty did not object.120
    During a subsequent email exchange, Condo confirmed for CDPQ that “[i]f a transaction
    entitles a Member to a C of C Amount, MPS Amount or Target Multiple, they give up all
    Company Interest.”121
    On July 3, 2014, Invenergy received regulatory approval for CDPQ’s investment.
    On July 10, all of the members executed the Third Amended and Restated Limited Liability
    116
    JX 141 at 1.
    117
    JX 142 at 1.
    118
    JX 143 at 1.
    119
    JX 144 at 1 (cover email).
    120
    See JX 148 (exchange between Invenergy, CDPQ, and Liberty discussing other
    changes in the agreement); JX 149 (same); Renault Tr. 371, 410-11 (CDPQ witness
    confirming that he was aware of the changes but did not spend too much time focusing on
    them).
    121
    JX 148 at 1.
    34
    Company Agreement of Invenergy Wind LLC.122 The LLC Agreement contained the
    changes to Section 8.04(b) negotiated between Russell and Condo. The provision now
    stated:
    Without prior written consent of (i) the Manager and (ii) the Required Series
    B Non-Voting Investor Members, the Company shall not:
    ...
    (b) participate in or permit a Material Partial Sale, unless the transaction
    giving rise to the Material Partial Sale yields cash proceeds equal to or greater
    than the amount that would provide the Series B Non-Voting Investor
    Members, as of the closing of such Material Partial Sale, with cash proceeds
    equal to or more than their applicable Target Multiple with such Target
    Multiple to be paid upon such closing of the Material Partial Sale. At the
    option of all other Members, any such transaction may be structured to
    provide such other Members with lower proceeds on a pro rata basis as the
    Series B Non-Voting Investor Members in order to yield such Series B Non-
    Voting Investor Members with their Target Multiple.123
    Leaf qualified as a Required Series B Non-Voting Investor Member. This is the operative
    version of the Series B Consent Right for purposes of this litigation.
    I.        Leaf Formalizes Its Plan For Orderly Liquidation.
    In July 2014, Leaf’s parent held a special meeting of stockholders at which it
    formally embarked on an orderly liquidation of its assets focused on “the return of capital
    to the shareholders, with no predetermined timeframe and in a manner that produces
    122
    PTO ¶ II.C.3; JX 160 (the LLC Agreement); see also JX 159 (Amendment No.
    1 to Second Amended and Restated Series B Senior Subordinated Convertible Note
    Purchase Agreement); JX 162 (press release announcing CDPQ investment in Invenergy).
    123
    JX 160 § 8.04(b).
    35
    optimum realisation value to the shareholders.”124 Its annual report stated that Leaf was
    “currently evaluating options for monetising its investment in” Invenergy, which the report
    described as a “well-performing asset.”125
    That same month, Leaf engaged Dean Bradley Osborne Partners LLC (“Dean
    Partners”) to market Leaf’s position in the Series B Notes. Dean Partners’ engagement
    letter provided for a flat fee of $1 million plus 10% of the consideration Leaf received for
    its position in excess of $57 million, subject to a $2 million cap for a sale to a buyer
    unaffiliated with Invenergy.126 This partially contingent fee arrangement gave Dean
    Partners a financial incentive to seek a higher value for Leaf’s position.
    In its preliminary analyses, Dean Partners valued Leaf’s positon at between $50
    million and $79 million,127 and Dean Partners proposed to market the position at
    approximately $70 million.128 The face value of the Series B Notes, consisting of principal
    124
    JX 155 at 5; see also Lerdal Tr. 236. Leaf’s parent traded on the London Stock
    Exchange. In United Kingdom parlance, the special meeting was an “extraordinary general
    meeting.”
    125
    JX 155 at 6.
    126
    JX 157 at 1 (executed Dean Partners engagement letter); see also Alemu Tr. 76.
    127
    JX 166 at 3 (deck prepared by Dean Partners for Leaf).
    128
    See JX 173 at 2 (notice to Invenergy of intent to transfer the notes, stating “we
    propose to transfer the Notes to Invenergy at a purchase price of $70,000,000 in cash
    consideration”); see also Lerdal Tr. 247-48.
    36
    and interest, was $46 million.129 Dean Partners ascribed incremental value to the Series B
    Notes because of the Target Multiple, which Dean Partners regarded as a “guaranteed
    return upon liquidity event.”130 The marketing materials explained that “[p]rior to
    December 22, 2015, the note holders must approve any Invenergy liquidity event or
    material partial sale that does not yield a 20.5% IRR” and that “[o]nce converted to equity,
    investor must approve any Invenergy liquidity event that does not yield a return of
    $113.1MM, $126.4MM, and $136.6MM in December ’14, ’15, and ’16, respectively.”131
    Before it could start marketing the Series B Notes, Leaf had to comply with a right-
    of-first-offer provision in the Series B Agreement. Section 11.2 required that Leaf deliver
    what the Series B Agreement termed a “Note Offer Notice” to Invenergy specifying a price
    and other proposed terms. Invenergy then had thirty days to consider the Note Offer Notice
    and submit a counter offer. If Invenergy countered, Leaf had thirty days to consider the
    counter. If Leaf rejected the counter, then Leaf had 120 days to sell the Series B Notes to
    a third party as long as “the consideration, terms and conditions offered by such third party
    are materially no less favorable to [Leaf] than is the Note Offer Notice.”132 Leaf and Dean
    129
    JX 169 at 1 (Preliminary Information Memorandum prepared by Dean Partners).
    130
    Id. at 3.
    131
    Id.
    132
    JX 88 § 11.2.
    37
    Partners did not expect Invenergy to cooperate with the right-of-first-offer process.133 But
    Lerdal was not worried. He regarded the sales process as “not time sensitive” and, absent
    some intervening event, “fully expect[ed] to exercise” Leaf’s Put Right in 2015.134
    Dean Partners delivered Leaf’s Note Offer Notice to Invenergy on October 24,
    2014.135 The Note Offer Notice invited Invenergy to repurchase the Series B Notes for $70
    million rather than playing “appraisal roulette” after Leaf exercised its Put Right in
    December 2015.136 Leaf stated that if Invenergy declined to purchase the Series B Notes,
    then Leaf would market them to third parties or “hold the notes until December, 2015,
    convert the notes into equity of Invenergy, and exercise the Put option.”137
    On November 3, 2014, Condo rejected the notice as defective. Invenergy took the
    positon that the Series B Agreement required Leaf to include “the identity of the proposed
    third party transferee (which must be a Qualified Transferee) and the price at which the
    133
    See JX 170 at 2.
    134
    Id. at 1 (email from Lerdal: “if the company is not going to work with us, we
    should run with our process. At a minimum just to send a message to the company that we
    are serious about this asset.”); see also Lerdal Tr. 300-01.
    135
    JX 176 at 1 (transmittal email); see also Alemu Tr. 77; Lerdal Tr. 247; Russell
    Tr. 504-05; Murphy Tr. 613-15.
    136
    JX 179 (email between Dean Partners and Leaf); see also Lerdal Tr. 300; Dean
    Dep. 185-86.
    137
    JX 176 at 1.
    38
    Holder intends to sell the Notes to such third party.”138 Invenergy thus construed the
    transfer procedures in the Series B Agreement as creating a right of first refusal, rather than
    a right of first offer. By letter dated January 27, 2015, Leaf disputed Invenergy’s position,
    but did not pursue the matter further.139
    J.     Invenergy Considers A Material Partial Sale.
    In late 2014, Invenergy began to consider selling some of its assets and retained
    Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC to assist with that process.140 Murphy explained at trial that an
    investment vehicle called a “YieldCo” was “making its rounds on Wall Street.”141 In
    YieldCo deals, assets were being valued “significantly higher than how [Invenergy was]
    valuing assets, and we thought it might be a good time to test the market.” 142 Goldman
    began exploring potential transactions and advised Invenergy that there was “significant
    value in the M&A market for [Invenergy’s] high quality [wind] portfolio.”143
    138
    JX 177 at 1; see also Alemu Tr. 83; Lerdal Tr. 248; Russell Tr. 506-07.
    139
    JX 182 at 2 (letter from Russell to Condo).
    140
    Murphy Tr. 616-17; Polsky Dep. 48-49.
    141
    Murphy Tr. 616.
    142
    Id. at 616-17.
    143
    JX 180 at 5 (Goldman deck sent to Invenergy).
    39
    Goldman marketed Invenergy’s assets and pushed interested parties “for indicatives
    before March 17.”144 One of the interested parties was TerraForm Power, Inc., an owner
    and operator of renewable power assets. Lerdal served as a director of TerraForm and in
    that capacity learned in early March that TerraForm was preparing a bid. In what Lerdal
    candidly described as “not [his] proudest moment,” he immediately notified Alemu that
    Invenergy was pursuing an asset sale.145 Lerdal and Alemu were thrilled with the news,
    because they expected that the sale “was going to trigger the [Material Partial Sale
    clause].”146 Alemu also thought that a transaction could establish “a really good precedent”
    for determining Invenergy’s Fair Market Value under the Put-Call Provisions.147
    For its part, Invenergy was exploring how it could engage in a transaction without
    securing Leaf’s consent or paying Leaf its Target Multiple. Polsky was “convinced that we
    need to proceed with the wind asset sale to YieldCo, particularly considering [anticipated
    revenue declines in Poland].”148 But “because of the behavior of Leaf . . . beginning in late
    2014,” Invenergy did not want Leaf to “have a consent right to this transaction.”149
    144
    JX 186 at 1 (email from Murphy to Polsky providing “updates”).
    145
    Lerdal Tr. 253-54; see also JX 188 (emails between Lerdal and Alemu regarding
    the sale); Alemu Tr. 85-87.
    146
    Lerdal Tr. 254.
    147
    JX 189 (email from Alemu to Lerdal).
    148
    JX 197 (email from Polsky to Murphy); see also Polsky Dep. 50-51.
    149
    Murphy Tr. 690.
    40
    Invenergy management calculated at the time that Leaf’s Target Multiple was $95
    million.150
    One Invenergy strategy was to postpone disclosing the sale to Leaf for as long as
    possible.151 Another was to explore what would happen “if we do an MPS (where proceeds
    exceed the Target Multiple) and simply do not offer the TM?”152 Condo told Murphy that
    he was “happy to ask that of outside counsel,” but he was blunt about what the Series B
    Agreement contemplated: “I don’t see any plausible way to make that case. It’s my view
    that the agreement is very clear that we have to offer the TM to them, which they could
    then take or stay in the note.”153 Murphy responded, “I admit it appears to be a long shot
    [but] we should at least ask about it.”154
    Condo asked. On March 10, 2015, he explained to outside counsel that Invenergy
    was “looking at a transaction that, by any measure, would be a Material Partial Sale under
    150
    JX 191.
    151
    See JX 192 at 1 (email from Condo to Invenergy management advising that Leaf
    had a right to attend noteholders’ meetings but not members’ meetings, “[s]o we don’t need
    to be coy about separate meetings”).
    152
    Id. at 1.
    153
    JX 193 at 2.
    154
    Id.
