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GREAT HILL EQUITY PARTNERS IV, LP, Great Hill Investors LLC, Fremont Holdco, Inc., and Bluesnap, Inc. (f/k/a Plimus), Plaintiffs, v. SIG GROWTH EQUITY FUND I, LLLP, SIG Growth Equity Management, LLC, Amir Goldman, Jonathan Klahr, Hagai Tal, Tomer Herzog, Daniel Kleinberg, Irit Segal Itshayek, Donors Capital Fund, Inc., and Kids Connect Charitable Fund, Defendants.
OPINION
The plaintiffs, Great Hill Equity Partners IV, LP, Great Hill Investors LLC, Fremont Holdco, Inc., and Bluesnap, Inc. (for clarity, collectively the âBuyerâ), have filed this suit alleging that the defendants, former shareholders and representatives of Plimus, Inc. (for clarity, collectively the âSellerâ), fraudulently induced the Buyer to acquire Plimus, Inc. (âPlimusâ) in September 2011. Plimus was the surviving corporation in the merger.
After the Buyer brought this suit in September 2012âa full year after the mergerâit notified the Seller that, among the files on the Plimus computer systems that the Buyer acquired in the merger, it had discovered certain communications between the Seller and Plimus's then-legal counsel at Perkins Coie regarding the transaction. During that year, the Seller had done nothing to get these computer records back, and there is no evidence that the Seller took any steps to segregate these communications before the merger or excise them from the Plimus computer systems, the control over which was passing to the Buyer in the merger. It is also undisputed that the merger agreement lacked any provision excluding pre-merger attorney-client communications from the assets of Plimus that were transferred to the Buyer as a matter of law in the merger, and the merger was intended to have the effects set forth in the Delaware General Corporation Law (âDGCLâ).1 Nonetheless, when the Seller was notified that the Buyer had found pre-merger communications on the Plimus computer system, the Seller asserted the attorney-client privilege over those communications on the ground that it, and not the surviving corporation, retained control of the attorney-client privilege that belonged to Plimus for communications regarding the negotiation of the merger agreement. Before the court is a motion by the Buyer seeking to resolve this privilege dispute and determine, among other things, that the surviving corporation owns and controls any pre-merger privilege of Plimus or, alternatively, that the Seller has waived any privilege otherwise attaching to those pre-merger communications.2
The question before the court is thus an issue of statutory interpretation in the first instance. Section 259 of the DGCL provides that following a merger, âall property, rights, privileges, powers and franchises, and all and every other interest shall be thereafter as effectually the property of the surviving or resulting corporationâ¤â3 Nonetheless, the Seller contends that the statutory term âall ⤠privilegesâ does not include the attorney-client privilege, and claims that the Seller still retains control over that particular subset of Plimus's privileges, or, as shall be seen, at least the portion of that subset consisting of attorney-client communications regarding the merger negotiations. At oral argument, the Seller suggested without citation that the General Assembly actually intended the âprivilegeâ referred to in § 259 of the DGCL to include only certain property rights, and that it did not extend to privileges established by a rule of evidence.4 But, when asked, the Seller was not able to cite any legislative history that supported its narrow reading of the statute,5 and the court has not been able to find any evidence for its suggested interpretation in the leading treatises.6 Most importantly, the Seller's reading is not a plausible interpretation of the plain statutory language. That language uses the broadest possible terms to make sure that âallâ assets of any kind belong to the surviving corporation after a merger. The Seller's attempt to interpret the word âprivilegesâ to mean âproperty rightsâ ignores the reality that the word âpropertyâ is already specifically used in the statute, as is the term ârightsââand then these terms are expanded still further to include âall and every other interest.â The definition of âallâ is well known, and means âthe whole amount, quantity, or extent of.â7 There is a presumption that the General Assembly carefully chose particular language when writing a statute, and this court will not construe the statute to render that language mere surplusage if another interpretation is reasonably possible.8 The term âprivilegeâ is commonly defined as âa right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor,â9 and one of the most obvious examples is the attorney-client privilege.10 To indulge the Seller's argument would conflict with the only reasonable interpretation of the statute, which is that all means all as to the enumerated categories, and that this includes all privileges, including the attorney-client privilege.
