Jason Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc ( 2024 )


Menu:
  •                             COURT OF CHANCERY
    OF THE
    STATE OF DELAWARE
    MORGAN T. ZURN                                              LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
    VICE CHANCELLOR                                                500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
    WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734
    January 31, 2024
    Scott James Leonhardt, Esquire                Laurence V. Cronin, Esquire
    The Rosner Law Group LLC                      Smith, Katzenstein & Jenkins LLP
    824 North Market Street, Suite 810            1000 West Street, Suite 1501
    Wilmington, DE 19801                          Wilmington, DE 19899
    RE: Jason Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    Dear Counsel:
    This letter decision addresses whether language sounding in waiver extends
    to unexercised stock options. Plaintiff, Dr. Jason Terrell, argues he holds rights to
    unexercised stock options under certain agreements; defendant Kiromic
    Biopharma, Inc. (the “Company”) argues Terrell waived those rights in a
    subsequent stock option grant notice. This letter assumes familiarity with the
    underlying dispute and previously defined terms; concludes the Company’s
    committee lacked authority to interpret the grant notice; concludes Terrell waived
    rights to any unexercised options under that grant notice; and grants the
    Company’s motion to dismiss.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 2 of 21
    I.      BACKGROUND1
    Terrell seeks a declaration that Agreements 1 and 2 remain valid and
    enforceable contracts2 and seeks specific performance of those Agreements,
    including as to unexercised options.3 There is no dispute that Agreements 1 and 2
    are valid and enforceable insofar as they granted Terrell options he then exercised
    on or before Agreement 3’s execution date.4              The dispute concerns whether
    1
    For the purposes of the pending motion, I draw the following facts from the plaintiff’s
    Verified Complaint, as well as the documents attached and integral to it. See, e.g., N.
    River Ins. v. Mine Safety Appliances, 
    2013 WL 6713229
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Dec. 20, 2013);
    H-M Wexford v. Encorp, 
    832 A.2d 129
    , 139 (Del. Ch. May 27, 2003). Unless otherwise
    indicated, this opinion adopts the defined terms used in Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma,
    Inc. (Terrell I), 
    2022 WL 175858
     (Del. Ch. Jan. 20, 2022). Citations in the form
    “Compl.” refer to plaintiff’s Verified Complaint, available at docket item (“D.I.”) 1.
    Citations in the form “DOB” refer to Defendant’s Opening Brief in Support of its Motion
    to Dismiss, available at D.I. 12. Citations in the form “PAB” refer to Plaintiff’s
    Answering Brief in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, available at D.I. 16.
    Citations in the form “DRB” refer to Defendant’s Reply Brief in Further Support of its
    Motion to Dismiss, available at D.I. 18.
    2
    Compl. ¶¶ 42–43, 52–53.
    3
    Id. ¶¶ 43, 45, 47, 55, 57, 59.
    4
    See DOB 16 (“If he exercised his options and received stock certificates, then the
    merger clause has no effect on those . . . .”); see also D.I. 28 at 8 (noting Terrell is still
    entitled to shares he received after exercising options granted by Agreements 1 and 2).
    Readers will recall the Grant Notice, the Incentive Plan, the Stock Option Agreement,
    and the Exercise Agreement “constitute the entire agreement” referred to as Agreement 3.
    D.I. 1, Ex. D at 2017 Stock Option Agreement [hereinafter “SOA”] § 15.2; Terrell v.
    Kiromic Biopharma, Inc. (Terrell III), 
    297 A.3d 610
    , 614 (Del. 2023).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 3 of 21
    language in Agreement 3’s Grant Notice waived Terrell’s rights to unexercised
    options granted by Agreements 1 and 2.
    The relevant Grant Notice provision (the “Waiver”) reads:
    By signing this Grant Notice, you acknowledge and agree that other
    than the Shares, you have no other rights to any other options, equity
    awards or other securities of the Company (except securities of the
    Company, if any, issued to you on or prior to the date hereof, if any),
    notwithstanding any commitment or communication regarding
    options, equity awards or other securities of the Company made prior
    to the date hereof, whether written or oral, including any reference to
    the contrary that may be set forth in your offer letter, consultant
    agreement or other documentation with the Company or any of its
    predecessors.5
    This letter is the most recent stop on a multijurisdictional tour. A dispute
    resolution provision in Agreement 3’s Stock Option Agreement (the “SOA”)
    required the parties to submit any dispute regarding “the interpretation of this
    Agreement” to a Company committee (the “Committee”).6                     I concluded the
    Committee had to decide, in the first instance, (i) whether the dispute over the
    Grant Notice, a separate instrument from the SOA that was also part of Agreement
    5
    D.I. 1, Ex. D at Notice of Stock Option Grant [hereinafter “Grant Notice”] at 2.
