EMSI Acquisition, Inc. v. Contrarian Funds, LLC ( 2017 )


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  •                                                     EFiled: May 03 2017 03:12PM EDT
    Transaction ID 60551802
    Case No. 12648-VCS
    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    EMSI ACQUISITION, INC.,               :
    :
    Plaintiff,   :
    :
    v.                    :           C.A. No. 12648-VCS
    :
    CONTRARIAN FUNDS, LLC, PACIFIC        :
    LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, PACIFIC :
    LIFE & ANNUITY COMPANY,               :
    RELIASTAR LIFE INSURANCE              :
    COMPANY OF NEW YORK, MMD              :
    RESOURCES, LLP, MARK S. DAVIS         :
    (individually and in his capacity as  :
    guarantor of MMD RESOURCES, LLP),     :
    and ROBERT P. BROOK,                  :
    :
    Defendants. :
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: February 7, 2017
    Date Decided: May 3, 2017
    S. Mark Hurd, Esquire, Ryan D. Stottman, Esquire, and Lauren K. Neal, Esquire of
    Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, and Stephen C.
    Hackney, Esquire and Timothy Knapp, Esquire of Kirkland & Ellis LLP, Chicago,
    Illinois, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
    Rolin P. Bissell, Esquire and Paul J. Loughman, Esquire of Young Conaway Stargatt
    & Taylor LLP, Wilmington, Delaware and Marshall R. King, Esquire, Lauren M.L.
    Nagin, Esquire, Gabriel K. Gillett, Esquire of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, New
    York, New York, Attorneys for Defendants.
    SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor
    Plaintiff, EMSI Acquisition, Inc. (“Plaintiff” or “Buyer”), brings this action
    against Defendants, Contrarian Funds, LLC, Pacific Life Insurance Company,
    Pacific Life & Annuity Company, Reliastar Life Insurance Company, Reliastar Life
    Insurance Company of New York, MMD Resources, LLP, Mark S. Davis, and
    Robert P. Brook (together, “Defendants” or “Sellers”) to assert post-closing claims
    for indemnification following Plaintiff’s acquisition of EMSI Holding Company
    (“EMSI” or the “Company”) from the Defendants (the “Acquisition”).              The
    Acquisition was memorialized in a Stock Purchase Agreement (the “SPA”) which is
    at the heart of this dispute. It is alleged that EMSI manipulated its financial
    statements prior to the Acquisition in order to inflate its EBITDA and induce
    Plaintiff to pay substantially more for the Company than it was worth. At issue is
    whether Plaintiff may avoid contractual limits on recovery for indemnification
    claims against the Sellers when the claims are based on fraudulent representations
    in the SPA made by the Company. Also at issue is whether findings of an
    independent auditor who attempted to resolve the dispute between the parties post-
    closing may be “confirmed” by the Court under the Delaware Arbitration Act.
    Plaintiff asserts two counts in a Verified Complaint (the “Complaint”) against
    Defendants: Count I for indemnification and Count II for confirmation of the
    auditor’s award. Defendants have moved to dismiss both counts for failure to state
    a claim pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6). For the reasons that follow,
    1
    I find that the SPA is ambiguous with respect to whether the Buyer’s indemnification
    claims against the Sellers for allegedly fraudulent contractual representations of the
    Company in the SPA are subject to contractual limitations on indemnification
    claims.   Extrinsic evidence is required to interpret the relevant provisions.
    Accordingly, the motion to dismiss Count I is DENIED. The motion to dismiss
    Count II, however, must be GRANTED as the auditor’s findings do not constitute
    an arbitration award that is subject to “confirmation” under the Delaware Arbitration
    Act.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In considering Defendants’ motion to dismiss, I have drawn the facts from the
    well-pled allegations in the Complaint, documents integral to the Complaint and
    matters of which I may take judicial notice.1 At this stage of the proceedings, all
    well-pled facts contained in the Complaint are assumed to be true.
    A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties
    Plaintiff, EMSI Acquisition, Inc., an affiliate of private equity firm Beecken
    Petty O’Keefe & Company, is the Buyer under the SPA. It is a Delaware corporation
    with its corporate headquarters in Irving, Texas.
    1
    In re Crimson Exploration Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2014 WL 5449419
    , at *8 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 24, 2014) (“A judge may consider documents outside of the pleadings only when
    (1) the document is integral to a plaintiff’s claim and incorporated in the complaint or
    (2) the document is not being relied upon to prove the truth of its contents.”) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    2
    As noted, each of the Defendants named in the Complaint are alleged to be
    Sellers under the SPA. Defendant, Contrarian Funds, LLC, is a Delaware LLC with
    its principal place of business in Greenwich, Connecticut. Defendant, Pacific Life
    Insurance Company, is a Nebraska insurance company with its principal place of
    business in Newport Beach, California.         Defendant, Pacific Life & Annuity
    Company, is an Arizona insurance company with its principal place of business in
    Newport Beach, California. Defendant, Reliastar Life Insurance Company, is a
    Minnesota insurance corporation with its principal place of business in Minneapolis,
    Minnesota. Defendant, Reliastar Life Insurance Company of New York, is a New
    York insurance company with its principal place of business in Woodbury, New
    York. And Defendant, MMD Resources, LLP, is an Arizona limited partnership
    with its principal place of business in Scottsdale, Arizona.
    Defendant, Mark S. Davis, is a former officer and shareholder of EMSI and a
    guarantor of MMD Resources, LLP’s obligations under the SPA. He is named in
    the Complaint both in his individual capacity and as guarantor. Defendant, Robert P.
    Brook, is a former officer in EMSI’s Healthcare Services division and a former
    shareholder of EMSI.
    Non-party, EMSI Holding Company, is a medical information services
    company which, “[a]mong other things, [] collects and codes medical records,
    performs in-home health assessments, and supports clinical trials and drug-testing
    3
    specimen collections.”2 At the time of the Acquisition, EMSI’s three main business
    units were Healthcare Services, Insurance Services, and Investigative Services. The
    Healthcare Services unit offers risk adjustment services to health plans and aids
    employers in drug and alcohol testing and identity verification. The Insurance
    Services unit aids life insurers with underwriting requirements and electronic
    application processing services.       The Investigative Services segment offers
    investigative services to property, casualty and life insurance carriers.
    B. EMSI Engages in a Sales Process
    Defendants received their equity in EMSI through an out-of-court
    restructuring in 2005, and soon afterwards began attempting to sell their interests in
    the Company. This included formal sales processes in 2009 and 2012––neither of
    which resulted in a sale. In 2015, Defendants again decided to explore a sale of their
    equity in EMSI, beginning the sales process with the release of a Confidential
    Information Memorandum (the “CIM”) on April 30, 2015. The CIM projected a
    rosy outlook for EMSI’s future, even though this was out of line with historical
    trends including a decline in profitability for the most recent fiscal year.
    Plaintiff responded to the CIM in the summer of 2015 and the parties
    negotiated the Acquisition from July through November 2015. Throughout these
    2
    Verified Compl. (“Compl.”) ¶ 21.
    4
    negotiations, the Defendants sent interim financial projections that forecast
    “significant near-term growth potential.”3 Plaintiff ultimately used the reported
    EBITDA of $10.2 million for the trailing twelve months to price the Acquisition.
    Based on this reported EBITDA, Plaintiff agreed to purchase EMSI on November 3,
    2015 for $85 million.
    C. The Relevant Provisions of the SPA
    The SPA recognized the distinction between the Sellers and the Company.4
    This distinction made sense given that, other than Davis and Brook, who were both
    Sellers and members of Company management, the other Sellers were stockholders
    who had received their equity in the Company through a restructuring. Based on the
    allegations in the Complaint, there is no indication that the “Institutional Sellers”
    (meaning those other than Davis and Brook) were at all involved in the management
    of the Company.
    The structure of the SPA is familiar to those who regularly encounter such
    agreements. Article I outlined the transaction and set the purchase price: $85 million
    with certain contemplated adjustments. Importantly, Article I also identified an
    3
    Compl. ¶ 28.
    4
    The SPA defines the “Sellers” as Contrarian Funds, LLC, Pacific Life Insurance
    Company, Pacific Life & Annuity Company, Reliastar Life Insurance Company, Reliastar
    Life Insurance Company of New York, Mark S. Davis (both individually and on behalf of
    MMD Resources, LLP), and Robert P Brook. See Transmittal Aff. of Lauren K. Neal in
    Supp. of Pl.’s Br. in Opp. to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss Ex. A (“SPA”) Preamble.