In the face of the statutory language, the Seller cites to two cases in support of its argument, which it claims stand for the proposition that the former stockholders of a selling corporation retain the selling corporation's privileges as to any attorney-client communications regarding the negotiation of the merger.11 In particular, the Seller relies on a decision of the New York Court of Appeals, TekniâPlex, Inc. v. Meyner & Landis, which dissected the privileges belonging to a Delaware corporation that was sold in a merger into two categories, and held that only one category, i.e., less than all, passed to the surviving corporation in the merger.12 TekniâPlex held that the privilege over attorney-client communications regarding general business operations did pass to the surviving corporation in the merger.13 But then the Court of Appeals innovated and, without citing § 259 of the DGCL, concluded that the pre-merger attorney-client communications regarding the merger negotiations did not pass to the surviving corporation for policy reasons related to its analysis of New York attorney-client privilege law.14 The Seller also cites Postorivo v. AG Paintball Holdings, Inc., a decision of this court that applied TekniâPlex.15 But in Postorivo, the court did not take a stand on whether TekniâPlex would be correct under Delaware law, because it was not necessary to do so under the facts of that case. There, the court was applying New York law to an asset purchase agreement that excluded certain assets,16 rather than a merger that included all assets, and the parties had agreed that under the specific contractual terms of their transaction, the seller retained the attorney-client privilege over communications relating to the negotiation of the transaction.17 Thus, as was the case in TekniâPlex, Postorivo did not even cite § 259 of the DGCL.
The Buyer answers the Seller's arguments about these cases with a dispositive response: it points out that the General Assembly's statutory determination leaves no room for judicial improvisation.18 The Buyer contends that under the plain terms of § 259 of the DGCL, the attorney-client privilegeâlike all other privilegesâpasses to the surviving corporation in the merger as a matter of law.19 Thus, the Buyer argues, this court must enforce the statute. The court agrees. If the General Assembly had intended to exclude the attorney-client privilege, it could easily have said so.20 Instead, the statute uses the broadest possible language to set a clear and unambiguous default rule: all privileges of the constituent corporations pass to the surviving corporation in a merger. Tellingly, the Seller admits that the attorney-client privilege has transferred to the surviving corporation for at least some purposes, and the Seller conceded at oral argument that the surviving corporation would, in fact, be able to access and use these same documents if it was necessary to defend itself against a third party.21 But this concession means that the Seller, like the Court of Appeals in TekniâPlex, is not allowing the surviving corporation to receive âallâ of the âprivilegesâ of Plimus in the merger, but only the subset that the judiciary has deemed acceptable to transfer. Thus, âall ⤠privilegesâ in § 259 of the DGCL would become âall ⤠privileges, minus judicially-created exceptions.â Whatever the case may be in other states, members of the Delaware judiciary have no authority to invent a judicially-created exception to the plain words âall ⤠privilegesâ and usurp the General Assembly's statutory authority.22
The Seller claims that giving effect to § 259 of the DGCL will create serious public policy issues.23 But, as has long been recognized by the Delaware Courts, when the General Assembly has addressed an issue within its authority with clarity, there is no policy gap for the court to fill.24 If a valid statute is not ambiguous, the court will apply the plain meaning of the statutory language to the facts before it.25 It would usurp the authority of our elected branches for this court to create a judicial exception to the words âall ⤠privilegesâ for pre-merger attorney-client communications regarding the merger negotiations. That sort of micro-surgery on a clear statute is not an appropriate act for a court to take.
