Wendy Lee v. Mark Pincus ( 2014 )


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  •     IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    WENDY LEE, individually and on behalf       )
    of all others similarly situated,           )
    )
    Plaintiff,                      )
    v.                                    )     C.A. No. 8458-CB
    )
    MARK PINCUS, JOHN SCHAPPERT,                )
    WILLIAM GORDON, REID HOFFMAN,               )
    JEFFREY KATZENBERG, STANLEY J.              )
    MERESMAN, SUNIL PAUL, OWEN                  )
    VAN NATTA, MORGAN STANLEY                   )
    & CO. LLC, GOLDMAN, SACHS & CO.,            )
    AND ZYNGA INC.,                             )
    )
    Defendants.                     )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: August 22, 2014
    Date Decided: November 14, 2014
    Elizabeth M. McGeever and J. Clayton Athey of PRICKETT, JONES & ELLIOT, P.A.,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Ethan D. Wohl of WOHL & FRUCHTER LLP, New York, New
    York, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
    Danielle Gibbs and Nicholas J. Rohrer of YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT &
    TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Jordan Eth, Anna Erickson White and Kevin A.
    Calia of MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP, San Francisco, California, Attorneys for
    Defendants Mark Pincus, John Schappert, William Gordon, Reid Hoffman, Jeffrey
    Katzenberg, Stanley J. Meresman, Sunil Paul, Owen Van Natta, and Zynga Inc.
    Gregory V. Varallo, Thomas A. Uebler and Robert L. Burns of RICHARDS, LAYTON
    & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Bruce D. Angiolillo and Jonathan K.
    Youngwood of SIMPSON THACHER & BARTLETT LLP, New York, New York;
    Simona G. Strauss of SIMPSON THACHER & BARTLETT LLP, Palo Alto, California,
    Attorneys for Defendants Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC and Goldman, Sachs & Co.
    BOUCHARD, C.
    I.     INTRODUCTION
    This action involves allegations by a stockholder of Zynga Inc. (“Zynga”) that, a
    few months after the company completed its initial public offering in December 2011, the
    board of directors waived in a discriminatory manner certain contractual restrictions that
    had prevented most pre-IPO investors from selling their stock for a designated period.
    Selectively waiving these “lockup” restrictions permitted some pre-IPO stockholders to
    sell a portion of their holdings almost two months before other pre-IPO stockholders, at
    what turned out to be a significantly higher price than was available later. Four of
    Zynga’s eight directors received this opportunity. Plaintiff claims that Zynga’s directors
    breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty by approving a self-dealing waiver of these
    lockups to the unfair benefit of half the members of the Zynga board (Count I). Plaintiff
    also claims that two investment banks, whose consent was necessary to waive the
    lockups, aided and abetted these breaches of fiduciary duty (Count II).
    As discussed below, the specific waivers at issue were part of a larger decision by
    the Zynga board to restructure the lockup restrictions covering approximately 688 million
    shares of Zynga stock. This figure equates to almost seven times the number of shares
    (100 million shares) issued in the company’s IPO. All of the lockups were set to expire
    on the same day: May 28, 2012. But, in March 2012, the Zynga board decided to stagger
    the lockup expirations, which would have the effect of gradually making more stock
    available to the public.
    With their lockups modified, a group of pre-IPO stockholders were thereby able to
    participate in a secondary offering to the public that closed in early April 2012 at a price
    1
    of $12.00 per share. Each of the four Zynga directors who received lockup waivers sold
    millions of dollars of Zynga stock in this secondary offering.           Zynga’s founder,
    Chairman, and then-Chief Executive Officer, Mark Pincus, alone received over $192
    million in proceeds. The two investment banks that consented to the lockup waivers
    together made over $10 million in fees by acting as underwriters for the secondary
    offering. Plaintiff’s shares, in contrast to those of the four directors who participated in
    the secondary offering, remained locked up until May 29, 2012, when the closing price
    for Zynga’s stock was $6.09 per share.
    Zynga and the eight director defendants moved to dismiss Count I under (i) Court
    of Chancery Rule 23.1 for failure to make a pre-suit demand upon Zynga’s board or to
    plead facts excusing such demand and (ii) Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to
    state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The two underwriter defendants moved
    to dismiss Count II under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim.
    In this opinion, I conclude that plaintiff has stated a claim for breach of fiduciary
    duty against the director defendants because it is reasonably conceivable that, when the
    members of the Zynga board restructured the lockup restrictions, half of the directors
    who approved that decision received an unfair benefit. I also conclude that plaintiff has
    not stated a claim for aiding and abetting because plaintiff has failed to plead facts from
    which it is reasonably inferable that the underwriters knowingly participated in a breach
    of fiduciary duty. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss Count I is denied, and the motion
    to dismiss Count II is granted.
    2
    II.     BACKGROUND 1
    A.     The Parties
    Defendant Zynga, a Delaware corporation based in San Francisco, California, is in
    the “social gaming” industry.       Zynga produces interactive, online games (think
    FarmVille) that are accessible through facebook.com and other platforms. It generates
    income primarily through advertising and selling so-called “virtual goods.” Its stock
    trades on the NASDAQ. Zynga is named as a defendant “solely because it is a party to
    agreements underlying and relating to the [s]econdary [o]ffering.” 2
    Between the company’s IPO in December 2011 and the secondary offering in
    April 2012, Zynga’s board consisted of eight individuals: defendants Mark Pincus
    (“Pincus”), John Schappert (“Schappert”), William Gordon, Reid Hoffman (“Hoffman”),
    Jeffrey Katzenberg, Stanley J. Meresman, Sunil Paul, and Owen Van Natta (“Van
    Natta”). All eight individuals had been directors of Zynga since November 2011. Four
    of these directors received lockup waivers and then sold stock in the secondary offering:
    Pincus, Schappert, Hoffman, and Van Natta. I refer to the eight individual defendants as
    the “Director Defendants,” and to the Director Defendants and Zynga, collectively, as the
    “Zynga Defendants.”
    Defendant Pincus founded Zynga in 2007. Through his ownership of high-voting
    stock, Pincus controlled 37.4% of Zynga’s voting power immediately after the
    1
    Unless noted otherwise, the facts recited in this opinion are based on the allegations of
    the Verified Amended Class Action Complaint (the “Amended Complaint”).
    2
    Am. Compl. ¶ 22.
    3
    company’s IPO, and 36.5% immediately before the secondary offering. He sold 16.5
    million shares in the secondary offering and received $192,060,000 in net proceeds,
    equating to $11.64 per share. Defendants Schappert, Hoffman, and Van Natta together
    sold approximately 1.5 million shares in the secondary offering, receiving over $17.6
    million in net proceeds.
    Defendant Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC (“Morgan Stanley”) is a Delaware limited
    liability company based in New York. Defendant Goldman, Sachs & Co. (“Goldman”) is
    a New York limited partnership also based in New York. Morgan Stanley and Goldman
    (together, the “Underwriter Defendants”) served as the lead underwriters, and as the
    representatives for the other underwriters, in Zynga’s IPO and the secondary offering.
    Plaintiff Wendy Lee (“Lee”) has been a Zynga stockholder at all times relevant to
    this case. She was also a Zynga employee from 2009 until May 2011. On August 2,
    2011, pursuant to a Stock Option Exercise Agreement (the “Exercise Agreement”), Lee
    acquired 30,000 shares of Zynga stock at an exercise price of $3.805 per share. In
    September 2012, she sold substantially all of her stock at a price of $3.15 per share.
    B.    Zynga’s Capital Structure
    Zynga has three classes of common stock: (i) Class A shares, entitled to one vote
    per share; (ii) Class B shares, entitled to seven votes per share; and (iii) Class C shares,
    entitled to seventy votes per share, which “were issued only to Pincus.” 3          Zynga’s
    publicly traded stock is its Class A shares. Except for matters that affect Class B or Class
    3
    
