Sanjiv Mehra v. Jonathan Teller ( 2023 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    SANJIV MEHRA, individually, and              )
    SAMRITA MEHRA, as trustee of the             )
    SANJIV MEHRA 2014 IRREVOCABLE                )
    TRUST,                                       )
    )
    Plaintiffs,                     )
    )
    v.                                    )   C.A. No. 2019-0812-KSJM
    )
    JONATHAN TELLER, EOS INVESTOR                )
    HOLDING COMPANY LLC, ANGRY                   )
    ELEPHANT CAPITAL, LLC, ANDREW                )
    SALTOUN, as successor trustee of the         )
    Teller Children’s 2015 Trust, and SARAH      )
    SLOVER,                                      )
    )
    Defendants.                     )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: November 18, 2022
    Date Decided: February 28, 2023
    John L. Reed, Peter H. Kyle, Kelly L. Freund, DLA PIPER LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
    Patrick J. Smith, Brian T. Burns, SMITH ZILLAZOR LLP, New York, New York; Counsel
    for Plaintiffs Sanjiv Mehra and Samrita Mehra as trustee of the Sanjiv Mehra 2014
    Irrevocable Trust.
    Jon E. Abramczyk, D. McKinley Measley, Alexandra Cumings, Elizabeth A. Mullin,
    Sebastian Van Oudenallen, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Defendants Jonathan Teller, EOS Investor Holdings
    Company LLC, Angry Elephant Capital, LLC, Andrew Altoun as successor trustee of the
    Teller Children’s 2015 Trust, and Sarah Slover.
    McCORMICK, C.
    Plaintiff Sanjiv Mehra and Defendant Jonathan Teller dispute the dissolution of
    EOS Investor Holding Company, LLC (“Holdco”). Before the disputed dissolution, Mehra
    and Teller shared control of Holdco. Although Teller held a greater equity stake in the
    company, Mehra took responsibility for most of the company’s day-to-day management,
    and the two agreed that Mehra’s contributions warranted granting him equal say over
    member and board decisions. The two also agreed that Mehra would have a right to equal
    distributions above a specified threshold.
    The parties’ agreements on shared control and equal distributions were
    memorialized in Holdco’s LLC agreement. The LLC agreement made Teller and Mehra
    managers on the two-person board and required unanimity to take board action. If Teller
    and Mehra deadlocked, the LLC agreement provided that Holdco would be automatically
    dissolved. In the event of a deadlock-based dissolution, Holdco would distribute its shares
    of its New York subsidiary, The Kind Group LLC (“Kind”), to Holdco members in
    proportion to their equity stakes and the members would replicate Mehra’s equal-
    distribution rights at the Kind level.
    Deadlock arose in September 2019, and Teller dissolved Holdco. Mehra brought
    this suit challenging the dissolution and asserting other claims. The court bifurcated
    Mehra’s claims challenging the dissolution. Following an expedited trial, the court issued
    an opinion (the “Post-Trial Opinion”)1 holding that the deadlock and resulting dissolution
    were valid, but that Teller failed to replicate Mehra’s economic rights at the Kind level.
    1
    C.A. No. 2019-0812-KSJM, Docket (“Dkt.”) 218 (“Post-Trial Op.”). All terms not
    defined herein shall have the same meaning as in the Post-Trial Opinion.
    Teller and the other defendants have moved to dismiss Mehra’s claim to economic rights
    at the Kind level. This decision grants in part and denies in part the motion to dismiss.
    I.     FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    This decision incorporates the factual findings of the Post-Trial Opinion resolving
    claims concerning the validity of EOS’s dissolution (the “Post-Trial Opinion”).
    A.     The Post-Trial Decision Found That Teller Validly Dissolved Holdco.
    Teller and Mehra held all of Holdco’s membership interests directly or indirectly.2
    Teller controlled 85% and Mehra controlled 15%.           Holdco held 66.3% of Kind’s
    membership interests through its sole ownership of Kind’s “Preferred Interests.” Kind
    wholly owns EOS Products, LLC (“Products”), the operating entity. These membership
    interests were reflected in Holdco’s operating agreement as amended in 2016 (the “Holdco
    LLC Agreement”).
    Under the Holdco LLC Agreement, Teller could not unilaterally remove Mehra as
    a manager or take other action on behalf of Holdco without Mehra’s consent. Stated in the
    contrapositive, the LLC Agreement required the unanimous vote of Mehra and Teller to
    authorize any Holdco board action. In the event of deadlock, the sole contractual remedy
    was dissolution. Section 4.10 provided that “in the event the vote upon an action by the
    2
    Teller held his membership interest in Holdco directly and indirectly through the Teller
    Children’s 2015 Trust and Angry Elephant Capital, LLC (“Angry Elephant”), an
    investment vehicle owned by Teller and his mother. Mehra held his membership interest
    in Holdco indirectly through the Sanjiv Mehra 2014 Irrevocable Trust.
    2
    Board of Managers results in a deadlock, then the Board of Managers shall dissolve the
    Company in accordance with Article X.”3
    Tensions rose between Teller and Mehra in 2019. In September 2019, Teller
    declared deadlock as a predicate to dissolving Holdco and then dissolved Holdco.
    Defendant Sarah Slover, EOS’s General Counsel and Head of Human Resources, assisted
    in drafting the documents that effectuated Holdco’s dissolution.
    B.     The Holdco LLC Agreement
    Section 4.10 of the Holdco LLC Agreement provides that, in the event of
    dissolution, Holdco’s shares in Kind be distributed pro rata based on Teller and Mehra’s
    respective membership interests in Holdco. 4 Section 4.10 also requires that the members
    “shall take such actions as are necessary or appropriate to give effect as members of Kind
    to the economic arrangements among the Members set forth in Section 7.01(a)(ii).”5
    Section 7.01(a)(ii) of the Holdco LLC Agreement governs Mehra’s distribution
    rights. Under this section, Teller and Mehra’s respective distribution percentages were
    initially proportionate to their membership interests—85% and 15%, respectively.6 Once
    aggregate distributions reached a threshold of $190 million (the “Threshold”), the
    3
    Dkt. 58 (“Am. Compl.”), Ex. A. (“Holdco LLC Agr.”) § 4.10.
    4
    Holdco LLC Agr. § 4.10.
    5
    Id.
    6
    Id. § 7.01(a)(ii).
    3
    percentages changed.7 Past the Threshold, the distributions would be governed by an
    “Equal-Distribution Arrangement” outlined in the Holdco LLC Agreement.8
    Section 11.13 of the Holdco LLC Agreement is also relevant. It provides that
    “[e]ach of the Members hereby agrees to take or cause to be taken such further actions, . .
    . as may be necessary or as may be reasonably requested in order to fully effectuate the
    purposes, terms and conditions of this Agreement.”9
    When dissolving Holdco, Teller distributed Holdco’s shares in Kind pro rata10 but
    failed to replicate Mehra’s distribution rights at the Kind level. Teller admitted at trial that
    he took no action to implement Mehra’s economic rights at Kind.11
    C.       The Kind LLC Agreement
    As discussed above, prior to the dissolution, Holdco owned all of Kind’s Preferred
    Interests. Teller, Mehra, their affiliates, and EOS employees held the remaining interest in
    Kind. After the dissolution, the parties to this action owned the entirety of Kind’s Preferred
    Interests and Teller was Kind’s sole manager.
    Kind is organized under the laws of New York. Along with the Preferred Interests
    owned by the parties to this case, Kind has three other classes of membership interests:
    7
    Id.
    8
    Id.
    9
    Id. § 11.13.
    10
    Based on Teller and Mehra’s elections, Holdco’s Preferred Interests in Kind are now
    held by Teller, Angry Elephant, Andrew Saltoun (as successor trustee of the Teller
    Children’s 2015 Trust), and Samrita Mehra (as trustee of the Sanjiv Mehra 2014
    Irrevocable Trust). Dkt. 268, Ex. A (“Kind Membership Interests Chart”).
    11
    Post-Trial Op. at 68.
    4
    Class A Common Interests, Class B Common Interests, and Class C Common Interests.
    Angry Elephant holds all of the Class A interests, and the Class B interests are owned by
    Teller, Mehra, and non-party Bion Bartning. The Class C interests are held by 14 current
    and former employees or consultants of EOS Products, including Slover.
    Kind’s Seventh Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement (the
    “Kind LLC Agreement”) is its operative LLC agreement.12              Article XIV governs
    amendments to the Kind LLC Agreement. It requires up to two levels of approval.
    First, all amendments must be approved by “unanimous written consent of [Kind’s]
    Board of Managers.”13 Teller is the sole manager of Kind.
    Second, if an amendment would “treat a Restricted Member in a manner that is
    disproportionately adverse compared to the Restricted Members voting in favor of the
    amendment,” then the amendment requires “the consent of the Restricted Member so
    affected.”14
    A “Restricted Member” is any holder of Kind’s Preferred, Class A, or Class B
    interests.15 As of April 25, 2022, the Restricted Members comprised Teller, Mehra, Angry
    Elephant, Saltoun, Samrita, and Bartning.16 Bartning is the only Restricted Member who
    is not a party to this suit.
    12
    Am. Compl., Ex. B (“Kind LLC Agr.”).
    13
    Id., Art. XIV.
    14
    Id.
    15
    Id.
    16
    Kind Membership Interests Chart.
    5
    D.     This Litigation
    Mehra and Samrita Mehra, as trustee of a family trust in which Mehra placed Holdco
    interests (together, “Plaintiffs”), brought this action on October 10, 2019, and amended
    their claims on December 13, 2019 (the “Amended Complaint”).17
    The Amended Complaint asserts claims against Teller, Holdco, Angry Elephant,
    Saltoun (as successor trustee of the Teller Children’s 2015 Trust), and Slover (collectively,
    “Defendants”). The Amended Complaint asserts four counts:
    •      In Count I, Plaintiffs allege breach of fiduciary duty against Teller for
    improperly denying their distribution rights following the dissolution and
    invalidly triggering the dissolution of Holdco.
    •      In Count II, Plaintiffs allege breach of contract against Teller for failing to
    follow the procedures for dissolution set forth in the Holdco LLC Agreement.
    •      In Count III, Plaintiffs allege aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty
    against Slover for providing Teller with legal advice necessary to execute his
    breaches.
    •      In Count IV, Plaintiffs seek declaratory judgment against all Defendants
    establishing Plaintiffs’ membership and economic distribution rights
    following the dissolution.
    The court expedited proceedings to resolve the threshold question of whether
    deadlock permitted dissolution of Holdco.18 In the Post-Trial Opinion, the court held that
    Teller had not breached his contractual or fiduciary obligations by declaring deadlock and
    was therefore within his right to cause dissolution.19
    17
    Am. Compl.
    18
    Dkt. 52.
    19
    See Post-Trial Op. at 75 (“The court enters judgment in favor of Defendants regarding
    the existence of deadlock and the validity of Holdco’s dissolution.”).
    6
    The Post-Trial Opinion did not resolve aspects of Plaintiffs’ complaint, including
    but not limited to Plaintiffs’ Count IV, which sought declaratory judgment against all
    Defendants establishing Plaintiffs’ membership and economic distribution rights following
    the dissolution. At trial, Teller acknowledged his duty under Section 4.10 to give effect to
    the distribution provisions after dissolution but admitted that he took no action to
    implement Plaintiffs’ economic rights at Kind.20
    The Post-Trial Opinion closed by ordering the parties “to confer on a path forward
    for litigating the remainder of Plaintiffs’ claims.”21 The parties attempted to mediate their
    remaining disputes. They were unsuccessful.
    Defendants then moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ remaining claims under Court of
    Chancery Rules 12(b)(6), 12(b)(2), 12(b)(4), and 12(b)(5).22 The motions were fully
    briefed,23 and the parties presented oral argument on May 31, 2022.24
    After the matter was taken under advisement, the court requested supplemental
    briefing on the feasibility of the relief sought by Plaintiffs.25 The parties submitted their
    20
    Id. at 68.
    21
    Id. at 73.
    22
    Dkt. 233 (“Mot.”); Dkt. 234 (“Defs.’ Opening Br.”).
    23
    Dkt. 256 (“Pls.’ Answering Br.”); Dkt. 259 (“Defs. Reply Br.”).
    24
    Dkt. 263 (Oral Arg. Tr.).
    25
    Dkt. 264 (“Letter Requesting Supp. Briefing”) at 8.
    7
    supplemental briefing on these questions in a process that concluded on November 18,
    2022.26
    II.    LEGAL ANALYSIS
    The analysis proceeds in three parts. First, the court addresses the arguments under
    Rule 19 that what remains of this case should be dismissed because Kind and Kind
    members who are not involved in this litigation are necessary and indispensable parties
    who cannot be joined. Second, the court addresses the arguments under Rule 12(b)(6) that
    Counts I and II fail under the law of the case or as duplicative causes of action. Third, the
    court addresses the arguments under Rules 12(b)(2) and 12(b)(6) that the claims against
    Slover and Saltoun should be dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction and failure to state
    a claim.
    A.     Neither Kind Nor Absent Kind Members Are Required Parties.
    Rule 19 establishes a multi-step test for determining whether absent persons are
    necessary or indispensable to pending litigation. The analysis turns on three inquiries, but
    one is dispositive here. As the first inquiry, the court must evaluate the criteria set forth in
    Rule 19(a) to determine whether an absent party is required and should be party to the
    litigation.27 Because Defendants cannot demonstrate under this criterion that Kind and the
    26
    Dkt. 268 (“Pls.’ Supp. Opening Br.”); Dkt. 271 (Defs.’ Supp. Answering Br.”); Dkt. 274
    (“Pls.’ Supp. Reply Br.”).
    27
    Ct. Ch. R. 19; S’holder Representative Servs. LLC v. RSI Holdco, LLC, 
    2019 WL 2207452
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. May 22, 2019) (citing Makitka v. New Castle Cty. Council, 
    2011 WL 6880676
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Dec. 23, 2011)).
    8
    absent Kind members are required parties in this action, the court does not reach the other
    parts of the inquiry.
    Rule 19(a) established two categories of required parties to an action. The first
    category includes parties without which “complete relief cannot be accorded among those
    already parties.”28 The second category necessitates a showing that the absent party
    “claims an interest relating to the subject of the action[.]” 29 This second category covers
    only an absent party’s “legally protected interest[s]” in the subject of the case; “[n]ot any
    abstract or vague interest will do,” and a “mere[] . . . financial interest” is not enough.30
    The interest must also be “practically—not theoretically—impaired or impeded by a
    disposition in the person’s absence,” and the “impairment must be direct and immediate,
    not speculative.”31
    Defendants’ arguments under Rule 19 focus on Plaintiffs’ request for a declaration
    that Defendants must implement Mehra’s distribution rights at the Kind level under Section
    4.10 of the Holdco LLC Agreement. Defendants argue that this request for relief would
    have the effect of requiring that the Kind LLC Agreement be amended “regarding
    distributions to the Mehra Trust from Kind LLC, or with respect to the amounts of any
    28
    Ct. Ch. R. 19(a)(1); See Germaninvestments AG v. Allomet Corp., 
    2020 WL 6870459
    , at
    *7 (Del. Ch. Nov. 20, 2020).
    29
    Ct. Ch. R. 19(a)(2).
    30
    Gov. Empls. Ins. Co. (GEICO) v. Korn, 
    310 F.R.D. 125
    , 132 (D.N.J. 2015).
    31
    
