Triple H Family Limited Partnership v. Jerry Neal ( 2018 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    Triple H Family Limited Partnership,    )
    a Delaware limited partnership,         )
    )
    Plaintiff and             )
    Counterclaim Defendant,   )
    )
    v.                        ) C.A. No. 12294-VCMR
    )
    Jerry Neal,                             )
    )
    Defendant and             )
    Counterclaim Plaintiff,   )
    )
    v.                        )
    )
    Jeffrey A. Hoops,                       )
    )
    Counterclaim Defendant,   )
    )
    and                       )
    )
    Omni Insurance Group, LLC, a            )
    Delaware limited liability company,     )
    )
    Nominal Defendant and     )
    Counterclaim Defendant.   )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: April 19, 2018
    Date Decided: July 31, 2018
    David B. Anthony and Sean A. Meluney, BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff and Counterclaim Defendants.
    Robert J. Katzenstein and Clarissa R. Chenoweth, SMITH, KATZENSTEN &
    JENKINS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendant and
    Counterclaim Plaintiff.
    MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Vice Chancellor.
    In August 2014, two old friends decided to start an insurance agency together.
    They had high hopes of a mutually beneficial relationship, but these hopes were
    quickly dashed.    Almost two months to the day from the inception of their
    arrangement, the parties agreed to dissolve their business. The parties differ in their
    opinion on the cause of the failure; one side claiming incompetence and the other
    hubris. In fact, the parties differ in their opinion on pretty much everything
    pertaining to this litigation, much as they differed on pretty much everything during
    their business venture.
    Unfortunately, the failed venture created bad blood between the two friends.
    This litigation was filed after months of fighting over how to unwind their business.
    The plaintiff seeks damages for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty as
    well as judicial dissolution of the limited liability company involved. The defendant
    seeks damages for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and fraud. I find that
    the defendant breached the contract and breached his fiduciary duties, and the
    plaintiff did not breach the contract, breach his fiduciary duties, or commit fraud.
    Finally, judicial dissolution is not necessary because the parties already agreed to
    dissolve the limited liability company. Instead, I order that the limited liability
    company be wound up.
    1
    I.    BACKGROUND
    Below are my findings of fact based on the parties’ stipulations, over 300 trial
    exhibits, and the testimony of six live witnesses during a three-day trial. 1
    A.     Parties and Relevant Non-Parties
    Plaintiff and Counterclaim Defendant Triple H Family Limited Partnership
    (“Triple H”) is ninety-nine percent owned by Hoops Family Dynasty Trust, which
    is controlled by Jeffrey Hoops’s three adult sons, and one percent owned by its
    general partner, Milton Management. 2           Triple H is a holding company for
    investments made by Milton Management, which is controlled by Jeffrey Hoops. 3
    Counterclaim Defendant Jeffrey Hoops (“Hoops”) has worked in coal mining
    for more than forty years.4 Hoops started several coal mining businesses during his
    1
    Citations to testimony presented at trial are in the form “Tr. # (X)” with “X”
    representing the surname of the speaker, if not clear from the text. Joint Trial
    Exhibits are cited as “JX #,” and facts drawn from the parties’ Joint Pretrial
    Stipulation and Order are cited as “PTO #.” Unless otherwise indicated, citations
    to the parties’ briefs are to post-trial briefs. After being identified initially,
    individuals are referenced herein by their surnames without honorifics or regard to
    formal titles such as “Doctor.” No disrespect is intended.
    2
    PTO ¶¶ 12, 13. For the sake of efficiency, I refer to Triple H and Hoops collectively
    as “Plaintiff.”
    3
    