    Id. ¶ 29.
    4
    C shares differently, the three classes vote together on all matters submitted to Zynga
    stockholders, including the election of directors.
    C.    Zynga’s Directors and Most Pre-IPO Stockholders Agree to
    Lockup Restrictions in Advance of the Company’s IPO
    On December 16, 2011, Zynga completed its IPO. It sold 100 million shares to
    the public at $10 per share, raising $1 billion. The offering price implied an enterprise
    value for the company of over $7 billion.
    Before the IPO, the Director Defendants, Zynga’s officers and employees, and
    most other pre-IPO investors (including plaintiff Lee) had agreed to lockup restrictions
    that prevented them from selling their Zynga stock for a 165-day period after December
    15, 2011, i.e., until after May 28, 2012.            Collectively, approximately 688 million
    shares 4—nearly seven times the initial public float—were subject to these lockup
    restrictions. The company disclosed the terms of the lockup restrictions in a Form S-1/A
    filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 15, 2011 (the
    “December S-1”). According to the “Risk Factors” section of the December S-1, making
    additional Class A shares available to the public could “depress” the company’s stock
    price. 5
    4
    Rohrer Decl. Ex. 3 (Zynga Inc., Amendment No. 1 to Registration Statement (Form S-
    1/A), at 125 (Mar. 23, 2012)) (the “March S-1”). I may consider limited parts of the
    March S-1 at the motion to dismiss stage because it is referenced as the source for Lee’s
    allegations in Paragraphs 43, 47, and 49 of the Amended Complaint and, therefore, is
    integral to Lee’s claims. See In re Santa Fe Pac. Corp. S’holder Litig., 
    669 A.2d 59
    , 69-
    70 (Del. 1995).
    5
    The December S-1 stated, in relevant part:
    5
    Morgan Stanley and Goldman acted in the IPO as the lead underwriters and as the
    representatives for the other underwriters.      In its IPO underwriting agreement with
    Morgan Stanley and Goldman, Zynga had agreed “[n]ot to amend, modify or terminate,
    or waive any provision of, any of the ‘lock-up’ agreements with [its] officers, directors or
    stockholders” without the underwriters’ prior written consent. 6
    D.    With the Consent of Morgan Stanley and Goldman,
    Zynga’s Board Restructures the Lockup Restrictions
    In March 2012, Zynga’s directors decided to modify the lockup restrictions to
    permit certain pre-IPO stockholders to sell some of their shares before the original May
    28, 2012, expiration date and the rest of their shares after the original May 28, 2012,
    expiration date. I infer from the Amended Complaint that all eight of Zynga’s directors
    voted in favor of this lockup restructuring. 7 As reflected in a Form S-1/A filed with the
    SEC on March 23, 2012 (the “March S-1”), the board received the consent of Morgan
    Future sales of our Class A common stock in the public market could cause
    our share price to decline. Sales of a substantial number of shares of our
    Class A common stock in the public market after this offering, or the
    perception that these sales might occur, could depress the market price of
    our Class A common stock and could impair our ability to raise capital
    through the sale of additional equity securities.
    Am. Compl. ¶ 37; see also 
    id. ¶ 38.
    6
    
    Id. ¶ 36
    (quoting December S-1).
    7
    See 
    id. ¶ 47
    (“Pincus, Schappert, Hoffman, Van Natta, and the other selling
    shareholders were the beneficiaries of a selective waiver of the [l]ockups by the Board
    and the Underwriter Defendants.”), ¶ 53 (“[T]he [s]econdary [o]ffering was possible only
    because the Board and the Underwriter Defendants approved it.”).
    6
    Stanley and Goldman to restructure the lockups. The restructuring created staggered
    lockup expiration dates falling into four categories.
    First, Zynga’s board waived the 165-day lockup restrictions for approximately 49
    million shares (inclusive of the underwriters’ option to purchase additional shares) held
    by select investors, including four of Zynga’s eight directors: Pincus, Schappert,
    Hoffman, and Van Natta. For the stock held by these four directors, the board also
    waived the company’s “blackout” policy, which prohibited Zynga employees from
    selling stock during a designated period around the company’s quarterly earnings
    releases. These waivers were made to facilitate a secondary offering of Zynga stock to
    the public that closed on April 3, 2012.         Director Defendants Pincus, Schappert,
    Hoffman, and Van Natta would each participate in this secondary offering.
    Second, the board waived the 165-day lockup restrictions for approximately 114
    million shares held by non-executive employees. 8 Although these shares were no longer
    subject to the lockups, they remained subject to the company’s blackout policy. By
    operation of the blackout policy, these non-executive employees were first able to sell
    their approximately 114 million shares on May 1, 2012.
    Third, for approximately 325 million shares held by former employees (including
    plaintiff Lee) and certain institutional investors, the lockups were not modified. Those
    shares could be sold starting on May 29, 2012, after the 165-day lockup period expired.
    8
    The Amended Complaint alleges that 114 million shares fall into this category, but the
    March S-1 refers to 115 million shares. Compare Am. Compl. ¶ 49, with March S-1 at
    125. The difference is immaterial to this decision.
    7
    Fourth, the board extended the lockup restrictions for the remaining holdings of
    those stockholders who were permitted to participate in the secondary offering and
    certain other stockholders. This last group included the rest of the stock held by all eight
    Zynga directors. In total, approximately 200 million shares were subject to extended
    lockups.      Approximately 50 million shares could be sold on July 6, 2012, and
    approximately 150 million shares could be sold on August 16, 2012. 9
    E.    The Secondary Offering
    On April 3, 2012, the secondary offering closed at a price of $12.00 per share.
    Pincus sold 16.5 million shares and received net proceeds of $192,060,000, representing
    nearly 40% of the total proceeds from the offering. Each of Schappert, Hoffman, and
    Van Natta sold several million dollars’ worth of their Zynga stock in the secondary
    offering. Schappert sold 322,350 shares for net proceeds of $3,752,154. Hoffman sold
    687,626 shares for net proceeds of $8,003,967. Van Natta sold 505,267 shares for net
    proceeds of $5,881,308. Zynga did not sell any shares in the secondary offering.
    As they had in the IPO, Morgan Stanley and Goldman acted as the lead
    underwriters (and as the representatives for the other underwriters) for the secondary
    offering. For their services, Morgan Stanley and Goldman each received more than $5.3
    million in fees and commissions.
    9
    March S-1 at 125.
    8
    F.      The Decrease in Zynga’s Stock Price after the Secondary Offering
    After the secondary offering in 2012, Zynga’s stock “began a precipitous decline”
    in value. 10     Most relevant here are the market prices when the company’s pre-IPO
    investors, now subject to a range of lockup restrictions, could first sell their stock.
    Zynga’s stock fell from the secondary offering price of $12.00 per share on April 3, 2012,
    to a closing price of $8.46 per share on May 1 (when approximately 114 million shares
    could be sold by current, non-executive employees), and then to a closing price of $6.09
    per share on May 29 (when approximately 325 million shares could be sold by Lee, other
    former employees, and institutional investors). In their brief, the Zynga Defendants note
    that the company’s stock price continued to decline after May 29, to a closing price of
    $5.36 per share on July 6 (when approximately 50 million shares could be sold by Zynga
    directors and other investors), and then to a closing price of $3.00 per share on August 16
    (when approximately 150 million shares could be sold by Zynga directors and other
    investors). 11
    Based on Lee’s calculations, had the four Zynga directors who sold stock in the
    secondary offering at $12.00 per share instead sold those shares on May 29 at $6.09 per
    10
    Am. Compl. ¶ 60.
    11
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 6. The Amended Complaint included a graph reflecting the price
    of Zynga stock from approximately December 15, 2011, to approximately June 28, 2012.
    