    Id. at 132
     (cleaned up).
    9
    such distributions.”32 This, they say, “would necessarily affect the rights of Kind LLC (and
    its members).”33
    This argument has superficial appeal. One would think that requiring amendments
    to the Kind LLC agreement concerning distributions from Kind would affect Kind’s assets
    and Kind members’ rights. But the appeal of Defendants’ argument begins to wane once
    one wades into the weeds of the Kind LLC Agreement.
    Viewing Plaintiffs’ requested relief properly, the court can give complete relief in
    this case by requiring the parties to this action to amend the Kind LLC Agreement. As
    discussed above, Article XIV of the Kind LLC Agreement requires up to two levels of
    approval to amend the agreement. It provides:
    This Agreement may only be amended, modified, or waived in
    writing with the [1] prior unanimous written consent of the
    Board of Managers provided that [2] any amendment that (i)
    would treat a Restricted Member in a manner that is
    disproportionately adverse compared to the Restricted
    Members voting in favor of the amendment, (ii) would increase
    the required Capital Contributions to be made by any
    Restricted Member, (iii) would disproportionately reduce or
    limit the voting rights of a Restricted Member, or (iv) would
    impose restrictions in addition to the transfer restrictions set
    forth herein on a Restricted Member’s right to transfer its
    Membership Interest, shall also require the consent of the
    Restricted Member so affected in addition to the consents
    required above.34
    32
    Defs.’ Opening Br. at 14.
    33
    