    6
    Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 617, 619; SOA § 15.1.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 4 of 21
    3, fell within that provision, and (ii) if so, Terrell’s dispute itself.7 The Committee
    determined:
    i. the Committee has the exclusive authority, pursuant to Section 15.1
    of Dr. Jason Terrell’s Stock Option Agreement with Kiromic
    BioPharma, Inc., to interpret Dr. Terrell’s November 2017 “Notice of
    Stock Option Grant”; and
    ii. the merger clause in Dr. Terrell’s grant notice supersedes and
    nullifies any option rights Dr. Terrell may have had under Dr.
    Terrell’s prior agreements with Kiromic.8
    I then dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.9
    Terrell appealed, contending this Court “fail[ed] to review the Committee’s
    determination before dismissing his action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,”
    as this Court was “still required to subject the Committee’s determination to some
    form of judicial review.”10 The Supreme Court of Delaware agreed, concluding
    this Court was “not precluded by the terms of the parties’ agreement from
    reviewing the Committee’s resolution of” (i) the scope of the Committee’s
    7
    Terrell I, 
    2022 WL 175858
    , at *7.
    8
    D.I. 29 at Ltr.
    9
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc., (Terrell II), 
    2022 WL 3083229
     (Del. Ch. Aug. 2,
    2022).
    10
    Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 616.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 5 of 21
    authority, and (ii) its decision that language in the Grant Notice extinguished
    unexercised options granted by Agreement 3.11
    The high court then considered the “standard by which the Court of
    Chancery should review the Committee’s legal determinations.”12 Analogizing the
    Committee as an expert to an appraiser, Terrell III relied on Adkins Limited
    Partnership v. O Street Management, LLC.13            Adkins explains that when an
    appraiser must interpret the meaning of a legal document before performing an
    appraisal, that interpretation is subject to judicial review in which the appraiser’s
    interpretation, while “clothed with no presumption of correctness,” warrants
    deference “as long as it is reasonable and does not exceed the appraiser’s
    authority.”14 Adkins also explains that when the question of contract interpretation
    goes to the scope of the appraiser’s authority, that question resembles the question
    11
    Id. at 622–23.
    12
    Id. at 621. The Supreme Court also held Agreement 3 “as interpreted by the Court of
    Chancery” was not unconscionable. Id. at 623–24.
    13
    Id. at 622–23 (citing Adkins Ltd. P’ship v. O St. Mgmt., LLC, 
    56 A.3d 1159
     (D.C.
    2012)).
    14
    Adkins, 56 A.3d at 1167 (first quoting Marceron v. Chevy Chase Servs., Inc., 
    258 F.2d 155
    , 158 (D.C. Cir. 1958); then quoting Doggett v. McLachlen Bancshares Corp., 
    663 A.2d 511
    , 516 (D.C. 1995)). Terrell III also analogized contractually created expert
    committees charged with legal questions to statutorily created quasi-judicial
    administrative courts, the decisions of which federal courts review de novo. Terrell III,
    297 A.3d at 623 n.49.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 6 of 21
    of substantive arbitrability, and the trial court will review that determination de
    novo.15       Terrell III also discussed AIU Insurance Company v. Lexes, which
    similarly explains that the scope of an appraiser’s authority is a legal question for
    the courts.16 Terrell III concluded “the Committee’s contractual interpretation was
    subject, under the [Adkins] court’s reasoning, to de novo review,” and this Court
    should have decided the Company’s motion to dismiss “in light of its de novo
    interpretation of the relevant agreements.”17
    The Supreme Court remanded the matter for this Court to interpret the
    relevant agreements “consistent with [its] opinion.”18                 The parties submitted
    post-remand letters on August 8 and August 18, which I took under advisement on
    September 4.19
    15
    Adkins, 56 A.3d at 1167.