    41
    this agreement.”155 Condo’s email walked through the pertinent sections of the Series B
    Agreement. He wrote that the Series B Consent Right
    says that we must get Leaf’s consent if we want to complete a Material Partial
    Sale if the proceeds of such transaction are less than the amount of the Target
    Multiple. If the proceeds exceed the amount of the Target Multiple and we
    comply with Section 1.4(e), we don’t need consent. The proceeds here would
    exceed the Target Multiple.156
    Condo asked “whether there is any way to read this in a way that would not require us to
    offer to pay the full Target Multiple.”157 He laid out several arguments:
     Perhaps we could make the case that because we don’t need to get
    their consent in the first place since the transaction exceeds the Target
    Multiple, 1.4(e)(iv) wouldn’t necessarily apply? Put another way,
    could we say 1.4(e) only applies if they refuse consent, as opposed to
    a case where we simply don’t ask?
     Or is there some other way to say that the intent here is that for a high-
    value transaction, they benefit and we don’t need to make such an
    offer?
     Or, maybe there would be a basis to say that their failure to simply
    consent to the transaction (it’s a sole discretion consent per 11.15), if
    it values the company highly, is a bad faith action?158
    155
    JX 194 at 1.
    156
    Id.
    157
    Id.
    158
    Id. (formatting added).
    42
    Condo concluded: “You may think we are grasping a little, and you’d be right. But we are
    trying to see if we have any realistic alternatives here.”159 At the time, Condo and Murphy
    both believed that Invenergy had to pay Leaf its Target Multiple if Invenergy engaged in a
    Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent, and they believed any arguments to the
    contrary either did not exist or were unlikely to succeed.
    In contrast with its efforts to develop arguments to avoid Leaf’s consent rights,
    Invenergy sought consent from CDPQ and Liberty.160 In mid-March 2015, Invenergy
    management met with CDPQ and Liberty in Chicago and explained the rationale for the
    sale.161 CDPQ and Liberty saw “significant value in this transaction” but argued that
    “proceeds in excess of what [they] believe is reasonable should be distributed to the
    members.”162 Liberty and CDPQ balked at Invenergy’s idea of using the proceeds to pay
    down debt.163
    159
    Id.; see also Condo Tr. 425-26 (acknowledging the question “was one that I felt
    was something of a stretch” and that he “didn’t really think there was really much merit”
    to his theories but that he sent the email “so that I could report back to my boss that I had
    run this down with outside counsel”).
    160
    See JX 195-96 (emails between Invenergy and CDPQ discussing potential asset
    sale); Murphy Tr. 687-89.
    161
    JX 201 at 1 (email from Polsky to Liberty and CDPQ recapping meeting); see
    also Renault Tr. 376-80; Murphy Tr. 633; Polsky Dep. 104-05.
    162
    JX 201 at 1.
    163
    Id.
    43
    Polsky responded that reinvesting the proceeds in Invenergy’s business would yield
    enough cash over time to begin making distributions to investors. He reminded CDPQ and
    Liberty that he was the largest equity holder and hence shared their interests.164
    Negotiations continued, and CDPQ and Liberty remained involved and generally
    supportive of the asset sale.165
    K.     Leaf Evaluates Its Options.
    On March 23, 2015, a news article leaked that “Invenergy is understood to be
    considering a sale of the bulk of its generation fleet.”166 The article confirmed what Leaf
    already knew due to Lerdal’s role as a director of TerraForm. Alemu noted that if the
    transaction were “consummated prior to Dec 22, 2015, we would be entitled to our target
    multiples.”167 He explained that the transaction
    would certainly constitute a material partial sale and Leaf would be entitled
    to its target multiple if the following conditions are met
    1) Transaction occurs prior to Dec 22, 2015 and
    2) If the sale would yield cash proceeds to Invenergy equal to or greater than
    the target multiple for all outstanding Series B-notes.168
    164
    Id. at 2.
    165
    See Renault Tr. 373; Murphy Tr. 633.
    166
    JX 203 at 1.
    167
    JX 204 at 1.
    168
    Id.
    44
    He caveated that “[a]ll of the above assumes that we don’t consent to the deal.” 169 Dean
    Partners agreed with Alemu’s analysis.170 So did Russell.171
    The Leaf team also analyzed Leaf’s rights if it converted into equity. On April 27,
    2015, Alemu advised Lerdal that under the LLC Agreement, “Invenergy would require
    consent from all of us (CDPQ, Liberty and Leaf) in order to undertake a material partial
    sale.”172 He also noted that “[c]onsent would not be required if they deliver consideration
    equal to or greater than the target multiples to the investors.”173 Alemu further observed
    that for a transaction prior to December 22, 2015, the Target Multiple for Leaf was higher
    under the LLC Agreement than under the Series B Agreement, meaning that Leaf would
    receive greater value if it converted into equity before a Material Partial Sale took place.174
    Lerdal responded that Leaf “might want to convert soon” but cautioned that Leaf
    needed to “time this properly” because “[w]e want their deal to be fully baked before we
    tip our hand.”175 Lerdal anticipated that Invenergy “will fight the existence of an MPS” and
    169
    Id.
    170
    JX 208 at 2.
    171
    JX 212 at 1.
    172
    JX 222 at 1.
    173
    Id.
    174
    Id.
    175
    JX 223 at 1.
    45
    that “they might push it off to after December 2015 to force us into the put call.”176 In other
    words, Lerdal believed that Invenergy might delay closing the Material Partial Sale and
    exercise its Call Right before the transaction closed to avoid paying the Target Multiple.
    That path did not worry Lerdal, because he believed that the Material Partial Sale would
    result in “a new floor valuation, much higher than currently” for determining Fair Market
    Value under the Put-Call Provisions.177
    Alemu agreed. He also noted that “[t]he threshold for a MPS under the LLC
    agreement ($240 mm) is lower than that under the [Series B Agreement] (20% of the value
    of the company),” so it would be “very difficult for them to try and avoid having to pay
    target multiple if we convert and they consummate the transaction.”178
    176
    Id.; see also Lerdal Dep. 106 (testifying he was concerned that, if Invenergy was
    “aware of -- if they were contemplating our right to the target multiple, they might put it -
    - they might have a closing date after the date that they could call our shares”).
    177
    JX 223 at 1; see also Lerdal Tr. 305-07 (testifying he wanted the deal to close
    because Invenergy was “doing a very good deal for not themselves but for everyone” and
    was selling at “[i]f not the very top [of the market], very close” which would “give Leaf a
    better return under the appraisal process, either the put or the call”).
    178
    JX 223 at 1.
    46
    L.    The TerraForm Bid
    On June 4, 2015, TerraForm submitted its bid to purchase seven Invenergy projects
    for an aggregate price of approximately $2.4 billion.179 On June 6, Invenergy accepted
    TerraForm’s proposal and entered into an exclusive negotiation period.180
    On June 16, 2015, Invenergy held a regularly scheduled meeting with its
    noteholders. Representatives of Invenergy, CDPQ, Liberty, and Leaf attended. No one
    mentioned the TerraForm deal.181 Invenergy circulated fifty-five pages of materials for the
    meeting; none mentioned the pending transaction.182
    By this point, Invenergy had decided not to seek Leaf’s consent, but Invenergy had
    not settled on what argument it would use to justify that course of action. One approach
    was to depress the value of the deal below the Material Partial Sale threshold. Between
    June 15 and 16, 2015, Sane subjected various deal structures to an “MPS test” to determine
    whether they tripped the Material Partial Sale threshold in the Series B Agreement.183 The
    original deal clearly did, but Sane developed variations that did not.184 He settled on an
    179
    JX 233 at 2.
    180
    JX 235 at 5-6.
    181
    Alemu Tr. 98-100; Murphy Tr. 701-02.
    182
    JX 241.
    183
    JX 244-45; see also Sane Tr. 735-41.
    184
    See JX 242 at 3; JX 243 at 3; see also Sane Tr. 733-35.
    47
    analysis that increased the valuation of certain assets Invenergy was retaining while
    decreasing the valuation of certain assets it was selling.185 Sane sent this revised analysis
    to Murphy for “external distribution.”186
    Meanwhile, Leaf had grown suspicious about Invenergy’s continuing silence
    regarding the pending transaction.187 On June 18, 2015, Leaf held a board meeting to decide
    on a course of action.188 The board materials reflected Leaf’s understanding that “[i]f Leaf
    withholds consent, Invenergy can proceed with the MPS transaction but would be obligated
    to deliver a target IRR to Leaf [of] 20.5% if Leaf holds [the] notes [and] 23% prior to
    December 22, 2015 and 21% thereafter, if Leaf converts to equity.”189 The presentation
    suggested that Invenergy might try to avoid paying the Target Multiple by “delay[ing]
    closing the transaction until December 22, 2015” and “call[ing] Leaf’s position,” thereby
    “requiring both parties to go through the [Fair Market Value] appraisal process.”190
    185
    See JX 245.
    186
    Id.; see also Sane Tr. 738.
    187
    See JX 239 (email from Dean Partners banker to Lerdal: “I am confident that
    these guys will attempt to screw you if there is a material partial sale. We will be ready.”);
    JX 250 (email from Lerdal to Dean Partners: “Again, I have no confidence that Invenergy
    will honor any provision in the documents.”).
    188
    See JX 248 at 1 (email transmitting slides to Leaf board “for the purpose of our
    call tomorrow”); Alemu Tr. 100-01; Lerdal Tr. 259-60; Russell Tr. 513-14. See generally
    JX 248-49.
    189
    JX 249 at 3 (formatting omitted).
    190
    Id. at 8.
    48
    At the conclusion of the meeting, the Leaf board authorized Leaf to convert its
    position in the Series B Notes into membership interests.191 Russell sent notice to Invenergy
    that Leaf was exercising its right to convert its full position.192 After several days of silence,
    Russell followed up with Condo. Condo replied that Invenergy had decided to seek
    regulatory approval for the conversion.193
    M.     TerraForm And Invenergy Sign Up A Deal.
    Invenergy and TerraForm continued full steam ahead on their deal.194 Invenergy
    also continued negotiating the terms on which CDPQ and Liberty would consent to the
    transaction. Recognizing that they had leverage, CDPQ and Liberty sought to extract some
    consideration for themselves. The vehicle for the negotiations was a use-of-proceeds
    schedule to the written consent that would define how Invenergy could use the proceeds.
    Initially, Invenergy prepared use-of-proceeds schedules for two possible transaction
    structures. In one, Invenergy would sell 100% of the assets that TerraForm wanted for cash
    proceeds of $1.4 billion plus assumption of approximately $800 million in debt. In the
    other, Invenergy would sell 90% of the assets for cash proceeds of $1.2 billion plus the
    191
    Lerdal Tr. 259-61; Russell Tr. 522.
    192
    See PTO ¶ II.D.2; JX 253 at 2 (exercise notice); see also Alemu Tr. 102-03;
    Russell Tr. 522.
    193
    JX 272 at 1.
    194
    See JX 251 (circulating draft consents to CDPQ and Liberty); JX 259 (email from
    Goldman discussing open points with TerraForm).
    49
    assumption of debt.195 Under both structures, Invenergy would use the vast majority of the
    proceeds to repay debt, including the Series A Notes, the Series B Notes, and a loan from
    CDPQ secured by several of the assets being sold.196 Both draft schedules contemplated
    CDPQ receiving a payment of $300 million for its loan.197 Under the full-sale scenario,
    Invenergy would retain approximately $270 million in net proceeds; under the partial sale
    scenario it would retain approximately $141 million. Neither schedule contemplated any
    distributions to the equity holders other than tax distributions.198
    On June 30, 2015, Invenergy and TerraForm executed a Purchase and Sale
    Agreement (the “TerraForm Agreement”), which called for a deal consistent with the 90%
    structure (the “TerraForm Transaction”).199 CDPQ and Liberty executed and delivered
    their consents on July 1.200 At closing, Invenergy would receive cash proceeds of
    195
    JX 265 at 7 (draft use-of-proceeds schedule).