    Id. ¶ 12;
    Tr. 44 (Hoops).
    4
    See PTO ¶ 6.
    2
    career and currently runs Revelation Energy LLC (“Revelation”), a coal mining
    business he started in 2008.5
    Defendant and Counterclaim Plaintiff Jerry Neal (“Neal” or “Defendant”) is
    an insurance agent residing in West Virginia. He has worked in the insurance
    business for almost thirty years, 6 and in 2011 he formed his own insurance business
    called Neal Insurance. 7
    Omni Insurance Group, LLC (“Omni”) is a Delaware LLC organized by
    Hoops on August 25, 2014. 8 Triple H and Neal both own fifty percent of Omni. 9
    B.     Credibility
    I accord the evidence the weight and credibility I find it deserves. There are
    several conflicts between the contemporaneous documents and the live witness
    testimony given three years after the fact. I tend to give more weight to the
    contemporaneous evidence as it is free from the realities of litigation and closer in
    time to the events that transpired. Additionally, the contemporaneous written
    evidence and live witness testimony in this case show a clear pattern of behavior on
    5
    Tr. 17 (Hoops).
    6
    See PTO ¶ 4.
    7
    
    Id. ¶ 5.
    8
    
    Id. ¶ 1.
    9
    
    Id. ¶ 2.
    3
    the part of both Hoops and Neal that greatly influenced the credibility of each. On
    the one hand, Hoops is a seasoned businessman who seems to move with breakneck
    speed when it comes to making business decisions. But Hoops also has a strong
    personal code of ethics and believes a man’s word is his bond. 10 Neal, on the other
    hand, is the perpetual salesman who will say whatever he needs to, regardless of
    veracity, in order to secure the deal and who continuously tries to renegotiate deals
    to get more favorable terms for himself. 11 These characteristics are repeatedly
    10
    See, e.g., JX 17 (setting up Omni within days of coming up with the idea with Neal);
    JX 57 (refusing to move insurance away from Van Meter, even for a cheaper rate,
    because “they done the right thing when it would have been easy for them to say
    no”); JX 69 (“I sincerely apologize for his actions as I would never want to be in
    business with anyone that conducts themselves in this manner.”); JX 72 (“It is clear
    you do not think much of Heather and I know little about insurance, but she has
    done a great job for us the past 6 years and with all she and Joe are involved in for
    us, I cannot cut her loose.”); JX 72 (agreeing to stick to the terms of his deal with
    Neal even after Neal failed to secure insurance twice in ten days); JX 86 (agreeing
    to pay the ten percent penalty on Neal withdrawing money from 401K to keep Neal
    “whole”).
    11
    See, e.g., JX 23 (attempting to renegotiate the terms of Omni to keep Neal Insurance
    bond and consulting income exclusively for himself); JX 54 (telling Hoops less than
    twenty-four hours before his personal policies lapsed, despite multiple assurances
    to the contrary, that Neal did not succeed in getting Hoops’s assets covered); JX 72
    (attempting to renegotiate the terms of Omni’s dissolution); JX 222 (opening a JP
    Morgan Bank account without Hoops’s knowledge to redirect Omni’s biggest
    commissions). Compare JX 90 (representing to West Virginia Offices of the
    Insurance Commissioner that he is the sole managing member of Omni in order to
    report Hoops and Black Diamond to the Insurance Commissioner) with Tr. 454
    (Neal) (testifying after suing Hoops for breach of fiduciary duty that, “I don’t think
    that as it was unfolded and what we truly ended up doing, I was the sole manager,
    no.”); compare JX 25 (representing on September 1, 2014, that Neal did not have
    “a single Neal Insurance policy renewing” until after December 31, 2014) with JX
    326 (invoicing November 18, 2014 renewals); compare JX 47 (telling Hoops that
    “[a]ll coverages are bound, went into effect at midnight on Sunday morning”) with
    4
    reaffirmed by the evidence; thus, when contemporaneous written evidence is lacking
    and Neal’s and Hoops’s testimony conflicts, I tend to give Hoops’s testimony more
    weight.
    C.      Facts
    Neal and Hoops attended high school together in West Virginia. 12 In August
    2014, they both attended their fortieth high school reunion. 13 During the course of
    the second night of the reunion, the two men discussed a shared acquaintance in the
    coal industry who had started an insurance agency. 14 This idea appealed to Hoops
    as a way of recouping some of the money he spent on insurance premiums each year.
    From Neal’s perspective, Hoops’s business and personal insurance would generate
    very lucrative commissions. Forming an insurance agency together would be a
    mutually beneficial endeavor, and the two men left the reunion excited about the
    prospect. 15
    JX 310 (emailing an insurance broker minutes after JX 47 was sent asking if the
    policy is bound and saying he is “[v]ery concerned we are exposed”).
    12
    PTO ¶ 3.
    13
    