    16
    Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 622 (citing AIU Ins. Co. v. Lexes, 
    815 A.2d 312
    , 314
    (Del. 2003)); AIU Ins. Co., 815 A.2d at 314 (noting “[t]he issue is whether the appraisers
    have the authority to include in their valuation items that are expressly excluded from
    coverage or items that exceed the coverage limits,” and concluding that the trial court had
    jurisdiction to issue a “declaration of the scope of the appraisal process”).
    17
    Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 623.
    18
    Id.
    19
    D.I. 37 [hereinafter “Def. Letter”]; D.I. 38 [hereinafter “Pl. Letter”]; D.I. 39.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 7 of 21
    II.    ANALYSIS
    On the Company’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, I must consider the
    facts as stated in the complaint and draw all reasonable inferences from those facts
    in favor of the plaintiff. “[T]he Court can resolve contract interpretation on a
    motion to dismiss.”20 In doing so, “I give priority to the intention of the parties,”
    and I “start by looking to the four corners of the contract to conclude whether the
    intent of the parties can be determined from its express language.”21 “When the
    contract is clear and unambiguous, [I] will give effect to the plain-meaning of the
    contract’s terms and provisions”22 with the aid of interpretive canons.23          I must
    “lean in favor of a construction which will render every word operative, rather than
    one which may make some idle and nugatory.”24
    20
    Light Years Ahead v. Valve Acq., 
    2021 WL 6068215
    , at *5 (Del. Super. Dec. 22, 2021).
    21
    Paul v. Deloitte & Touche, LLP, 
    974 A.2d 140
    , 145 (Del. 2009).
    22
    Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 
    991 A.2d 1153
    , 1159 (Del. 2010).
    23
    Bouchard v. Braidy Indus., 
    2020 WL 2036601
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Apr. 28, 2020) (“[T]he
    court evaluates the relevant provision’s semantics, syntax, and context, aided by
    interpretive canons.”).
    24
    Osborn, 991 A.2d 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.’”); see
    Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts
    [hereinafter “Reading Law”] 174 (2012) (quoting Thomas M. Cooley, A Treatise on the
    Constitutional Limitations Which Rest upon the Legislative Power of the States of the
    American Union 58 (1868)).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 8 of 21
    A.     The Parties Did Not Send Disputes Regarding The Grant
    Notice To The Committee.
    My mandate on remand is de novo review “under the [Adkins] court’s
    reasoning.”25 Under Adkins, review of the Committee’s scope of authority is de
    novo.26 A de novo review of the Committee’s scope of authority leads to the
    conclusion that the Committee did not have authority to resolve a dispute regarding
    the interpretation of the Grant Notice.
    Section 15.1 of the SOA reads: “Interpretation. Any dispute regarding the
    interpretation of this Agreement shall be submitted by Optionee or the Company to
    the Committee for review. The resolution of such a dispute by the Committee shall
    be final and binding on the Company and Optionee.”27                  The SOA defines
    “Agreement” to mean the SOA itself:
    This Stock Option Agreement (this ‘Agreement’) is made and entered
    into as of the date of grant (the ‘Date of Grant’) set forth on the Notice
    of Stock Option Grant attached as the facing page to this Agreement
    (the ‘Grant Notice’) by and between Kiromic, Inc., a Delaware
    corporation (the ‘Company’), and the optionee named on the Grant
    Notice (‘Optionee’).28
    25
    Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 623.
    26
    Adkins, 56 A.3d at 1167.
    27
    SOA § 15.1.
    28
    Id. at 1.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 9 of 21
    This language plainly creates a distinction between the Grant Notice on the one
    hand and the SOA on the other, and limits Section 15.1 to the SOA.
    It is true that the Grant Notice incorporates the SOA by reference, and the
    SOA incorporates the Grant Notice.29 “[A] contract may incorporate by reference
    provisions contained in some other instrument.”30 “When an executed contract
    refers to another instrument and makes the conditions of the other instrument a part
    of it, the two will be interpreted together as the agreement of the parties.”31 But
    interpreting agreements together is a different matter than setting aside the plain
    definition provided in one of those agreements. Indeed, a holistic review of the
    instruments in Agreement 3 indicates they explicitly rely on each other for content
    29
    Id. § 15.2 (“Entire Agreement. The [Incentive] Plan, the Grant Notice and the Exercise
    Agreement are each incorporated herein by reference. This Agreement, the Grant Notice,
    the [Incentive] Plan and the Exercise Agreement constitute the entire agreement of the
    parties with respect to the subject matter hereof and supersede all prior undertakings and
    agreements with respect to such subject matter.”); Grant Notice at 1 (“By their signatures
    below, [Terrell] and the Company agree that this Option is granted under and governed
    by this [Grant Notice] and by the provisions of the [Incentive] Plan and the Stock Option
    Agreement. The [Incentive] Plan and the Stock Option Agreement are incorporated
    herein by reference.”).