    196
    See Renault Tr. 382-87.
    197
    JX 265 at 7. The final schedule attached to the executed consent reflected that
    the repayment comprised $250 million in principal and interest plus a $50 million
    prepayment premium. JX 281 at 2. The premium compensated CDPQ for foregoing
    approximately twenty-two years of expected interest on the long-term loan. Renault Tr.
    384-86; Murphy Tr. 683-84.
    198
    JX 265 at 7.
    199
    See PTO ¶ II.D.3; JX 275 (executed Purchase and Sale Agreement).
    200
    JX 281 at 21.
    50
    approximately $1.1 billion.201 The final use-of-proceeds schedule called for the payment
    of $300 million to CDPQ, a payment of approximately $100 million to satisfy investors in
    the projects who had “tag along” rights upon their sale,202 and additional amounts to pay
    certain equity holders in one of the projects.203 After these payments, the TerraForm
    Transaction would yield net proceeds to Invenergy of approximately $230 million. From
    that amount, Invenergy would make a tax distribution to its members of approximately
    $123 million and retain approximately $107 million as working capital. 204 The final
    consent provided that it would be “null and void in the event the proceeds of the
    Transaction are not paid as set forth hereunder including Exhibit B (subject only to
    immaterial adjustments).”205
    N.    Leaf Demands Payment.
    On July 2, 2015, after Invenergy signed the TerraForm Agreement but before any
    public announcement of the TerraForm Transaction, Invenergy finally notified Leaf.206
    Murphy called Alemu and described the deal size and basic structure and relayed that
    201
    Id.
    202
    Murphy Tr. 634-35.
    203
    Renault Tr. 388.
    204
    JX 281 at 21.
    205
    Id. at 5.
    206
    PTO ¶ II.D.3.
    51
    Invenergy anticipated a principal closing in September and a secondary closing around
    year’s end.207 Murphy also described the use of proceeds, which included a reserve against
    Leaf’s anticipated exercise of its Put Right. During the call, Murphy took the position that
    the TerraForm Transaction did not constitute a Material Partial Sale because “according to
    [Invenergy’s] analysis . . . this transaction would be about 12% of [the] value of [the]
    business.”208 Murphy reported to Condo that Alemu “seemed quite pleased about the value
    that will accrue to the company.”209
    On July 6, 2015, Murphy sent Alemu an analysis which showed the TerraForm
    Transaction constituted 12.5% of the value of the Company.210 Invenergy had achieved this
    percentage by retaining the 10% interest in the assets it sold and removing one of the
    projects from the sale.211
    Invenergy publicly announced the TerraForm Transaction on July 6, 2015.212 On
    July 10, Invenergy filed for regulatory approval of Leaf’s conversion from debt to equity.213
    207
    JX 285 at 1 (email from Alemu to Leaf management and advisors recapping call).
    208
    Id.
    209
    JX 286 at 1 (email from Murphy to Condo).
    210
    JX 290 at 3.
    211
    Sane Tr. 739-41.
    212
    PTO ¶ II.D.3; JX 287 (press release).
    213
    PTO ¶ II.D.4; JX 296 (application); JX 297 (email notifying Leaf of filing).
    52
    During the same period, Alemu sought backup documentation for Invenergy’s analysis of
    the Material Partial Sale threshold.214 Alemu’s own analyses indicated that the value of the
    TerraForm Transaction qualified as a Material Partial Sale under the LLC Agreement.215
    During a call on July 23, 2015, Alemu advised Murphy that Leaf had converted to
    equity before the execution of the TerraForm Agreement, that the TerraForm Transaction
    qualified as a Material Partial Sale under the terms of the LLC Agreement, and that
    Invenergy therefore had to obtain Leaf’s consent for the TerraForm Transaction.216 Murphy
    disagreed.217 The call ended with the parties agreeing “there was not more to talk about and
    attorneys would be more appropriate parties to discuss these differences.” 218 Leaf decided
    214
    JX 298-300.
    215
    JX 304 at 1.
    216
    See JX 308 (calendar invitation scheduling call); JX 310 (internal Leaf email
    discussing agenda for call); see also JX 318 at 5 (Leaf CFO providing summary of Leaf’s
    position to auditors: “Leaf considers itself to be in the equity as a result of its June 18, 2015
    conversion notice, effective June 21, 2015 and the terms of the [LLC Agreement] apply.
    Therefore, the TerraForm deal is an MPS, since its value is much greater than $245mm.
    Invenergy cannot close an MPS (i.e. the TerraForm deal) until after Leaf’s conversion is
    effective, and without providing 30 days[’] prior notice of the deal to Leaf and requesting
    Leaf’s consent to the deal. If Leaf does not consent (it will not), then Invenergy cannot
    close the deal without paying Leaf its Target Multiple (i.e. 23% cash on cash IRR since the
    first investment, which will be equal to approximately $120 million on 9/30/2015, the
    expected date of [the] closing of the deal.”).
    217
    JX 311 at 2 (email from Murphy to Invenergy management recapping
    conversation).
    218
    Id.; see also Alemu Tr. 109-15; Murphy Tr. 630-31.
    53
    not to take any further action until it received a fully executed signature page to the LLC
    Agreement.219
    O.     Leaf Becomes A Member.
    Throughout the summer and into the fall of 2015, TerraForm and Invenergy plodded
    towards a closing. By the end of August, Murphy had grown anxious. He emailed a senior
    executive at TerraForm to remind him that Invenergy entered into the TerraForm
    Agreement “with the understanding that the transaction would be closed in the most
    expeditious manner . . . and in no event later than the stated deadline of December 15,
    2015.”220 The market had softened for comparable assets, and Murphy wanted “to proceed
    forward to closing asap.”221
    Because of the delay, Invenergy secured a bridge loan of $100 million. CDPQ and
    Liberty agreed on a revised use-of-proceeds schedule that contemplated repaying the
    bridge loan.222
    JX 313 at 1 (email from Lerdal to members of Leaf board: “[T]he current plan is
    219
    to take no action until Leaf has received a fully executed signature page to the LLC
    Agreement of Invenergy [W]ind, LLC.”).
    220
    JX 320 at 2.
    221
    Id. at 3; see also JX 346 (email from Murphy relaying assurance he received that
    TerraForm “is committed to complet[ing] our transaction”); JX 347 (announcement of
    TerraForm ratings downgrade); Lerdal Tr. 271 (testifying there had been “some [market]
    deterioration during that six months” and “TerraForm was in trouble”).
    222
    See JX 325-27 (communications with CDPQ discussing changes to use of
    proceeds); Murphy Tr. 637-38.
    54
    On September 23, 2015, Invenergy received regulatory approval for the conversion
    of Leaf’s Series B Notes into equity.223 On September 24, the equity holders entered into
    an amendment to the LLC Agreement that admitted Leaf as a member of Invenergy.224
    Other than revising the membership schedules, the LLC Agreement did not change.225
    Afterwards, Condo told Russell that because Leaf was not an equity holder when
    Invenergy executed the TerraForm Agreement, Leaf could not assert any rights under the
    LLC Agreement.226 The attorneys agreed to disagree on that point.227
    At the end of September 2015, Leaf’s parent company issued its annual report. The
    “Chairman’s Statement” included an update on the Invenergy investment which stated:
    Under the terms of the Operating Agreement, Leaf believes that Invenergy is
    required to obtain Leaf’s consent to the Proposed TerraForm Sale prior to its
    consummation and that, absent such consent, Invenergy is required to make
    a payment to Leaf upon the closing of the sale.228
    223
    See JX 330 (FERC approval); JX 331 (email transmitting FERC approval from
    Invenergy to Leaf).
    224
    PTO ¶ II.D.5; JX 332.
    225
    JX 333 (email from Condo circulating revised agreement and advising “there are
    no changes to the operating agreement other than the annexes now reflecting Leaf’s
    ownership”).
    226
    JX 334 (email from Condo relaying conversation to Murphy: “They think they
    get TM at [the TerraForm] close. I said no, we don’t agree with that.”); Alemu Tr. 115-16;
    Condo Tr. 468; Russell Tr. 528-30.
    227
    JX 334; Condo Tr. 430; Russell Tr. 530.
    228
    JX 337 at 2.
    55
    Internally, Leaf had no interest in blocking the TerraForm Transaction. Leaf instead
    worried that pushing its consent right might give TerraForm grounds to back out of the
    deal.229 Lerdal decided against filing a lawsuit before closing because “[w]e don’t want to
    give [TerraForm] any excuse to walk.”230 At trial, Lerdal testified candidly that the sale
    “was a great deal for us.”231 He thought that either Leaf would get its Target Multiple or,
    “worst case,” the parties would end up in the put-call process and “the valuation of
    Invenergy has just gone through the roof because of this deal.”232 Lerdal also believed that
    Leaf could not obtain an injunction because a court would hold that Leaf could receive
    money damages as a remedy.233
    Alemu sent the Chairman’s Statement from Leaf’s annual report to Invenergy. On
    October 9, 2015, he emailed Murphy a “reminder that, pursuant to Section 8.01(e) of the
    LLC Agreement, Invenergy is required to ‘provide each Member with not less than thirty
    229
    See JX 339 at 1 (email from Dean Partners to Lerdal expressing concern that
    “our lack of consent [could] give [TerraForm] grounds to back out of a market top deal”).
    230
    JX 340 at 1; accord JX 344 (email from Lerdal to Leaf CFO: “Remember the
    reason we are not filing [suit] prior to closing is to give [TerraForm] no reason to back out.
    Might be remote, but damages are unchanged before or after closing—if it closes. That is
    the most important fact for us.”); Lerdal Tr. 324 (confirming that Leaf delayed filing a
    complaint because it “didn’t want to give TerraForm any excuse to walk”).
    231
    Lerdal Tr. 270.
    232
    Id.
    233
    Id.; see also id. at 349 (reiterating analysis of why Leaf would not have
    successfully secured an injunction); Condo Tr. 430 (confirming Leaf did not seek to block
    TerraForm Transaction).
    56
    (30) days’ prior notice of the occurrence of any Material Partial Sale’” and that “the LLC
    Agreement requires that Invenergy obtain Leaf’s consent prior to participating in or
    permitting a Material Partial Sale or in lieu of such consent, pay Leaf the Target
    Multiple.”234
    Invenergy had its outside counsel respond to Alemu’s email. The response
    acknowledged that “[u]nder the terms of the Operating Agreement, the Transaction is a
    Material Partial Sale.”235 But it took the position that “Leaf did not become a Member until
    nearly three months after the Company entered into the Transaction.”236
    P.     The TerraForm Transaction Closes.
    Between the signing of the TerraForm Agreement and December 2015, Invenergy
    removed a handful of projects from the sale. On December 15, 2015, the parties entered
    into an amended and restated TerraForm Agreement and closed the deal.237 In the revised
    TerraForm Transaction, Invenergy sold fewer assets and received approximately $1 billion
    in cash.238 The revised deal required updated consents from CDPQ and Liberty as well as
    234
    JX 338 at 1.
    235
    JX 341 at 1; see also Alemu Tr. 119-20.
    236
    JX 341 at 1.
    237
    PTO ¶¶ II.D.6-7; JX 355-57 (fully executed Amended and Restated Purchase and
    Sale Agreement).