    Id.
    34
    Kind LLC Agr., Art. XIV.
    10
    Breaking it down, to effectuate an amendment, Article XIV requires the unanimous
    written consent of the Board of Managers in all instances. In some instances, the additional
    consents of Restricted Members are also required.
    The first requirement is not a hurdle to granting Plaintiffs’ relief—Teller is Kind’s
    sole manager and a party to this litigation.
    Of the enumerated circumstances requiring additional consents, subparts (ii)
    through (iv) are not implicated. Subpart (i), however, would be implicated if the proposed
    amendment is “disproportionately adverse” to the rights of a Restricted Member.
    Plaintiffs’ proposed amendment would not affect the rights of Restricted Members at all,
    because the proposed amendment is limited to affecting the relative rights of Kind’s
    Preferred Members so as to effectuate the Equal-Distribution Arrangement at the Kind
    level.
    In arguing that this court can accord complete relief absent Kind and the other Kind
    members, Plaintiffs proposed the following amendment to implement their economic rights
    in the Kind LLC Agreement.35 The most substantial amendment is to add a new section,
    9.11, to Article IX:
    9.11. Provisions to Give Effect to the Economic Arrangements
    among the Preferred Members as required by the Amended and
    Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of EOS
    Investor Holding Company LLC. This section 9.11 is intended
    to implement the obligation under section 4.10 of the Amended
    and restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of EOS
    Investor Holding Company LLC, effective as of May 26, 2016
    (the “EOS Holdco Agreement”), requiring members of EOS
    35
    Pls.’ Supp. Opening Br. at 10–12.
    11
    Investor Holding Company LLC (“EOS Holdco”) to take such
    actions as are necessary or appropriate to give effect as
    members of the Company to the economic arrangements
    among the members of EOS Holdco set forth in section
    7.01(a)(ii) of the EOS Holdco Agreement.
    a) The term “Preferred Member Distributions” means (i) any
    distributions of cash or other assets of the Company to any
    Preferred Member listed on Exhibit A attached hereto; and (ii)
    any payments made by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
    to any Preferred Member listed on Exhibit A as salary or
    pursuant to any consulting or other agreement with such
    Preferred Member.
    b) Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary
    (including in Sections 9.1, 9.2, 9.6, or 9.10), Preferred Member
    Distributions shall be made to the Preferred Members listed on
    Exhibit A in accordance with their respective revised sharing
    percentages as set forth in Exhibit A.
    c) Calculations of Preferred Member Distributions shall be
    provided to the Preferred Members listed on Exhibit A within
    five business days of any such Preferred Member
    Distributions. Challenges to any calculations of Preferred
    Member Distributions may be made in a suit brought in
    accordance with Section 16.7 and shall be decided without
    regard to the provisions of Section 4.1.
    d) The provisions of this section 9.11 and the revised sharing
    percentages among the Preferred Members, as listed on Exhibit
    A, may not be changed or amended without the advance
    written consent of each preferred Member affected by the
    change or amendment.36
    Plaintiffs also prepared a sample Exhibit A, which captures the same distribution
    percentages as those after the Threshold has been met—the Equal-Distribution
    Arrangement:
    36
    