    30
    Duff v. Innovative Discovery LLC, 
    2012 WL 6096586
    , at *12 n.72 (Del. Ch.
    Dec. 7, 2012) (quoting State ex rel. Hirst v. Black, 
    83 A.2d 678
    , 681 (Del. Super.
    1951)).
    31
    Pauley Petroleum, Inc. v. Cont’l Oil Co., 
    231 A.2d 450
    , 456 (Del. Ch. 1967), aff’d,
    
    239 A.2d 629
     (Del. 1968).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 10 of 21
    when that is what the drafters intended.32 The SOA’s drafters plainly limited
    Section 15.1 to the SOA itself.               That section did not send Grant Notice
    interpretation disputes to the Committee.
    That leaves the dispute over the Grant Notice for this Court.
    B.      The Grant Notice Contains An Express Waiver.
    The parties agree that the disputed Grant Notice interpretation is “a simple
    question of contract interpretation”: whether Agreement 3’s Grant Notice
    preserved Terrell’s unexercised options granted by Agreements 1 and 2.33 I begin
    by observing that the Waiver is, in fact, a waiver. This Court has long found clear
    and unequivocal waivers to be binding on the waiving party.34 “A waiver is ‘the
    32
    E.g., SOA § 15.1 (referring to the “Committee,” which is only defined in the Incentive
    Plan at Section 14); Grant Notice at 1 (stating that the Grant Notice is “subject to the
    conditions, described below and in the Stock Option Agreement attached hereto as
    Exhibit A, including its annexes”).
    33
    Pl. Letter at 1; see Def. Letter at 2.
    34
    Realty Growth Inv. v. Council of Unit Owners, 
    453 A.2d 450
    , 456 (Del. 1982)
    (discussing the requirements and effect of a waiver but finding no basis for attributing
    waiver beyond the construction of the fourth building that occurred); see 13 Richard A.
    Lord, Williston on Contracts [hereinafter “Williston on Contracts”] § 39:15 (4th ed.
    2023) (“A party who has intentionally relinquished the right to performance by the other
    party may not thereafter seek judicial enforcement of the contract with regard to the
    waived performance and loses any right to damages for the failure to perform. In short,
    once it has been established that a right has been waived, the party possessing the right
    prior to the waiver is generally precluded from asserting it in a court of law . . . .”).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 11 of 21
    voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a known right.’”35 “Three elements
    must be satisfied before a conclusion of waiver may be reached: (i) there is a
    requirement or condition to be waived, (ii) the waiving party must know of the
    requirement or condition, and (iii) the waiving party must intend to waive that
    requirement or condition.”36 A waiver “of a contract provision may be made by a
    party’s express declaration, or it may be implied by representations that fall short
    of an express declaration of waiver.”37 An express waiver occurs when a party
    makes an unequivocal representation in words to disclaim certain rights.38
    Delaware courts use contract principles of interpretation to determine whether a
    written representation is “unequivocal and clear.”39
    35
    Realty Growth Inv., 453 A.2d at 456.
    36
    Specialty Dx Hldgs. v. Lab’y Corp. of Am. Hldgs., 
    2021 WL 6327369
    , at *9 (Del. Ch.
    Dec. 16, 2021).
    37
    13 Williston on Contracts § 39:27; see Specialty Dx Hldgs., 
    2021 WL 6327369
    , at *9
    (“A waiver may [be] express or implied, but either way, it must be unequivocal.”).
    38
    Vila v. BVWebTies LLC, 
    2010 WL 3866098
    , at *10 n.72 (Del. Ch. Oct. 1, 2010) (“[A]
    party may waive—by words or conduct—any contractual right or obligation”)
    (summarizing 13 Williston on Contracts § 39:14); see 13 Williston on Contracts § 39:14
    (“[A] finding of waiver must be based on an intention expressed in explicit language to
    forego a right or on conduct under the circumstances justifying an inference of a
    relinquishment of it.”).