    238
    JX 495 ¶ 7 (Murphy affidavit).
    57
    a revised use-of-proceeds schedule.239 After all outlays, the TerraForm Transaction left
    Invenergy with approximately $85 million in working capital.240
    Q.     This Litigation And The Put-Call Process
    Leaf filed this lawsuit on December 21, 2015.241 On December 28, 2015, Invenergy
    exercised its Call Right and proposed a price of $42,375,694.00 for Leaf’s entire 2.3%
    stake.242 The proposed price implied a total enterprise value for Invenergy of approximately
    $1.8 billion. Including assumption of debt, the TerraForm Transaction had provided
    consideration of roughly $2 billion for what Invenergy contended represented just 12.5%
    of its assets.
    Later on December 28, 2015, Leaf exercised its Put Right.243 Under the LLC
    Agreement, Invenergy could revoke its call, and Leaf wanted to eliminate that possibility
    by invoking its put.244 Leaf proposed a price of $214 million, which it derived by using the
    value of the TerraForm Transaction to imply a value for Invenergy as a whole.245
    239
    JX 348 at 1 (revised schedule).
    240
    Id.
    241
    PTO ¶ II.E.1; JX 365 (filed complaint); Alemu Tr. 124.
    242
    JX 367 at 1 (Invenergy’s exercise notice).
    243
    JX 368 at 1 (Leaf’s exercise notice).
    244
    Id.; Alemu Tr. 134-35.
    245
    Alemu Tr. 134-36, 207; Lerdal Tr. 332-33.
    58
    The LLC Agreement obligated the parties to negotiate in good faith in an effort to
    agree on Fair Market Value. They agreed to meet in Chicago on January 8, 2016.246 Ahead
    of the meeting, Alemu sent the calculations underlying Leaf’s valuation.247 During the
    meeting, Leaf continued to argue in favor of valuing Invenergy based on the TerraForm
    Transaction. Invenergy argued for valuing Leaf’s interest based on CDPQ’s investment in
    2014.248 The parties could not reach agreement.
    The next step under the Put-Call Provisions was for the parties to hire independent
    appraisers. Russell and Condo exchanged lists of appraisers that they believed would not
    qualify as independent.249 Invenergy engaged Navigant Consulting, Inc., and Leaf engaged
    XMS Capital Partners, LLC.250 Neither appeared on either list of problematic appraisers.
    Nevertheless, each side raised objections to the other side’s appraiser and reserved all rights
    to challenge the selection later. Invenergy expressed concern about whether “XMS has the
    necessary qualifications to perform an appraisal of a power generation company, as well
    246
    JX 371 (email exchange arranging meeting); JX 374 (same).
    247
    JX 374 at 4.
    248
    See id.; JX 376 (slides used at meeting).
    249
    JX 378 at 3-4.
    250
    Id. at 1; see also JX 381 (negotiating non-disclosure agreement with Navigant);
    JX 382 (transmitting fully executed XMS engagement letter); JX 384 (transmitting fully
    executed XMS documents to Invenergy).
    59
    as its independence.”251 Leaf expressed concern about “Navigant’s ability to provide a
    proper valuation, given that they are primarily a consulting firm.”252
    Both appraisers received a briefing from their clients about the valuation standard
    and key valuation considerations.253 Both appraisers understood the nature of the appraisal
    process, the interests of their client, and the competing interests of the other side. 254 Both
    appraisers conducted due diligence.255
    251
    JX 378 at 1.
    252
    JX 384 at 3.
    253
    See JX 383 (discussion materials Dean Partners prepared for XMS); JX 397
    (notes of Invenergy’s meeting with Navigant).
    254
    See, e.g., JX 397 at 2 (notes from Invenergy meeting with Navigant containing
    observation that “Leaf’s value will be very high and will skew the value so our value should
    take that into consideration”); JX 399 (internal Navigant email expressing concern that
    “[t]he WACC is clearly too low” and exploring ways to “get it up slightly” such as
    “pull[ing] betas from Bloomberg” which “sometimes . . . are a bit higher”); JX 405
    (Navigant email noting that Leaf was relying on the TerraForm Transaction while
    Invenergy was relying on the 2014 investment by CDPQ and guessing based on the latter
    that “our target is in that range.”); see also Kohan Tr. 747-48 (Navigant appraiser testifying
    that Invenergy had made clear that the TerraForm Transaction represented its “most
    valuable assets” that “were acquired during a peak in the market”); Nygaard Dep. 70, 73-
    74 (testimony of XMS representative about discussions with Leaf, including that “the
    TerraForm transaction and the implied discount rates that were assumed in that transaction
    would be very important benchmarks”).
    255
    See JX 385; JX 390; JX 396-97; JX 400.
    60
    Both Navigant256 and XMS257 delivered near final versions of their reports to their
    clients, discussed the reports with their clients, and made changes in the reports as a result
    of those discussions that benefited their clients. Both appraisers delivered the revised
    versions of their reports to their respective clients. Navigant finalized its report after
    receiving signoff from Invenergy.258 Leaf and Dean Partners had another round of
    comments for XMS.259 In response, XMS made additional changes to its report and
    presented its final valuation conclusion as a point estimate that slightly exceeded XMS’s
    earlier range.260 Lerdal admitted that he had “no reason to believe that but for Leaf’s
    cajoling and bird-dogging, XMS would ever have gotten above the top of its prior
    range.”261
    256
    Compare JX 436 at 1, 3 (near-final Navigant report ascribing value to Invenergy
    of approximately $1.93 billion), with JX 445 at 1, 6 (updated report ascribing value to
    Invenergy of $1.583 billion), and JX 448 at 3 (final report ascribing value to Invenergy of
    $1.608 billion). In between, Navigant received feedback from Invenergy. See, e.g., JX 444
    (comments from Invenergy team)
    257
    Compare JX 417 at 1 (initial XMS report valuing Leaf’s interest between $45.7
    and $56.7 million), with JX 439 (revised XMS report valuing Leaf’s interest between $57.8
    and $71.1 million). In between, XMS received feedback from Leaf and Dean Partners. See,
    e.g., Lerdal Tr. 336; Alemu Dep. 242-52, 256-62; Dean Dep. 155-61.
    258
    See JX 445 at 1; JX 449 at 1; JX 451 at 1.
    259
    See JX 452 (email from Lerdal to Alemu).
    260
    See JX 460 at 19.
    261
    Lerdal Tr. 337. On this point, as in other aspects of his testimony, Lerdal was
    honest and forthright. He did not dissemble or try to run from factual points that
    Invenergy’s counsel sought to elicit. As discussed elsewhere in this decision, Invenergy’s
    61
    On April 29, 2016, Leaf and Invenergy exchanged appraisal reports. The XMS
    report valued Leaf’s interest at $73.1 million.262 The Navigant report valued Leaf’s interest
    at $36.4 million.263 Because the two appraisals were more than 20% apart, the LLC
    Agreement required the parties to appoint a third, independent appraiser. Disputes arose
    over appointing the third appraiser.
    Meanwhile, on April 19, 2016, Leaf moved for partial judgment on the pleadings to
    obtain a determination that closing the TerraForm Transaction without Leaf’s consent
    constituted a breach the LLC Agreement. In response, Invenergy argued (consistent with
    its position to that point) that the relevant time for evaluating which investors possessed
    consent rights was when Invenergy signed the TerraForm Agreement, not when the
    TerraForm Transaction closed.264 Invenergy defended this interpretation by claiming it
    needed to know in advance of signing whether it had the requisite consents because the
    “consequence” of not receiving consent was that certain non-consenting members could
    “require” that their interest be redeemed:
    Under both sections [8.01(e) and 8.04 of the LLC Agreement], the
    consequence of not obtaining consent is that, if Invenergy nonetheless elects
    to enter into an agreement without consent, members may require that cash
    proceeds of the sale be applied to buying out their membership interests at
    witnesses took a different approach, particularly when seeking to characterize
    contemporaneous emails in unpersuasive ways.
    262
    JX 460 at 19.
    263
    JX 451 at 12.
    264
    JX 469 at 21-30 (Invenergy’s brief).
    62
    closing. See LLC Agreement § 8.01(e) (describing notice and election
    options), § 8.04 (describing when Series B members may be entitled to the
    Target Multiple, meaning “an amount, in exchange for its entire Company
    Interest”) (defined at § 1.01, Target Multiple)).265
    The argument demonstrated that, as of May 2016, Invenergy both believed (as Leaf did)
    and represented to the court that Leaf could compel payment of the Target Multiple in
    exchange for its interests if Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s
    consent.
    I entered an order granting Leaf’s motion in part (the “Liability Order”).266 The
    Liability Order held that the operative time for determining Leaf’s status as a member was
    at closing. The Liability Order further determined that if this conclusion was incorrect and
    the operative time was signing, then Leaf had become an equity holder before the signing
    of the definitive agreement. This was because TerraForm and Invenergy had executed the
    amended and restated agreement just before closing, well after Invenergy recognized Leaf
    as a member.267 The Liability Order found that by not securing Leaf’s consent or paying
    the Target Multiple, Invenergy breached the LLC Agreement.268 The Liability Order did
    “not determine the amount of damages,” which would “require further proceedings.”269
    265
    Id. at 24-25.
    266
    Dkt. 39.
    267
    Dkt. 39 ¶¶ 14-17.
    268
    Dkt. 39 ¶¶ 12, 18.
    269
    Dkt. 39 ¶ 23.
    63
    After the issuance of the Liability Order, Condo was “presented with a proposed
    separation agreement.”270 The agreement included cooperation and non-disparagement
    obligations for Condo and provided that he would forfeit any remaining severance
    payments if he violated those provisions.271 Condo agreed to release all claims he possessed
    against Invenergy, but Invenergy did not give Condo a reciprocal release.272 Invenergy
    retained new litigation counsel.273
    Leaf moved for entry of an order and final judgment based on the Target Multiple
    calculations in the LLC Agreement.274 Leaf determined that the amount of the Target
    Multiple was $126,110,576. Invenergy disputed one aspect of Leaf’s calculation, but I held
    that Leaf had calculated the figure correctly.275
    Invenergy’s new counsel argued that even accepting that Invenergy had breached,
    Leaf was not entitled to its Target Multiple.276 Invenergy’s new counsel argued that
    determining damages required a trial to consider what the extrinsic evidence showed about
    270
    Condo Tr. 419; see also JX 4.
    271
    Condo Tr. 419, 434-35.
    272
    Id. 433-34.
    273
    Dkt. 48.
    274
    Dkt. 45.
    275
    Dkt. 81 ¶ 6.
    276
    Dkt. 62 (Invenergy’s answering brief).
    64
    the parties’ understanding of Leaf’s consent right.277 By order dated October 7, 2016, I
    denied Leaf’s motion to establish the remedy as a matter of law and reiterated that
    determining the proper remedy required a trial.278
    On November 1, 2016, Invenergy filed counterclaims relating to the put-call
    process.279 The parties mooted part of the counterclaims by agreeing to appoint Moelis &
    Company, LLC as the third appraiser. Invenergy continued to seek a declaratory judgment
    that Leaf’s conduct during the put-call process violated the express terms of the Put-Call
    Provisions and breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
    On April 7, 2017, Moelis delivered an appraisal report valuing Leaf’s position at
    $42.5 million.280
    II.     LEGAL ANALYSIS
    As a remedy for Invenergy’s breach of the Series B Consent Right, Leaf seeks to
    recover its Target Multiple. Leaf proved at trial that until midway through this litigation,
    the parties believed that Leaf would receive its Target Multiple in exchange for its entire
    equity interest if Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without obtaining Leaf’s
    consent. But that is not the damages remedy afforded to Leaf by Delaware law.