Of course, parties in commerce canâand haveânegotiated special contractual agreements to protect themselves and prevent certain aspects of the privilege from transferring to the surviving corporation in the merger. The Buyer submitted several excerpts from private company merger transactions that contained provisions excluding pre-merger attorney-client communications regarding the negotiation of the transaction from the assets to be transferred to the surviving corporation and explicitly acknowledging that the attorney-client privilege for those documents would belong solely to the seller after the merger.26 Furthermore, one of the cases cited by the Seller demonstrates that parties already know how to protect themselves from this situation. In Postorivo, the transactional agreements specifically retained the attorney-client privilege for communications regarding the negotiation of the transaction, so that particular element of the privilege did not pass to the surviving corporation as an incident of the sale.27 The question in that case, rather, was whether a selling party that had contractually negotiated to retain the privilege waived the rights it had preserved by contract through its failure to take steps to ensure that the privileged information did not actually pass into the possession of the buyer.28
Notably, in the immediate wake of Postorivo and TekniâPlexâand before the parties began negotiating this transactionâseveral articles were written encouraging practitioners to take privilege issues into account when negotiating a merger agreement.29 Well before TekniâPlex, the United States Supreme Court had uttered these plain words:
â[W]hen control of a corporation passes to new management, the authority to assert and waive the corporation's attorney-client privilege passes as well. New managers installed as a result of a takeover, merger, loss of confidence by shareholders, or simply normal succession, may waive the attorney-client privilege with respect to communications made by former officers and directors. Displaced managers may not assert the privilege over the wishes of current managers, even as to statements that the former might have made to counsel concerning matters within the scope of their corporate duties.30
Thus, the answer to any parties worried about facing this predicament in the future is to use their contractual freedom in the manner shown in prior deals to exclude from the transferred assets the attorney-client communications they wish to retain as their own.31 Here, by contrast, the Seller did not carve out from the assets transferred to the surviving corporation any pre-merger attorney-client communications, and this court will not unilaterally read such a carve out into the parties' contract.32 Absent such an express carve out, the privilege over all pre-merger communicationsâincluding those relating to the negotiation of the merger itselfâpassed to the surviving corporation in the merger, by plain operation of clear Delaware statutory law under § 259 of the DGCL.
The Seller also argues that waivers of the attorney-client privilege are not lightly inferred,33 and that irrespective of the fact that the Seller in this case did nothing to preserve the privilegeâeither in terms of i) negotiating a provision in the merger agreement that pre-merger attorney-client communications made in connection with the negotiations did not pass to the surviving corporation in the merger and would remain privileged except as waived by the surviving corporation, or ii) by taking any action to ensure that those attorney-client communications did not pass to the surviving corporation in bulk and remain in the surviving corporation's full possession and control for an entire yearâthat the Seller has nonetheless not waived the privilege. But having decided that the attorney-client privilege for the documents passed as a matter of law to the surviving corporation in the merger, these waiver-related arguments need not be addressed, including the substantial issue of whether the Seller waived the privilege through its lengthy failure to take any reasonable steps to ensure the Buyer did not have access to the allegedly privileged communications.
For all these reasons, the Buyer's motion for disposition of privilege dispute is granted.34 IT IS SO ORDERED.
FOOTNOTES
1.  Plimus was a California corporation, and the Buyer was a Delaware corporation. Thus, the Merger Agreement provided that â[t]he Merger shall have the effects set forth in this Agreement and in the applicable provisions of the DGCL and the [California General Corporation Law (âCGCLâ) ].â). Merger Agreement § 2.02, Effects of the Merger. The Buyer has represented that the CGCL âeffectively followsâ the DGCL on this point, see Oral Arg. Tr. 6:13â15, and the Seller has not argued that the result would be different under the CGCL. Section 12.07 of the Merger Agreement also provided that â[a]ll disputes, controversies, issues and questions concerning the construction, validity, interpretation and enforceability of this Agreement ⤠shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the Laws of the State of Delawareâ¤â
2.  The Buyer also argued that the Seller's privilege log was inadequate, and that the documents in dispute should be reviewed by a Master to determine whether the crime-fraud exception to attorney-client privilege would apply.
3.  8 Del. C. § 259.