    Id. Lee failed
    to include, however, the specific per-share closing price on any relevant
    date.     The Zynga stock prices listed above are from Yahoo! Finance.                 See
    http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=ZNGA+Historical+Prices. I take judicial notice of
    these reported stock prices because they are not subject to reasonable dispute. See D.R.E.
    201(b)(2); see also In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 
    897 A.2d 162
    , 169 (Del.
    2006).
    9
    share, they would have received approximately $100 million less in proceeds. This
    calculation is the basis of Lee’s allegation that the lockup waivers received by the four
    Zynga directors were “worth” approximately $100 million. 12
    G.     Procedural Background 13
    On April 4, 2013, Lee commenced this action against defendants. On May 10,
    2013, defendants filed a notice of removal from the Court of Chancery to the United
    States District Court for the District of Delaware. On December 23, 2013, the District
    Court granted Lee’s motion for remand to this Court for lack of federal jurisdiction. 14
    On January 17, 2014, Lee filed the Amended Complaint, asserting two causes of
    action. Count I asserts that the Director Defendants breached their fiduciary duty of
    loyalty by waiving the lockup restrictions to favor the Director Defendants at the expense
    of other pre-IPO stockholders. Count II asserts that the Underwriter Defendants aided
    and abetted those breaches of fiduciary duty.
    On March 6, 2014, the Zynga Defendants moved to dismiss Count I of the
    Amended Complaint under Court of Chancery Rules 12(b)(6) and 23.1. Also on March
    12
    Am. Compl. ¶ 62.
    13
    In addition to this action, there are derivative lawsuits filed against certain of the
    Director Defendants in California state court and in the United States District Court for
    the Northern District of California. McGeever Trans. Aff. Ex. 1-5. There also is a
    derivative lawsuit pending against the Director Defendants in this Court that is currently
    stayed by agreement of the parties. Stip. and Order, Sandys v. Pincus, C.A. No. 9512-CB
    (Del. Ch. Oct. 21, 2014).
    14
    See Lee v. Pincus, 
    2013 WL 6804640
    , at *2 (D. Del. Dec. 23, 2013).
    10
    6, 2014, the Underwriter Defendants moved to dismiss Count II of the Amended
    Complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6). 15
    III.     LEGAL ANALYSIS
    In Count I, Lee alleges that the Director Defendants breached their fiduciary duties
    by “selectively releasing the [l]ockups, selectively waiving the [b]lackout [p]olicy, and
    authorizing the [s]econdary [o]ffering to benefit themselves.” 16 She further alleges that
    the secondary offering, made possible only by the lockup waivers, “was approved by a
    self-interested board of directors, acting to serve the interests of its own members and the
    17
    [c]ompany’s controlling shareholder [(i.e., Pincus)].”        With respect to the shares held
    by the Director Defendants who participated in the secondary offering, I focus my
    attention here on the waiver of the lockups as shorthand for the alleged waiver of both the
    lockups and the company’s blackout policy.
    The Zynga Defendants raise three arguments in support of their motion to dismiss
    Count I. First, they contend that the cause of action is derivative and that Lee failed to
    satisfy the pleading requirements of Court of Chancery Rule 23.1. Second, they assert
    that Lee’s claim sounds in contract law and thus does not state a claim for breach of
    15
    Defendants also moved to stay discovery in this action pending resolution of their
    motions to dismiss. At oral argument on August 22, 2014, I granted this motion except
    that I required the production to plaintiff of documents Zynga previously had produced to
    a stockholder in a separate action initiated in this Court pursuant to 
    8 Del. C
    . § 220. See
    Stip. and Final Order, Sandys v. Zynga Inc., C.A. No. 8450-ML (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 2013).
    16
    Am. Compl. ¶ 74.
    17
    
    Id. ¶ 73;
    see also 
    id. ¶¶ 52,
    63-64.
    11
    fiduciary duty. Third, they argue that, even if fiduciary duty principles govern the claim,
    it must be dismissed because Lee has failed to rebut the business judgment rule. These
    issues are considered, in turn, below.
    A.     Count I Alleges Direct Harm to Lee
    Lee seeks to bring this action on behalf of a class consisting of all Zynga
    stockholders, excluding defendants and their affiliates, who “were subject to the
    [l]ockups, and who were not permitted to sell shares in the [s]econdary [o]ffering.” 18
    Thus, the putative class would be limited to a subgroup of Zynga’s pre-IPO stockholders
    and would exclude all of the company’s public stockholders, who were not subject to the
    lockup restrictions.
    Despite how Count I is pled, the Zynga Defendants argue that the claim is
    derivative in nature on the theory that it is based on a “devaluation in stock resulting from
    [their] alleged breach of fiduciary duty.” 19     According to the Zynga Defendants, a
    devaluation in stock price would affect all Zynga stockholders proportionally and would
    not affect Lee and the putative class individually.
    In opposition, Lee asserts that Count I does not fit within the framework of a
    traditional derivative claim.    For example, she does not contend that the Director
    Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by selling stock in the secondary offering
    18
    
    Id. ¶ 65.
    19
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 14.
    12
    based on confidential information, which would give rise to derivative harm. 20 Nor does
    she contend that the Director Defendants usurped a corporate opportunity21 or wasted
    corporate assets, 22 both of which likewise would harm Zynga stockholders derivatively.
    Rather, Lee contends that Count I asserts a direct claim because the harm “relates to the
    transferability of [her] shares, not any injury, direct or indirect, to Zynga itself.” 23
    Specifically, she submits that “the injury flows from being deprived of the same
    opportunity to sell as the Director Defendants provided to themselves.” 24
    The Delaware Supreme Court articulated the test for determining whether a
    stockholder plaintiff’s claim is direct or derivative in Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin &
    Jenrette, Inc. 25 The analysis turns “solely” on two questions: “(1) who suffered the
    alleged harm (the corporation or the suing stockholders, individually); and (2) who would
    receive the benefit of any recovery or other remedy (the corporation or the stockholders,
    individually)?” 26 The Tooley test is not necessarily a binary inquiry, as certain corporate
    20
    See, e.g., Kahn v. Kolberg Kravis Roberts & Co., L.P., 
    23 A.3d 831
    , 836-38 (Del.
    2011).
    21
    See, e.g., Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc., 
    676 A.2d 436
    , 442 (Del. 1996).
    22
    See, e.g., Kramer v. W. Pac. Indus., Inc., 
    546 A.2d 348
    , 353 (Del. 1988).
    23
    Pl.’s Ans. Br. 17.
    24
    