    Id. ¶ 8.
    14
    Tr. 27 (Hoops).
    15
    JX 7. I make no determination as to the legality of their venture.
    5
    1.      Initial conversations about forming Omni: August 18-25,
    2014
    On August 18 and 19, 2014, Neal and Hoops exchanged emails discussing the
    preliminary plans for starting an insurance agency together.16 On August 20 at 12:53
    p.m., Hoops sent the following email (the “August 20 Email”) to his long-time
    personal lawyer Edward “Eddie” Cunningham:
    Eddie:
    Looking to diversify a little as I just completed a meeting
    with Jerry Neal a lifelong friend and business
    acquaintance as we finalized the plans to move forward
    with forming a new Insurance Agency. Would appreciate
    you pullingtogther our normal operating agreement with
    the ownership to be structured as follows:
    1)    New Entity Name
    a.   Omni Insurance Group (if available)
    b.   Assume we will register in Delaware,
    then get set up to do business in WV,
    KY, TN, VA, and OH.
    2)   Owner
    a.   Jerry Neal
    b.   Triple H Family LP will have a 50%
    Net Profits Interest with an option to
    convert that to 50% of the stock in the
    future.
    i. Will have 50% voting rights on
    decisions.
    Jerry has a base of business already that will move into the
    entity and he will be provided a Base Salary plus Benefits
    as President and CEO of the business. Jerry has all of the
    16
    JX 9-JX 13.
    6
    necessary licenses required to underwrite insurance and if
    there are any nuances to forming an Agency please let me
    know as we were not aware of any.
    Sandy:
    If you are aware of anything we need to be concerned
    about, please advise.
    Lisa:
    Initially there will be minimal back office work, so if you
    can set up a GL for this that would be great. Ultimately
    we will need Alpha to set up a web page and other IT
    things we may need for such a venture. Once Eddie has is
    set up with an Operating Agreement and FEIN, please set
    up a bank account at United Bank for this entity.
    We would like to have everything in place and start rolling
    Jerry’s other business into this entity by October 1 and he
    will go on salary at that point. We can make a loan from
    Triple H to this entity for the initial working capital that
    might be required. Ultimately Jerry will build out an
    office staff, but will run lean initially.
    Let us know if you have any questions or need any
    additional information … Thanks … Jeff17
    17
    JX 16. Quotes from trial testimony and email exhibits are presented in their original
    form except where indicated. I chose not to include sic because it would make some
    of the testimony and emails unreadable.
    7
    The August 20 Email was cc’d to Neal, Lisa Henson, and Sandy Thomas. 18 Lisa
    Henson was the CFO of Revelation,19 and Sandy Thomas is a tax expert.20
    Neal replied all to the August 20 Email at 7:04 p.m. on August 20, “Thanks
    Jeff. Let me know what you need from me Eddie. I can license the Agency with the
    various State Insurance Departments if you want me to. Thanks.” 21 On August 21
    at 1:27 p.m., Thomas replied all to the August 20 Email to explain that “if Jerry is
    the only member of the LLC it will be a single member LLC and a disregarded entity
    for tax.”22 Based on this advice, as well as Cunningham’s legal research on who
    could own an insurance agency, Hoops replied all to Thomas at 1:41 p.m. on the
    same day, “Those are good points, so let’s go ahead and make Triple H a member
    and we can pay Jerry from LLC and bill it to Omni so he will not have to deal with
    the Quarterly Tax issue.”23
    18
    JX 14.
    19
    Tr. 59 (Hoops).
    20
    Tr. 39 (Hoops).
    21
    JX 14.
    22
    