4.  Oral Arg. Tr. 64:8â17 (âI think we have to look at whether [§ ] 259(a) is really talking about the same kind of privilege that we're talking about here. It talks about property rights⤠I don't think it's talking about a rule of evidence, which is what the attorney-client privilege is.â); Oral Arg. Tr. 66:5â12 (âAn easement ⤠A privilege to use land, for example, is something that belongs and can be sold, belongs to the property rights. That is aâthat has often been defined as a privilege. A use of a copyright has often been defined as a privilege. And, therefore, what I think the statute might be talking about is those kind of privileges.â).
5.  Oral Arg. Tr. 65:15â20.
6.  See, e.g., R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, Delaware Law of Corporations & Business Organizations § 9.26, Effects of Merger (2013) (âSection 259(a) further provides for the transfer, as a matter of law, to the surviving or resulting corporation of all of the ârights, privileges, powers and franchises as well of a public as of a private nature â¤â) (emphasis added); David A. Drexler, Lewis S. Black, Jr. & A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, Delaware Corporation Law and Practice § 35.07, Effect of Merger on Rights and Liabilities of Constituent Corporations (2009) (noting that â[t]he property passing to the surviving corporation also includes contractual rights and other choses in action, as well as any âprivileges, powers and franchises as well a public as of a private natureâ â â) (emphasis added); Edward P. Welch, el al., Folk on the Delaware General Corporation Law § 259.2 (5th ed.2008), Survival of rights of a constituent corporation (âThe concept of continuing the life, but not the separate identity, of the merged corporation finds statutory expression in the provision that the new or surviving corporation âpossess[es] all the rights, privileges, powers and franchises as well of a public as of a private natureâ previously belonging to or enjoyed by the constituent corporation. In a merger or consolidation, all rights of the constituent corporation are transferred to the surviving corporation by operation of law â¤â) (emphasis added); see also 19 C.J.S. Corporations § 909, Succession to rights, privileges, and property (2013) (âThe usual effect of a consolidation or merger is that the new corporation succeeds to the rights, powers, privileges and immunities of each of the original corporations, except as provided by the limitations of the new corporation's charter⤠The new corporation takes the rights, powers, privileges, and immunities of the constituent corporations.â) (emphasis added); 15 Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 7095, Exemptions and immunities passing to new company (2013) (noting that â[t]he modern corporation statutes in a number of jurisdictions expressly provide that, upon a statutory merger or consolidation, the surviving or new corporation shall thereupon and thereafter possess all the rights, privileges, immunities and franchises, both of a public as well as of a private nature, of each of the merging or consolidating corporationsâ and citing 8 Del. C. § 259 as an example) (emphasis added).One treatise expressly declares that â[u]nder a provision giving a consolidated corporation the rights, franchises, privileges and property of the consolidating corporations, or without such a provision, and in the absence of provision to the contrary, the consolidated corporation acquires ⤠the absorbed corporation's attorney-client privilege.â 15 Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 7089, Powers and rights acquired (2013).
7.  MerriamâWebster Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/ dictionary/all (last visited Nov. 14, 2013).
8.  Taylor v. Diamond State Port Corp., 14 A.3d 536, 538 (Del.2011); Oceanport Indus., Inc. v. Wilmington Stevedores, Inc., 636 A.2d 892, 900 (Del.1994).
9.  MerriamâWebster Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/ dictionary/privilege (last visited Nov. 14, 2013); see also Black's Law Dictionary 1234â35 (8th ed.2004) (defining âprivilegeâ as â[a] special legal right, exemption, or immunity granted to a person or class of persons, an exception to a duty,â or â[a]n evidentiary rule that gives a witness the option to not disclose the fact asked for, even though it might be relevant; the right to prevent disclosure of certain information in court, esp. when the information was originally communicated in a professional or confidential relationshipâ and listing the âattorney-client privilegeâ as an example).
10.  See Upjohn Co. v. United States, 449 U.S. 383, 389 (1981) (stating that â[t]he attorney-client privilege is the oldest of the privileges for confidential communications known to the common lawâ); Union Carbide Corp. v. Dow Chem. Co., 619 F.Supp. 1036, 1046 (D.Del.1985) (noting that the attorney-client privilege âdates back to the 16th centuryâ).