    5
    adjustment for an “Escrow Amount,” $9,562,500, which is a feature of the parties’
    agreed-upon indemnification scheme.5 Article II outlined a post-closing purchase
    price adjustment procedure that included, inter alia, a process whereby the parties
    would “jointly engage [a] Settlement Auditor” to resolve disputes regarding Net
    Working Capital and other identified purchase price adjustments.6 Any purchase
    price adjustments determined to be due the Buyer were to be paid out of the Escrow
    Funds and, “for the avoidance of doubt,” the SPA made clear that “to the extent the
    then-remaining Escrow Funds are insufficient to pay the full amount of any such
    deficiency, no Seller (or other Escrow Payee) will have any liability to Buyer for
    such deficiency.”7
    Article III set forth each of the Seller’s representations and warranties to the
    Buyer. They are noticeably more limited than those provided by the Company in
    Article IV. Here again, this is not surprising given that the Institutional Sellers were
    investors in, not managers of, the Company. Article III closes with the following
    language:
    5
    SPA § 1.4(a).
    6
    SPA § 2.3.
    7
    SPA § 2.4(b).
    6
    NO ADDITIONAL REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES.
    EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THE
    TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS, SUCH SELLERS EXPRESSLY
    DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES OF
    ANY KIND OR NATURE, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO THE
    CONDITION, VALUE, OR QUALITY OF THE COMMON SHARES
    OR THE BUSINESS OR THE ASSETS OR THE OPERATIONS OF
    THE EMSI ENTITIES OR ANY OTHER MATTER, AND SUCH
    SELLER SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION
    OR     WARRANTY     OF   MERCHANTABILITY,    USAGE
    SUITABILITY, OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE
    WITH RESPECT TO THE COMMON SHARES, THE BUSINESS,
    SUCH ASSETS, SUCH OPERATIONS, OR ANY PART THEREOF,
    OR AS TO THE WORKMANSHIP THEREOF, OR THE ABSENCE
    OF ANY DEFECTS THEREIN, WHETHER LATENT OR PATENT,
    IT BEING UNDERSTOOD THAT THE COMMON SHARES, THE
    BUSINESS, SUCH ASSETS AND SUCH OPERATIONS ARE
    ACQUIRED, REDEEMED, OR TERMINATED, AS APPLICABLE,
    ‘AS IS, WHERE IS’ ON THE CLOSING DATE, AND IN THEIR
    PRESENT CONDITION.8
    Article IV contains the Company’s more expansive set of representations and
    warranties, several of which are at issue here. These included representations that
    the “unaudited consolidated balance sheets, statement of operations, and cash flows
    of the EMSI Entities for the six-month period ended September 30, 2015 . . . have
    been prepared in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis throughout
    the periods covered thereby”;9 that there had been no “change[] in any significant
    respect in any business practice” from March 31, 2015 to the close of the
    8
    SPA § 3.9.
    9
    SPA §§ 4.17(a)(ii), 4.17(b).
    7
    Acquisition;10 that there had been no “change in the method of accounting or cash
    management practices” from March 31, 2015 to the close of the Acquisition;11 that
    there had been no “accelerat[ion of] the collection of or discount[ing of] any
    accounts receivable”;12 that there had been no “action or fail[ure] to take any action
    that has had, or could reasonably be expected to have, the effect of accelerating to
    pre-Closing periods sales to customers or others that would otherwise be expected
    to occur after the Closing”;13 that there had been no agreements to change either the
    Company’s business practices or accounting methods from the time period from
    March 31, 2015 and the close of the Acquisition;14 that there had been no “Company
    Material Adverse Effect” since March 31, 2015;15 and that the Company Disclosure
    Schedule incorporated within the SPA “contains true and complete copies” of the
    interim financial statements.16
    10
    SPA §§ 4.9(a)(i), 4.17(a)(i).
    11
    SPA § 4.9(a)(viii).
    12
    SPA § 4.9(a)(xi).
    13
    SPA § 4.9(a)(xiv).
    14
    SPA § 4.9(a)(xvii).
    15
    SPA § 4.9(c). “Company Material Adverse Effect” means, with certain designated
    exceptions, “any development, circumstance, change, event or condition that, individually
    or in the aggregate, has had or is reasonably likely to have a materially adverse effect on
    the business of the EMSI Entities, taken as a whole . . .” SPA Article XI.
    16
    SPA § 4.17(a)(ii).
    8
    Article IV closes with a disclaimer nearly identical to the disclaimer in Article III:
    EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THE
    TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS, THE COMPANY EXPRESSLY
    DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES OF
    ANY KIND OR NATURE, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO THE
    CONDITION, VALUE, OR QUALITY OF THE COMMON SHARES
    OR THE BUSINESS OR THE ASSETS OR THE OPERATIONS OF
    THE EMSI ENTITIES OR ANY OTHER MATTER, AND THE
    COMPANY       SPECIFICALLY      DISCLAIMS       ANY
    REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY,
    USAGE SUITABILITY, OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR
    PURPOSE WITH RESPECT TO THE COMMON SHARES, THE
    BUSINESS, SUCH ASSETS, SUCH OPERATIONS, OR ANY PART
    THEREOF, OR AS TO THE WORKMANSHIP THEREOF, OR THE
    ABSENCE OF ANY DEFECTS THEREIN, WHETHER LATENT
    OR PATENT, IT BEING UNDERSTOOD THAT THE COMMON
    SHARES, THE BUSINESS, SUCH ASSETS AND SUCH
    OPERATIONS     ARE    ACQUIRED,    REDEEMED,     OR
    TERMINATED, AS APPLICABLE, ‘AS IS, WHERE IS’ ON THE
    CLOSING DATE, AND IN THEIR PRESENT CONDITION, AND
    THAT BUYER SHALL RELY ON ITS OWN EXAMINATION AND
    INVESTIGATION THEREOF.17
    As an accent to the disclaimers, in Article V, the Buyer represented that it was
    only relying on the promises and representations contained in the SPA in a
    straightforward non-reliance clause:
    The Buyer acknowledges that the representations and warranties of the
    Company and Sellers expressly contained in this Agreement constitute
    the sole and exclusive representations and warranties of the Company
    and Sellers to Buyer in connection with the Transaction Documents and
    the transactions contemplated thereby. Buyer acknowledges that any
    financial projections or other forward-looking statements provided by
    the EMSI Entities are for illustrative purposes only and are not and will
    not be deemed to be relied upon by Buyer in executing, delivering the
    17
    SPA § 4.26.
    9
    Transaction Documents and performing the transactions contemplated
    thereby. Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing in this Section 5.7
    shall limit the right of Buyer to rely on the representations and
    warranties, covenants and agreements set forth in this Agreement or in
    any Schedule or Exhibit (or in any certificate delivered with respect
    thereto hereunder) or Buyer’s right to indemnification hereunder.18
    The parties also negotiated a comprehensive indemnification regime within
    Article X of the SPA. The Seller’s indemnification obligations are set forth in
    Section 10.2:
    Subject to the other provisions of this Article X, (including, without
    limitation, Section 10.4), each Seller shall . . . indemnify and hold
    harmless . . . the “Buyer Indemnified Parties” [of which Plaintiff is a
    member] . . . from any and all Losses which any of the Buyer
    Indemnified Parties may sustain arising out of: (a) any breach of any
    representation or warranty of such Seller or the Company contained in
    this Agreement; (b) any breach of any covenant or agreement of such
    Seller that is contained in this Agreement . . .19
    The limits upon Seller’s indemnification obligations are provided in
    Section 10.4:
    Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement (including,
    without limitation, Section 10.2) . . . : (b) The Buyer Indemnified
    Parties shall not be entitled to indemnification under Section 10.2(a) for
    any and all Losses unless and until the aggregate amount of all of the
    Losses . . . for which the Buyer Indemnified Parties would otherwise be
    entitled to indemnification pursuant to Section 10.2(a) exceed $450,000
    (the “Basket Amount”), in which event, subject to the terms of this
    Article X and the Escrow Agreement, the Buyer Indemnified Parties
    will be entitled to be indemnified in accordance with Section 10.2(a)
    18
    SPA § 5.7.
    19
    SPA § 10.2.
    10
    for such Losses . . . in excess of the Basket Amount to the extent of,
    and exclusively from, any then-remaining Escrow Funds.20
    Section 10.4(d) further limits Seller’s indemnification liability to the amount
    of the set-aside Escrow Funds by providing that, “[n]otwithstanding anything to the
    contrary in this Agreement”:
    The Buyer Indemnified Parties shall only be entitled to indemnification
    (i) with respect to Losses in respect of the representations and
    warranties (other than the Excluded Representations and the Specific
    Indemnity Items) to the extent of, and exclusively from, any then-
    remaining Escrow Funds . . .21
    Section 10.10(a) makes clear that indemnification is the exclusive remedy for
    a Seller’s breach of a representation, warranty or covenant:
    From and after Closing (except . . . in the case of claims for fraud or
    willful or intentional misrepresentation), the sole and exclusive remedy
    of the Seller Indemnified Parties and the Buyer Indemnified Parties for
    any breach or inaccuracy, or alleged breach or inaccuracy, of any
    representation, warranty or covenant under, or for any other claims
    arising in connection with, any of the Transaction Documents, other
    than specific performance, shall be indemnification in accordance with
    this Article X, subject to the limitations set forth herein . . .22
    Section 10.10(b) of the SPA then appears to carve out from this limitation
    “any” claim “based upon fraud”:
    20
    SPA § 10.4(b).