    39
    Bouchard, 
    2020 WL 2036601
    , at *9, 10 (invoking Delaware’s objective theory of
    contracts, and looking to semantics, syntax and context, aided by interpretive canons,
    including the whole-text canon, to determine whether a contractual provision amounted
    to a jurisdictional waiver and holding that on its face, the language fell “short of
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 12 of 21
    On its face, the Waiver unequivocally relinquishes Terrell’s “rights to any
    other options, equity awards or other securities of the Company.”40 The Waiver
    begins: “By signing this Grant Notice, you acknowledge and agree that other than
    the Shares, you have no other rights to any other options, equity awards or other
    unequivocally relinquishing the right to contest a Delaware court’s personal
    jurisdiction”).
    40
    Grant Notice at 2. Terrell argues that the Grant Notice could not operate as a waiver of
    his unexercised options because “Agreement 3 . . . confer[red] no new consideration to
    Dr. Terrell, and, thus, would not constitute a binding contract in the first place.” PAB
    10. A waiver is a “voluntary . . . relinquishment of a known right.” Realty Growth Inv.,
    453 A.2d at 456. It does not require support by consideration. 13 Williston on Contracts
    § 39:14; see, e.g., In re Coinmint, LLC, 
    261 A.3d 867
    , 893 (Del. Ch. Apr. 15, 2021)
    (reciting the standard for showing waiver, with consideration notably absent).
    Terrell also argues that he could not have agreed to a relinquishment of his rights
    because such a waiver is unreasonable insofar as “no reasonable person would have
    accepted” it and it “is commercially unreasonable.” PAB 8. This argument is an
    unconscionability argument.        See Ketler v. PFPA, LLC, 
    132 A.3d 746
    , 748
    (Del. 2016) (“[A]n unconscionable contract is one which no man in his senses and not
    under delusion would make on the one hand, and as no honest or fair man would accept,
    on the other.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Rummel Klepper & Kahl v. Del. River
    & Bay Auth., 
    2022 WL 29831
    , at *14 (Del. Ch. Jan. 3, 2022)
    (“The ‘business-practices-of-the-community’ test is a means of evaluating
    substantive unconscionability.” (citing Tulowitzki v. Atl. Richfield Co., 
    396 A.2d 956
    , 960 (Del. 1978) (explaining unconscionability can be shown by the
    “business-practices-of-the-community test [that] asks whether the terms are so extreme as
    to appear unconscionable according to the mores and business practices of the time and
    place”))). The Supreme Court of Delaware rejected Terrell’s argument that Argument 3
    was unconscionable. Terrell III, 297 A.3d at 624. I will not belabor the matter. Neither
    Terrell’s consideration nor unreasonableness argument disrupts the efficacy of the
    Waiver.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 13 of 21
    securities of the Company . . . .”41             The waived rights are expressly and
    expansively identified as “options,” with reiterative phrases making clear that
    Terrell has “no other rights” or “any other options.”
    And the Waiver goes further, expressly emphasizing Terrell’s renunciation
    of his reliance on prior Company commitments. He relinquished his
    rights to any other options . . . notwithstanding any commitment or
    communication regarding options, equity awards or other securities of
    the Company made prior to the date hereof, whether written or oral,
    including any reference to the contrary that may be set forth in [his]
    offer letter, consultant agreement or other documentation with the
    Company or any of its predecessors.42
    The term “notwithstanding” indicates the parties’ intention “to supersede all other
    [agreements].”43
    The Grant Notice contains an express waiver.               “A clearer statement is
    difficult to imagine.”44
    41
    Grant Notice at 2.
    42
    Id. (emphasis added).
    43
    Cisneros v. Alpine Ridge Grp., 
    508 U.S. 10
    , 18 (1993); see Reading Law 126–27 (“A
    dependent phrase that begins with notwithstanding indicates that the main clause that it
    introduces or follows derogates from the provision to which it refers.”).
    44
    Cisneros, 
    508 U.S. at 18
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 14 of 21
    C.        The Waiver Carveout Does Not Preserve Unexercised
    Options.
    The parties’ dispute centers on the meaning of that waiver and the carveout
    within it. Terrell agreed he has “no other rights to any other options, equity awards
    or other securities of the Company (except securities of the Company, if any, issued
    to [him] on or prior to the date hereof, if any)” (the “Carveout”).45 Terrell claims
    the Carveout expressly preserves “[options] of the Company . . . issued to [him]”
    because an option is a security.46 The Company contends an unexercised option is
    not an “issued security.”47 I conclude, under Agreement 3’s language, that while
    an option is a security, it is not an issued security.