11.  Postorivo v. AG Paintball Holdings, Inc., 2008 WL 343856 (Del. Ch. Feb. 7, 2008); TekniâPlex, Inc. v. Meyner & Landis, 674 N.E.2d 663 (N.Y.1996).
12.  674 N.E.2d 663, 670 (N.Y.1996).
13.  Id. at 670â71.
14.  Id. at 671â72 (noting that the decision was made â[i]n light of the facts of this particular transaction and the structure of the underlying agreementâ).
15.  2008 WL 343856 (Del. Ch. Feb. 7, 2008).
16.  Id. at *2 (describing the terms of the asset purchase agreement and noting that â § 12.8 of the [asset purchase agreement] provides that [it] is governed by New York law.â).
17.  Id. at *1 (noting the parties' agreement).
18.  Ross v. State, 990 A.2d 424, 428 (Del.2010) (âThe role of the judiciary in interpreting a statute is to determine and give effect to the legislature's intent. When the intent is reflected by unambiguous language in the statute, the language itself controls. In that instance, a court must apply the statutory language to the facts of the case before it.â) (internal citations omitted); Rubick v. Sec. Instrument Corp., 766 A.2d 15, 18 (Del.2000) (âIf the statute is unambiguous, there is no room for interpretation, and the plain meaning of the words controls.â); Coastal Barge Corp. v. Coastal Zone Indus. Control Bd., 492 A.2d 1242, 1246 (Del.1985) (noting that where a statute is unambiguous, âthe Court's role is then limited to an application of the literal meaning of the words.â).
19.  See Oral Arg. Tr. 112:14â18 (âThe statute clearly is intended to say that the entirety of the ball of rights, everything that the law recognizes is a right [was sold], period, full stop; and you would have to be putting an asterisk on the statute to get there.â). The Buyer also points to Delaware Rule of Evidence 502, which explicitly contemplates that the attorney-client privilege may pass to a corporation's successor, for additional support of this interpretation, because no evidence of a carve out appears there either. See Del. R. Evid. 502(c) (âThe privilege under this rule may be claimed by ⤠the successor, trustee or similar representative of the corporation.â).
20.  See Fid. & Deposit Co. of Md. v. State Dep't of Admin. Servs ., 830 A.2d 1224, 1228â29 (Del. Ch.2003) (refusing to âimpos[e] an additional term upon the statute that was not put in place by the legislatureâ because â[t]he legislature was clearly capable of articulating exacting requirementsâ if it wanted to do so); see also State v. Cooper, 575 A.2d 1074, 1075â76 (Del.1990) (noting that âthe language of the statute must be regarded as conclusive of the General Assembly's intent.â).
21.  See Oral Arg. Tr. 71:22â72:5; Oral Arg. Tr. 72:13â15.
22.  See, e.g., In re Adoption of Swanson, 623 A.2d 1095, 1096â97 (Del.1993) (â[O]ur role as judges is limited to applying the statute objectively and not revising it.â); Giuricich v. Emtrol Corp., 449 A.2d 232, 238 (Del.1982) (âThe courts may not engraft upon a statute language which has been clearly excluded therefrom by the Legislature.â).
23.  Def's. Opp'n. Br. at *18â19 (citing TekniâPlex to argue that this outcome âwould significantly chill attorney-client communication during the transactionâ and would therefore defeat the purpose of the attorney-client privilege).
24.  See, e.g., In re Adoption of Swanson, 623 A.2d 1095, 1099 (Del.1993) (âIt is beyond the province of courts to question the policy or wisdom of an otherwise valid law. Instead, each judge must take and apply the law as they find it, leaving any changes to the duly elected representatives of the people.â) (internal citations omitted); Pub. Serv. Comm'n of State of Del. v. Wilmington Suburban Water Corp., 467 A.2d 446, 451 (Del.1983) (recognizing âthe well-established principle that if an otherwise valid statute causes or leads to an inequitable result, then it is the sole province of the legislature to correct it.â); In re Vandyke's Estate, 136 A. 147, 148 (Del.Orph.1927) (âIf the policy of the statute is wrong, the Legislature is the only place where relief against it may be obtained.â).