    21
    SPA § 10.4(d).
    22
    SPA § 10.10(a).
    11
    Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary (including
    . . . any limitations on remedies or recoveries . . .) nothing in this
    Agreement (or elsewhere) shall limit or restrict (i) any Indemnified
    Party’s rights or ability to maintain or recover any amounts in
    connection with any action or claim based upon fraud in connection
    with the transactions contemplated hereby . . .23
    D. Plaintiff Discovers Fraudulent Misrepresentations in EMSI’s Financial
    Statements and Related SPA Reps and Warranties After Closing
    EMSI’s financial performance dramatically declined after the close of the
    Acquisition, in contrast to the bright future for the Company the Defendants had
    forecast throughout the sales process.24 This prompted Plaintiff to conduct a forensic
    investigation which revealed “a Company that was ready to implode because of
    months of financial manipulation, acceleration of revenue, and recognition of sham
    revenue and earnings.”25 Plaintiff alleges specifically that the financial fraud was
    implemented through manipulation of the Company’s work in progress (“WIP”)
    model by inflating volume and prices, accelerating revenue recognition for projects
    the Company was not yet working on, overstating assumptions about what
    percentage of contracts would be completed and falsifying its progress on ongoing
    projects.
    23
    SPA § 10.10(b).
    24
    Compl. ¶¶ 2–11, 161–73.
    25
    Compl. ¶ 175.
    12
    As alleged in the Complaint, the Company’s employees knowingly engaged
    in the scheme to manipulate the WIP in the ramp up to sell the Company. In June
    2015, the Controller, the Executive Vice President of the Healthcare Division and
    the Division Controller for the Healthcare Division emailed EMSI employees about
    millions of dollars in WIP revenue that needed to be written off the financial
    statements. As instructed, EMSI employees thereafter created a new version of the
    Company’s financials that wrote off substantial WIP. During the diligence process,
    however, EMSI accounting and operations employees reinstated this revenue on the
    books without explanation or disclosure to the Buyer. EMSI’s Division Controller
    for the Healthcare Division was repeatedly told by the Executive Vice President of
    the Healthcare Division manually to override parts of the WIP model so that revenue
    recognition would be accelerated. When she expressed her unease with these
    practices, the Division Controller was told that this direction was coming from
    “management.”26 EMSI employees also created a fake data file in June 2015 to
    recognize revenue on a project that had not yet been approved by the client.
    This was part of a greater pattern where, from June 2015 until the closing,
    EMSI employees would routinely recognize revenue on projects that the employees
    knew were not approved by clients. EMSI’s Executive Vice President of the
    26
    Compl. ¶ 86.
    13
    Healthcare Division and the Division Controller also systematically increased
    completion percentages in the WIP model in August 2015 to inflate revenue and
    accounts receivable. When the Division Controller again expressed her view that
    the changes were “arbitrary and indefensible,” the CFO responded that the changes
    were directed by management and would remain intact.27 The Executive Vice
    President of the Healthcare Division was also alerted that the same project was
    included twice in EMSI’s financial records in October 2015, leading to the
    recognition of over $500,000 in extra revenue, and yet he chose to do nothing to fix
    the error.
    E. The Parties Engage an Independent Auditor to Make a Net Working
    Capital Adjustment
    After discovering the fraud and realizing that it had received substantially less
    than the $41 million in working capital it had bargained for, Plaintiff promptly
    initiated the so-called “net working capital adjustment process” that was laid out in
    Article II of the SPA. In that process, Defendants conceded that EMSI’s net working
    capital was overstated by over $4 million in the interim financial statements and
    returned those funds to Plaintiff, but disputed Plaintiff’s contention that another $5.8
    million in accounts receivable identified in the Company’s financial statements
    could not be justified under GAAP. To resolve that dispute, as mandated by the
    27
    Compl. ¶ 115.
    14
    SPA, Plaintiff initiated a formal dispute resolution process with an auditor (the
    “Settlement Auditor”) to determine the appropriate GAAP accounting.                      The
    Settlement Auditor agreed with Plaintiff and concluded that EMSI’s financial
    statements overstated its accounts receivable by the $5.8 million claimed by Plaintiff
    in addition to the $4 million net capital overage that Defendants had conceded.
    The aggregate purchase price adjustments made pursuant to the SPA totaled
    $9,894,520 (the voluntary adjustment of $4,085,379, plus the Settlement Auditor
    determination of $5,809,150), which exceeds the $9,562,500 placed in escrow. The
    Escrow Funds are gone.28 Consequently, it is not disputed that if Plaintiff’s claims
    in this action are subject to the contractual limitations set forth in the SPA, which
    would cap Plaintiff’s recovery at the available Escrow Funds, then, as a practical
    matter, the claim is not viable.
    F. Procedural History
    Plaintiff initiated this action to recover the shortfall in its recovery of the
    Settlement Auditor’s net working capital determination by having this Court
    “confirm” the findings as an award under the Delaware Arbitration Act and also to
    “recover the inflated price it paid as a result of the Company’s fraud” through the
    28
    As the Joint Written Instruction makes clear, the only remaining funds held by the escrow
    agent after such disbursement would “constitute the Sales Tax Escrow Amount” (Ex. 4),
    which is a separate pool of money set aside solely for potential sales tax liabilities that is
    not available to satisfy any purchase price adjustment or indemnification obligation (see
    SPA § 1.4(a) & Art. XI).
    15
    indemnification provisions in the SPA.29 Defendants promptly moved to dismiss the
    Complaint arguing that Plaintiff’s recovery under the SPA was limited to the now-
    depleted Escrow Funds and that the Settlement Auditor’s findings did not constitute
    a binding award that can be converted to a confirmed judgment under Delaware law.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Motion to Dismiss Standard
    In considering this motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under
    Rule 12(b)(6), the standard is well settled:
    (i) all well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as true; (ii) even
    vague allegations are ‘well-pleaded’ if they give the opposing party
    notice of the claim; (iii) the Court must draw all reasonable inferences
    in favor of the non-moving party; and (iv) dismissal is inappropriate
    unless the ‘plaintiff would not be entitled to recover under any
    reasonably conceivable set of circumstances susceptible of proof.’30
    Questions involving contract interpretation can be answered on a motion to
    dismiss “[w]hen the language of a contract is plain and unambiguous.” 31 But
    dismissal of a contract dispute under Rule 12(b)(6) is proper “only if the defendants’
    interpretation is the only reasonable construction as a matter of law.” 32 If the
    29
    Pl.’s Br. in Opp. to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (“Answering Br.”) 19.
    30
    Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 
    812 A.2d 894
    , 896–97 (Del. 2002) (citations omitted).
    31
    Capital Corp. v. GC Sun Hldgs., L.P., 
    910 A.2d 1020
    , 1030 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    32
    VLIW Tech., LLC v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 
    840 A.2d 606
    , 615 (Del. 2003).
    16
    Plaintiff has offered a reasonable construction of the contract, and that construction
    supports the claims asserted in the complaint, then the Court must deny the motion
    to dismiss even if the defendant’s construction is also reasonable.33
    B. Plaintiff has Adequately Pled an Indemnification Claim Based on Fraud
    that Is Not Capped by the Escrow Funds
    Defendants offer two grounds upon which the Court must dismiss Plaintiff’s
    indemnification claim. First, they argue that the claim is subject to the limitation
    within the SPA that would cap any recovery at the amount of available Escrow
    Funds, which both sides acknowledge are now depleted. According to Defendants,
    Plaintiff’s contrary construction of the SPA, which would allow any claim “based
    upon fraud” to proceed against the Sellers without regard to the contractual limits on
    recovery, cannot be squared with the clear and unambiguous language of the SPA.
    Second, Defendants maintain that even if Plaintiff’s interpretation of the SPA is
    reasonable, the Complaint fails to plead fraud with particularity as required by Court
    of Chancery Rule 9(b). For reasons explained below, at this pleadings stage, neither
    ground is persuasive.
    33
    See Vanderbilt Income and Growth Assocs., L.L.C. v. Arvida/JMB Managers, Inc., 
    691 A.2d 609
    , 613 (Del. 1996) (“On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, a trial court
    cannot choose between two differing reasonable interpretations of ambiguous
    documents.”).
    17
    1. Abry Partners V, L.P. v. F&W Acquisition LLC and its Implications
    Here
    Before I turn to the specifics of this case, it is appropriate to dilate for a
    moment on this court’s seminal opinion in Abry Partners V, L.P. v. F&W Acquisition
    LLC, which Defendants claim served as a road map for the provisions they bargained
    for in the SPA.34 In Abry, a private equity firm purchased the shares of a publishing
    company from another private equity seller and thereafter sought rescission of the
    stock purchase agreement due to alleged fraud on the part of the company and the
    seller.35 This scenario served as a platform for the court to consider the state of the
    law in Delaware with respect to freedom of contract, risk allocation in transactions
    between sophisticated parties and the consequences of fraud in the sales process.