    An “option” is a type of “security” under the Grant Notice and the rest of
    Agreement 3. The Waiver’s text makes this plain. Its phrase “no other rights to
    any other options, equity awards or other securities of the Company” categorizes
    options and equity awards as subsets of securities.48 Generally, the conjunction
    45
    Grant Notice at 2 (emphasis added).
    46
    PAB 7.
    47
    See DOB 11.
    48
    Grant Notice at 2.
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 15 of 21
    “or” “is . . . used to indicate an alternative.”49 And the use of the word “other”
    before a catchall phrase warrants application of the “reverse ejusdem generis”
    principle, under which the catchall helps define the specific examples.50 Under
    that principle, the “grammatical context”51 and syntax of the phrase “A, B, or other
    C” supports the conclusion “that A must fall within the class C.”52 In the Grant
    Notice, the general phrase “or other securities” defines the class of the preceding
    listed items. It follows that while a “security” is not necessarily an “option,” an
    “option” must be a type of security.
    49
    13 Williston on Contracts § 30:12.
    50
    See Lantheus Med. Imaging, Inc. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 
    255 F.Supp.3d 443
    , 460 (S.D.
    N.Y. Apr. 28, 2015) (explaining the proper use of reverse ejusdem generis and holding it
    did not apply because the list did not conclude with a “catch-all” phrase and some of the
    specific terms preceding the general one did not have a common attribute from which a
    kind or class could be identified); Safe Food & Fertilizer v. E.P.A., 
    350 F.3d. 1263
    , 1269
    (D.C. Cir. 2003) (applying reverse ejusdem generis to understand the operation of the
    phrase “or other discarded materials” and holding that the “listed materials are ‘solid
    waste’ only if they are also ‘discarded,’” because “the phrase ‘A, B, or any other C’
    indicates that A is a subset of C”).
    51
    Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. U.S., 
    2000 WL 1860718
    , at *358 (Fed. Cl. Dec. 18, 2000)
    (“[The] [p]laintiff argues that the three conditions are in a categorical series linked by the
    word ‘otherwise,’ and that the reverse of the interpretive maxim ejusdem generis supports
    this interpretation . . . . The court concludes that plaintiff’s interpretation of the proviso is
    consonant with its plain meaning. The meaning of these three phrases in the proviso
    derives from grammatical context.”).
    52
    U.S. v. Delgado, 
    4 F.3d 780
    , 786 (9th Cir. 1993).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 16 of 21
    Concluding that an option is a type of security does not settle the Carveout’s
    meaning.53 The Carveout applies only to securities “issued to [Terrell] on or prior
    to the date hereof, if any.”54 The parties dispute whether unexercised options were
    “issued” before that date, or if the Carveout is limited to “issued” shares. The
    Waiver would be meaningless if the Carveout’s “issued” securities included all of
    Terrell’s options: Terrell’s statement that he has “no other rights to any other
    options” would be swallowed by the Carveout.55                  If “by any reasonable
    construction, the two can be made to stand together,” I must pursue that
    construction.56
    And so, because identical words used in different parts of the same
    agreement are presumed to “bear the same meaning throughout,” I look to other
    53
    DRB 2 (“Terrell maintains that “options” must be treated as ‘securities’ . . . . This
    misses the mark: the question is not what the single word ‘security’ means . . . but rather
    what the complete phrase ‘securities of the Company, if any, issued to you’ means in
    Agreement 3 . . . .”).
    54
    Grant Notice at 2.
    55
    
    Id.
    56
    Reading Law 174 (quoting Thomas M. Cooley, A Treatise on the Constitutional
    Limitations Which Rest upon the Legislative Power of the States of the American Union
    58 (1868)).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 17 of 21
    uses of the verb “to issue” and its related nouns in Agreement 3.57 Agreement 3
    never uses the word “issued” in relation to options.                Instead, every use of
    “issued,”58 “issuance,”59 and “issuable”60—all thirty-five of them—relates to
    57
    
    Id.
     at 170–73; see JJS, Ltd. v. Steelpoint CP Hldgs., 
    2019 WL 5092896
    , at *1 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 11, 2019) (“[A]bsent anything indicating a contrary intent, the same phrase should
    be given the same meaning when it is used in different places in the same contract.”).