    Id. 23 Tr.
    43 (Hoops); JX 16.
    8
    On August 22 at 9:36 a.m., Neal sent an email to his accountant Bob Toler.24
    The email stated:
    Very Confidential.
    Need your thoughts about new Insurance Agency that is
    being set up with me as President and Jeff Hoops as 50%
    owner. Please look at below and let’s discuss. Eddie is
    Jeff’s attorney who sets up his business ventures etc.
    Jeff is rolling in all his business plus another three or four
    times that in associated business that he has ties to.25
    The email also included the August 20 Email, Thomas’s response from August 21
    at 1:27 p.m., and Hoops’s response to Thomas at 1:41 p.m. 26 Toler replied at 10:29
    a.m. on August 22, “Even if they make the other entity a member you cannot
    received salary or wages from the LLC. You will receive guaranteed payments to a
    partner and pay estimated taxes accordingly. A member of an LLC can’t be an
    employee of the LLC.” 27
    On August 22 at 1:41 p.m., Hoops informed Neal via email that “Omni is
    available in Delaware and West Virginia, so Eddie is going to proceed with getting
    us set up in Delaware, then we will register to do business under that name in WV
    24
    JX 19.
    25
    
    Id. 26 Id.
    27
    
    Id. 9 where
    the main office will be located. Looks like everything is coming together.”28
    On August 25, 2014, Hoops, as organizer, executed the Certificate of Formation for
    Omni creating the Delaware LLC. 29
    2.   The push to get Omni off the ground and Revelation’s
    policies renewed before they lapsed: September 1-30, 2014
    In the insurance world, agents make commissions, which are a percentage of
    the premium paid by the customer. Hoops was under the impression that Omni
    would earn $600,000 a year in commissions just from Revelation’s insurance
    policies.30 Triple H would then be entitled to fifty percent of those commissions
    after expenses as a fifty percent owner of Omni. Securing these commissions came
    with a hitch, however. Revelation’s insurance policies were yearlong policies that
    ran from October 5 to October 5.31 All of Revelation’s policies would be renewing
    on October 5, and in order to secure the 2014-2015 commissions, Omni would have
    to be the agent of record and place those policies.32
    28
    JX 20.
    29
    JX 21.
    30
    Tr. 35 (Hoops). In actuality, Omni received a little over $300,000 in commissions
    for the 2014-2015 year because the insurance policies were placed using brokers
    rather than directly with the carriers. Tr. 56 (Hoops).
    31
    Tr. 28 (Hoops).
    32
    See Tr. 111, 118-19 (Hoops) (explaining that the Agent of Record at the time the
    policy is placed is entitled to the commissions for the entire term of that policy
    regardless of any later changes to the Agent of Record).
    10
    Normally, an insurance agent would start to look for those renewal policies
    three months in advance, or July for policies renewing in October.33 Hoops had a
    meeting set up with his current insurance broker, Van Meter Insurance Group (“Van
    Meter”) for September 24, 2014.34 Since Omni was created on August 25, it was
    generally understood that having Omni handle the renewal of Revelation’s policies
    would be challenging. 35 Hoops’s personal policies, securing $15 million in assets,
    were up for renewal on October 15, which further compounded the amount of work
    required by Neal and Omni in a very short amount of time.
    On September 1, 2014, Neal wrote to Hoops:
    I need to focus on getting everything moved by 10-5 or so.
    Best if I do it from here for at least a few weeks.
    Thinking of farming out your personal policies to agent
    here who is really good.            50/50 split maybe on
    commission. Hopefully for just this year. You OK with
    that?
    Assuming premiums same or better. Going to get
    appointed with current carriers but might be tough in 30
    days. 36
    33
    Tr. 28 (Hoops); JX 9.
    34
    JX 9.
    35
    Tr. 56 (Hoops).
    36
    JX 25.
    11
    On top of all the work required to place Revelation’s and Hoops’s insurance
    policies by the renewal dates, there was significant work required just to set up Omni
    to function as an insurance agency. In the same September 1 email, Neal also wrote:
    I hope to have the Errors and Omissions Insurance in place
    tomorrow. Will need about $5000 to pay for the year.
    Next is getting Broker/Agency Appointments. Will need
    W9-FEIN. Hope we can get it tomorrow. Will this be
    Eddie, Lisa, or me?
    Need to get Business licensed in WV so I can do same with
    Insurance Commissioner.
    E&O carriers will not do business in Delaware. I had to
    change address on applications. I used my address and
    phone number. We can change easily and will.37
    Adding even further strain was the fact that Neal kept attempting to
    renegotiate the structure and operation of Omni. In the same September 1 email
    above, Neal also wrote:
    I don’t think I have a single Neal Insurance policy
    renewing between now and 12-31-14. All are done
    already. Nothing really gained by moving them until
    renewal.
    I do have some Consulting fees coming up which do not
    involve any contracts or agreements with any company,
    Brook and SM included. I get paid a fee for getting the
    bonds and keeping the bonds placed. Two customers.
    Ungureans and one small bond in Pa. I would need to
    discuss with them which I really don’t want to do. I don’t
    want to discuss with Brook either although there is no
    37
    