    Defendants are correct that these issues are front and center in this case.
    The contract at issue in Abry contained a broad non-reliance clause. Having
    agreed to this provision, the court was not tolerant of the buyer’s claim that the seller
    had made false, extra-contractual promises upon which the buyer relied when it
    agreed to close the transaction.36 Under such circumstances, to allow the buyer to
    34
    
    891 A.2d 1032
     (Del. Ch. 2006).
    35
    
    Id. at 1035
    .
    36
    
    Id. at 1059
     (explaining that “[t]he integration clause must contain ‘language that . . . can
    be said to add up to a clear anti-reliance clause by which the plaintiff has contractually
    promised that it did not rely upon statements outside the contract’s four corners in deciding
    to sign the contract’”).
    18
    pursue a fraud claim based on extra-contractual representations would be tantamount
    to condoning the buyer’s fraud in representing in the contract that it had not relied
    upon any representations beyond those that appeared in the agreement.37
    In addition to alleging extra-contractual fraud, the buyer in Abry also alleged
    that the seller and the company intentionally misrepresented facts in the contract.
    This contractual fraud, the buyer alleged, allowed it avoid the limitations in the
    agreement that precluded the buyer from pursuing rescission for breach of
    representations and warranties and capped damages for indemnification at $20
    million, the amount placed in escrow to cover any post-closing claims of the buyer.38
    The seller disagreed and argued that the parties had agreed that the seller’s risk for
    indemnification would be capped in all instances at the amount the seller had
    bargained for––$20 million.39
    37
    
    Id.
     See also 
    id. at 1035
     (“Recognizing that the case law of this court gives effect to non-
    reliance provisions that disclaim reliance on extra-contractual representations, the Buyer
    has premised its rescission claim solely on the falsity of representations and warranties
    contained within the Stock Purchase Agreement itself.”); 
    id. at 1058
     (“The enforcement of
    non-reliance clauses recognizes that parties with free will should say no rather than lie in a
    contract.”).
    38
    
    Id. at 1059
    .
    39
    
    Id. at 1052
     (“In summary, though, the [Seller’s] argument proceeds as follows. The
    Stock Purchase Agreement is a carefully negotiated document that allocates economic risk.
    It was entered into by sophisticated parties in the private equity markets. In that
    Agreement, the parties carefully set forth which representations and warranties were made
    by the Company and which were made by the Seller. The Buyer also explicitly promised
    that the only information it relied upon in entering into the Agreement was that represented
    and warranted in the Agreement itself, thus contractually pledging that it had not relied on
    19
    After balancing Delaware’s strong contractarian preferences against the well-
    settled public policy of this State that abhors fraud, the court concluded that, “to the
    extent that the Stock Purchase Agreement purports to limit the Seller’s exposure for
    its own conscious participation of lies to the Buyer,”40 the provision was void as a
    matter of law. Accordingly, the court declined to dismiss the buyer’s claim of
    contractual fraud against the seller. But the court made clear that the claim survived
    because the buyer had pled facts that allowed a reasonable inference either that the
    seller knew that the representations and warranties made by the company were false
    or that the seller itself had made fraudulent representations and warranties.41 In this
    regard, the court emphasized that the buyer could avoid the bargained-for limits on
    its remedies only if it could prove that the seller acted with an “illicit state of mind”;42
    otherwise, if the buyer’s proof revealed only that the company had misrepresented
    extra-contractual representations. In addition, the Buyer agreed to the exclusive Remedy
    Provision stating that the only remedy that it had against the Seller for contractual
    misrepresentations was limited to a . . . Indemnity Claim. And, in that event, the Seller’s
    liability is capped at the extent of the Indemnity Fund for $20 million. Furthermore, the
    Agreement explicitly indicated that the Exclusive Remedy Provision and limitation on
    liability contained in the contract were bargained for and reflected in the sale price.”).
    40
    
    Id. at 1064
    . See also 
    id. at 1059
     (noting the “strong tradition in American law that holds
    that contracts may not insulate a party from damages or rescission resulting from the
    party’s fraudulent conduct”).
    41
    
    Id. at 1064
    .
    42
    
    Id.
    20
    facts without the seller’s knowledge of the falsity, then the buyer would be limited
    to the bargained-for indemnity claim and its associated limitations.43
    2. The Parties Have Offered Reasonable Competing Interpretations
    of the SPA
    Abry provides a solid analytical framework within which to analyze the
    arguments of buyers and sellers who seek to exploit the risk allocation provisions of
    their transactional agreements, bargained-for on a clear day but deployed in the
    midst of post-closing controversy. As our courts have recognized, “[d]eal-related
    indemnification provisions address ‘post-closing risk allocation.’”44 They serve the
    laudable purpose of “mak[ing] the contractual structure feasible or more attractive
    to the participants.”45 Parties can shift risks of loss in their indemnification schemes
    as is appropriate and necessary to get the deal done, and can disclaim certain claims
    and remedies as well.46 But “Delaware’s strong public policy against intentional
    43
    
    Id.
     (stating that the buyer “has no moral justification for escaping its own voluntarily-
    accepted limits on its remedies against the Seller absent proof that the Seller itself acted in
    a consciously improper manner”).
    44
    White v. Curo Texas Hldgs., LLC, 
    2016 WL 6091692
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Sept. 9, 2016).
    45
    Delphi Easter P’rs Ltd. v. Spectacular P’rs, Inc., 
    1993 WL 328079
    , at *2 (Del. Ch.
    Aug. 6, 1993).
    46
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1058
    .
    21
    fraud” will not permit a party to a contract to disclaim or eliminate a claim that it
    made “a knowingly false contractual representation.”47
    The SPA contains a non-reliance clause in Section 5.7, where Plaintiff
    specifically disclaimed any reliance on extra-contractual representations. As Abry
    reiterates, these types of non-reliance clauses will be upheld where the clause
    contains “language that . . . can be said to add up to a clear anti-reliance clause by
    which the plaintiff has contractually promised that it did not rely upon statements
    outside the contract’s four corners in deciding to sign the contract.”48 Section 5.7
    arguably fits that bill. Plaintiff is also bound by the SPA’s separation of the
    representations and warranties of the Seller from those of the Company and by the
    language at the end of Article III which states clearly that the representations and
    warranties in that article are the only ones being made by the Seller. Given this
    scheme, it is not surprising that Plaintiff has not sought to stake its fraud claim
    47
    Airborne Health, Inc. v. Squid Soap, LP, 
    984 A.2d 126
    , 136–37 (Del. Ch. 2009) (citing
    Abry P’rs, 
    891 A.2d at
    1061–64).
    48
    Kronenberg v. Katz, 
    872 A.2d 569
    , 593 (Del. Ch. 2004).
    22
    against the Sellers on extra-contractual ground.49 Under Abry and its progeny,50
    therefore, absent a contractual portal, the Plaintiff (Buyer) cannot reach the
    Defendants (Sellers) on an indemnification claim beyond the bargained-for limits
    (the Escrow Funds) unless Plaintiff can demonstrate that Defendants acted with an
    “illicit state of mind” or “knew that the Company’s representations and warranties
    were false.”51
    Defendants maintain that they took pains when they negotiated the SPA to
    honor Delaware’s public policy and the holding in Abry by preserving the parties’
    rights to bring “a non-contractual claim based on fraud” outside of the “strictures
    that apply to contractual indemnification claims.” 52 Specifically, consistent with
    Abry, the SPA, at Section 10.10(a), preserves claims for “fraud or willful or
    49
    See Abry P’rs, 
    891 A.2d at 1057
     (stating that “a party cannot promise, in a clear
    integration clause of a negotiated agreement, that it will not rely on promises and
    representations outside of the agreement and then shirk its own bargain in favor of a ‘but
    we did rely on those other representations’ fraudulent inducement claim”). I note that
    Article X may be read to allow extra-contractual claims for fraud notwithstanding the non-
    reliance clause. Indeed, as discussed below, that is how Defendants interpret the parties’
    bargained-for indemnification scheme. Plaintiff, of course, has not pursued an extra-
    contractual fraud claim here and one can only surmise that it made that strategic decision,
    at least in part, based upon its appreciation that the non-reliance clause would likely
    complicate the prosecution of that claim.
    50
    See e.g. Great Hill Equity P’rs IV, LP v. SIG Growth Equity Fund I, LLP, 
    2014 WL 6703980
    , at *27 (Del. Ch. Nov. 26, 2014).
    51
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1064
    .
    52
    Reply Br. of Defs. in Supp. Of their Mot. To Dismiss the Verified Compl. “Reply Br.”
    at 2–3.