    Id.
     at 10–11.
    12
    Preferred Member Number of           Percentage of       Revised Sharing
    Preferred Interests Preferred Interests Percentage
    Jonathan Teller          36,139,028           67.6832%              39.89%
    Angry       Elephant                     618,527          1.1584%                 0.68%
    Capital, LLC
    Andrew Saltoun, as                  8,543,104            16.0000%                 9.43%
    trustee of the Teller
    Children’s      2015
    Trust
    Samrita Mehra, as                   8,093,743            15.1584%                   50%
    trustee of the Sanjiv
    Mehra           2014
    Irrevocable Trust
    Totals                             53,394,402          100.0000%                   100%
    The Plaintiffs’ proposed amendment alters Section 13.4 to reflect the new Section
    9.11:
    13.4. Distribution of Assets on Dissolution – Upon the
    winding up of the Company, the Company’s property shall be
    distributed in accordance with Section 9.6(b), except that
    property distributed to Preferred Members shall be distributed
    in accordance with Section 9.11.37
    Taken together, these provisions implement Plaintiffs’ rights at the Kind level by
    incorporating the Holdco LLC Agreement’s definition of distributions, restyled as
    “Preferred Distributions,” under the defined Equal-Distribution Arrangement.           The
    proposed amendments also include safeguards against Teller unilaterally amending the
    Preferred Distribution percentages and ensuring that Plaintiffs are paid the Preferred
    Distributions they are owed even in the event of dissolution.
    37
    Id. at 11 (amendments in italics).
    13
    The only persons whose rights might be affected in a way “disproportionately
    adverse” would be the Preferred Members themselves—those whose distributions are
    reduced by distributions to Mehra. All of the Preferred Members are parties to this
    litigation. To the extent the Kind LLC Agreement requires their vote to effectuate the
    amendment, then the court can order them to so vote.
    There is only one Restricted Member who is not a party to this litigation—Bartning.
    Plaintiffs’ proposed amendment would not be “disproportionately adverse” to his rights.
    Under the Kind LLC Agreement, the non-Preferred Restricted Members like Bartning
    never had an interest in distributions to the Preferred Members. Defendants do not take up
    the mantle on this argument. In fact, the words “Restricted Member” do not appear in any
    of Defendants’ original or supplemental briefing.
    Accordingly, the Kind LLC Agreement could be amended by the consent of Teller
    as manager, coupled potentially with the consents of the Preferred Members, all of whom
    are parties to this litigation. Because the requested Kind LLC Agreement is the only relief
    Plaintiffs seek, and it can be accomplished by the parties to this litigation, Rule 19 does not
    require dismissal.
    Defendants advance a series of arguments in search of a different outcome. First,
    they argue that Plaintiffs’ proposed Section 9.11 changes the definition of “Distributions”
    across the entire Kind LLC Agreement such that the amendment would impact salaries or
    payouts to other Kind members. This is a misstatement. Section 9.11 does not alter the
    definition of Distributions; rather, it creates a new definition for “Preferred Distributions,”
    which encompasses those distributions to Preferred Members exclusively. The new
    14
    definition would have no impact on other members’ payouts or capital accounts, and
    instead would only impact distributions to Teller, Angry Elephant, Saltoun, or Samrita
    Mehra.
    Defendants next argue that the structure in Exhibit A improperly assumes that the
    Threshold has been met, a fact which Defendants dispute. This issue is not relevant to the
    motion to dismiss. The Amended Complaint alleges that the Threshold has been met, and
    the court must accept this allegation as true when resolving a motion to dismiss.38
    Defendants further argue that the proposed amendment improperly includes salary
    payments.     The inclusion is not necessarily improper.     The governing definition of
    distribution rights in the Holdco LLC Agreement includes distributions of “(i) Available
    cash and (ii) any payments made by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to any Member
    as salary or pursuant to any consulting or other agreement with such Member.”39 The
    Preferred Distributions definition implements Mehra’s economic rights by mirroring the
    language in the Holdco LLC Agreement. In any event, whether Teller’s salary payments
    should be included in the relevant portion of the proposed amendment does not inform the
    Rule 19 question concerning who constitutes necessary parties.
    Defendants also contend that the proposed amendment eliminates the Kind
    manager’s discretion in making distributions. This is untrue. Whether and how much to
    38
    Am. Compl. ¶ 40; Germaninvestments, 
    2020 WL 6870459
    , at *2 (noting that, on a
    motion to dismiss for failure to join a necessary party, the court must “accept as true the
    Complaint’s well-pled factual allegations and draw all reasonable inferences in Plaintiffs’
    favor”).
    39
    Holdco LLC Agr. § 1.01.
    15
    distribute is still squarely within the Kind manager’s discretion. The proposed amendment
    merely governs the relatively rights of the Preferred Members.
    Defendants finally take the position that the amendment to Section 13.4 improperly
    alters distribution rights upon dissolution. Perhaps this is a live issue for debate. The
    parties have not yet presented facts or argument as to whether the Holdco members’
    distribution rights were intended to extend through dissolution of Kind. Still, it is clear
    that whatever relief Plaintiffs seek among the Preferred Members can be accomplished
    through this litigation.
    In sum, the court is capable of granting complete relief in this litigation. Defendants
    do not expressly make arguments under Rule 19(a)(2), but those arguments would fail for
    the same reasons. Neither Kind nor Kind’s non-Preferred Members have legally protected
    interests affected by the relief Plaintiffs request.
    For completeness, however, it is worth noting that the only other members of Kind
    not yet mentioned in this decision are the Class C Common interest holders.40 Slover is
    one holder of Kind Class C Common interests.41 There are 13 other holders of Class C
    Common interests; all are current or former employees or consultants of EOS Products.42
    There is not a perceivable threat to the rights of Class C Common interest holders, whose
    rights are limited under the Kind LLC Agreement. Class C Common members cannot vote
    40
    Kind Membership Interests Chart.
    41
    Id.
    42
    Id.
    16
    their interests in electing Kind’s managers43 and waive their right to inspect Kind’s books
    and records.44     Article XIV does not require their consents for Plaintiffs’ proposed
    amendments.
    At bottom, the proposed amendment only changes the distribution scheme for
    Preferred Members. Defendants assert generally that “the proposed amendment clearly
    changes the rights and obligations under the agreement, thereby affecting Kind LLC and
    its members.”45 Defendants does not identify who these other members might be or what
    their interest in distributions to the Preferred Members would entail. It is difficult to
    imagine which other members could be impacted by this amendment.
    Defendants expend significant ink arguing that Plaintiffs’ proposed relief would
    impact the legal interests of Kind, a New York LLC. This argument ignores the simple
    truth that the only parties who would need to act to amend the Kind LLC Agreement are
    the Teller-Affiliated Defendants and Samrita Mehra. All of those parties are before the
    court and are obligated by the Holdco LLC Agreement to take all actions necessary and
    appropriate to implement Mehra’s economic rights even after Holdco’s dissolution. Kind
    itself does not have a right to vote on an amendment to its LLC Agreement; only the
    Restricted Members have that right. It is also not apparent what interest, if any, Kind would
    have in the Preferred Members’ mechanism for metering distributions amongst themselves.
    43
    Kind LLC Agr. § 4.2(a).
    44
    Id. § 7.3.
    45
    Defs.’ Supp. Answering Br. at 19.
    17
    Defendants argue in briefing that “this Court does not have jurisdiction to ‘fashion
    equitable relief’ to enforce the provisions of a New York limited liability company
    agreement.’”46 This is irrelevant. Plaintiffs request for specific performance does not ask
    this court to enforce the provisions of a New York LLC agreement; rather, it asks this court
    to enforce the provisions of the Holdco LLC Agreement, which is a Delaware LLC.
    Defendants also half-heartedly contend, in an argument relegated to a footnote, that
    interests of comity and the internal affairs doctrine weigh in favor of dismissal absent Kind
    in this court.47 Defendants rely on In re Coinmint, LLC to support this contention.48 In
    Coinmint, this court was tasked with deciding whether a Delaware court had jurisdiction
    to declare the membership of or dissolve an entity formed under the laws of Puerto Rico.
    In finding that it did not possess jurisdiction to do either, the court relied on precedent
    emphasizing the importance of vesting the power to determine the management and
    dissolution of an entity in the state that created the entity.49 As to management, the court
    reasoned that Puerto Rico’s courts’ vested jurisdiction in deciding contested matters of
    management precluded a Delaware court’s jurisdiction over that determination. As to
    dissolution, Coinmint limited its holding to finding that “only the courts of the jurisdiction
    46
    Id. at 13.
    47
    Id. at 4 n.4.
    48
    
    261 A.3d 867
     (Del. Ch. 2021).
    49
    Id. at 911.
    18
    under whose law the limited liability company is organized have the capacity to order its
    dissolution.”50
    This case is distinguishable from Coinmint on multiple fronts. Most importantly,
    granting Plaintiffs’ requested relief would not require dissolution of a foreign entity.
    Further, Plaintiffs do not ask this court to impose Delaware law on Kind; instead, they ask
    this court to order action by members of Kind in enforcing those members’ obligations
    under a Delaware LLC agreement. Finally, ordering specific performance would not
    require any change to Kind’s management, membership, or even its discretion to issue
    distributions—it would only alter the recipients of those distributions and the amount of
    their receipts.
    Finally, Defendants argue that Teller is only before this court in his capacity as a
    member and manager of Holdco, and therefore he cannot be ordered to take action to
    implement Plaintiffs’ economic rights in his capacity as a member and manager of Kind.
    For this point, both sides cite to Godden v. Franco.51 That case involved a marine
    transportation company, HMS Inc., incorporated in Washington state and wholly owned
    by a series of Delaware LLCs.52 Under the holding company structure, Holdco 3 sat at the
    top, and HMS, Inc. was at the bottom as the lowest-tier subsidiary.53 The Holdco 3 LLC
    50
    Id. at 913.
    51
    