    Id. 12 arrangement
    with him other thatn fact that he knows that I
    get something on a fee basis.
    I would like to leave these alone for now and also keep
    Neal Insurance operating mainly for reason to place
    something that we might not be able to do with Omni.
    Heather mentioned this in a way.
    I am going to need the income from the Consulting this
    year.
    Guessing, but Revelation probably pays quarterly
    installments that are interest free. If so, we might get only
    get a quarter of the commission this year. My half added
    to 3 months of dray might leave me a little short for the
    year.
    Most important thing is that I absolutely will not do any
    new business in Neal Insurance after Oct. 1 unless you and
    I agree before hand and have a good reason. My thinking
    is by first quarter of next year my business will be an
    insignificant portion of my income comparted to Omni
    and I will want to roll it in. We can discuss further if we
    need to. I don’t want this to be an issue with you at all. I
    will show all records for this and past years. 38
    But Hoops wanted to maintain their original agreement. He replied several
    hours later:
    Thought we had discussed and agreed on many of these
    things as here was my understanding
    1) Fine with considering sharing or leasing office space
    with Ron but want to clearly understand and formalize
    the relationship
    2) the FEIN can be done on line if it is not done already I
    will make sure it gets done tomorrow
    3) I can have Lisa register us on line in WV
    38
    
    Id. 13 4)
    Omni Insurance Group, LLC address is 1051 Main
    Street, Milton, WV 25541
    5) as discussed I am not hung up on where you work from
    6) had thought we could do personal policies as they are a
    month behind others, but if that is all we can do then
    we have no choice. They are October 25th
    7) copy me on request to Heather and I will follow up as
    well.
    8) understood we were going to do the following
    - roll all of your current income into Omni
    - you would draw salary of $100K, vehicle, and
    health insurance
    - 50% ownership
    - Commissions on my business along could be as
    much as $600,000
    I went into this with the understanding it was all going to
    roll together and we were going to be 100% focused on
    growing Omni. If that does not work for you that is fine
    and need to know now so we can go in another direction.39
    Neal quickly backed off. He replied, in relevant part, the next day, September
    2 at 9:23 a.m.:
    I am 100% committed to growing Omni.
    I will roll Neal Insurance beginning in October. Maybe a
    short term perspective on my part.
    I will feel better when it is clear that I have Oct. 5 covered.
    Most of concerns are on my end.
    I want to handle your Personal [insurance] and will if I can
    get proper markets. Inside of 60 days which is a minimum
    for some markets to quote.
    Total Personal premium for 8 policies is about $18,959.69.
    About $3800 commission. 40
    39
    