    23
    intentional misrepresentation” by the Sellers within and subject to the
    indemnification framework.          Section 10.10(b) then makes clear that extra-
    contractual claims “based upon fraud” against the Sellers are not subject to the
    bargained-for limits on remedies for contractual indemnification.
    According to Defendants, this scheme, consistent with Delaware law,
    “provides for ‘two paths to recovery’ for a purchaser alleging misrepresentations in
    connection with a stock purchase agreement: ‘(1) suing contractually and going
    through the indemnification provisions or (2) suing for fraud.’”53 This is because,
    in Defendants’ reading, Abry makes clear that “[i]f the Company’s managers
    intentionally misrepresented facts to the Buyer without knowledge of falsity by the
    Seller, then the Buyer . . . must proceed with an Indemnity Claim subject to the
    Indemnity Fund’s liability cap.”54 Thus, Defendants maintain that Plaintiff’s only
    options for recovery are either to (1) seek indemnification for breaches of
    representations and warranties from the now-dissipated Escrow Funds, or (2) bring
    a claim for fraud against Defendants based on the Sellers’ own fraudulent actions
    subject, of course, to this Court’s heightened pleading standards for fraud.
    53
    Reply Br. at 1 (citing Anvil Hldg. Corp. v. Iron Acq. Co., Inc., 
    2013 WL 2249655
    , at *9
    (Del. Ch. May 17, 2013)).
    54
    Abry P’rs, 
    891 A.2d at 1064
     (emphasis added).
    24
    Plaintiff disagrees and maintains that the parties took a step beyond Abry in
    Section 10.10(b), in order to “deal[] with the precise situation identified here,” by
    allowing the Buyer, without limitation or restriction, “to recover any amounts in
    connection with any action or claim ‘based upon fraud’ in connection with the
    contemplated transaction.”55 Plaintiff contends that, in this respect, unlike in Abry,
    the SPA deliberately “allocated to Sellers the risk that the Company was knowingly
    misrepresenting itself when it entered into the SPA.”56 And since its indemnification
    claim is “based upon” the allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations in the
    representations and warranties by the Company, as opposed to merely innocent
    breaches of the SPA, Plaintiff argues that the claim is not subject to the limitations
    on recovery imposed by Section 10.4(b). This is so, Plaintiff maintains, even if it
    has not pled and cannot prove that the Sellers acted with scienter in connection with
    their own representations and warranties or knew that the Company’s
    representations and warranties were false when made.
    Contract construction, in this instance, is complicated by two competing
    “notwithstanding           clauses”—one      in        Section   10.10(b)   providing   that
    “[n]otwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary (including . . . any
    limitations on remedies or recoveries . . .) nothing in this Agreement (or elsewhere)
    55
    Answering Br. at 2–3; SPA § 10.10(b).
    56
    Answering Br. at 3.
    25
    shall limit or restrict . . . any Indemnified Party’s rights or ability to maintain or
    recover any amounts in connection with any action or claim based upon fraud in
    connection with the transactions contemplated hereby”; and the other in
    Section 10.4(d) providing that “[n]otwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
    Agreement (including, without limitation, Section 10.2) . . . : (b) The Buyer
    Indemnified Parties shall not be entitled to indemnification under Section 10.2(a) for
    any and all Losses . . . in excess of . . . and exclusively from, any then-remaining
    Escrow Funds.”57 Generally, “[t]he use of such a ‘notwithstanding’ clause clearly
    signals the drafter’s intention that the provisions of the ‘notwithstanding’ section
    override conflicting provisions of any other section.”58 This tenant of construction
    is less useful when the contract contains two apparently conflicting
    “notwithstanding” clauses, both of which, at first glance, appear to “override” the
    other.59
    57
    SPA §§ 10.10(b) (emphasis added); 10.4(d) (emphasis added).
    58
    In re Estate of Crist, 
    863 A.2d 255
    , 258 (Del. Ch. 2004), aff’d, 
    876 A.2d 602
     (Del. 2005).
    See also Medicis Pharm. Corp. v. Anacor Pharm., Inc., 
    2013 WL 4509652
    , at *8 n.46 (Del.
    Ch. Aug. 12, 2013) (citing Cisneros v. Alpine Ridge Gp., 
    508 U.S. 10
    , 18 (1993) (“[T]he
    use of such a ‘notwithstanding’ clause clearly signals the drafters intention that the
    provisions of the ‘notwithstanding’ section override conflicting provisions of any other
    section.”)).
    59
    Cf. Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 
    991 A.2d 1153
    , 1160 (Del. 2010) (“An unreasonable
    interpretation produces an absurd result or one that no reasonable person would have
    accepted when entering the contract.”).
    26
    Defendants reconcile these apparently contradictory provisions by arguing
    that Section 10.10(b) only removes the limitations on liability for extra-contractual
    fraud claims.60 Under this construction, the limits imposed by Sections 10.2(a) and
    10.4(d) still apply to the Plaintiff’s claim for indemnification against the Sellers
    based on fraud by the Company to the extent the claim arises from
    misrepresentations within the contract.61         Plaintiff responds that Defendants’
    proffered construction renders the “notwithstanding” clause in Section 10.10(b)
    meaningless.     According to Plaintiff, the “specific ‘notwithstanding’ clause in
    Section 10.10(b), which expressly disclaims ‘all limitations on remedies or
    recoveries,’ must prevail over the general ‘notwithstanding’ clause in Section 10.4,
    60
    This construction of 10.10(b) would also take the indemnification scheme beyond Abry,
    which held that the non-reliance clause in the stock purchase agreement at issue precluded
    the buyer from suing on extra-contractual representations, even if fraudulent. Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1059
    .
    61
    Defendants also contend that Plaintiff’s singular focus on Section 10.10(b) guts the
    parties’ carefully negotiated indemnification regime and renders meaningless several
    provisions of the SPA, including Section 10.4(d)’s restriction of indemnification recoveries
    to “then-remaining escrow funds” and Section 10.10(a)’s recognition that extra-contractual
    fraud fits within the indemnification regime. According to Defendants, Plaintiff’s
    construction of the SPA would violate the settled canon of contract construction that
    requires the court to interpret contracts so as to not render a provision “meaningless or
    illusory.” Coughlan v. NXP B.V., 
    2011 WL 5299491
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Nov. 4, 2011).
    27
    which is included in the preamble clause, and not specifically tied to the
    indemnification limits in Section 10.4(b).”62
    At this juncture, I find that it is at least reasonable to view the competing
    “notwithstanding” clauses as conflicting and to interpret the “notwithstanding”
    clause in Section 10.10(b) as trumping the “notwithstanding” clause in
    Section 10.4.63    Whether the parties intended the “notwithstanding” clause in
    Section 10.10(b) to go beyond Abry by removing limits on the Seller’s liability for
    “any” claim “based upon fraud,” including claims that the Company alone
    committed fraud in its contractual representations and warranties, cannot be gleaned
    as a matter of law from the four corners of the SPA.
    To be sure, Defendant’s construction of Sections 10.10(b) and 10.4(d) as a
    sensible allocation to the Buyer of the Seller’s risk that the Company’s employees
    and managers were not honest brokers might ultimately prevail as the most
    reasonable.    But it is not the only reasonable construction allowed by these
    provisions. As Plaintiff notes, a reasonable construction of Section 10.10(b) is that
    it confirms, “[n]otwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary,”
    62
    Answering Br. 27 (citing Pontone v. Milso Indus. Corp., 
    100 A.3d 1023
    , 1049 (Del Ch.
    2014) (“[U]nder the rule of contract interpretation . . . specific provisions should prevail
    over general provisions.”)).
    63
    See Schiepisi v. Roberts, 
    974 N.Y.S.2d 446
    , 447 (N.Y. App. Div. 2013) (holding that
    under Delaware law dueling “notwithstanding” provisions in a contract created ambiguity
    and therefore denying summary judgment).
    28
    including “any limitations on remedies or recoveries,” that Plaintiff’s “rights or
    ability to maintain or recover” for “any action or claim based upon fraud” shall not
    be “limited or restricted.”64 This very broad language, apparently deliberate in its
    placement, does not delineate between “contractual” and “extra-contractual” fraud
    claims, but rather reasonably can be read to reflect that the parties agreed that there
    would be no limitations on recovery from the Sellers for any action or claim based
    upon fraud.65
    64
    SPA § 10.10(b) (emphasis added). See Unified Indus., Inc., 929 F.Supp. at 950
    (construing the phrase “claims involving fraud” as “contemplate[ing] a wider range of
    claims than those that actually allege a cause of action for fraud”).