    277
    Dkt. 83 at 40 (argument transcript).
    278
    Dkt. 81.
    279
    Dkt. 84.
    280
    JX 512 at 32.
    65
    To recover damages, Leaf must show that it suffered actual harm from the violation
    of the Series B Consent Right, meaning that Leaf must be worse off now than if the Material
    Partial Sale had not taken place. Leaf failed to prove that it suffered actual damages in this
    sense. Instead, Lerdal admitted that Leaf “ironically” was better off because the TerraForm
    Transaction took place.281
    Alternatively, Leaf could show that it could have secured consideration if given the
    opportunity to negotiate for its consent. While serving as Chancellor, Chief Justice Strine
    applied this measure of damages in Fletcher International, Ltd. v. ION Geophysical
    Corp.282 On the facts of this case, Leaf failed to prove that it could have extracted any
    consideration in return for consenting to the TerraForm Transaction. The record instead
    shows that if Leaf had insisted on a meaningful payment, then the TerraForm Transaction
    would not have taken place.
    Although Leaf failed to prove that it suffered actual harm, Leaf did establish that
    Invenergy breached the Series B Consent Right. Leaf is therefore entitled to nominal
    damages of one dollar.
    In its counterclaim, Invenergy contends that Leaf breached the express and implied
    requirements of the Put-Call Provisions. As a remedy, Invenergy contends that the court
    should order that Fair Market Value be determined without reference to the XMS appraisal.
    281
    Lerdal Tr. 344.
    282
    
    2013 WL 6327997
     (Del. Ch. Dec. 4, 2013).
    66
    Invenergy failed to prove its counterclaim. The parties will complete the buyout of Leaf’s
    interests in accordance with the LLC Agreement.
    A.     Leaf’s Entitlement To Damages
    In the Liability Order, this court determined that Invenergy breached the Series B
    Consent Right. At trial, Leaf proved that the parties subjectively believed that Leaf would
    receive its Target Multiple in exchange for its equity interest if Invenergy engaged in a
    Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent. On the facts presented, however, Delaware
    law will not endorse that remedy. Leaf is therefore entitled only to nominal damages.
    1.     The Parties’ Subjective Expectations
    Leaf proved at trial that until midway through this case, all of the parties to the LLC
    Agreement understood that Leaf would receive its Target Multiple if Invenergy engaged
    in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent. Invenergy only advanced a new
    interpretation after losing the motion for judgment on the pleadings that resulted in the
    Liability Order, separating from its former General Counsel (Condo), and hiring new
    litigation counsel. The contemporaneous evidence presented at trial—spanning a period of
    more than seven years starting with Leaf’s investment in 2008—demonstrated the parties’
    67
    shared, pre-litigation understanding. The totality of the evidence easily met the
    preponderance of the evidence standard.283 It my view, it was clear and convincing.284
    The most telling evidence of the shared understanding was generated during the
    negotiations in 2014 over the equity investment by CDPQ and the conversion of a portion
    of Liberty’s debt position into equity. As part of those discussions, Invenergy prepared a
    matrix that it provided to CDPQ, Liberty, and Leaf which described Leaf’s rights in the
    event of a Material Partial Sale: “Consent required unless paying MPS amount. Leaf MPS
    amount is Target Multiple.”285 While seeking Leaf’s consent for the recapitalization,
    Condo told Russell that the Series B Consent Right was “a firm consent right that we can’t
    do a C of C absent Leaf’s consent if the Target Multiple is not reach[ed]. So unless they
    consent not to receive it, they will always get it.”286 At trial, Condo acknowledged that his
    283
    “Proof by a preponderance of the evidence means proof that something is more
    likely than not. It means that certain evidence, when compared to the evidence opposed to
    it, has the more convincing force and makes you believe that something is more likely true
    than not.” Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18,
    2010) (Strine, V.C.) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Del. Express Shuttle, Inc.
    v. Older, 
    2002 WL 31458243
    , at *17 (Del. Ch. Oct. 23, 2002)).
    284
    “The clear and convincing evidence standard requires evidence that produces in
    the mind of the trier of fact an abiding conviction that the truth of [the] factual contentions
    [is] highly probable.” Hudak v. Procek, 
    806 A.2d 140
    , 147 (Del. 2002) (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting Cerberus Int’l, Ltd. v. Apollo Mgmt., L.P., 
    794 A.2d 1141
    , 1151
    (Del. 2002)). “To establish proof by clear and convincing evidence means to prove
    something that is highly probable, reasonably certain, and free from serious doubt.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Del. Super. P.J.I. § 4.3 (2000)).
    285
    JX 112 at 2.
    286
    JX 128 at 2 (emphasis added).
    68
    reference to “C of C” encompassed a Material Partial Sale.287 Condo later reassured Russell
    again, writing that in the event of a Material Partial Sale without consent, “[t]he intent is
    that Leaf receives its TM.”288
    Leaf then asked for additional upside protection such that if the Material Partial Sale
    generated distributions which on a pro rata basis would exceed the Target Multiple, Leaf
    would get the higher amount. Condo relayed the ask to Murphy, Invenergy’s CFO, who
    was the business principal on the deal. Murphy cut to the chase by laying out his
    understanding of the arrangement:
    My understanding is:
     If we do a material partial sale with their consent, we do the deal and
    if we have a distribution as a result we pay pro rata.
     If we try to do an MPS and they don’t consent, then we can transact
    anyway as long as we pay them the TM at which point they are out.
    Probably in this case we pay them more than their pro rata amount to
    get them to TM.
    That was the deal. No way we agree to modify. 289
    Condo agreed and told Murphy, “Your understanding is right.”290
    287
    Condo Tr. 440.
    288
    JX 128 at 1.
    289
    JX 127 at 1.
    290
    JX 133 at 1.
    69
    After that, Murphy spoke with Leaf’s business principal, Alemu. After quoting the
    language of Section 8.04(b), Murphy stated:
    To summarize,
     If we do a material partial sale with your consent, the value is captured
    by the Company to the pro rata benefit of the members. And if we
    have a distribution as a result the value is pro rata.
     If we desire to do an MPS without your consent, then we can transact
    anyway as long as we pay you your Target Multiple, at which point
    you would no longer be a member.291
    Murphy then moved on to the new point Leaf had raised and explained why it was contrary
    to the original deal and made little economic sense. Alemu reviewed Murphy’s email,
    agreed with his analysis, and told Murphy that Leaf was “fine with the language below
    (target multiple for MPS without consent).”292 Russell fairly summarized the import of
    these exchanges at trial: “I think it was confirmed . . . by both . . . the GC and the CFO. In
    my world, that’s pretty good, right, when you have the principals basically saying, ‘Yes.
    This is what the deal is.’”293
    After Leaf converted to equity, Invenergy’s actions evidenced that it continued to
    have the same understanding. When Leaf asserted that the closing of the TerraForm
    Transaction would give it a right to its Target Multiple, Invenergy never disputed that this
    291
    JX 135 at 1.
    292
    JX 141 at 1.
    293
    Russell Tr. 503.
    70
    was the correct result if Leaf had properly converted into equity. Instead, Invenergy argued
    that it had not breached the Series B Consent Right in the LLC Agreement because Leaf
    converted into equity after Invenergy signed the TerraForm Agreement.294 When Leaf filed
    suit, Invenergy advanced the same reasoning. In its brief opposing Leaf’s motion for
    judgment on the pleadings, Invenergy contended that its interpretation of the point in time
    for measuring what consents a Material Partial Sale required had to be correct. This was
    because Invenergy needed to know at signing whether it had to pay out the Target Multiple
    at closing:
    Under both sections [8.01(e) and 8.04 of the LLC Agreement], the
    consequence of not obtaining consent is that, if Invenergy nonetheless elects
    to enter into an agreement without consent, members may require that cash
    proceeds of the sale be applied to buying out their membership interests at
    closing. See LLC Agreement § 8.01(e) (describing notice and election
    options), § 8.04 (describing when Series B members may be entitled to the
    Target Multiple, meaning “an amount, in exchange for its entire Company
    Interest”) (defined at § 1.01, Target Multiple)).295
    Thus, as late as May 2016, Invenergy continued to manifest its belief that Leaf could
    compel payment of the Target Multiple in exchange for its interests if Invenergy engaged
    in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent. Invenergy only came up with new
    arguments after the Liability Order rejected its timing argument.
    294
    JX 341 at 1.
    295
    JX 469 at 24-25 (emphasis added).
    71
    At trial, Murphy tried to discount his exchanges with Condo and Alemu during the
    CDPQ negotiations as an “academic exercise” because “there would need to be enough
    proceeds so that Leaf’s pro rata share would be enough to pay them the target multiple”
    and “their share of the fair market value was very unlikely to exceed the material partial
    sale amount.”296 I did not find Murphy’s testimony on this point credible. The
    contemporaneous emails do not read like an academic exercise. They read like someone
    who is stating accurately, definitively, and in straightforward terms what would happen if
    Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent. Both Murphy and
    Condo agreed at trial that throughout their communications with Leaf, they never suggested
    that (i) Invenergy had the option—rather than an obligation—to pay Leaf its Target
    Multiple if Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent, (ii) Leaf
    could receive its Target Multiple only if its pro rata share of the proceeds equaled or
    exceeded the Target Multiple, or (iii) Leaf could receive its Target Multiple only if Liberty
    and CDPQ consented to the payment.297
    The testimony and conduct of the other Invenergy representatives further
    undermined Murphy’s hindsight explanation. Sane reported directly to Murphy during his
    entire time at Invenergy and worked with Murphy and Condo to prepare the matrix
    296
    Murphy Tr. 603-04.
    297
    Condo Tr. 435-43, 446-49; Murphy Tr. 657-58, 663-64.
    72
    summarizing the investors’ rights.298 Sane testified that he never had the understanding that
    Invenergy could pursue a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s consent and only would have
    to pay the Target Multiple if the transaction generated sufficient proceeds to make a large
    enough distribution on a pro rata basis.299 Sane also did not recall any conversations with
    Murphy in which Murphy expressed this concept.300 Condo confirmed that as of his
    departure from Invenergy in July 2016, two weeks after the issuance of the Liability Order,
    he could not recall any discussions with anyone at Invenergy reflecting that a transaction
    had to be large enough to yield Leaf its Target Multiple on a pro rata basis to allow Leaf to
    collect its Target Multiple if Invenergy engaged in a Material Partial Sale without Leaf’s
    consent.301
    At trial, Murphy and Condo also tried to characterize their communications as
    simply discussing whether Invenergy would have to pay the Target Multiple to Leaf if
    Invenergy sought to bypass the Series B Consent Right by achieving a transaction that
    could generate sufficient proceeds to pay the Target Multiple. During the back-and-forth,
    Russell did identify the possibility that under the original language, Invenergy might argue
    298
    See Murphy Tr. 665-68; Sane Tr. 723.
    299
    Sane Tr. 724-25.
    300
    Id.
    301
    Condo Tr. 456-57.