    Id. 40 Id.
    14
    Hoops replied:
    No issue with you maintaining Neal Insurance entity in the
    even we would need it for separation. My intent is to be a
    silent partner and unless it is an account I can help land,
    everyone else will see it as your company.
    Agree the personal is not a big part of what we are doing.
    Thought based on your conversation with Jim last week
    you were confident you could get everything done. Agree
    getting business covered is critical and if you see that
    cannot be done, then we pull the plug on everything and
    go back to the way it is right now. 41
    Throughout September 2014, Neal and Hoops continued to try to place Revelation’s
    and Hoops’s insurance policies, get Omni running, and discuss their business
    relationship. Central to all of this was Heather Hammond.
    Hammond began working in the coal industry nineteen years ago at Jacobs
    Risk Management, helping to prepare mine plans for the Mine Safety and Health
    Administration. 42 Jacobs Risk Management assists small and large coal companies
    with regulatory affairs and insurance needs;43 it had serviced Revelation’s and
    41
    
    Id. 42 Tr.
    479 (Hammond).
    43
    Tr. 552 (Jacobs).
    15
    Hoops’s insurance policies since 2009.44 Jacobs Risk Management was contracted
    to work with Van Meter to place the insurance policies.45
    When Hoops and Neal first decided to form Omni, they met with Hammond
    and Joseph Jacobs, 46 the owner of Jacobs Risk Management. 47 At that meeting, Neal
    and Hoops asked Hammond and Jacobs to help with the transition into Omni and for
    help with future administrative work. 48     They all agreed that “Jacobs Risk
    Management would receive a commission on current business of Revelation as well
    as commission on any new business that’s brought to the table.” 49 Hammond
    continued to work with Neal through September, assisting with renewing
    Revelation’s policies.50 She provided Neal with renewal paperwork to be submitted
    to insurance carriers, helped new carriers conduct site visits with Jacobs, and
    provided additional information to Neal as needed.51
    44
    Tr. 485 (Hammond); Tr. 553 (Jacobs).
    45
    Tr. 485 (Hammond); JX 4.
    46
    Tr. 486 (Hammond); JX 26.
    47
    Tr. 19 (Hoops).
    48
    Tr. 486 (Hammond).
    49
    Tr. 487 (Hammond); see also JX 26; Tr. 37 (Hoops); JX 41, at JN00015354.
    50
    See JX 26; JX 32.
    51
    Tr. 280-81 (Neal); Tr. 491-95 (Hammond).
    16
    The relationship between Neal and Hammond was strained almost
    immediately. 52 Neal felt that Hammond was not providing him with the type of
    cooperation he was expecting,53 and Hammond felt that Neal treated her like he was
    superior to her or like she was “ lower class.” 54 Despite this tension, Hammond and
    Neal continued to work towards renewal of Revelation’s policies, sending out Agent
    of Record letters and getting insurance quotes.55
    On September 22, 2014, Cunningham sent a proposed operating agreement
    for Omni, a proposed employment agreement for Neal, and a proposed member
    agreement for Omni to Hoops and Neal. Neal never signed these agreements. 56
    3.   Things fall apart: October 1-31, 2014
    On October 1, 2014, Neal emailed Hoops saying, “We did it. I have everything
    done.”57 Neal then walked through the particulars of the different insurance policies,
    including workers’ compensation, director and officer (“D&O”), crime, and excess
    52
    JX 27; JX 28; Tr. 282-83 (Neal); Tr. 496 (Hammond).
    53
    Tr. 283 (Neal).
    54
    Tr. 496 (Hammond).
    55
    JX 32; JX 34; JX 35.
    56
    Tr. 330, 347-48 (Neal).
    57
    JX 41.
    17
    insurances. 58 Hoops replied, “Amazing you got all of this pulled together in such a
    short time, great job.” 59   The celebrations continued on October 3,60 but the
    celebrations were short lived. On October 4, a Saturday, Neal emailed Hoops at 6:02
    p.m., “I was not able to get the policy number on the D&O from the wholesaler
    representing Westchester.    The wholesaler said there was a concern with the
    questions on Friday.” 61 Hoops replied at 6:20 p.m., “Are we going to be without
    insurance for some period of time now? Having coverage is more important than
    anything else as I would not Want to e itch out insurance for one minute as we have
    people on our jobs 24/7.”62 Neal assured Hoops that everything was likely fine,
    writing, “Most likely someone of authority with Westchester was out Friday
    afternoon and upon return Monday morning will approve and coverage will be in
    effect midnight Sunday morning – 10-05-14 as if nothing happened.”63 Hoops
    replied, “I would have submitted financing without D&O as I would never take the
    chance of not having liability and equipment coverage. Will anything be covered as
    58
    