    65
    See Alley v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    590 F.3d 1195
    , 1207 (11th Cir. 2009)
    (“The adjective ‘any’ has an expansive meaning and refers to ‘every’ or ‘all’ of the subject
    that it is describing.”). Delaware courts may look to dictionaries to aid in the search for
    plain meaning where contract terms are undefined. Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co. v. Esmark,
    Inc., 
    672 A.2d 41
    , 44 (Del. 1996). Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary has defined
    “any” as “one or some indiscriminately of whatever kind,” “one selected without
    restriction,” “one, some, or all indiscriminately of whatever quantity,” and “unmeasured or
    unlimited in amount, number, or extent.”               MERRIAM-WEBSTER’S COLLEGIATE
    DICTIONARY 53 (10th ed. 1996). See also U.S. v. Unified Indus., Inc., 
    929 F.Supp. 947
    ,
    950–51 (E.D. Va. 1996) (“The more plausible plain meaning of the phase ‘involving fraud’
    is that it contemplates a wider range of claims than those that actually allege a cause of
    action for fraud. Had Congress intended to limit the [relevant statute’s] exception to causes
    of action for fraud, the statute presumably would have so provided explicitly, by referring
    specifically to claims ‘of fraud’ or ‘for fraud.’ Instead, Congress chose to use the more
    general phrase, ‘any claim involving fraud.’ The use of this broader language reflects a
    congressional intent to except from [the statute] exclusivity not only causes of action for
    fraud in particular, but also actions the factual bases of which are intertwined with
    allegations of fraud.”).
    29
    “Dismissal, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) is proper only if the defendants’
    interpretation is the only reasonable construction as a matter of law.” 66 As Buyer’s
    construction of Section 10.10 is reasonable, and may or may not prove to be most
    reasonable, the Motion must be denied. “[I]nelegant drafting” has left the Court
    unable definitively to construe the indemnification provisions of the SPA in a
    manner that would enable final adjudication of this dispute at the pleading stage.67
    The Court will require extrinsic evidence to construe the ambiguous indemnification
    provisions within Article X before determining which of the competing
    interpretations reflects the parties’ intent with respect to indemnification for claims
    of fraud against the Seller arising from misrepresentations by the Company.68
    66
    See VLIW Tech., 
    840 A.2d at 615
    .
    67
    Stockman v. Heartland Indus. P’rs, LP, 
    2009 WL 2096213
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. July 14,
    2009) (noting that “inelegant drafting” had given rise to a dispute regarding the meaning
    of indemnification provisions within a partnership agreement).
    68
    See Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 
    702 A.2d 1228
    , 1232 (Del. 1997)
    (stating that where a contract is susceptible to multiple reasonable interpretations there is
    ambiguity, which then requires the reviewing court to consider extrinsic evidence in order
    to construe those ambiguous contract provisions).
    30
    3. Plaintiff has Adequately Pled Fraud by the Company
    Defendant contends that even if the SPA allows Plaintiff to seek
    indemnification without any caps based on fraudulent misrepresentations by the
    Company, Plaintiff has not pled fraud against the Company with the requisite
    particularity. To state a claim for fraud, a plaintiff must
    plead facts supporting a reasonable inference that: (1) the defendant
    falsely represented or omitted facts that the defendant had a duty to
    disclose; (2) the defendant knew or believed that the representation was
    false or made the representation with a reckless indifference to the truth;
    (3) the defendant intended to induce the plaintiff to act or refrain from
    acting; (4) the plaintiff acted in justifiable reliance on the
    representation; and (5) the plaintiff was injured by its reliance.69
    Court of Chancery Rule 9(b) requires that “[i]n all averments of fraud or mistake,
    the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake shall be stated with particularity.
    Malice, intent, knowledge and other condition of mind of a person may be averred
    generally.” Against this heightened pleading standard, to state a claim for fraud, a
    complaint must contain allegations of “the time, place and contents of the false
    representations, the facts misrepresented, as well as the identity of the person making
    the representation and what he obtained thereby.”70 And while Rule 9(b) allows a
    plaintiff to plead knowledge generally, a plaintiff “must allege sufficient facts from
    69
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1050
    .
    70
    Metro Commc’n Corp., BVI, v. Advanced Mobilecomm Techs. Inc., 
    854 A.2d 121
    , 144
    (Del. Ch. 2004) (citation omitted).
    31
    which it can reasonably be inferred that [whatever the defendant is alleged to have
    known] was knowable and that the defendants were in a position to know it.”71
    When a plaintiff alleges that fraudulent statements appear in a contract, the
    pleading burden is easily satisfied for elements other than knowledge for the simple
    reason that
    The plaintiff can readily identify who made what representations where
    and when, because the specific representations appear in the contract.
    The plaintiff likewise can readily identify what the defendant gained,
    which was to induce the plaintiff to enter into the contract. Having
    pointed to the representations, the plaintiff need only allege facts
    sufficient to support a reasonable inference that the representations
    were knowingly false.72
    Defendants assert that Plaintiff has not adequately pled the Company’s
    knowledge of the fraudulent statements and that, in any event, Plaintiff has not
    adequately pled that certain of the alleged misrepresentations were ever made. I
    disagree.
    a. Plaintiff has Adequately Pled the Company’s Knowledge
    Defendants argue first that the Complaint does not adequately allege that the
    Company acted with knowledge when it made the false representations in the SPA
    regarding the Company’s WIP model and the accuracy of the Company’s financial
    statements “because Plaintiff has not tied any knowledge of wrongdoing to the
    71
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1050
    .
    72
    Prairie Capital III, L.P. v. Double E Hldg. Corp., 
    132 A.3d 35
    , 62 (Del. Ch. 2015).
    32
    corporate agents responsible for making the Company’s representations.”73 They
    argue that the Complaint only contains allegations of lower-level employees
    engaging in fraudulent accounting practices and that unidentified senior-level
    employees may have acted with knowledge of the wrongdoing.
    To reiterate, Delaware law is that a plaintiff adequately pleads knowledge in
    the context of fraud when he pleads facts that allow a reasonable inference that the
    false representation was “knowable and [] the defendants were in a position to know
    it.”74 Nevertheless, Defendants urge this court to take guidance from federal
    securities fraud cases and adopt a more searching pleading standard75 that would
    impose a “stringent rule for inferences involving scienter.”76 Delaware has not
    73
    Opening Br. of Defs. in Supp. of their Mot. to Dismiss the Verified Compl. (“Opening
    Br.”) 23.
    74
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at 1050
     (holding that the Plaintiff had adequately pled knowledge where
    the seller’s employee had discussions with the buyer about the target company’s EBITDA
    and was in close contact with management of the target company about the target’s
    financials, placing him in a position to have knowledge of the falsity of the financial
    statements and with an obvious motive to engage in wrongdoing).
    75
    See Opening Br. 24–25. These federal securities fraud cases cited by the Defendants fall
    under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLRA”), which requires complaints
    to “state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted
    with the required state of mind.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2). In contrast, Delaware law and
    Court of Chancery Rule 9(b) only require that knowledge be “averred generally.”
    76
    Teamsters Local 445 Freight Div. Pension Fund v. Dynex Capital Inc., 
    531 F.3d 190
    ,
    194 (2d Cir. 2008).
    33
    adopted this more stringent pleading standard for common law fraud,77 and I decline
    to do so here.
    Under Delaware law, principles of agency law supply “the general rule that
    knowledge of an officer or director of a corporation will be imputed to the
    corporation.”78 More specifically, courts will impute the knowledge of corporate
    actors to its corporate employer “when the agent was acting within the scope of his
    authority.”79     Following this, for the Complaint adequately to plead that the
    Company had knowledge of the fraud, Plaintiff must simply plead that the
    Company’s employees had knowledge of the fraud.80
    77
    See Snowstorm Acq. Corp. v. Tecumseh Prod. Co., 
    739 F.Supp. 2d 686
    , 708 (D. Del.
    2010) (“In Delaware . . . a claim for common law fraud is not subject to the heightened
    pleading standards of the PSLRA . . .”).
    78
    Teachers Ret. Sys. of La. v. Aidinoff, 
    900 A.2d 654
    , 671 n.23 (Del. Ch. 2006). See also
    Albert v. Alex. Brown Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 
    2005 WL 2130607
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Aug. 26,
    2005) (“Delaware law states the knowledge of an agent acquired while acting within the
    scope of his or her authority is imputed to the principal.”).
    79
    Abry, 
    891 A.2d at
    1050 n.35 (citation omitted).
    80
    See Affordable Home Enters., Inc. v. Nelson, 
    1994 WL 315227
    , at *3 (Del. Super. Ct.
    May 25, 1994) (“Delaware law states the knowledge of an agent acquired while acting
    within the scope of his or her authority is imputable to the principal. Similarly, knowledge
    of an employee is imputed to the employer. This imputation occurs even if the agent does
    not communicate this knowledge to the principal/employer.”). See also Aidinoff, 
    900 A.2d at
    671 n.23; Alex. Brown, 
    2005 WL 2130607
    , at *11.
    34
    Plaintiff readily meets this standard. As illustrated in the following chart,
    produced in Plaintiff’s Answering Brief, the allegations in the Complaint that reveal
    Company knowledge of the alleged fraud—actual and imputed—are extensive.