    58
    See, e.g., Grant Notice at 2 (preserving “securities of the Company . . . issued to you”);
    SOA § 10 (discussing conferral of stockholder rights “from and after the date that Shares
    are issued to Optionee”); Incentive Plan § 2.1 (discussing a forfeiture where “Shares
    previously issued under the [Incentive] Plan are reacquired by the Company”); id.
    (discussing the Company’s reacquisition of “Shares previously issued”).
    59
    See, e.g., SOA § 4.3(e) (requiring payment approved by the Committee that
    “constitutes legal consideration for the issuance of Shares”); id. § 4.4 (“Prior to the
    issuance of the Shares upon exercise of the Option, Optionee must pay . . . .”); id. § 4.5
    (heading titled “Issuance of Shares”); id. § 5 (“The exercise of this Option and the
    issuance and transfer of Shares shall be subject to compliance by the Company and
    Optionee . . . .”); id. § 7.1(d) (“Optionee shall have provided the Company with written
    assurances . . . for the grant of the Option, the issuance of Shares thereunder . . . .”); id.
    § 9.7 (discussing termination of right of first refusal “other than a registration statement
    relating solely to the issuance of Common Stock pursuant to a business combination or an
    employee incentive or benefit plan”); D.I. 1, Ex. D [hereinafter “Exercise Agreement”]
    § 4 (indicating optionee’s acceptance of the “terms and conditions of the issuance of the
    Purchased Shares”); Incentive Plan § 2.1 (discussing forfeiture or repurchase whereby
    “such shares shall be added to the number of shares then available for issuance under the
    Plan”); id. (discussing the event where the “number of Shares reserved and available for
    grant and issuance under the [Incentive] Plan is increased”).
    60
    See, e.g., SOA § 4.4 (discussing “Shares issuable upon exercise”); id. § 4.5 (indicating
    the Company “shall issue the Shares issuable upon a valid exercise of this Option”);
    Incentive Plan § 11(b) (“[T]he exercise price and the number and nature of shares
    issuable upon exercise of any such option . . . will be adjusted appropriately.”).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 18 of 21
    Shares, not options.61      The definitions of “Shares” and “Exercise Price” both
    include the word “issuable;”62 the definition of “Option” does not.63 To describe
    the Company’s delivery of an option to purchase shares, Agreement 3 only uses
    the word “grant.”64 The Grant Notice itself uses that word.65 And Agreement 3
    61
    DRB 6 (“[T]he term ‘issued’ is never used in Agreement 3 with respect to options, but
    only with respect to actual shares of stock.”).
    62
    See, e.g., Incentive Plan § 14 (“Shares’ means shares of the Company’s Common
    Stock . . . reserved for issuance under this Plan.”); id. (“Exercise Price’ means the price
    per Share at which a holder of an Option may purchase Shares issuable upon exercise of
    the Option.”).
    63
    Id. (“Option’ means an award of an option to purchase Shares pursuant to Section 4 of
    the [Incentive] Plan.”).
    64
    See Grant Notice at 1 (“The Optionee . . . has been granted an option . . . . Optionee
    and the Company agree that this Option is granted under and governed by this Notice of
    Stock Option Grant . . . . Optionee accepts the electronic delivery of any documents that
    the Company . . . may deliver in connection with this grant.”); SOA at 1 (“This Stock
    Option Agreement . . . is made and entered into as of the date of grant . . . .”); id. § 1
    (“The Company hereby grants to Optionee an option . . . to purchase up to the total
    number of shares . . . .”); id. § 7.1(d) (referencing “the grant of the Option, [and] the
    issuance of Shares”); Exercise Agreement § 8 (discussing the exercise price per share “at
    the time the option was granted by the Board”); Incentive Plan § 4 (“The Committee may
    grant Options”); id. § 4.1 (discussing “[e]ach option granted under this Plan”); id.