    Id. 59 Id.
    60
    JX 46.
    61
    JX 47.
    62
    
    Id. 63 Id.
    18
    of midnight tomorrow night?      If not I would shut the operations down until
    something is in place. That cost us about $1.1mm per day.” 64
    At 8:18 a.m. on Monday, October 6, Neal assured Hoops again that, “All
    coverages are bound, went into effect at midnight Sunday morning. I have the policy
    numbers for them except the D&O.” 65 At 8:20 a.m., Neal emailed the D&O
    insurance intermediary asking, “Are we bound? No policy number or word Friday.
    Very concerned that we are exposed. Please advise asap. Customer is not happy
    with me about this.”66 The intermediary responded at 10:13 a.m. that the underwriter
    and carrier both had additional questions as of Monday, October 6. At 9:37 a.m. on
    October 6, Neal emailed a different intermediary to see if they could give him a
    quote for D&O insurance.67 On October 8 at 9:58 a.m., Neal emailed yet another
    underwriter, “I have a pressing need to get D&O in place on [Revelation].
    Westchester is stalling and have not bound. They offered renewal terms but have
    64
    
    Id. 65 Id.
    66
    JX 310.
    67
    JX 48.
    19
    refused to bind through Crump.” 68 At some point after this October 8 email,
    Westchester bound the D&O insurance effective October 5, 2014. 69
    Less than ten days later, on October 14 at 9:20 a.m., Neal emailed Hoops,
    Henson, and Hammond, “Your [Hoops] personal policies come due tomorrow, so
    we need to bind today. I was not successful in getting all policies policies replaced
    with my agent here as I had hoped to do . . . The best option is to renew with VMI
    unless they refuse.”70 At 10:17 a.m., Hammond replied all, “I have some pretty good
    pricing on your personal lines. I’ll email you some options to look at.”71
    At 4:29 p.m., Hoops emailed Neal and cc’d Henson and Hammond, but the
    email was addressed to Hammond. It read, “Heather Just do whatever it takes to
    make sure I have coverage disappointed only 1 hour notice as that that just does not
    work.”72    At 4:33 p.m., Neal emailed Hoops, Hammond, and Henson, “My
    experience is that companies will bind effective of the day of the instruction to bind
    especially if it is a renewal, so we could bind tomorrow effective 10-15. However
    it might be trouble getting a claim paid in the window of midnight to whenever we
    68
    JX 60.
    69
    Tr. 161 (Hoops); Tr. 275 (Neal).
    70
    JX 53.
    71
    JX 54.
    72
    
    Id. 20 send
    order to bind.”73 At 4:38 p.m., Hoops replied “24 hours of exposure is
    unacceptable this is no way to do business.”74 At 4:57 p.m., Hammond emailed
    Neal, “I’ll be heading out of the office soon. Do I need to do anything to help on
    this?”75 Neal responded at 5:01 p.m., “Yes, Bind all with [Van Meter] before you
    leave.     Send clear email that coverage will be effective 10-15-14.         A return
    acknowledgment would also be good.”76 Van Meter, from whom Omni had just
    taken all of Revelation’s insurance, ended up placing Hoops’s personal insurance
    with almost no notice. 77
    The parties did not submit contemporaneous written evidence that illuminates
    the events of October 15-17 as clearly as the other events in this case. Hoops testified
    that on October 15, he and Neal agreed “Omni would be dissolved and that we would
    go our separate ways and that we would split the commissions for the next year 50-
    50.”78 On October 16 at 1:19 p.m., Neal wrote, in part:
    73
    