    73
    that it only had to receive sufficient proceeds, not pay them out. 302 But having considered
    the evidence as a whole and having considered the credibility of the witnesses, I believe
    the record supports the view that parties envisioned only two scenarios: either Invenergy
    would get Leaf’s consent or Invenergy would redeem Leaf’s interests for its Target
    Multiple.
    2.       The Absence of Actual Damages
    Although Leaf proved what it sought to establish about the parties’ subjective
    beliefs, Invenergy has explained persuasively that the parties’ subjective beliefs about a
    remedy are not controlling unless they are implemented in a remedial provision in an
    agreement, such as a liquidated damages clause. Instead, Leaf must show that it suffered
    actual damages before it can recover anything other than a nominal award. One way Leaf
    could prove actual damages would be by proving that the TerraForm Transaction itself
    harmed Leaf’s interests. Another way that Leaf could prove actual damages would be by
    proving that if Invenergy had respected the Series B Consent Right, then Leaf could have
    bargained for consideration in exchange for granting its consent.
    The parties have not cited authority which holds explicitly that the parties’
    subjective beliefs about the likely remedy are not controlling unless memorialized in a
    remedial provision, but this proposition appears to be correct. The Restatement (Second)
    of Contracts states that the components of expectation damages include
    302
    See JX 128 at 2; Russell Tr. 558-59; see also Alemu Tr. 66; Condo Tr. 421, 443,
    448.
    74
    (a) the loss in the value to [the injured party] of the other party’s performance
    caused by its failure or deficiency, plus
    (b) any other loss, including incidental or consequential loss, caused by the
    breach, less
    (c) any cost or other loss that [the injured party] has avoided by not having
    to perform.303
    These measures do not refer to the parties’ subjective beliefs. It thus may be that “[c]ontract
    damages are ordinarily based on the injured party’s expectation interest,”304 but that
    concept is a term of art that does not depend on what the parties subjectively expected.
    Instead, the court determines an amount that will give the injured party “the benefit of its
    bargain by putting that party in the position it would have been but for the breach.”305
    Parties can contract for a specified remedy, such as in a liquidated damages clause, 306 but
    unless they memorialize their subjective beliefs in such a way, those beliefs do not establish
    303
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 347 (Am. Law Inst. 1981).
    304
    Id. cmt. a.
    305
    Genecor Int’l, Inc. v. Novo Nordisk A/S, 
    766 A.2d 8
    , 11 (Del. 2000); accord
    Duncan v. TheraTx, Inc., 
    775 A.2d 1019
    , 1022 (Del. 2001) (“This principle of expectation
    damages is measured by the amount of money that would put the promisee in the same
    position as if the promisor had performed the contract.”); Restatement (Second) of
    Contracts § 347 cmt. a (“Contract damages . . . are intended to give [the injured party] the
    benefit of his bargain by awarding him a sum of money that will, to the extent possible, put
    him in as good a position as he would have been in had the contract been performed.”).
    306
    See generally Brazen v. Bell Atl. Corp., 
    695 A.2d 43
    , 48-50 (Del. 1997).
    75
    the measure of damages. Expectancy damages “must be tied to and limited by the express
    promises made to [the plaintiff] in the Agreement.”307
    In this case, the parties did not memorialize their subjective beliefs about the
    expected remedy in a contractual provision. As the Liability Order held, the Series B
    Consent Right did not specify a remedy for breach. After describing how Leaf viewed the
    appropriate remedy, the Liability Order stated:
    The problem with this analysis is that the Series B Consent Right does not
    explicitly entitle Leaf to $126 million if its consent to a Material Partial Sale
    is not obtained. The Payment Path instead establishes a scenario in which the
    Company does not have to obtain Leaf’s consent. The Company did not
    follow the Payment Path, so that exception does not apply. 308
    Consistent with this ruling, two other decisions by this court—Ford Holdings and
    GoodCents—have held that when an investor’s consent right contains an exception
    grounded in the investor’s receipt of particular consideration, the exception does not create
    a right to receive the specified consideration in the event of breach.309
    As discussed in the prior section, the evidentiary record developed at trial showed
    that the parties believed subjectively that there were only two possibilities under the Series
    B Consent Right: Either Leaf would consent, or Leaf would not consent and receive its
    307
    Interim Healthcare, Inc. v. Spherion Corp., 
    884 A.2d 513
    , 551 (Del. Super.),
    aff’d, 
    886 A.2d 1278
     (Del. 2005) (TABLE).
    308
    Dkt. 81 ¶ 7.
    309
    See In re Appraisal of GoodCents Hldgs., Inc., 
    2017 WL 2463665
    , at *5 (Del.
    Ch. June 7, 2017); In re Appraisal of Ford Hldgs., Inc. Preferred Stock, 
    698 A.2d 973
    ,
    978-79 (Del. Ch. 1997) (Allen, C.).
    76
    Target Multiple. Their expectation regarding Leaf’s receipt of its Target Multiple stemmed
    from the exception to the Series B Consent Right and the misimpression that it created a
    right to receive the Target Multiple in the event of breach. If that misunderstanding were
    now enforced under the guise of the parties’ subjective expectation regarding damages, it
    would upend this court’s holdings in Ford Holdings and GoodCents and turn the exception
    into a payment right.
    Properly understood, the exception was only an exception. The Series B Consent
    Right explicitly gave Invenergy only two options to consummate a Material Partial Sale:
    get Leaf’s consent or satisfy the exception by paying Leaf its Target Multiple. But
    Delaware law recognizes a third option: efficient breach.310 The doctrine of efficient breach
    holds that “properly calculated expectation damages increase economic efficiency by
    giving ‘the other party an incentive to break the contract if, but only if, he gains enough
    from the breach that he can compensate the injured party for his losses and still retain some
    of the benefits from the breach.’”311 Although Invenergy did not do so consciously at the
    time, it elected that third option. The result is that Leaf must demonstrate actual damages
    by showing either that it suffered harm as a result of the TerraForm Transaction or that it
    310
    Bhole, Inc. v. Shore Invs., Inc., 
    67 A.3d 444
    , 453 n.39 (Del. 2013).
    311
    E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v. Pressman, 
    679 A.2d 436
    , 445 (Del. 1996)
    (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts, Reporter’s Note to Introductory Note to ch.
    16, Remedies).
    77
    would have secured additional consideration given the opportunity to negotiate for its
    consent.
    Leaf did not assert that the TerraForm Transaction harmed its interests. Leaf
    benefitted from the transaction as an investor in Invenergy, because Invenergy sold assets
    at an attractive price.312 Lerdal was candid about this in his testimony,313 and his
    contemporaneous actions and communications support it.314 Lerdal admitted that any steps
    he might have taken to withhold Leaf’s consent would not have been to protect Leaf from
    an economic downside or threatened harm. Rather, any such steps would have been to
    extract value, or as he put it, to act as “leverage to ask for something in return.” 315 Under
    Fletcher, there is a strong argument that this concession should end the matter. Chief
    Justice Strine observed in that decision that a consent right does not give its holder the
    “opportunity to coerce value” from a counterparty “in circumstances where [the holder of
    the consent right] believed that the transaction it was being asked to consent to was highly
    beneficial.”316 That reasoning indicates that Leaf should not have withheld its consent from
    the TerraForm Transaction and cannot now recover damages for breach.
    312
    See Alemu Tr. 122-23; Lerdal Tr. 270.
    313
    See, e.g., Lerdal Tr. 270, 340-41, 344.
    314
    JX 340 at 1; see also Lerdal Tr. 270, 349 (confirming Leaf declined to move to
    enjoin the TerraForm Transaction).
    315
    Lerdal Tr. 322-23.
    316
    Fletcher, 
    2013 WL 6327997
    , at *18.
    78
    In Fletcher, however, Chief Justice Strine did not end his analysis with a finding
    that the transaction in that case benefitted the issuer by preventing it from becoming
    insolvent, which would have wiped out the interests of the investor holding the consent
    right. Instead, he recognized that the investor could have bargained for consideration in
    return for providing its consent, and he derived a damages award by constructing a
    hypothetical negotiation among the parties to the transaction. Leaf’s remaining avenue for
    demonstrating actual damages, therefore, is showing it could have negotiated for
    consideration for waiving its consent given the opportunity.
    On the facts of this case, I find that Leaf would not have been able to extract any
    payment in return for its consent, meaning that Leaf did not suffer any damages from
    Invenergy bypassing its Series B Consent Right. As part of any negotiation with Leaf over
    the Series B Consent Right, Invenergy had at least three options: (i) pay Leaf some amount
    as the price of going forward with the TerraForm Transaction; (ii) restructure the
    TerraForm Transaction to reduce its value below the threshold for a Material Partial Sale,
    or (iii) abandon the TerraForm Transaction entirely.317 Importantly, Invenergy would be
    317
    Invenergy has suggested that it might have bargained with TerraForm for the
    ability to hold open the TerraForm Transaction until after December 22, 2015, when
    Invenergy could exercise the Call Right. Leaf also worried that Invenergy might pursue
    that strategy. See, e.g., JX 223 at 1; JX 249 at 8; Lerdal Tr. 307; Lerdal Dep. 106. As a
    factual matter, it may have been true that Invenergy could have pushed out the closing.
    Invenergy certainly had the ability to seek a drop-dead date for the TerraForm Transaction
    of December 23, 2015, or later, rather than the original drop-dead date of December 15,
    and that would have enabled Invenergy to exercise the Call Right before closing. After
    August 2015, market conditions made it unlikely that TerraForm would have agreed to an
    extension beyond the original drop-dead, but before that point (and particularly during the
    79
    evaluating these options under circumstances where it had no pressing need for the
    proceeds from the TerraForm Transaction.318 Invenergy liked the price TerraForm was
    offering and could put the money to good use paying down debt, but Invenergy also had
    the flexibility to pass on the deal, particularly if Leaf made aggressive demands.
    Given its various options and lack of any financial pressure, Invenergy would have
    had considerable leverage in any negotiation. By contrast, Leaf would have been bluffing
    about its willingness to block the deal. In spring 2014, Leaf’s parent company had started
    liquidating its investments.319 Leaf intended to exercise its Put Right in December no matter
    what.320 Leaf recognized that the TerraForm Transaction was beneficial for the valuation
    original negotiations), there is no reason to think that Invenergy could not have obtained
    an additional ten days or so. Nevertheless, as a legal matter, that strategy would not have
    been effective. The LLC Agreement provided that an equity holder would retain all of its
    rights until the close of the call exercise. See JX 180 § 11(g). The closing of the call exercise
    would occur on the thirtieth day after the parties determined Fair Market Value. See id.
    Given the elaborate process for determining fair value and the tension between the parties,
    the call exercise likely would not have closed for months after Invenergy exercised its Call
    Right. If the Terraform Transaction closed during this extended period, as it almost
    certainly would have, then the closing could have breached the Series B Consent Right,
    and the parties would have been in the same positon where they are today. For Invenergy,
    pushing back the drop-dead date and exercising the Call Right was not a viable strategy for
    avoiding breach.
    318
    Renault Tr. 390 (confirming Invenergy had “[p]lenty” of “avenues to raise short-
    term cash if it needed short-term cash”); Murphy Tr. 617 (confirming Invenergy did not
    “need to sell assets in 2015”); Polsky Dep. 106-07 (denying “this was a necessary
    transaction”).
    319
    JX 155 at 5 (Leaf’s parent’s annual report announcing it was initiating “the
    orderly realisation of [its] investments and the return of capital to the shareholders.”).
    320
    See, e.g., JX 172; JX 173 at 1; JX 249 at 9; see also JX 280 at 6.