    Id. 18. 25
         
    845 A.2d 1031
    (Del. 2004).
    26
    
    Id. at 1033.
    13
    wrongs are said to harm stockholders directly and derivatively. 27 Essential to asserting a
    direct claim are allegations of “some individualized harm not suffered by all of the
    stockholders at large.” 28
    The parties have not cited any Delaware case squarely addressing whether the
    claim advanced as Count I may be asserted directly. 29 In my opinion, Count I asserts a
    direct claim under Tooley because the Director Defendants’ decision to restructure the
    lockups gave allegedly “preferential treatment” 30 to certain pre-IPO stockholders over
    others. Specifically, the modification of the lockups allegedly benefitted the liquidity of
    the stock of the Director Defendants that could be sold in the secondary offering relative
    to the stock held by Lee and the putative class. 31 Moreover, the whole universe of
    Zynga’s public stockholders—who were not subject to the lockups to begin with—were
    unaffected by any of the Director Defendants’ actions, even though they were Zynga
    27
    See, e.g., Gentile v. Rossette, 
    906 A.2d 91
    , 99-100 (Del. 2006).
    28
    Feldman v. Cutaia, 
    951 A.2d 727
    , 733 (Del. 2008).
    29
    The closest analogue cited by the parties is Nixon v. Blackwell, 
    626 A.2d 1366
    (Del.
    1993). In Nixon, plaintiffs alleged that the director defendants, as Class A stockholders,
    received benefits by way of an employee stock ownership plan and various “key man”
    life insurance policies, which were not shared with the plaintiffs, Class B stockholders.
    
    Id. at 1375-79.
    The Delaware Supreme Court considered whether it was entirely fair for
    the corporation’s directors to not offer the same liquidity to Class B stockholders as to
    Class A stockholders. Neither the Supreme Court nor the trial court, however, expressly
    addressed whether the plaintiffs’ claim was direct or derivative.
    30
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 49, 73.
    31
    Although the Amended Complaint does not expressly identify “liquidity” as the harm,
    Tr. of Oral Arg. 12-13, it is reasonable to infer that the alleged harm of “preferential
    treatment” (to the stockholders who received lockup waivers) embodies the concept of
    liquidity.
    14
    stockholders when the lockups were waived. In short, the alleged harm is unique to Lee
    and the putative class of pre-IPO stockholders who were not permitted to participate in
    the secondary offering.
    The Zynga Defendants’ primary authority in support of their position, Feldman v.
    Cutaia, 32 does not change my conclusion. Feldman involved breach of fiduciary duty
    claims relating to the directors’ decision to issue stock options for allegedly inadequate
    consideration. The Delaware Supreme Court concluded that the plaintiff’s purportedly
    direct claim challenging the board’s failure to consider the validity of the options when
    approving a merger agreement (resulting in less merger consideration to the plaintiff) was
    derivative under Tooley because the alleged harm was “exactly the same” as the harm to
    the corporation alleged in another of the plaintiff’s claims challenging the validity of the
    options when they were issued: dilution in value of the corporation’s stock, a classic
    derivative harm. 33
    Unlike the plaintiff in Feldman, Lee alleges no harm to the corporation or to all
    stockholders because the lockup waivers did not harm Zynga or the liquidity of all Zynga
    stockholders but only that of the putative class of pre-IPO stockholders. Lee is thus not
    “restating a derivative claim under the guise of a direct claim.” 34 Because I find Count I
    32
    
    951 A.2d 727
    (Del. 2008).
    33
    See 
    id. at 732-33.
    34
    Protas v. Cavanagh, 
    2012 WL 1580969
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. May 4, 2012).
    15
    to state a direct claim, Lee does not need to satisfy the pleading requirements of Rule
    23.1, and the Zynga Defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I under Rule 23.1 is denied. 35
    B.     Count I Asserts a Claim Governed by Fiduciary Duty Principles
    The Zynga Defendants assert that their obligations to Lee and the putative class
    with respect to the lockup restrictions are limited exclusively to those set forth in the
    agreements providing for the lockups. That is, they disclaim that the Director Defendants
    owed any fiduciary duties to the pre-IPO stockholders regarding any modification to any
    contractual lockup restrictions, including to their own lockups. They argue that Lee was
    not harmed by the lockup restructuring because she “received exactly what she was
    35
    In the Amended Complaint, Lee requests disgorgement of the amounts by which the
    Director Defendants were unjustly enriched. Am. Compl. Prayer for Relief ¶ B. The
    Zynga Defendants argue that the request for disgorgement, which is typically associated
    with derivative claims, demonstrates that Count I asserts derivative harm. Zynga Defs.’
    Op. Br. 15-16. This argument overlooks the fact that Lee also seeks to have the Director
    Defendants account to her and the putative class “for all damages suffered.” Am. Compl.
    Prayer for Relief ¶ B. At this procedural stage, this request for damages is sufficient to
    support a direct claim because it has a “logical or reasonable relationship to the harm.”
    See In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 
    906 A.2d 766
    , 773 (Del. 2006).
    Although it is not apparent to me how disgorgement would be a proper remedy in this
    case, resolution of that issue is for another day.
    Separately, the Zynga Defendants complain that Lee should not be permitted to “win a
    race to judgment and capture the disgorgement remedy for herself” ahead of the
    derivative actions filed in California and in this Court that seek disgorgement from
    certain Director Defendants. Zynga Defs.’ Reply Br. 23-24. Underlying this contention
    is the general principle, which Lee acknowledges, Pl.’s Ans. Br. 22, that a given dollar
    can be disgorged only once. See, e.g., Litton Indus., Inc. v. Lehman Bros. Kuhn Loeb
    Inc., 
    734 F. Supp. 1071
    , 1076 (S.D.N.Y. 1990). This concern of the Zynga Defendants is
    not a basis in my view for dismissing Count I, which otherwise states a claim for breach
    of fiduciary duty. Rather, this concern speaks to the appropriate remedy to be awarded if
    liability is established on the theory plaintiff has espoused, and bears on the question
    whether prosecution of this case should be coordinated somehow with the other actions
    going forward.
    16
    entitled to under her contract—she was permitted to sell her Zynga stock without
    restriction beginning on May 29, 2012.” 36
    Lee insists that her claim is governed by fiduciary duty principles, not by contract
    law, because her Exercise Agreement did not “expressly address” the possibility that the
    Director Defendants could modify the lockups covering the stock they owned to the
    detriment of Lee and other members of the class. 37 Alternatively, she asserts that any
    contractual provision to that effect would be an unenforceable waiver of the duty of
    loyalty by the Director Defendants. 38
    36
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 18.
    37
    Section 7 of the Exercise Agreement contains the lockup restriction governing Lee’s
    shares. It states as follows:
    7.     Market Standoff Agreement. Purchaser agrees in connection with
    any registration of the Company’s securities that, upon the request of the
    Company or the underwriters managing any public offering of the
    Company’s securities, Purchaser will not sell or otherwise dispose of any
    Shares without the prior written consent of the Company or such
    underwriters, as the case may be, for such period of time (not to exceed 180
    days) after the effective date of such registration requested by such
    managing underwriters and subject to all restrictions as the Company or the
    underwriters may specify. Purchaser further agrees to enter into any
    agreement reasonably required by the underwriters to implement the
    foregoing.
    Rohrer Decl. Ex. 1, § 7. The Exercise Agreement was not attached to the Amended
    Complaint, but it is plainly integral to Lee’s claims. Thus, I may consider it at this
    procedural stage. See Santa 
    Fe, 669 A.2d at 69-70
    .
    38
    Pl.’s Ans. Br. 24-33.
    17
    Directors of Delaware corporations owe fiduciary duties to the corporation and to
    the stockholders. 39 In certain circumstances, these fiduciary duties may be preempted by
    contractual obligations set forth in a contract between the corporation and its
    stockholders, as the Delaware Supreme Court held in Nemec v. Shrader. 40
    In Nemec, former stockholders alleged that the directors unfairly caused the
    corporation to redeem their stock pursuant to the plan by which they received their
    shares. The Supreme Court concluded that the stockholders’ breach of fiduciary duty
    claim was “foreclosed as superfluous” because the “dispute relat[ed] to the exercise of a
    contractual right.” 41 In other words, the Supreme Court held that because the dispute
    was over the exercise of a contractual right governing the shares at issue, any claim by
    the former stockholders against the directors with respect to the redemption rights would
    sound in contract law, not in fiduciary duty principles. Under Nemec, a contract must
    “expressly” address an issue, and thereby create a right that is “solely a creature of
    contract,” for the contract to preempt the default fiduciary relationship between directors
    and stockholders. 42
    39
    See Mills Acq. Co. v. Macmillan, Inc., 
    559 A.2d 1261
    , 1280 (Del. 1989).
    40
    