    EMSI Employee                          Knowledge Allegations
    Chief Financial          Told the Division Controller for the Healthcare
    Officer, who              business not to ask questions when she was told by the
    reported to               Executive Vice President of Healthcare Operations to
    Defendants Brook          make arbitrary and objectively incorrect changes to the
    and Davis                 Company’s WIP model because they were
    “management decisions” that must be followed.
    (Compl. ¶¶ 113, 115).
     Scolded EMSI’s bankers when they scheduled a
    discussion about WIP, the very financial statement line
    item the Company was manipulating during the sale
    process, explaining that WIP should only be discussed
    in a “smaller group.” (Id. ¶ 162).
    Controller               Explicitly directed the operations team to remove
    “stale” projects from WIP revenue on June 1, 2015
    because he was “concerned about the future” if they
    were not removed. (Id. ¶ 75).
     But then agreed to allow those “stale projects,”
    representing millions of dollars of revenue, to remain
    in the Company’s financial statements for the next five
    months, including in the October 2015 Interim
    Financial Statements. (Id. ¶¶ 76, 160).
    Executive Vice           Learned the Company’s August—October 2015 WIP
    President of              models included duplicate entries, representing nearly
    Healthcare                $500,000 of revenue and earnings, for the exact same
    Operations                project, yet decided to leave the duplicate entries in the
    Company’s October 2015 Interim Financial
    Statements. (Id. ¶¶ 140–142).
     Intentionally left stale revenue in the WIP model
    despite prior instructions from lower-level employees
    that it should be written off. (Id. ¶¶ 73–76).
    35
    EMSI Employee                       Knowledge Allegations
    Division Controller    Directed by EMSI’s senior management, including the
    of Healthcare           Executive Vice President of Healthcare Operations, to
    Operations              manipulate EMSI’s financial records by deleting the
    WIP Milestone formulas and replacing those formulas
    with numbers that produced substantially higher
    revenue and earnings than would have been produced
    by the normal operation of the WIP formulas.
    (Id. ¶¶ 84–90).
     Met with the Executive Vice President of Healthcare
    Operations on the morning of September 5, 2015 and
    consciously and intentionally made arbitrary changes
    to the Company’s WIP model (without any business
    justification) to increase the amount of revenue and
    earnings EMSI could report in the October 2015
    Interim Financial statements. (Id. ¶ 112).
    Chief Sales Officer    Solicited a file from a customer after he was told to
    “swear in blood” to that customer that the Company
    would not work on it—and then proceeded to
    recognize revenue on the project. (Id. ¶ 117)
    Defendant Brook        Developed the WIP Model, and thus was in the best
    (former Executive       position to know how it could be, and was being,
    Vice President and      manipulated by the Company. (Compl. ¶ 52).
    President of EMSI’s    On several occasions, requested (or directed others to
    Healthcare Services     request) unapproved, preliminary files from clients on
    division)               projects that the Company then included in revenue
    even though Defendant Brook knew the Company was
    not actually working on the project. (Id. ¶¶ 106–107,
    116, 117).
     Emailed with the Executive Vice President of
    Healthcare Operations about creating two sets of
    books, one for internal and one for external (i.e., for
    Buyer) projections. (Id. ¶ 134).
    Defendant Davis        Agreed not to “ask many questions” if Brook could
    (former Chairman,       develop a plan to make up a $1 million budget shortfall
    President, and CEO      less than a month into the sale process. (Id. ¶ 34).
    of EMSI and            After seeing disappointing mid-month numbers for
    signatory of the        September 2015, told EMSI’s Chief Operating Officer:
    36
    EMSI Employee                          Knowledge Allegations
    Company’s                  “We need the gp [gross profit] presented [to Buyer] last
    representations in the     night.” (Id. at ¶¶ 38, 137). The COO responded:
    SPA)                       “I know, that’s why I’m in a bit of a panic. I’ll figure
    something out.” (Id.) Immediately after that, the
    Company turned to manipulating the WIP model,
    including by double booking revenue and income from
    the exact same project and loading projects into the
    Company’s WIP model at volumes that were not just
    incorrect, but dramatically higher than the volume in
    EMSI’s contemporaneous business records at the time.
    (Id. ¶¶ 139–144).
     After extensive manipulations of the WIP model in the
    prior months, told Defendant Rob Brook how to spin
    the Company’s growing WIP balance to Buyer, by
    claiming that the “shortfalls will be made up.” (Id. at
    ¶ 156–157).
     Tightly controlled due diligence, prohibiting any
    employee from discussing WIP. (Id. ¶¶ 161–62)
    These allegations meet Delaware standards for pleading knowledge as a basis
    for fraud in that they allow a reasonable inference the alleged fraud was knowable
    and that senior members of the Company’s management involved in the sales
    process, including Defendants Brook and Davis, were in a position to know it.81
    81
    See Aviation W. Charters, LLC v. Freer, 
    2015 WL 5138285
    , at *7 (Del. Super. Ct. July 2,
    2015) (holding that, in a case alleging fraudulent accounting practices in connection with
    an acquisition, the complaint satisfied the knowledge requirement under Rule 9(b) for the
    claim that the buyers were fraudulently induced to enter into the acquisition because the
    complaint reasonably inferred that “‘something’ was knowable and that the defendant[s]
    [were] in a position to know it” by alleging that the defendants knew that some of the
    financials were inflated, that the defendants, by manipulating the financial statements,
    knowingly concealed the true financial condition of the company and that they also knew
    of the falsity of the EBITDA representations due to the company’s revenue recognition
    practices) (quoting Metro Communc’n, 854 A.2d at 147).
    37
    b. Plaintiff has Adequately Pled the Misrepresentations
    Defendant also argues that Plaintiff has failed adequately to plead the falsity
    of the representations listed in Complaint at paragraphs 192 (iii), (v), (vi), and (vii).82
    First, Defendants argue that the Complaint does not adequately allege that the
    “Company falsely represented that it had not ‘entered into any agreements’ to change
    the Company’s business practices or accounting methods between March 31, 2015
    and Closing.”83 In this regard, Defendants contend that the Complaint does not
    allege that the Company had entered into any formal agreement to change business
    practices or accounting methods. While this might be true, the Company represented
    that it had not “entered into any agreements” to change its business practices and
    accounting methods and the Complaint pleads facts that support a reasonable
    inference that the Company’s employees entered into an agreement, albeit not a
    “formal agreement,” to modify the Company’s business and accounting practices
    with regard to its WIP model by alleging that managers, in concert, engaged in
    systematic manipulations of that model to misstate Company revenue.84
    82
    Defendants appear to have conceded that Plaintiff has adequately pled the
    misrepresentations set forth in paragraphs 192 (i), (ii), (iv), and (viii) of the Complaint. As
    stated earlier, the alleged misrepresentations in the SPA identified in the Complaint were
    made by the Company, not the Sellers.
    83
    Opening Br. 31 (quoting Compl. ¶ 192(v)).
    84
    See generally Compl. ¶¶ 69–160 (describing the process through which EMSI
    systematically manipulated the WIP Model from May to October 2015). See also Compl.
    ¶¶ 71–76 (“In an attempt to narrow its miss to budget [in May 2015], EMSI turned to the
    38
    Next, Defendants argue that the Complaint fails to plead facts to support an
    inference that the Company fraudulently misrepresented that it had not accelerated
    WIP Model. Specifically, . . . EMSI decided to not write-off over $1 million of WIP
    revenue on projects it identified as completed in May 2015. . . . Remarkably, EMSI rejected
    Ms. Brook’s changes [where she had written off certain projects from the WIP]. It
    reinserted the Stale Projects and the corresponding over $1 million of WIP revenue back
    into the May WIP Model. . . . Despite the Controller’s concerns [that certain projects
    should not be in the WIP], the Stale Projects Ms. Brook identified remained in the WIP
    Model for May 2015, artificially increasing EMSI’s revenue and EBITDA for the month
    by well over $1 million.”); ¶¶ 80–82 (“June 2015 started even worse than May 2015. When
    EMSI issued its Mid-Month revenue estimate on June 16, 2015, it estimated a $1.6 million
    miss to its forecast, including a $1.7 million miss in the Healthcare business. Davis asked
    Brook: ‘Is there anything that can turn this to a more positive outcome for June?’ In
    response, EMSI again turned to manipulating the WIP Model to close the Mid-Month gap.