    2018 WL 3998431
     (Del. Ch. Aug. 21, 2018).
    52
    Letter Requesting Supp. Briefing at 5–8; Godden v. Franco, 
    2018 WL 3998431
    , at *1–
    2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 21, 2018).
    53
    Godden, 
    2018 WL 3998431
     at *2.
    19
    agreement required that the boards of all its subsidiaries, including HMS, Inc., have the
    same composition as Holdco 3’s board.54 Two of the four members of Holdco 3’s board
    of managers removed a third member, Harley Franco, by written consent. The two
    members then filed suit and moved for summary judgment seeking a declaration that,
    among other things, the written consent also obligated all parties to the Holdco 3 LLC
    agreement, including Franco, to implement that decision at the subsidiary level by
    removing Franco from the board of HMS, Inc.55
    Vice Chancellor Laster declared that the provisions of the Holdco 3 LLC agreement
    bound “the parties contractually as a matter of Delaware law just as a stockholder
    agreement would” and that “[i]f the members of Holdco 3 change the composition of the
    Board of Managers, then the parties to the Holdco 3 LLC agreement have a contractual
    obligation . . . to take steps to implement that decision at the subsidiaries.” 56 Those
    provisions, however, were “not self-executing.”57 Rather, “they require mechanisms by
    which stockholder-level decisions can be implemented under the governing documents of
    the entity.”58 Godden stopped short of ordering that HMS, Inc. replicate the board of
    directors consistent with the makeup of Holdco 3’s board of managers under the Holdco 3
    54
    Id. at *4.
    55
    Id. at *1–2.
    56
    Id. at *14.
    57
    Id.
    58
    Id.
    20
    LLC agreement, as such an order “could raise knotty issues under Washington law.”59
    Specifically, ordering that the HMS, Inc. board implement the requirements under the
    Holdco 3 agreement may have implicated fiduciary duty breaches under Washington law.
    Plaintiffs argue that Godden concerned different implementation rights that raise
    distinguishable issues of foreign state law. They contend that the implementation rights in
    Godden required determining who would manage a Washington entity, a matter that would
    potentially implicate the absent managers’ fiduciary duties to the entity. This case,
    Plaintiffs argue, is fundamentally different because implementing Mehra’s rights at the
    Kind level would not impact any exercise of managerial discretion—their proposed relief
    would not affect management’s discretion to issue distributions or the total amount, just
    the recipients and their respective portions.
    Defendants rely on Godden to argue that this court is obligated to respect corporate
    separateness and thus cannot order Teller to take action at Kind based on this court’s
    interpretation of Mehra’s rights under the Holdco LLC Agreement. They also argue that
    compliance with obligations imposed by the Holdco LLC Agreement could raise issues
    under New York law and is therefore beyond this court’s jurisdiction.
    Defendants’ reading of Godden overstates that case’s premise. The court in Godden
    did not hold that it could not order action at the subsidiary level; rather, it declined to reach
    the issue. The issue was not properly before the court, as the plaintiffs merely sought
    59
    Id. at *15.
    21
    declaratory relief, not an order requiring implementation of the board composition at the
    HMS, Inc. level.
    Defendants fail to identify how implementing the proposed amendments would
    implicate Teller’s fiduciary obligations in any event. In Godden, the court noted that
    Washington law issues may arise “if Franco asserts that compliance would cause him to
    breach his fiduciary duties.”60 This informed the court’s decision to decline to reach the
    question of whether a party to the Holdco 3 LLC agreement would be obligated to comply
    with obligations imposed by the agreement notwithstanding competing obligations.
    Defendants have not pointed to similar competing obligations in this instance. They
    do point out that New York does not permit a complete waiver of fiduciary duties in limited
    liability entities.61 Even so, they fail to identify how the proposed amendment could
    constitute a fiduciary breach under any foreseeable circumstances. Such circumstances are
    difficult to imagine, given that the proposed amendments would not alter the Kind board’s
    discretion in deciding to make distributions and would only impact the recipients of those
    distributions. The mere existence of fiduciary liability under New York law, without some
    sort of nexus to liability that might actually arise from the proposed amendments, does not
    raise the same concerns as noted in Godden.
    Defendants also cite to Hamilton Partners, L.P. v. Englard for the proposition that
    Teller cannot be compelled in this court to act in his capacity as a member and manager of
    60
    Id.
    61
    
    N.Y. Ltd. Liab. Co. Law § 417
    (a).
    22
    a foreign entity.62 In Hamilton Partners, the stockholder plaintiff brought a derivative
    claim in Delaware against the directors of a New York parent corporation. Those directors
    were also the directors of the parent’s Delaware subsidiary, and the stockholder plaintiff
    brought a double derivative claim against those directors in their capacity as directors of
    the Delaware subsidiary. The directors moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
    The court granted dismissal as to the derivative claim on behalf of the New York
    corporation, reasoning that the directors had no ties to Delaware aside from their service
    on the Delaware subsidiary’s board. This status was “irrelevant to a claim against them as
    directors of the New York parent.”63
    Defendants argue that the same result is warranted here because Teller’s status as a
    member of Holdco is irrelevant to any obligations he may owe at Kind. But this contention
    both misstates the source of Teller’s obligations and overstates the reach of Hamilton
    Partners. There, the plaintiff attempted to sue the directors derivatively in their capacity
    on the board of the New York parent. Here, there is no derivative action. Teller is in this
    court in his capacity as a signatory to the Holdco LLC Agreement. Far from being
    “irrelevant” to his status as a member and manager of Kind, his role in the Holdco LLC
    Agreement forms the very basis for his obligations to implement Mehra’s economic rights
    at Kind. The concerns raised in Hamilton Partners as to Teller’s role in this suit are thus
    inapplicable.
    62
    