    991 A.2d 1120
    (Del. 2010).
    41
    
    Id. at 1129.
    42
    See id.; see also Blaustein v. Lord Baltimore Capital Corp., 
    2013 WL 1810956
    , at *11-
    13 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2013) (concluding, in a closely-held corporation, that a breach of
    fiduciary duty claim with respect to the board’s rejection of the stockholder plaintiffs’
    stock repurchase proposal, as well as their proposal to form an independent committee to
    consider the repurchase proposal, were foreclosed by a shareholders’ agreement that
    18
    This Court has identified a similar principle in several recent decisions analyzing
    in what contexts, and to what extent, the fiduciary duties owed by directors to preferred
    stockholders may be preempted by the contractual rights set forth in the preferred stock’s
    certificate of designation. For example, in LC Capital Master Fund, Ltd. v. James, 43 the
    preferred stockholder plaintiffs claimed that the directors breached their fiduciary duties
    by not allocating additional merger consideration to the preferred beyond the “as if
    converted” value set forth in the certificate of designation. Then-Vice Chancellor Strine
    rejected this argument, concluding that “[w]hen, by contract, the rights of the preferred in
    a particular transactional context are articulated” in the corporation’s charter, the board
    must satisfy those rights but “need not go further and extend some fiduciary beneficence
    on the preferred at the expense of the common.” 44             Thus, under Delaware law,
    “[p]referred stockholders are owed fiduciary duties only when they do not invoke their
    special contractual rights and rely on a right shared equally with the common stock.” 45
    Underlying these decisions is the policy that, “in matters involving the essentially
    contractual rights and obligations of preferred stockholders,” the contractual obligations
    expressly “provides an explicit process by which the parties intended for share
    repurchases to occur”), aff’d, 
    84 A.3d 954
    (Del. 2014).
    43
    
    990 A.2d 435
    (Del. Ch. 2010).
    44
    
    Id. at 449-50.
    45
    In re Trados Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    73 A.3d 17
    , 39-40 (Del. Ch. 2013).
    19
    supplant any fiduciary obligations. 46 A related principle also appears in the partnership
    and limited liability company contexts. 47
    The Zynga Defendants argue that the principle animating Nemec and LC Capital
    applies with equal force here. In particular, they contend that, in the same way that the
    conversion ratios in the certificate of designation defined the board’s obligations to
    preferred stockholders with respect to the merger consideration in LC Capital, the lockup
    provision in the Exercise Agreement exclusively defined their obligations to Lee with
    respect to the lockup restrictions. That is, the Zynga Defendants maintain that they “did
    not owe [Lee] (or her proposed class) a fiduciary duty to provide her with different terms
    from those contained in her contract.” 48            Thus, from their perspective, Lee
    inappropriately “asks this Court to rewrite the [Exercise Agreement] and insert a
    provision that would divest the corporation of its discretion regarding whether or how to
    waive the lockup restriction.” 49
    I disagree. The core issue in this case is whether the existence of the Exercise
    Agreement, and the company’s rights under that agreement, superseded the Director
    Defendants’ general fiduciary obligations to Lee as a Zynga stockholder. In my view, the
    46
    See Gale v. Bershad, 
    1998 WL 118022
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Mar. 4, 1998).
    47
    See, e.g., AM Gen. Hldgs. LLC v. Renco Gp., Inc., 
    2013 WL 5863010
    , at *10 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 31, 2013) (limited liability company agreement); Grunstein v. Silva, 
    2009 WL 4698541
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Dec. 8, 2009) (oral partnership); Schuss v. Penfield P’rs, L.P.,
    
    2008 WL 2433842
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. June 13, 2008) (limited partnership agreement).
    48
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 18.
    49
    
    Id. 20 fact
    that the putative class members’ shares were governed by contracts containing
    lockup restrictions does not eliminate the fiduciary duties of the Director Defendants to
    act loyally to all Zynga stockholders—especially when the challenged action did not
    involve the exercise of any contractual right governing Lee’s shares but instead involved
    modifications to the contractual provisions governing their own shares.
    This case is thus distinguishable from Nemec and LC Capital. Unlike in Nemec,
    where the company exercised a redemption right governing the shares at issue, this case
    does not involve any action that was taken under the terms of the contracts governing the
    putative class members’ shares. 50 Unlike in LC Capital, this case does not turn on
    whether Lee or other members of the putative class are entitled to additional rights or
    benefits than were afforded to them under the contracts they signed containing the lockup
    restrictions.
    The Zynga Defendants’ contention that “the staggered release had no effect on the
    liquidity or transferability of [Lee’s] shares” 51 ignores key allegations of the Amended
    Complaint. The obligation Lee seeks to enforce is for the Director Defendants to not
    receive personal benefits inconsistent with the standard of conduct of fiduciaries under
    Delaware law. 52 She alleges that the Director Defendants gave themselves an improper
    50
    The Exercise Agreement does not contain a provision expressly granting the Zynga
    board the discretion to waive or restructure their own lockup restrictions in a manner that
    might give them a benefit that is not shared pro rata with Lee. See supra note 37.
    51
    Zynga Defs.’ Reply Br. 21.
    52
    See, e.g., Guth v. Loft, Inc., 
    5 A.2d 503
    , 510 (Del. 1939) (“Corporate officers and
    directors are not permitted to use their position of trust and confidence to further their
    21
    benefit inconsistent with their duty of loyalty to Lee and the putative class. 53 In my view,
    this is quintessentially a fiduciary duty claim.
    C.     Count I States a Claim for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim for relief must
    be denied unless, assuming the well-pled allegations to be true and viewing all reasonable
    inferences from those allegations in the plaintiff’s favor, there is no “reasonably
    conceivable set of circumstances susceptible of proof” in which the plaintiff could
    recover. 54 Although “conclusory allegations that are unsupported by specific facts” are
    not accepted as true, and “unreasonable inferences [are not drawn] in the plaintiff’s
    favor,” 55 the pleadings required to satisfy the reasonable conceivability standard are
    “minimal.” 56 “[I]t may, as a factual matter, ultimately prove impossible for the plaintiff
    to prove his claims at a later stage of a proceeding, but that is not the test to survive a
    motion to dismiss.” 57
    When a stockholder plaintiff claims that the directors breached their fiduciary
    duties, Delaware courts review the alleged misconduct through a doctrinal standard of
    private interests. . . . The rule that requires an undivided and unselfish loyalty to the
    corporation demands that there shall be no conflict between duty and self-interest.”).
    53
    See, e.g., Am. Compl. ¶ 63.
    54
    See Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Capital Hldgs. LLC, 
    27 A.3d 531
    , 536
    (Del. 2011).
    