    EMSI began to panic . . . when its client did not send the final [approval for a large project]
    by late June. Instead of simply waiting to recognize revenue until it actually received the
    final, approved TCL the following month, EMSI’s operations team directed a member of
    EMSI’s IT department to create a ‘fake’ list of medical records . . . so that it could load the
    project into its IT systems and begin recognizing WIP revenue.”); ¶¶ 84–86 (“[I]n June
    2015, EMSI manually overrode the WIP Milestone formulas in the WIP Model by
    manually advancing a number of projects to a later Milestone in order to recognize a greater
    percentage of WIP revenue. . . . The Division Controller was directed to manually override
    the WIP Milestone formulas by her superiors after she had repeatedly voiced her doubts
    about the propriety of it. The Division Controller was told repeatedly that the decision to
    override the WIP Milestone formulas was a ‘management decision.’”); ¶ 95 (“To limit the
    budget shortfall in July 2015, EMSI again turned to manipulating the WIP Model.”);
    ¶¶ 109–110 (“August 2015 followed the same pattern as May, June, and July. . . . To
    narrow the budget shortfall in August 2015, EMSI again turned up the volume of its
    financial manipulation.”); ¶¶ 136–138 (“When EMSI issued its Mid-Month estimated
    revenue on September 17, 2015, it estimated that it was $1.6 million behind its revenue
    budget for the month, including an $800,000 miss in Healthcare. . . . EMSI did not ‘figure
    something out,’ at least not in the sense of operational improvements, in September.
    Instead, it turned back to its now-familiar playbook of manipulating the WIP Model.”);
    ¶ 149 (“[In October, with] the deal expected to close at the end of the month, EMSI
    understood that it needed to keep the house of card standing for at least one more month.
    Thus, after releasing the Mid-Month projecting another down month, EMSI again turned
    to its familiar pattern of manipulation in October in hopes of closing the gap to the
    budget.”).
    39
    the collection of any accounts receivable, as alleged in Complaint Paragraph 192(iii),
    but rather only alleges that the Company accelerated recognition of revenue. The
    Complaint says otherwise.85
    Defendants then argue that the Complaint does not adequately allege that the
    Company breached its “material adverse effect” representation through its
    overstatement of EBITDA by $4.6 million. While I acknowledge that the “material
    adverse effect” standard is high,86 this court will find that a plaintiff has adequately
    pled a material adverse effect if the pled facts support a reasonable inference that the
    misrepresentations “could produce consequences that are materially adverse to the
    Company.”87 In the Complaint, Plaintiff alleges that the adverse consequences to
    the Company of the fraudulent practices are that “the Company has been forced to
    let go numerous employees, fire the auditors, scrap the WIP model, and deal with
    much tighter cash flow than anticipated, constraining its ability to grow the business
    and comply with its debt covenants.”88 Whether this will be borne out in discovery
    85
    See Compl. ¶¶ 106, 111, 123, 133 (all alleging alleged intentional manipulation of
    accounts receivable).
    86
    See Hexion Specialty Chems., Inc. v. Huntsman Corp., 
    965 A.2d 715
    , 738 (Del. Ch.
    2008) (“Delaware courts have never found a material adverse effect to have occurred in
    the context of a merger agreement.”).
    87
    Osram Sylvania Inc. v. Townsend Ventures, LLC, 
    2013 WL 6199554
    , at *7–9 (Del. Ch.
    Nov. 19, 2013).
    88
    Answering Br. 50 (citing Compl. ¶¶ 176–77).
    40
    remains to be seen, but the Complaint supports a pleading-stage inference that the
    Company intentionally misled the Buyer with respect to its material adverse effect
    representation.89
    Lastly, Defendant argues that the Complaint does not contain allegations that
    the Company committed fraud with regard to its representation that “‘true and
    complete’ copies of its interim financial statements for the period ended
    September 30, 2015 were attached to the SPA.”90 Not so. The theme that runs
    throughout the Complaint is that the Company misrepresented its financial fitness
    both in its financial statements and otherwise. Moreover, the Complaint alleges
    specifically that the interim financial statements reported $10.4 million in EBITDA
    for the twelve-month period ending September 30, 2015, but “$4.6 million of that
    EBITDA was fake, attributed only to EMSI’s financial manipulations in the year
    prior to closing.”91 This is adequate to support a reasonable inference that the copies
    89
    See Osram, 
    2013 WL 6199554
    , at *7–9 (holding that the Complaint stated a pleading-
    stage inference that the material adverse effect representation in the relevant purchase
    agreement had been breached where the acquired company “had made only half of its
    forecasted sales in Third Quarter 2011, and therefore had achieved $2 million less in
    revenues, reasonably could be interpreted as reflecting a change in circumstances that was
    ‘materially adverse to the Business, . . . results[, and] operations of the Acquired
    Companies’”).
    90
    Opening Br. 31.
    91
    Compl. ¶ 178.
    41
    of the Interim Financial Statements supplied to the Buyer were not the Company’s
    “true and complete” financial statements.
    *************
    Having found that Plaintiff has adequately pled the Company’s knowledge
    and the fraudulent misrepresentations in the SPA, the rest of the elements of the
    claim for fraud are easily satisfied.92 It is reasonably conceivable that the Defendants
    intended that Plaintiff would rely on the misrepresentations since they were included
    in the SPA. Plaintiff has alleged causally related harm because it would not have
    purchased, or would have paid materially less to purchase, EMSI but for these
    allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations.93
    C. Plaintiff has Failed to Plead a Claim for Confirmation of the Auditor’s
    Award
    In the second count of the Complaint, Plaintiff seeks confirmation of the
    findings of the Settlement Auditor pursuant to 10 Del. C. §§ 5701 and 5713, and the
    entry of judgment for the amount of the award that has not been satisfied through
    the Escrow Funds. Defendants riposte that the Settlement Auditor’s decision is not
    an arbitration award that can be confirmed by this court as that would contradict the
    explicitly bargained-for language found in the SPA. I agree.
    92
    See Prairie Capital, 132 A.3d at 62.
    93
    Compl. ¶¶ 164–73.
    42
    As noted, the parties’ relationship is governed by the terms of the SPA,
    pursuant to which the Settlement Auditor undertook its work on behalf of the parties.
    The SPA provided that the Settlement Auditor would resolve any disputes regarding
    the calculation of net working capital at closing, which would then affect the ultimate
    purchase price. The Settlement Auditor did its work and found that financial
    statements delivered to Plaintiff at the closing of the transaction were not in
    compliance with GAAP and that adjustments totaling $9.8 million were required.
    While Delaware law favors private arbitration of disputes,94 that does not
    negate the requirement that a “contract must reflect that the parties clearly and
    intentionally bargained for whether and how to arbitrate.”95 Therefore, parties
    “cannot be forced to arbitrate the merits of a dispute . . . in the absence of a clear
    expression of such intent in a valid agreement.”96 Here, the SPA explicitly provides
    that the Settlement Auditor will resolve disputes over the calculation Net Working
    Capital “acting as an expert and not an arbitrator.”97 If I were to interpret the
    Settlement Auditor’s decision as an arbitration award, I would violate two of the
    cardinal principles of contract construction: terms within a contract must be afforded
    94
    DMS Props.-First, Inc. v. P.W. Scott Assocs., Inc., 
    748 A.2d 389
    , 391 (Del. 2000).
    95
    Kuhn Const., Inc. v. Diamond State Port Corp., 
    990 A.2d 393
    , 396 (Del. 2010).
    96
    DMS Props.-First, 
    748 A.2d at 391
    .
    97
    SPA § 2.3(b).
    43
    their plain meaning and any such plain terms should not be read to render other
    provisions meaningless.98 While Plaintiff is correct that in certain instances an
    “expert’s” decision in a dispute resolution proceeding,99 or the parties’ course of
    conduct during a dispute resolution proceeding,100 may be tantamount to an
    arbitration, that cannot be the case where the contract language on point expressly
    states that the auditor/expert is not acting as an arbitrator. Therefore, in keeping with
    the plain meaning of the SPA, the Settlement Auditor’s determination clearly is not
    an arbitration award that can be confirmed under 10 Del. C. §§ 5701 and 5713.
    Count II of the Complaint must be dismissed.101
    98
    See BLGH Hldgs. LLC v. enXco LFG Hldg., LLC, 
    41 A.3d 410
    , 414 (Del. 2012) (“Where
    . . . the plain language of a contract is unambiguous i.e., fairly or reasonably susceptible to
    only one interpretation, we construe the contract in accordance with that plain meaning and
    will not resport to extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intentions.”); Osborn, 991
    A.3d at 1159 (“We will read a contract as a whole and we will give each provision and
    term effect, so as not to render any part of the contract mere surplusage. We will not read
    a contract to render a provision or term meaningless or illusory.”) (internal quotation marks
    and citations omitted).
    99
    See SRG Global, Inc. v. Robert Family Hldgs., Inc., 
    2010 WL 4880654
    , at *5 (Del. Ch.
    Nov. 30, 2010).
    100
    See Mehiel v. Solo Cup Co., 
    2007 WL 901637
    , at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 26, 2007).
    101
    This determination should not be construed as an opinion regarding binding effect of
    the Settlement Auditor’s decision or whether the cap on payment from the Escrow Funds
    applies to the Settlement Auditor’s decision. Those questions were not called by the
    Motion.
    44
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Verified
    Complaint is DENIED as to Count I and GRANTED as to Count II.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    45