    11 A.3d 1180
    , 1201 (Del. Ch. 2010).
    63
    
    Id. at 1201
    .
    23
    In sum, this court has the authority to order Teller and his related entities to take
    action that specifically performs the obligations under the Holdco LLC Agreement,
    including amending the Kind LLC Agreement.
    B.     Plaintiffs State A Claim For Breach Of Fiduciary Duty And Breach Of
    Contract.
    In their opening brief, Defendants raised several arguments that were either resolved
    or abandoned by the time they filed their reply. First, they contend that the law of the case
    doctrine requires dismissal of Counts I and II for breach of contract and fiduciary breach
    claims. Second, they argue that Count II for breach of fiduciary duty should be dismissed
    because it is duplicative of Count I for breach of contract.
    1.     Law Of The Case
    “The ‘law of the case’ doctrine requires that issues already decided by the same
    court should be adopted without relitigation, and ‘once a matter has been addressed in a
    procedurally appropriate way by a court, it is generally held to be the law of that case and
    will not be disturbed by that court unless compelling reason to do so appears.’”64
    Defendants argue that both Counts I and II have already been resolved by the Post-Trial
    Opinion and thus do not need to be relitigated.
    As to Count I for breach of fiduciary duty, Defendants argue that “this Court has
    already determined that Teller did not breach his fiduciary duty by dissolving Holdco
    following a bona fide deadlock.”65 It is true that the Post-Trial Opinion resolved any
    64
    May v. Bigmar, 
    838 A.2d 285
    , 288 n.8 (Del. Ch. 2003).
    65
    Defs.’ Reply Br. at 24.
    24
    fiduciary breach claim as to Teller’s actions in declaring a deadlock and dissolving Holdco.
    The Post-Trial Opinion also rejected Plaintiffs’ theory that Teller was solely motivated by
    a desire for liquidity in removing Mehra, and that Teller acted in good faith in both
    removing Mehra and in doing so without first confronting him.66 That decision decided
    the “narrow question addressed in this trial” of whether Plaintiffs had proven bad faith
    sufficient to justify equitable invalidation of the Holdco dissolution.67
    The Post-Trial Opinion, however, was focused on a narrow issue. Specifically, the
    Post-Trial Opinion only resolved whether Teller acted in bad faith as to Mehra’s
    termination and the dissolution of Holdco. The decision did not produce any holding on
    any potential fiduciary breach Teller has committed by his failure to implement Mehra’s
    economic rights following the dissolution. Count I alleges that Teller breached his
    fiduciary duty by “[e]xecuting a scheme to strip Mehra of his economic rights . . . including
    in the event of a deadlock dissolution.”68 That issue is still squarely before the court, and
    contrary to Defendants’ assertion, has not been decided or resolved by the Post-Trial
    Opinion.
    Defendants largely dropped their “law of the case” doctrine argument as to the
    breach of contract claim in Count II in their reply brief.69 In its place, they argue that Kind
    66
    Post-Trial Op. at 70.
    67
    
    Id.
    68
    Am. Compl. ¶ 81.
    69
    Compare Defs.’ Opening Br. at 10 (“[T]here is nothing left for a second trial of any
    contract claim.”), with Defs.’ Reply Br. at 19 (arguing only that Kind is a necessary party
    to the breach of contract claim).
    25
    is an indispensable party to the breach of contract claim, and therefore that Count II must
    be dismissed. The Post-Trial Opinion did rule on parts of the breach of contract claim,
    namely that Teller did not manufacture the deadlock in bad faith, failed to protect the
    interests of Holdco and its members, and failed to follow the proper procedures for a
    deadlock.70 Although the Post-Trial Opinion found that that Teller breached the Holdco
    LLC Agreement by failing to give effect to the economic arrangements at the Kind level,
    it did not address other remedies for Teller’s failure to replicate the Equal-Distribution
    Arrangement at Kind.71 The court thus has not resolved this count in the Post-Trial
    Opinion, and deciding the appropriate remedy at a second trial would not require
    relitigating the issues.
    In sum, the law of the case doctrine does not require dismissal of Counts I or II, and
    Defendants’ motion is denied on this ground.
    2.     Duplicative Claims
    The Amended Complaint alleges that Teller breached his fiduciary duties to
    Plaintiffs by failing to replicate the Holdco members’ rights at the Kind level, despite his
    knowledge of this duty.
    By default, managers of limited liability companies owe fiduciary duties akin to
    those of directors of a corporation.72 Although Delaware law permits a limited liability
    70
    Am. Compl. ¶ 87(a)–(d); Post-Trial Op. at 70.
    71
    Am. Compl. ¶ 87(d); Post-Trial Op. 69–70.
    72
    6 Del. C. § 18-1104 (“In any case not provided for in this chapter, the rules of law and
    equity, including the rules of law and equity relating to fiduciary duties . . . shall govern.”).
    26
    company to eliminate fiduciary duties in the governing agreement,73 the Holdco LLC
    Agreement does not do so.
    Teller owed Holdco and its members a duty of loyalty, which “mandates that the
    best interest” of Holdco and its owners “takes precedence over any interest” he may have
    possessed personally.74 “[B]ad faith conduct is a breach of the duty of loyalty . . . . ”75
    Under Delaware law, a plaintiff can show bad faith by proving that a fiduciary
    “intentionally acts with a purpose other than that of advancing the best interests of the
    corporation,” intentionally “acts with the intent to violate applicable positive law,” or
    “intentionally fails to act in the face of a known duty to act, demonstrating a conscious
    disregard for his duties.”76
    Defendants contend that Count II must be dismissed because any remaining
    fiduciary breach claim is entirely duplicative of any remaining breach of contract claim in
    Count I. Plaintiffs are not precluded, however, from asserting claims for breach of
    fiduciary duty and breach of contract based on a “common nucleus of operative facts” if
    73
    6 Del. C. § 18-1101(e) (“A limited liability company agreement may provide for the
    limitation or elimination of any and all liabilities for breach of contract and breach of duties
    (including fiduciary duties) of a member, manager, or other person to a limited liability
    company or manager or to another person that is a party to or is otherwise bound by a
    limited liability company agreement . . . . ”).
    74
    See Triple H. Fam. Ltd. P’rship v. Neal, 
    2018 WL 3650242
    , at *18 (Del. Ch. July 31,
    2018) (quoting Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    634 A.2d 345
    , 361 (Del. 1993)).
    75
    See, e.g., Stewart v. BF Bolthouse Holdco, LLC, 
    2013 WL 5210220
    , at *11 (Del. Ch.
    Aug. 30, 2013) (“It is now well-established . . . that the duty of loyalty encompasses more
    than interested transactions and also covers director actions taken in bad faith.”).
    76
    In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 
    906 A.2d 27
    , 67 (Del. 2006).
    27
    the breach of fiduciary duty claims “depend on additional facts as well, are broader in
    scope, and involve different considerations in terms of a potential remedy.”77
    Teller’s obligation to honor Plaintiffs’ economic rights as Holdco members finds
    equal footing in his fiduciary obligations as Manager. Teller had a duty to put the interests
    of Holdco’s owners above his own and to not take actions inimical to those interests. This
    includes dealing with Holdco’s members fairly, regardless of their affiliations with Teller
    himself.
    Yet Teller testified at the bifurcated trial to doing just the opposite. He admitted
    that he was not honoring the distribution agreement in the Holdco LLC Agreement, and
    that he knew that he had a fiduciary duty to do so.78 Instead, Teller has made distributions
    to himself in the form of salary payments without regard for the distribution arrangement.
    This case stands in stark contrast to Defendants’ cited precedent, Nemec v.
    Shrader.79 There, the plaintiffs were former employees of the defendant corporation who,
    upon their retirement, received put rights on their stock in the corporation that lasted for a
    period of two years.        After the two-year period expired, the corporation had an
    unconditional redemption right to buy back the stock at book value. Following the
    77
    Schuss v. Penfield, P’rs, L.P., 
    2008 WL 2433842
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. June 13, 2008); see
    also Nemec v. Shrader, 
    991 A.2d 1120
    , 1129 (Del. 2010) (“It is a well-settled principle that
    where a dispute arises from obligations that are expressly addressed by contract, that
    dispute will be treated as a breach of contract claim. In that specific context, any fiduciary
    claims arising out of the same facts that underlie the contract obligations would be
    foreclosed as superfluous.”).
    78
    Dkt. 202 at 690:5–10 (Teller).
    79
    