    55 Allen v
    . Encore Energy P’rs, L.P., 
    72 A.3d 93
    , 100 (Del. 2013).
    56
    Cent. 
    Mortg., 27 A.3d at 536
    .
    57
    
    Id. 22 review.
    58 The default standard of review is that of business judgment, which presumes
    that “in making a business decision the directors of a corporation acted on an informed
    basis, in good faith and in the honest belief that the action taken was in the best interests
    of the company.” 59 This presumption attaches to business decisions where disinterested
    and independent directors constitute a majority of those who vote in favor of the
    challenged transaction. 60
    A plaintiff may rebut the business judgment standard by alleging that at least half
    of the directors who approved the decision at issue are not entitled to its protection. 61 For
    example, a plaintiff may state a claim for breach of the duty of loyalty by alleging that
    half of the directors who approved the decision were not disinterested, were not
    independent, or did not act in good faith. 62 In that case, the entire fairness standard of
    review is implicated, which requires the defendants to establish that the decision “was the
    product of both fair dealing and fair price.” 63
    Lee’s main theory for rebutting the business judgment standard of review is that
    four of the eight Zynga directors had a personal financial interest in the lockup
    58
    See 
    Trados, 73 A.3d at 35
    .
    59
    Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
    , 812 (Del. 1984).
    60
    See 
    id. at 813-14.
    61
    See In re KKR Fin. Hldgs. LLC S’holder Litig., -- A.3d --, 
    2014 WL 5151285
    , at *6
    (Del. Ch. Oct. 14, 2014); see also In re Ebix, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2014 WL 3696655
    , at
    *28 (Del. Ch. July 24, 2014).
    62
    See, e.g., Brehm v. Eisner, 
    746 A.2d 244
    , 264 n.66 (Del. 2000).
    63
    Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
    , 1163 (Del. 1995).
    23
    restructuring because they received a benefit not shared with all pre-IPO stockholders:
    the opportunity to participate in the secondary offering. 64 Broadly characterized, the
    Zynga Defendants’ position is that no director received a benefit in the lockup
    restructuring primarily for two reasons: (i) the four directors who sold in the secondary
    offering agreed to subject a greater percentage of their stock to extended lockups (80%)
    than the percentage that they could sell in the secondary offering (20%); 65 and (ii) the
    average market price at which those four directors could first sell their pre-IPO shares in
    the secondary offering and after the expired lockups expired ($5.27 per share) was less
    than the market price at which those subject to unmodified lockups could first sell their
    pre-IPO shares ($6.09 per share). 66
    64
    Lee also seeks to rebut the business judgment standard on the theory that (i) half of the
    Zynga directors who approved the restructuring “lacked independence under NASDAQ’s
    listing requirements and rules” or (ii) Pincus, who held 36.5% of Zynga’s voting power
    immediately before the secondary offering, was the company’s controlling stockholder.
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 33-34. Based on my analysis of Lee’s primary theory, I need not
    consider these alternative grounds.
    65
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 21-22. The Zynga Defendants submit that the pre-IPO investors
    who received the lockup waivers were only able to sell approximately 20% of their
    holdings in the secondary offering on April 3, 2012, and that those stockholders also
    agreed to subject approximately 20% of their remaining holdings to lockup restrictions
    until July 6, 2012, and the other approximately 60% of their holdings to restrictions until
    August 16, 2012. The Amended Complaint is silent concerning how many, if any, shares
    held by Pincus, Schappert, Hoffman, and Van Natta (i) were subject to extended lockups
    and (ii) were actually sold on or after July 6, 2012. Despite the lack of any such factual
    allegations, the Zynga Defendants argue that there was no benefit to those four directors
    because their “relative liquidity” was worse off on the whole. Tr. of Oral Arg. 26.
    66
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 21-22. The secondary offering price was $12.00 per share, the
    closing price on July 6 was $5.36 per share, and the closing price on August 16 was $3.00
    per share. The Zynga Defendants calculate that a stockholder subject to the unmodified
    lockups could sell at $6.09 per share on May 29, 2012, but the four directors with the
    24
    As support for their arguments, the Zynga Defendants cite In re Paxson
    Communication Corp. Shareholders Litigation 67 and Robotti & Co., LLC v. Liddell 68 for
    the proposition that this Court cannot find a Zynga director interested unless “the benefits
    of the changes to the selling stockholders’ lockup agreements outweighed the significant
    burdens that were also part of the transaction.” 69 I agree with the general proposition that
    it is appropriate to consider the effect of the entire transaction on a director when
    determining whether a particular director is interested for standard of review purposes.
    But, in applying that principle here, I cannot conclude that it is not reasonably
    conceivable that half of the Director Defendants had a personal financial interest in the
    lockup restructuring or that they received an unfair benefit as a result of that transaction.
    A director may be interested in a transaction if, as a result of the business decision
    at issue, the director receives a “personal financial benefit . . . as opposed to a benefit
    which devolves upon the corporation or all stockholders generally.” 70 The Amended
    Complaint cites empirical studies for the proposition that, after the lockup period expires
    for stock held by pre-IPO investors in a newly public company, the market price of the
    waived and extended lockups could sell at an average of only $5.27 per share. Based on
    this difference, they claim there was no net benefit.
    67
    