25.  See Sussex Cnty. Dep't of Elections v. Sussex Cnty. Republican Comm., 58 A.3d 418, 422 (Del.2013) (âIf we determine that a statute is unambiguous, we give the statutory language its plain meaning.â); see also Moore v. Chrysler Corp., 233 A.2d 53, 55 (Del.1967) (âWords in statutes must be given their common and ordinary meanings.â).
26.  Letter from Counsel for the Buyer to the Court of Chancery (Sept. 27, 2013) (enclosing excerpts from three private company transactions).
27.  Postorivo, 2008 WL 343856, at *6 n. 25 (âSection 1.2(h) [of the asset purchase agreement] provides that âExcluded Assets' from the sale include âall rights of the Sellers under this Agreement and all agreements and other documentation relating to the transactions contemplated hereby.â â).
28.  Id. at *4 n. 13.
29.  See Henry Sill Bryans, Business Successors and the Transpositional AttorneyâClient Relationship, 64 Bus. Law. 1039, 1046 (2009) (noting that âTekniâPlex was a wake-up call for transactional lawyersâ and concluding that âdrafting against a contrary result may be prudentâ); M & A Jurisprudence Subcommittee, Mergers and Acquisitions Committee, ABA Section of Business Law, Annual Survey of Judicial Developments Pertaining to Mergers and Acquisitions, 64 Bus. Law. 433, 463 (2009) (âThe Postorivo decision highlights the importance of addressing attorney-client privilege ownership issues in an acquisition agreement, regardless of whether the acquisition is structured as an asset transaction, a merger, or a sale of stock.â); Russell C. Silberglied, Who Owns Privileged EâMails in A S363 Sale Case? Is Ownership Waived When the Debtor's Computer Servers Are Sold?, 28âFeb Am. Bankr.Inst. J., 46, 77 (2009) (âWhile Postorivo is one of the first cases addressing who owns the privilege in these scenarios, it will not be the last⤠[C]ounsel should strongly consider addressing these points in the asset-purchase agreement. Indeed, who will retain the privilege ⤠should be a part of most âchecklistsâ in negotiating an asset purchase agreement.â).
30.  Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Weintraub, 471 U.S. 343, 349 (1985) (emphasis added).
31.  See, e.g., John T. Hundley, White Knights, PreâNuptial Confidences, and the Morning After: The Effect of TransactionâRelated Disclosures on the AttorneyâClient and Related Privileges, 5 DePaul Bus. L.J. 59 (1993) (exploring the âtensions that can arise in the attorney-client privilege when corporate transactions occur or are contemplatedâ and concluding that âforethought and planning can reduce ⤠uncertainty and properly provide for improved protection in many instancesâ).
32.  To do so would âcreate a new contract with rights, liabilities and duties to which the parties had not assented.â RhoneâPoulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A .2d 1192, 1196 (Del.1992).
33.  See Davenport Grp. v. Strategic Inv., 1995 WL 523591 (Del. Ch. Aug. 24, 1995) (âPublic policy encourages courts to protect attorney client privilege.â); Hollingsworth v. Essence Comm'ns, Inc., 1977 WL 2585 (Del. Ch. July 15, 1977) (noting that â[t]he attorney-client privilege is too basic to our law to permit it to be disregarded lightly or under uncontrolled conditionsâ).
34.  The Buyer and the Seller also filed cross-motions regarding the Entry of a Protective Order. As a result of my ruling that all privileges pass to the surviving corporation in the merger as a matter of law under § 259 of the DGCL, this issue has been rendered moot, which the Seller acknowledged could occur. Thus, the Seller's Motion for Entry of a Protective Order is DENIED, and the Buyer's Motion for Entry of Proposed Amended Protective Order is GRANTED.
STRINE, Chancellor.
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Docket No: Civil Action No. 7906âCS.
Decided: November 15, 2013
Court: Court of Chancery of Delaware.
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