    991 A.2d 1120
     (Del. 2010).
    28
    plaintiffs’ retirement and the expiration of their put rights, the corporation negotiated a sale
    of one of its divisions that would reap massive gains for its stockholders. Before the sale
    went through, however, the corporation exercised its rights to redeem the plaintiffs’ shares,
    with the result that the plaintiffs did not realize the value of the sale. The plaintiffs sought
    relief for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty. The Delaware Supreme Court
    affirmed this court’s dismissal of the fiduciary claims because any stock rights they had
    were “solely a creature of contract.”80 As a result, “the nature and scope of the Directors’
    duties when causing the Company to exercise its right to redeem shares covered by the
    Stock Plan were intended to be defined solely by reference to that contract,” not by duties
    the directors owed to stockholders writ large.81
    Teller’s conscious decision to withhold distributions from Plaintiffs in this case is
    different. For sure, Teller has a contractual obligation under Section 4.10 as a Holdco
    member to honor Plaintiffs’ economic rights at the Kind level. Unlike the other Holdco
    members, however, Teller also has an obligation as a manager of Holdco to treat its
    members fairly and put their interests above his own. As a manager, Teller is also the only
    one in a position of power to ensure that Plaintiffs’ rights are implemented following
    dissolution. Teller’s knowing failure to honor Plaintiffs’ interests above his own is the sort
    of above-and-beyond bad faith that extends Plaintiffs’ fiduciary duty claim past the
    80
    
    Id. at 1129
    .
    81
    
    Id.
    29
    “common nucleus of operative facts” that form the basis of their contract claim.
    Defendants’ motion to dismiss is denied on this ground.
    C.     Additional Arguments As To Slover And Saltoun
    Defendants additionally move to dismiss all claims against Slover and Saltoun under
    Court of Chancery Rules 12(b)(2) for lack of personal jurisdiction and 12(b)(6) for failure
    to state a claim. The motion is granted as to Slover for lack of personal jurisdiction and
    denied as to Saltoun on both grounds.
    1.     Slover
    Plaintiffs argue that this court has personal jurisdiction over Slover under
    Delaware’s Long-Arm Statute based on the conspiracy theory of jurisdiction.82 The
    conspiracy theory analysis requires evaluating Slover’s aiding and abetting liability, so her
    12(b)(6) motion is considered in tandem with the personal jurisdiction analysis.
    “When a defendant moves to dismiss a complaint pursuant to Court of Chancery
    Rule 12(b)(2), the plaintiff bears the burden of showing a basis for the court’s exercise of
    jurisdiction over the defendant.”83 “In ruling on a 12(b)(2) motion, the court may consider
    the pleadings, affidavits, and any discovery of record,” but where “no evidentiary hearing
    has been held, plaintiffs need only make a prima facie showing of personal jurisdiction”
    on a record construed “in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.”84
    82
    Pls.’ Answering Br. at 54–59.
    83
    Ryan v. Gifford, 
    935 A.2d 258
    , 265 (Del. Ch. 2007) (citing Werner v. Miller Tech. Mgmt.,
    L.P., 
    831 A.2d 318
     (Del. Ch. 2003)).
    84
    Focus Fin. P’rs, LLC v. Holsopple, 
    241 A.3d 784
    , 800–01 (Del. Ch. 2020) (quoting
    Ryan, 
    935 A.2d at 265
    ).
    30
    Delaware courts use a two-step analysis to resolve questions of personal
    jurisdiction.85 First, the court must “determine that service of process is authorized by
    statute.”86 Second, the defendant must have certain minimum contacts with Delaware such
    that the exercise of personal jurisdiction “does not offend traditional notions of fair play
    and substantial justice.”87
    Delaware’s Long-Arm statute provides jurisdiction over a nonresident “who in
    person or through an agent . . . [t]ransacts any business or performs any character of work
    or service in the State . . . [or] [c]auses tortious injury in the State by an act or omission in
    this State.”88 “[A] single transaction is sufficient to confer jurisdiction where the claim is
    based on that transaction.”89 “Under the plain language of the Long-Arm Statute, forum-
    directed activity can be accomplished ‘through an agent.’”90
    The Delaware Supreme Court has adopted the conspiracy theory of jurisdiction,
    under which a person’s co-conspirators are their agents, such that forum-directed activities
    by the co-conspirator can give rise to personal jurisdiction over all conspiracy members.91
    85
    Ryan, 
    935 A.2d at 265
    .
    86
    
    Id.
    87
    Matthew v. FläktWoods Gp. SA, 
    56 A.3d 1023
    , 1027 (Del. 2012) (quoting Int’l Shoe Co.
    v. Washington, 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316 (1945) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    88
    10 Del. C. § 3104(c).
    89
    Crescent/Mach I P’rs, L.P. v. Turner, 
    846 A.2d 963
    , 978 (Del. Ch. 2000).
    90
    Virtus Cap. L.P. v. Eastman Chem. Co., 
    2015 WL 580553
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Feb. 11,
    2015) (quoting 10 Del. C. § 3104(c)).
    91
    Istituto Bancario Italiano SpA v. Hunter Eng’g Co., 
    449 A.2d 210
    , 222 (Del. 1982).
    31
    At the pleading stage, a plaintiff need not “produce direct evidence of a conspiracy” but
    must assert “specific facts from which one can reasonably infer that a conspiracy existed.”92
    The Delaware Supreme Court established the elements of the conspiracy theory of
    jurisdiction in Istituto Bancario Italiano SpA v. Hunter Engineering Co.:
    [A] conspirator who is absent from the forum state is subject
    to the jurisdiction of the court . . . if the plaintiff can make a
    factual showing that: (1) a conspiracy . . . existed; (2) the
    defendant was a member of that conspiracy; (3) a substantial
    act or substantial effect in furtherance of the conspiracy
    occurred in the forum state; (4) the defendant knew or had
    reason to know of the act in the forum state or that acts outside
    the forum state would have an effect in the forum state; and (5)
    the act in, or effect on, the forum state was a direct and
    foreseeable result of the conduct in furtherance of the
    conspiracy.93
    The five elements of the Istituto Bancario test “functionally encompass both prongs
    of the jurisdictional test.”94 “The first three . . . elements address the statutory prong . . . .
    The fourth and fifth . . . elements address the constitutional prong . . . .”95
    The first and second Istituto Bancario elements ask whether a conspiracy existed
    and whether the nonresidents were members of the conspiracy.                   “Although Istituto
    Bancario literally speaks in terms of a ‘conspiracy to defraud,’ the principle is not limited
    to that particular tort.”96
    92
    Reid v. Siniscalchi, 
    2014 WL 6589342
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Nov. 20, 2014).
    93
    Perry v. Neupert, 
    2019 WL 719000
    , at *22 (Del. Ch. Feb. 15, 2019) (quoting Istituto
    Bancario, 
    449 A.2d at 225
    ).
    94
    Virtus, 
    2015 WL 580553
    , at *12.
    95
    