    2001 WL 812028
    (Del. Ch. July 12, 2001).
    68
    
    2010 WL 157474
    (Del. Ch. Jan. 14, 2010).
    69
    Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 22.
    70
    
    Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812
    .
    25
    company’s stock typically decreases by 1.5% to 2%. 71 The Zynga Defendants also
    contemporaneously recognized this issue in the “Risk Factors” section of the December
    S-1, albeit tacitly, by disclosing that making additional Class A shares available to the
    public could depress the company’s stock price.
    Before the lockup restructuring, the Director Defendants and the putative class of
    Zynga stockholders were similarly situated: all of their lockups were to expire on May
    28, 2012. Through the restructuring, four of the Director Defendants received lockup
    waivers allowing them to sell earlier than May 28; the putative class did not. Affording
    plaintiff all reasonable inferences, as I must at this procedural stage, it is reasonably
    conceivable that, as of the time when the decision was made to restructure the lockups, 72
    the opportunity to sell earlier—before the market price could be expected to decrease
    71
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 39-40; see also Alon Brav & Paul A. Gompers, The Role of Lockups in
    Initial Public Offerings, 16 Rev. Fin. Stud. 1-29 (2003) (finding an average decrease of
    approximately 1.5% for a sample size of 2,794 recently public companies during a period
    from 1988-1996); Daniel Bradley et al., Venture Capital and IPO Lockup Expiration: An
    Empirical Analysis, 24 J. Fin. Res. 465-93 (2001) (finding an average decrease of
    approximately 2% for a sample size of 2,529 recently public companies during a period
    from 1988-1997); Laura Casares Field & Gordon Hanka, The Expiration of IPO Share
    Lockups, 56 J. Fin. 471-500 (2001) (finding an average decrease of approximately 1.5%-
    2% for a sample size of 1,948 recently public companies during a period from 1988-
    1997).
    72
    The Zynga Defendants acknowledge that the “‘[t]he correct time for measuring the
    Director Defendants’ decisionmaking is at the time the waiver decision was made,’ not
    with hindsight.” Zynga Defs.’ Reply Br. 9 (citing In re Compellent Techs., Inc. S’holder
    Litig., 
    2011 WL 6382523
    , at *20 (Del. Ch. Dec. 9, 2011)).
    26
    according to the empirical studies cited in the Amended Complaint—afforded those
    directors a benefit that outweighed any detriment from the lockup extensions. 73
    Despite their arguments to the contrary, the Zynga Defendants have not
    demonstrated why it is unreasonable to infer at this stage that the overall lockup
    restructuring may have conferred a benefit to the directors. The calculations the Zynga
    Defendants have offered comparing the average market prices at which the Director
    Defendants and Lee could sell their pre-IPO stock appear to suffer from at least two
    infirmities.   First, these calculations are entirely hypothetical.      No record exists
    concerning any actual sales the Zynga directors made after the extended lockups
    expired. 74 Second, the market prices for Zynga stock embedded in these calculations are
    ex post, making them inconsistent with the principle of Delaware law that the decisions
    of directors should be reviewed in the context of when those decisions were made. 75 It
    may well be that, when a record is developed, the Zynga Defendants will demonstrate
    that the directors who participated in the secondary offering did not receive a net benefit
    73
    Discovery could reveal, for example, that the directors who participated in the
    secondary offering intended when they approved the lockup restructuring only to sell
    shares in the near term in the secondary offering. At the other end of the spectrum, the
    record could show that they then intended to sell all of their shares as soon as the lockups
    applicable to each tranche expired.
    74
    Going outside her pleading, plaintiff asserts that “none of the directors who were
    subject to the modified lockup agreements sold any further Zynga shares in 2012 after the
    Secondary Offering, despite the fact that they were free to do so under their modified
    lockup agreements in early July 2012.” Pl.’s Ans. Br. 14.
    75
    See, e.g., In re Del Monte Foods Co. S’holders Litig., 
    25 A.3d 813
    , 830 (Del. Ch.
    2011).
    27
    in connection with the restructuring of the lockup restrictions. At this stage of the case,
    however, the opposite conclusion is reasonably conceivable in my view, which is all that
    is necessary for plaintiff to survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
    Unlike here, the Court in Robotti, the primary decision on which the Zynga
    Defendants rely, was able to conclude definitively at the pleadings stage that the
    challenged transaction did not confer a benefit upon the directors. In Robotti, the plaintiff
    alleged that the directors breached their fiduciary duties because a stockholder rights
    offering unfairly adjusted the conversion ratio of the directors’ stock options pursuant to
    the anti-dilution provisions of those options. The Court rejected the plaintiff’s argument
    that the additional stock to be issued when the directors exercised their adjusted options
    “would be issued for free” because the plaintiff “failed to account for the exercise price
    of the options.” 76 By operation of the anti-dilution provisions, the directors had options
    to acquire the same equity percentage of the company at the same aggregate price both
    before and after the offering.     In other words, the anti-dilution provisions merely
    preserved the directors’ preexisting contractual rights.      Thus, the Court in Robotti
    concluded that the plaintiff was “unable, from its well-pled factual allegations, to support
    the inference that the Defendants received a personal benefit from the Offering.” 77
    As discussed above, the facts here do not warrant the same conclusion. The
    lockup waivers the Zynga directors received were not granted by operation of some pre-
    76
    Robotti, 
    2010 WL 157474
    , at *8.
    77
    
    Id. at *10.
    28
    existing contractual rights, and it is not self-evident that the directors received no net
    benefit from their being able to participate in the secondary offering while extending the
    lockups on their remaining shares.
    Finally, the Zynga Defendants argue that the lockup waivers were not a “material”
    benefit, which they contend is necessary to render a director interested for standard of
    review purposes. 78 The Court recently addressed this question in Cambridge Retirement
    System v. Bosnjak, 79 a case involving allegations of excessive director compensation.
    There, relying on the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in Cede & Co. v. Technicolor,
    Inc. 80 and other authority, 81 the Court concluded that, where a director allegedly engages
    in self-dealing, that director is “interested” by virtue of receiving a benefit in the
    transaction, regardless of whether that benefit was material to him or her. 82
    Here, the Zynga board at the time of the lockup restructuring consisted of eight
    directors, and it is reasonably conceivable for the reasons explained above that four of
    them received a benefit in the lockup restructuring. Under the familiar definition of self-
    78
    Zynga Defs.’ Reply Br. 6; Zynga Defs.’ Op. Br. 23.
    79
    