    § 4.2 (“The date of grant of an Option will be the date on which the Committee makes the
    determination to grant such Option . . . .”); id. § 4.4. (“The Exercise Price of an Option
    will be determined by the Committee when the Option is granted and shall not be less
    than the Fair Market Value . . . unless expressly determined in writing by the Committee
    on the Option’s date of grant.”); id. § 4.8 (“[T]he Exercise Price may not be reduced
    below the minimum . . . that would be permitted . . . for Options granted . . . .”); id. § 11.2
    (“In the event the Company elects to grant a new Option . . . such a new Option . . . may
    be granted . . . .”); id. § 12.3 (discussing the board delegation’s to a Committee for “the
    granting of stock options and other equity awards”); id. 13.1(b) (“[N]o Option . . . granted
    . . . shall be exercised prior to the time . . . .”).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 19 of 21
    makes clear that options and shares are different: “[an] [o]ptionee shall not have
    any of the rights of a stockholder with respect to any Shares unless and until such
    Shares are issued to [the] [o]ptionee.”66          Based on Agreement 3’s language
    describing the delivery of options as compared to shares, I conclude that shares are
    “issued” while options are “granted.”
    The Carveout preserves only securities that have been issued, not securities
    that have been granted. This was presumably intentional.67 If the parties intended
    for the Carveout to include grants and not just issuances, they would have included
    the word “grant[ed],” as they did other times where “grant and issuance” were to
    be construed together.68
    65
    Grant Notice at 1 (“The Optionee . . . has been granted an option (this ‘Option’) to
    purchase shares of Common Stock . . . .”); id. (“Optionee and the Company agree that
    this Option is granted under and governed by this Notice of Stock Option Grant . . . .”).
    66
    SOA § 10.
    67
    MALT Fam. Tr. v. 777 P’rs, 
    2023 WL 7476966
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. 2023) (interpreting a
    contractual provision that only identified the plaintiff and concluding that the inclusion of
    the plaintiff indicated the intentional exclusion of the defendant under the interpretative
    maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius).
    68
    Incentive Plan § 2.1 (“Subject to Sections 2.2 and 11 hereof, the total number of Shares
    reserved and available for grant and issuance pursuant to this Plan will be Twenty Million
    (20,000,000) Shares.”); id. (“Shares subject to Awards that are . . . used to pay . . . the
    exercise price of an Option or that expire by their terms at any time will again be
    available for grant and issuance in connection with other Awards.”).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 20 of 21
    Because the Carveout addresses only issued securities, and because options
    are granted and not issued, the Carveout excludes from the Waiver only shares, and
    not unexercised options. This interpretation preserves the Waiver’s significance
    and the use of the terms “issue” and “grant” throughout Agreement 3.
    Terrell points me to the world outside Agreement 3, specifically the
    Securities Act of 1933 and common law, for inspiration to conclude that issued
    securities include options.69        He also implicitly suggests that the Carveout is
    ambiguous, arguing I should apply the contra proferentem canon.70 For its part,
    the Company points me to several cases providing that options are not “issued”
    shares.71 But Agreement 3 is unambiguous and provides an ample roadmap to a
    reasonable construction. It would be improper to stray from those directions.
    In sum, I read the Waiver to be an express waiver, by which Terrell waived
    all rights to unexercised options granted to him in any agreement other than
    Agreement 3.
    69
    Pl. Letter at 2 (first quoting 
    15 U.S.C. §77
    (b)(3); and then quoting and Davidow v. Lrn.
    Corp., 
    2020 WL 898097
    , at *2, 4, 10 (Del. Ch. Feb. 25, 2020)).
    70
    See PAB 6; see also Pl. Letter at 3–5.
    71
    DOB 15–17 (first citing Reis v. Hazelett Strip-Casting Corp., 
    28 A.3d 442
    , 478 (Del.
    Ch. Jan. 21, 2011); then citing Corp. Prop. Assocs. 14 v. CHR Hldg. Corp., 
    2008 WL 963048
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Apr. 10, 2008); and Feldman v. Cutaia, 
    2006 WL 920420
    , at *6
    n.37 (Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2006)).
    Terrell v. Kiromic Biopharma, Inc.,
    Civil Action No. 2021-0248-MTZ
    January 31, 2024
    Page 21 of 21
    III.   CONCLUSION
    Terrell’s claims for a declaration that the unexercised options granted by
    Agreements 1 and 2 were not waived by the Grant Notice are DISMISSED. The
    parties shall submit a stipulated proposed final order.
    Sincerely,
    /s/ Morgan T. Zurn
    Vice Chancellor
    MTZ/ms
    cc: All Counsel of Record, via File & ServeXpress
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C.A. No. 2021-0248-MTZ

Judges: Zurn V.C.

Filed Date: 1/31/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/31/2024