    80
    process, because Leaf could use metrics derived from it to calculate a high valuation for
    Invenergy as a whole.321 Consequently, Leaf had no intention of delaying or jeopardizing
    the TerraForm Transaction.322 Leaf even decided to delay filing suit until after the
    TerraForm Transaction closed because “[w]e don’t want to give [TerraForm] any excuse
    to walk.”323
    Moreover, Leaf’s consent was not the only investor sign-off the TerraForm
    Transaction required to close. CDPQ and Liberty also had to consent, and there is no reason
    to believe that they would have authorized a transaction that distributed value to Leaf
    321
    JX 189 (email from Alemu to Lerdal describing TerraForm Transaction as “a
    really good precedent for our process since we can exercise the put by the end of the year”
    and can “use [the TerraForm Transaction] as a proxy for the remainder of the pipeline and
    then try to use cost of equity of yieldco’s to value operational projects”); accord JX 223 at
    1; see also JX 337 at 2 (Leaf’s Chairman’s Statement alleviating concern around the
    TerraForm Transaction closing because “Leaf’s conversion to equity provides an
    additional pathway for Leaf to sell its equity interest to Invenergy”); Lerdal Tr. 270 (“I’m
    going to get this target multiple or, worst case, the valuation of Invenergy has just gone
    through the roof because of this deal.”); id. at 305-07 (testifying he wanted the deal to close
    because Invenergy was “doing a very good deal for not themselves but for everyone” and
    was selling “[i]f not at the very top [of the market], very close” which would “give Leaf a
    better return under the appraisal process, either the put or the call”); id. at 344 (agreeing he
    is “better off today with an appraisal and a fair market value with a TerraForm transaction
    than [he] would be if the negotiations resulted in a stalemate, because there, [he would] be
    in an appraisal world at a lower price”).
    322
    See JX 339 at 1; JX 344 (email from Lerdal to Leaf CFO: “Remember the reason
    we are not filing prior to closing is to give [TerraForm] no reason to back out. Might be
    remote, but damages are unchanged before or after closing—if it closes. That is the most
    important fact for us.”); Lerdal Tr. 324 (confirming that Leaf delayed filing a complaint
    because it “didn’t want to give TerraForm any excuse to walk”); see also id. at 270, 349.
    323
    JX 340 at 1.
    81
    preferentially. Together, CDPQ and Liberty owned over 40% of Invenergy’s equity; Leaf
    owned a 2.3% interest.324 Representatives of CDPQ and Liberty testified that they would
    not have consented to preferential distributions to Leaf.325 I have viewed this testimony
    skeptically because at this point, a damages award in favor of Leaf would harm CDPQ and
    Liberty indirectly. I nevertheless credit their testimony that they would not have consented.
    Invenergy’s negotiations with CDPQ and Liberty to secure their consents to the
    TerraForm Transaction support a finding that viewed any distribution to the equity holders
    was a nonstarter. When Invenergy first sought consent from CDPQ and Liberty, they asked
    that Invenergy distribute part of the proceeds to them.326 Invenergy refused, and the
    investors backed down. Then, at the eleventh hour, Liberty asked to receive a prepayment
    penalty in the amount of $2 million for redeeming its Series A Notes with the proceeds.
    Invenergy rejected the request as “insane,”327 and Liberty again backed down.328
    The consent that CDPQ and Liberty ultimately signed did not provide for
    distributions to the investors. The only portion of the proceeds that went to CDPQ was
    324
    PTO ¶ II.C.5 n.3.
    325
    See Renault Tr. 389; Fontanes Tr. 777-79.
    326
    JX 201 at 1; accord Murphy Tr. 632-33, 639-41.
    327
    JX 264.
    328
    See Murphy Tr. 639.
    82
    necessary to remove a security interest that CDPQ had in certain of the assets being sold.329
    The only portion of the proceeds that went to Liberty was used to repay its position in the
    Series A Notes.330 Invenergy retained all of the proceeds net of expenses necessary to
    consummate the TerraForm Transaction or repay existing debt.
    In my view, Leaf would have come to the negotiations eager to maximize its returns
    and full of bluster. Lerdal testified that he would not have accepted less than $100 million
    in return for Leaf’s consent.331 He might have taken that position at first, but he would have
    learned quickly that on those terms the TerraForm Transaction would not have happened.
    Once Lerdal found himself in a multi-party negotiation with CDPQ, Liberty, and
    Invenergy, and once it became clear that CDPQ and Liberty were not getting any
    distributions, Lerdal would have realized that he did not have the leverage he thought he
    had. The evidence shows that Leaf had no desire to jeopardize the TerraForm Transaction.
    Instead, Leaf wanted to gain from the resulting increase in Invenergy’s valuation when it
    exercised its Put Option. In my view, in a hypothetical negotiation, Leaf ultimately would
    have consented without receiving any unique consideration.
    329
    See Renault Tr. 382-88.
    330
    See JX 348 at 1; Murphy Tr. 634-38.
    331
    Lerdal Tr. 340-41.
    83
    3.       Nominal Damages
    Leaf suffered no actual damages due to Invenergy’s breach of the Series B Consent
    Right. The TerraForm Transaction did not harm Leaf, and Leaf could not have secured any
    additional consideration at the bargaining table. But “[e]ven if compensatory damages
    cannot be or have not been demonstrated, the breach of a contractual obligation often
    warrants an award of nominal damages.”332 “‘Nominal’ damages are not given as an
    equivalent for the wrong, but rather merely in recognition of a technical injury and by way
    of declaring the rights of the plaintiff.”333 They “are usually assessed in a trivial amount,
    selected simply for the purpose of declaring an infraction of the Plaintiff’s rights and the
    commission of a wrong.”334 This decision awards one dollar to Leaf as nominal damages
    for Invenergy’s breach.
    B.     Invenergy’s Claim For Breach Of The Put-Call Provisions
    Invenergy seeks a declaratory judgment that Leaf breached the Put-Call Provisions
    by making an aggressive opening demand for the exercise price, then later by trying to
    convince XMS to raise its valuation. As the party asserting this claim, Invenergy had the
    332
    Ivize of Milwaukee, LLC v. Compex Litig. Support, LLC, 
    2009 WL 1111179
    , at
    *12 (Del. Ch. Apr. 27, 2009).
    333
    Penn Mart Supermarkets, Inc. v. New Castle Shopping LLC, 
    2005 WL 3502054
    ,
    at *15 (Del. Ch. Dec. 15, 2005) (quoting USH Ventures v. Glob. Telesystems Gp., Inc., 
    796 A.2d 7
    , 23 (Del. Super. 2000)).
    334
    
    Id.
     (quoting USH Ventures, 
    796 A.2d at 23
    ).
    84
    burden of proving it by a preponderance of the evidence. 335 Invenergy did not meet its
    burden.
    1.       Leaf’s Opening Bid
    Invenergy contends that Leaf breached the explicit terms of the Put-Call Provisions
    that require the parties to “negotiate in good faith” to determine the price at which
    Invenergy would purchase Leaf’s interests.336 “[A]n express contractual obligation to
    negotiate in good faith is binding on the contracting parties.”337 “At the very least,” an
    obligation to negotiate in good faith precludes either party from “insist[ing] on specific
    terms that directly contradict[] a specific provision found in” the instrument creating the
    good-faith obligation.338 “Under Delaware law, ‘bad faith is not simply bad judgment or
    negligence, but rather it implies the conscious doing of a wrong because of dishonest
    335
    See 26 C.J.S. Declaratory Judgments § 157 (2017); see also San Antonio Fire &
    Police Pension Fund v. Amylin Pharm., Inc., 
    983 A.2d 304
    , 316 n.38 (Del. Ch. 2009)
    (“Because Amylin seeks a declaratory judgment as to its right to approve, it bears the
    burden of proof here.”); Hexion Specialty Chems., Inc. v. Huntsman Corp., 
    965 A.2d 715
    ,
    739 (Del. Ch. 2008) (“[T]he better view is that a plaintiff in a declaratory judgment action
    should always have the burden of going forward.” (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Those Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London v. Nat’l Installment Ins. Servs.,
    Inc., 
    2007 WL 4554453
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Dec. 21, 2007), aff’d, 
    962 A.2d 916
     (Del. 2008)
    (TABLE)).
    336
    JX 332 § 11.09(a), (d).
    337
    SIGA Techs., Inc. v. PharmaAthene, Inc., 
    67 A.3d 330
    , 343-44 (Del. 2013).
    338
    RGC Int’l Inv’rs, LDC v. Greka Energy Corp., 
    2001 WL 984689
    , at *14 (Del.
    Ch. Aug. 22, 2001) (Strine, V.C.), rev’d on other grounds, Scion Breckenridge Managing
    Member, LLC v. ASB Allegiance Real Estate Fund, 
    68 A.3d 665
     (Del. 2013); see also SIGA
    Techs., 67 A.3d at 344 (quoting RGC with approval).
    85
    purpose or moral obliquity.’”339 Bad faith “is different from the negative idea of negligence
    in that it contemplates a state of mind affirmatively operating with furtive design or ill
    will.”340
    Invenergy relies on Leaf’s opening bid of $214 million as evidence of bad faith.341
    Compared to where the appraisers ended up, that figure turned out to be quite high: nearly
    three times the XMS appraisal and five times what Moelis derived.342 It was also almost
    twice the value that Leaf placed on its entire portfolio just a few days later.343 But Leaf had
    a reasoned basis for making this ask: it relied on the value implied by the TerraForm
    Transaction, which comprised a portion of Invenergy’s assets, and used that figure to
    calculate Leaf’s share. Although aggressive, the $214 million figure was supportable and
    not outside the realm of reason.
    Except for a high opening bid, Invenergy has not identified any other indicia that
    Leaf negotiated in bad faith. When Invenergy reached out to schedule a meeting to
    339
    SIGA Techs., 67 A.3d at 346 (quoting CNL-AB LLC v. E. Prop. Fund I SPE (MS
    REF) LLC, 
    2011 WL 353529
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 28, 2011)).
    340
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting CNL-AB, 
    2011 WL 353529
    , at
    *9).
    341
    See JX 368 (Leaf’s exercise notice); Alemu Tr. 207; Lerdal Tr. 332.
    342
    See JX 460 at 19 (XMS report); JX 512 at 32 (Moelis report).
    343
    JX 389 at 2 (Leaf’s December 31, 2015 Interim Report to investors).
    86
    negotiate, Leaf acquiesced to Invenergy’s request to meet in Chicago.344 Ahead of that
    meeting, Alemu sent an explanation of Leaf’s opening bid.345 During the meeting, the
    parties engaged in negotiations, with each side presenting its positions. When the
    negotiations were unsuccessful, the parties collaborated on moving forward with the
    appraisal process.346
    Leaf’s aggressive opening bid is not enough to establish bad faith. Invenergy has
    failed to carry its burden to prove that Leaf breached the express terms of the Put-Call
    Provisions by failing to proceed in good faith.
    2.       Leaf’s Retention Of And Interactions With XMS
    Invenergy next takes issue with Leaf’s interactions with XMS. The evidence shows
    that Leaf sought to convince XMS to reach a higher valuation of Leaf’s interest. According
    to Invenergy, Leaf’s efforts resulted in XMS not being an “independent appraiser,” as
    required by the Put-Call Provisions. Invenergy also contends that Leaf breached the
    implied covenant by pushing XMS. Neither claim succeeds.
    a.      The Independence Requirement
    The LLC Agreement defines Fair Market Value, in relevant part, as
    the amount that could be obtained from an arm’s length willing buyer (not a
    current employee or Executive Officer) for 100% of the Company Interests.