    2014 WL 2930869
    (Del. Ch. June 26, 2014).
    80
    
    634 A.2d 345
    , 362-63 (Del. 1993).
    81
    See, e.g., Orman v. Cullman, 
    794 A.2d 5
    , 23, 25 n.50 (Del. Ch. 2002); HMG/Courtland
    Props., Inc. v. Gray, 
    749 A.2d 94
    , 112-14 (Del. Ch. 1999); Steiner v. Meyerson, 
    1995 WL 441999
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. July 19, 1995).
    82
    Bosnjak, 
    2014 WL 2930869
    , at *4-6.
    29
    dealing as a transaction in which a fiduciary stands “on both sides,” 83 the Director
    Defendants engaged in a self-dealing transaction. 84 Thus, under the analysis outlined in
    Bosnjak, those four Zynga directors are interested for standard of review purposes, even
    if the benefit they received from the lockup restructuring was not material to them
    individually. The Zynga Defendants’ contrary authority is inapposite because it did not
    involve allegations of self-dealing. 85
    For the reasons stated above, Lee has pled facts sufficient to rebut the business
    judgment standard of review because the lockup restructuring was not approved by a
    majority of disinterested and independent directors. Further, it is reasonably conceivable
    that the benefit the Director Defendants received in the lockup restructuring was not
    entirely fair. Accordingly, the Zynga Defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I for failure
    to state a claim for relief is denied.
    83
    Sinclair Oil Corp. v. Levien, 
    280 A.2d 717
    , 720 (Del. 1971).
    84
    See 
    Nixon, 626 A.2d at 1375-76
    (reviewing the board’s decision under the entire
    fairness standard because the directors were “on both sides of the transaction” since they
    benefited from a stock plan and key man life insurance “beyond that which benefited
    other stockholders generally”); see also eBay Domestic Hldgs., Inc. v. Newmark, 
    16 A.3d 1
    , 42 (Del. Ch. 2010) (“In transactions such as this, where fiduciaries deal directly with
    the corporation, entire fairness is ordinarily the applicable standard of review.”).
    85
    See, e.g., In re Gen. Motors Class H S’holders Litig., 
    734 A.2d 611
    , 617 (Del. Ch.
    1999) (“To show that a GM director’s independence was compromised . . . , the plaintiffs
    must show that . . . such holdings . . . was of a sufficiently material importance [to that
    director.]”) (emphasis added).
    30
    D.     Count II Does Not State a Claim for Aiding and Abetting
    In Count II, Lee alleges that the Underwriter Defendants aided and abetted the
    Director Defendants’ breach of fiduciary duty. Under Delaware law, a claim for aiding
    and abetting includes four elements: “(i) the existence of a fiduciary relationship, (ii) a
    breach of the fiduciary’s duty, (iii) knowing participation in the breach by the non-
    fiduciary defendants, and (iv) damages proximately caused by the breach.” 86 Based on
    my conclusion that Count I states a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, Count II satisfies
    the first two elements.
    To demonstrate the “knowing participation” element of an aiding and abetting
    claim, it must be reasonably conceivable from the well-pled allegations that “the third
    party act[ed] with the knowledge that the conduct advocated or assisted constitute[d] . . .
    a breach [of fiduciary duty].” 87      Knowing participation has been described as a
    “stringent” standard that “turn[s] on proof of scienter.” 88 The alleged aider and abettor,
    not the fiduciary, must act with scienter. 89        In In re Telecommunications, Inc.
    86
    In re Rural Metro Corp. S’holders Litig., 
    88 A.3d 54
    , 80 (Del. Ch. 2014) (citing
    Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1096 (Del. 2001)).
    87
    
    Malpiede, 780 A.2d at 1097
    .
    88
    Allied Capital Corp. v. GC-Sun Hldgs., L.P., 
    910 A.2d 1020
    , 1039 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    89
    See Houseman v. Sagerman, 
    2014 WL 1600724
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Apr. 16, 2014) (citing
    Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 97
    ).
    31
    Shareholders Litigation, 90 the Court provided an instructive summary of some of the
    ways in which a plaintiff successfully may plead knowing participation:
    [K]nowing participation may be inferred where the terms of the transaction
    are so egregious or the magnitude of side deals is so excessive as to be
    inherently wrongful.       In addition, the Court may infer knowing
    participation if it appears that the defendant may have used knowledge of
    the breach to gain a bargaining advantage in the negotiations. The
    plaintiff’s burden of pleading knowing participation may also be met
    through direct factual allegations supporting a theory that the defendant
    sought to induce the breach of fiduciary duty, such as through the offer of
    side payments intended as incentives for the fiduciaries to ignore their
    duties. 91
    Here, the Amended Complaint alleges that the Underwriter Defendants “profited”
    from the secondary offering, which was only possible after they “waiv[ed] the [l]ockups
    to which the participants in the [s]econdary [o]ffering were subject,” through the “receipt
    of over $10.6 million in fees and commissions.” 92           Lee further argues that the
    Underwriter Defendants “were fully aware of how the [s]econdary [o]ffering would
    operate to allow members of the [b]oard, senior management and the other selling
    stockholders to sell their shares while prohibiting Zynga’s other employees and former
    employees from participating.” 93
    90
    
    2003 WL 21543427
    (Del. Ch. July 7, 2003).
    91
    
    Id. at *2
    (citing, inter alia, Crescent/Mach I P’rs, L.P. v. Turner, 
    846 A.2d 963
    (Del.
    Ch. 2000); In re USACafes, L.P. Litig., 
    600 A.2d 43
    (Del. Ch. 1991); Zirn v. VLI Corp.,
    
    1989 WL 79963
    (Del. Ch. July 17, 1989)).
    92
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 79, 81.
    93
    Pl.’ Ans. Br. 49-50.
    32
    In my opinion, the allegations of the Amended Complaint do not support a
    reasonable inference of knowing participation by the Underwriter Defendants. Critically,
    plaintiff has failed to plead any facts from which it is reasonably inferable that the
    Underwriter Defendants knew when they provided their consent to modify the lockup
    restrictions that such action would facilitate a breach of fiduciary duty by the Director
    Defendants. The fact that the Underwriter Defendants’ consent was necessary for the
    Director Defendants to waive a lockup restriction, without more, is insufficient to
    demonstrate that the Underwriter Defendants gave their consent with the knowledge that
    the Director Defendants were treating Lee and the putative class unfairly.
    The Amended Complaint, moreover, does not allege that the amount of fees the
    Underwriter Defendants received in connection with the secondary offering were
    unreasonable for the services performed. 94 Thus, there is no well-pled basis to infer that
    the Underwriter Defendants extracted unreasonable compensation or any form of
    improper “side deal” for consenting to the selective lockup waivers. In sum, it is not
    reasonable to infer here that, simply by receiving fees (that are not alleged to be
    unreasonable) for acting as underwriters in the secondary offering, the Underwriter
    Defendants “participated in the [Zynga] board’s decisions, conspired with [the] board, or
    otherwise caused the board to make the decisions at issue.” 95
    94
    See Tr. of Oral Arg. 58.
    95
    
    Malpiede, 780 A.2d at 1098
    .
    33
    In support of her aiding and abetting claim, Lee relies primarily on Chancellor
    Chandler’s decision in In re eBay Inc. Shareholders Litigation. 96 It is readily
    distinguishable. In eBay, the stockholder plaintiffs alleged that an investment bank
    engaged in “spinning” by actively providing lucrative investment opportunities in dozens
    of IPOs to the corporation’s directors. The bank purportedly offered these opportunities
    in exchange for future business with the knowledge that the corporation had made similar
    equity investments in the past. Chancellor Chandler concluded that the plaintiffs had
    stated a claim for aiding and abetting because these allegations adequately supported the
    inference that the bank knowingly participated in the directors’ usurpation of a corporate
    opportunity, in breach of their fiduciary duty of loyalty to the corporation. 97 Here, there
    is nothing alleged in the Amended Complaint about the conduct of the Underwriter
    Defendants that comes anywhere close to the magnitude of the allegations in eBay, which
    essentially amounted to allegations of bribery.
    In sum, the allegations of knowing participation in the Amended Complaint are
    conclusory and fall short of those that Delaware courts routinely conclude do not
    substantiate a claim for aiding and abetting. 98 I therefore dismiss Count II for failure to
    state a claim for relief under Rule 12(b)(6).
    96
    
    2004 WL 253521
    (Del. Ch. Jan. 23, 2004, revised, Feb. 11, 2004).
    97
    See 
    id. at *1,
    5.
    98
    The Underwriter Defendants also questioned whether the Amended Complaint includes
    any well-pled allegation of proximate causation with respect to their conduct. Given that
    Count II is deficient for failure to satisfy the knowing participation element of an aiding
    and abetting claim, I do not reach this issue.
    34
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Zynga Defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I of the
    Amended Complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 and Rule 12(b)(6) is DENIED.
    The Underwriter Defendants’ motion to dismiss Count II of the Amended Complaint
    under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) is GRANTED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    35