    Id.
    96
    Id. at *13.
    32
    This court has recognized that aiding and abetting in a claim for breach of fiduciary
    duty can supply the relevant tort and are a “context-specific application of civil conspiracy
    law.”97 Plaintiffs’ arguments for personal jurisdiction over Slover, therefore, hinge on
    whether they have adequately alleged a claim for aiding and abetting.
    There are four elements to an aiding and abetting claim: “(1) the existence of a
    fiduciary relationship, (2) a breach of the fiduciary’s duty, . . . (3) knowing participation in
    that breach by the defendants, and (4) damages proximately caused by the breach.”98
    Defendants argue generally that Count III for aiding and abetting must be dismissed
    if the predicate fiduciary breach claim is dismissed. Since this decision has already found
    that the predicate fiduciary breach claim against Teller survives dismissal, this ancillary
    argument is without merit.
    The claim against Teller for breaching his fiduciary obligations to Plaintiffs by
    failing to implement their economic rights at the Kind level remains live. The question
    thus becomes the extent to which Plaintiffs have alleged that Slover knowingly participated
    in that breach. Plaintiffs argue that Slover participated in Teller’s fiduciary breach by
    assisting in drafting the documents that effectuated the dissolution without providing for
    Plaintiffs’ rights to distributions at the Kind level.99 Plaintiffs present further evidence of
    Slover’s involvement in their harm by drafting the documents assigning Preferred Interests
    97
    Allied Cap. Corp. v. GC-Sun Hldgs., L.P., 
    910 A.2d 1020
    , 1038 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    98
    Malpiedie v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1096 (Del. 2001).
    99
    Pls.’ Answering Br. at 40.
    33
    in Kind to Plaintiffs without providing for their rights to distributions. Plaintiffs point to
    Slover’s deposition testimony that she was aware of these obligations and that Teller was
    failing to honor them.100
    Even assuming that the court may consider the discovery evidence for the purpose
    of resolving the Rule 12(b)(2) arguments, Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate Slover’s
    requisite knowledge and participation in Teller’s alleged breached. As the story is alleged,
    Slover papered what Teller requested. It is very difficult to conclude that this act, standing
    alone, constituted knowing participation in fiduciary breach. While lawyers are not
    immune to such claims, one should be reticent to conclude that a lawyer’s ministerial
    actions constitute knowing participation. On these grounds alone alone, Plaintiffs have
    failed to demonstrate a basis for exercising jurisdiction over Slover.
    Plaintiffs’ showing as to the third element of the conspiracy theory is likewise
    specious. The third element requires showing that Slover completed a substantial act or
    that a substantial effect in furtherance of the conspiracy occurred in Delaware. Generally
    speaking, to comport with Delaware’s Long-Arm Statute, Slover must have taken some
    action that would give a causal nexus to this jurisdiction. Plaintiffs have not identified any
    such actions in this case. Plaintiffs note that Teller was required by Section 10.03 of the
    Holdco LLC Agreement to “cause the cancellation of the Certificate of Formation” if
    100
    
    Id.
    34
    Holdco were dissolved,101 but the certificate of cancellation was never filed.102 The mere
    contractual obligation to file a certificate of cancellation in Delaware does not create a
    sufficient contact with Delaware to satisfy the long-arm statute.           Further, Plaintiffs
    maintain that Teller was the one who was required to file the certificate of cancellation, not
    Slover.103 Plaintiffs do not offer any other basis to satisfy the third prong of Istituto
    Bancario.
    The fourth and fifth prongs similarly fail. Absent a qualifying act directed at the
    state of Delaware, Plaintiffs have no route to pleading that Slover had reason to know that
    the nonexistent act would have an effect in this jurisdiction. The conspiracy theory thus
    fails to establish personal jurisdiction over Slover. Slover’s motion to dismiss under Rule
    12(b)(2) is granted.
    2.     Saltoun
    Defendants argue that this court does not have jurisdiction over Saltoun as trustee
    of the Teller Children’s 2015 Trust.104 The requirement that a court have personal
    101
    Holdco LLC Agr. § 10.03.
    102
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 50–51.
    103
    Id.
    104
    Saltoun arguably waived this defense by failing to raise this defense until the present
    motion to dismiss. Under Court of Chancery Rule 12(h)(1), a defense of lack of personal
    jurisdiction “is waived (A) if omitted from a motion in the circumstances described in [Rule
    12(g)].” Ct. Ch. R. 12(h)(1). In other words, if Saltoun failed to raise a defense of personal
    jurisdiction in his initial motion, then that defense is considered waived. Saltoun filed an
    initial motion to dismiss in this action on January 2, 2020 under Rule 12(b)(6), but did not
    raise personal jurisdiction as a defense. See Dkt. 72.
    35
    jurisdiction, however, is a waivable right.105 “A defendant can agree to the court’s exercise
    of personal jurisdiction.”106 That agreement can be express or implied.107 When a party
    agrees to litigate in a forum, the party is considered to have implicitly consented to personal
    jurisdiction in that forum.108 When a party has consented to jurisdiction, the court can
    forego the typical two-step analysis.109
    Saltoun consented to this court’s jurisdiction under Section 11.12 of the Holdco
    LLC Agreement. This section provides that, “Each Member by its execution hereof,
    hereby submits to the exclusive jurisdiction of, and consents to service of process and
    venue in, the state and federal courts of the State of Delaware in any action, suit or
    proceeding between or among the Members arising out of this Agreement.” 110 As trustee
    to the Teller 2015 Children’s Trust, a Member of Holdco, Saltoun is a proper representative
    of the trust’s interests. Because this case arises from the Members’ breach of their
    obligations under the Holdco LLC Agreement to implement Plaintiffs’ economic rights at
    105
    Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 
    471 U.S. 462
    , 472 n.14 (1985).
    In re Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. Deriv. Litig., 
    2019 WL 1224556
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. Mar. 15,
    106
    2019) (collecting cases).
    107
    Id. at *11.
    108
    Id.; Solae, LLC v. Hershey Canada, Inc., 
    557 F. Supp. 2d 452
    , 456 (D. Del. 2008) (citing
    Res. Ventures, Inc. v. Res. Mgmt. Int’l, Inc., 
    42 F. Supp. 2d 423
    , 431 (D. Del. 1999)).
    109
    Neurvana Med., LLC v. Balt USA, LLC, 
    2019 WL 4464268
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 18,
    2019); R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, Delaware Law of Corporations &
    Business Organizations, §13.4 (3d ed. 2019) (“Consent to personal jurisdiction is
    considered a waiver of any objection on due process grounds and an analysis under
    minimum contacts is considered unnecessary.”).
    110
    Holdco LLC Agr. § 11.12.
    36
    the Kind level, Saltoun is subject to this court’s jurisdiction for this action. Saltoun’s
    motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(2) is denied.
    Defendants’ only basis for its remaining 12(b)(6) argument relies on the conclusion
    that, as a member of Holdco, Saltoun in his capacity as trustee for the Teller Children’s
    2015 Trust has no further obligations at the Holdco level and therefore no claims remain
    against him.111 This conclusion requires a finding that there are no further claims at the
    Holdco level. This decision has already found that the Holdco Members can be held
    responsible in this jurisdiction for their failure to implement Plaintiffs’ economic rights at
    the Kind level. As a result, the Complaint continues to state a claim against Saltoun, and
    his motion to dismiss is denied.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    Defendants’ motion to dismiss as to Slover is granted for lack of personal
    jurisdiction. The remainder of the motion is denied. The parties are instructed to submit a
    form of order implementing this decision within ten business days.
    111
    Defs.’ Opening Br. at 23 (“As explained above, there are no remaining claims at the
    Holdco level, so there are no remaining claims against Saltoun.”); Defs.’ Reply Br. at 29
    (“The Teller Trust was a member of Holdco prior to its dissolution, and no claims remain
    at the Holdco level.”).
    37