    Such price shall be determined by the averaging of the prices obtained from
    344
    JX 371; JX 374; see also JX 373 (Invenergy sending timeline to its attorneys in
    anticipation of meeting).
    345
    JX 374 at 4.
    346
    See JX 376.
    87
    (x) an independent appraiser or investment bank chosen by the Company
    (following consultation with CDPQ) and (y) an independent appraiser or
    investment bank chosen by Liberty or the Series B Non-Voting Investor
    Member, as applicable; provided, that if such appraisal amounts vary by
    greater than 20% a third appraiser shall be chosen jointly by the parties and
    the price per share shall be the averaging of the three appraisals. For the sake
    of clarity, when Fair Market Value is being determined and there is not an
    active trading market, the appraisers shall value the interests without
    ascribing a minority interest or illiquidity discount. The Company and
    Liberty or the Series B Non-Voting Investor Member, as applicable, agree to
    instruct each independent appraiser or investment bank, as the case may be,
    to promptly complete all independent appraisals, and that in any event all
    such independent appraisals shall be completed within sixty (60) days of the
    date that each independent appraiser is engaged.347
    In three locations, this provision refers to an “independent appraiser or investment bank.”
    It then refers twice to the “independent appraisals” and finishes with a final reference to
    “such independent appraiser.”
    When established legal terminology is used in a legal document, a court will
    presume that the parties intended to use the established legal meaning of the terms.348
    Under Delaware law, which governs the LLC Agreement, the concept of “independence”
    347
    JX 332 § 1.01.
    348
    See Hazout v. Tsang Mun Ting, 
    134 A.3d 274
    , 290 n.58 (Del. 2016) (collecting
    authorities demonstrating that where the legislature uses a term with a “well-settled legal
    meaning” it uses the term in its “legal sense”); LeVan v. Indep. Mall, Inc., 
    940 A.2d 929
    ,
    933 (Del. 2007) (looking to “both legal and non-legal definitions” of “to make” in
    interpreting statute of limitations); cf. Am. Legacy Found. v. Lorillard Tobacco Co., 
    2005 WL 5775806
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Aug. 22, 2005) (presuming use of words with “no accepted
    blackletter legal definition . . . was an implicit agreement by the parties to avoid the use of
    legal terms of art”).
    88
    refers to the ability to make a decision based on the merits, free of “extraneous
    considerations or influences.”349
    In this case, the plain language of the Put-Call Provisions required that each side
    select an appraiser that was independent in the sense of being able to render a valuation on
    the merits, free of extraneous considerations or influences. Examples of situations that
    might compromise an appraiser’s independence include a pending engagement for the
    other side of the negotiation or such a thick relationship with either side as to create a
    feeling of loyalty or owing-ness. Such a degree of connection might arise because of
    extensive present or past engagements or because of personal ties between the principals
    of the appraisal firm and its client. The terms of an appraiser’s engagement also could
    compromise the appraiser’s independence, such as a fee arrangement that gave the
    appraiser a pecuniary interest in the outcome of the valuation.350 These are merely
    examples; this list is not intended to be exhaustive.
    In this case, Invenergy has not pointed to anything that would have compromised
    XMS’s independence. Invenergy has not identified any prior relationship between XMS
    349
    Beam ex rel. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. v. Stewart, 
    845 A.2d 1040
    ,
    1049 (Del. 2004).
    350
    See, e.g., Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
    , 1167-68 (Del.
    1995) (establishing standard for when financial interest is “material” for purposes of duty
    of loyalty); Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 
    457 A.2d 701
    ,710 (Del. 1983) (“When directors of a
    Delaware corporation are on both sides of a transaction, they are required to demonstrate
    their utmost good faith and the most scrupulous inherent fairness of the bargain.”).
    89
    and Leaf, any financial interest XMS had in the outcome of the appraisal, or any similar
    attachment that could create a conflict. Although the LLC Agreement did not require it, the
    parties conferred regarding their selection of appraisers. As part of that process, Invenergy
    identified to Leaf twenty-three potential appraisers it deemed conflicted; XMS was not one
    of them.351 Although Invenergy later intimated that it harbored doubts as to the
    “independence” of XMS,352 it never provided any specifics.
    Invenergy instead relies on Leaf’s interactions with XMS to argue that XMS was
    not independent. The record reflects that both parties engaged with their appraisers and
    made arguments in favor of valuations that would favor their positon. But the record also
    reflects that both appraisers ultimately exercised independent judgment to reach
    supportable valuation opinions.353 Leaf’s interactions with XMS were more extensive in
    degree than Invenergy’s interactions with Navigant (or at least there is more evidence
    documenting them), but they did not differ in kind. In my view, Invenergy failed to
    establish that Leaf pressured XMS to such a degree that XMS was no longer independent
    for purposes of the Put-Call Provisions.
    351
    JX 378 at 5-6.
    352
    Id. at 1.
    353
    See Alemu Tr. 144, 147, 150; Lerdal Tr. 333, 350-51; Sane Tr. 742-44; Nygaard
    Dep. 110, 115, 119, 180-82; see also id. at 180; Houlihan Dep. 87, 124.
    90
    b.     Breach Of The Implied Covenant
    As an alternative to its claim that Leaf breached the express terms of the LLC
    Agreement, Invenergy argues that Leaf breached the implied covenant of good faith and
    fair dealing. Although not explicit about it, Invenergy appears to argue that Leaf breached
    an implied term requiring that Leaf conduct the appraisal in “good faith.”354 To secure a
    declaration that Leaf breached the implied covenant, Invenergy carries the burden of
    proving “a specific implied contractual obligation, a breach of that obligation by the
    defendant, and resulting damage to the plaintiff.”355
    Under Delaware law, the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing “attaches
    to every contract.”356 The implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing is a doctrine
    deployed to ensure that parties’ contractual expectations are fulfilled under circumstances
    354
    See Senior Hous. Capital, LLC v. SHP Senior Hous. Fund, LLC, 
    2013 WL 1955012
    , at *25-26 (Del. Ch. May 13, 2013) (Strine, C.) (finding that a procedure “which
    contractually provides for additional appraisals in the event of a dispute . . . does not
    contemplate any judicial review” but under such circumstances “it is a contractual
    expectation that the appraiser make a good faith, independent judgment about value to set
    the contractual input” and therefore any review “would not . . . involve second-guessing
    the good faith judgment of the appraiser” but rather whether “a party had breached the
    contract’s implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing”).
    355
    Fitzgerald v. Cantor, 
    1998 WL 842316
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Nov. 10, 1998).
    356
    Dunlap v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    878 A.2d 434
    , 441-42 (Del. 2005).
    91
    that they did not anticipate. In its most common manifestation, the implied covenant
    “supplies terms to fill gaps in the express provisions of a specific agreement.”357
    Invoking the doctrine is a “cautious enterprise.”358 Implying contract terms is an
    “occasional necessity . . . to ensure [that] the parties’ reasonable expectations are
    fulfilled.”359 Its use should be “rare and fact-intensive, turning on issues of compelling
    fairness.”360 To aid in that cautious enterprise, this court has developed a methodical, multi-
    step process to guide the application of the implied covenant: determination of the
    existence of a gap, determination of whether the circumstances warrant filling that gap,
    and, if necessary, crafting of the appropriate term to fill that gap.361
    Here, Invenergy did not engage in a methodical analysis of the implied covenant. It
    did not expressly identify the gap it seeks to fill, nor the term it seeks to fill it with. In
    addition, the parties did not develop the factual record surrounding the negotiating history
    of the Put-Call Provisions, making it all the more difficult to analyze these questions.
    357
    Allen v. El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C., 
    113 A.3d 167
    , 182 (Del. Ch. 2014),
    aff’d, 
    2015 WL 803053
     (Del. Feb. 26, 2015) (TABLE).
    358
    Nemec v. Shrader, 
    991 A.2d 1120
    , 1125 (Del. 2010) (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting Dunlap, 
    878 A.2d at 441
    ).
    359
    Dunlap, 
    878 A.2d at 442
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    360
    Cincinnati SMSA Ltd. P’ship v. Cincinnati Bell Cellular Sys. Co., 
    708 A.2d 989
    ,
    992 (Del. 1998).
    361
    See, e.g., In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litig., 
    2018 WL 818760
    , at *58-
    60; Allen, 113 A.3d at 182-85.
    92
    Instead, Invenergy has claimed that Leaf breached an implied term to conduct the
    appraisal in good faith by instructing XMS to determine “Fair Market Value” as the
    “highest” price that anyone would pay for the company.362 Citing the Delaware Supreme
    Court’s recent decision in DFC Global Corp. v. Muirfield Value Partners, L.P., Invenergy
    argues that this definition is directly opposed to Delaware law, which holds that “fair value
    is just that, ‘fair.’ It does not mean the highest possible price that a company might have
    sold for had Warren Buffet negotiated for it on his best day and the Lenape who sold
    Manhattan on their worst.”363 The Delaware Supreme Court made those comments when
    discussing the meaning of “fair value” under the appraisal statute.364
    This case involves a contractual definition for “Fair Market Value.” When Leaf
    originally invested, the LLC Agreement defined that term as
    the product of (x) the highest price per unit of equity interest which the
    Company could obtain from a willing buyer (not a current employee or
    director) for the Company’s Company Interests in a transaction involving the
    sale by the Company of all equity interests times (y) the number of Company
    Interests being valued.365
    362
    See Alemu Tr. 219-20; Alemu Dep. 283-84 (recalling that Leaf instructed XMS
    that Fair Market Value was “the highest amount that could be achieved . . . on an M&A
    sale.”); Nygaard Dep. 70.
    363
    
    172 A.3d 346
    , 370 (Del. 2017).
    364
    8 Del. C. § 262.
    365
    JX 38 at 85 (emphasis added).
    93
    The standard further specified that when “there is not an active trading market, the
    appraisers shall value the interests without ascribing a minority interest or illiquidity
    discount.”366
    The definition of “Fair Market Value” in the governing LLC Agreement dropped
    the “highest price” language and defined the measure simply as “the amount that could be
    obtained from an arm’s length willing buyer.”367 Given the history of the provision and the
    use of the phrase “could be obtained,” it was not unreasonable for Leaf to take the position
    that XMS could derive the highest price that could be obtained from a third party. Under
    the circumstances of this case, in light of the evolution of the provision, Leaf’s position did
    not breach the implied covenant.
    III.     CONCLUSION
    Leaf is awarded nominal damages of one dollar for Invenergy’s breach of the Series
    B Consent Right. Invenergy’s request for a declaratory judgment that Leaf breached the
    express and implied terms of the Put-Call Provisions is denied. In light of this decision, the
    parties will complete the put-call process in accordance with the governing provisions in
    the LLC Agreement.
    To implement this relief, the parties shall submit a final judgment that is agreed
    upon as to form. If there are issues that the court needs to address before it can enter a final
    366
    Id.
    367
    JX 332 at 12.
    94
    judgment, then the parties shall submit a joint letter within sixty days that identifies those
    issues and proposes a path forward that will bring this case to a conclusion at the trial level.
    95
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CA 11830-VCL

Judges: Laster, V.C.

Filed Date: 4/19/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/19/2018

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