    Id. 74 Id.
    75
    
    Id. 76 Id.
    77
    JX 73.
    78
    Tr. 78 (Hoops).
    21
    Lisa needs to issue check for 25% today. Ok?
    I would like to get the carriers aid their portion of the 25%
    today, or as many of the 9 as possible. Ok?
    The balance of the 25% down is Omni commission. I
    would like to get a check for half as we agreed. I will see
    if Lisa put any money in a new 401K and I will subtract
    that out. KEMI commission is the most part of the
    commission, about 40%, and is not financed as you know.
    We can use that commission to settle on for whatever
    expenses come out etc. including any monthly if we need
    to.
    I advised Lisa to max my 401K and planned on taking
    money out to live on. Regardless of how or whether we
    change our Omni concept. We are in agreement on a 50/50
    split for this year. Correct? 79
    Hoops replied, “Lisa has been waiting to give you a check for nearly 2 weeks.
    Believe I want to go direction I laid out yesterday.” 80
    In the morning on October 17, Neal, Hoops, and Henson met at Hoops’s
    office. Originally, Henson and Neal were meeting to sign the financing agreement
    that would govern the financing for the premiums that Revelation needed to pay.81
    Hoops testified that Henson called him down to her office to address an issue. 82 He
    79
    JX 61.
    80
    
    Id. 81 See
    JX 64.
    82
    Tr. 81 (Hoops).
    22
    further testified that he went down to her office, and she told him that Neal was
    refusing to sign the finance agreement “which is obviously required in order to get
    the additional premiums that are necessary to be paid to the underwriter. So without
    that, we would not have insurance coverage”83 unless Henson wrote “him a check
    for the full commissions at the time, which were $200,000.” 84 Hoops testified that
    he told Neal, “‘Jerry, our deal was 50-50. You don’t get all the commissions. It’s 50-
    50.’ So eventually we agreed that we would distribute $150,000. And so 75,000 was
    given to Jerry and 75,000 was given to Triple H Family Limited Partnership, leaving
    about $50,000 in Omni at that time.” 85 Neal testified:
    [Hoops] threw out a 75,000 distribution for each of us.
    Which, when I went in there, I just needed some money. I
    didn’t even know that we had to do a distribution for me
    to get a little bit of money. But in reality, the business
    sense of it was that we probably did both have to take a
    distribution, as he said. And then he said 75 K. I said,
    Okay, fine. It didn’t last a minute, and that was the end of
    that.86
    At 8:55 a.m. on October 17, Hoops emailed Hammond, Jacobs, and Henson:
    I told him this morning we are done and guess this will
    probably work out for the best as if you guys are
    Interested, then my plan is as follows:
    83
    
    Id. 84 Id.
    85
    Tr. 82 (Hoops).
    86
    Tr. 299 (Neal).
    23
    1)     Agree to give Jerry 50% of the commission for
    this year on Revelation Energy less expenses
    including the 10% to you.
    2)     He will sign over his 50% ownership in Omni
    3)     Then assuming this goes as planned I would
    envision you guys taking 50% ownership in
    Omni and we will work together to grow this
    business. 87
    At 9:15 a.m., twenty minutes later, Hoops emailed Neal and Henson:
    As you know on September 1, 2014 we agreed to the
    following structure for Omni:
    1)    Omni owned 50/50 by you and Triple H family
    LP
    2)    You would be paid a salary of $100K per year
    plus benefits to manage Omni
    3)    All commissions including what you projected
    from Neal Insurance o deals in place of $65,000
    would go to Omni
    4)    Jacobs will receive 10% of commissions on
    Revelation deal and 33% on any new business
    they bring.
    5)    Then as cash built up in Omni we would
    periodically distribute the earnings on a 50/50
    basis
    Given the recent turn of events it appears the best path
    forward would be to unwind Omni and I would like for
    you to surrender your 50% interest for the following
    consideration:
    1)    You keep all income from Neal Insurance
    2)    I will eat the expense of remodeling the main
    floor for $65,000 to accommodate the offices
    3)    You will receive the following:
    - 50% of the commissions after the following
    expenses are deducted
    - Any salary paid to you to date
    87
    JX 69.
    24
    - Any expense incurred to ate for benefits or
    401-K match
    - Half of the 10% commission we agreed to
    pay Jacobs
    4)    This will be paid to you by Omni as the
    commissions flow into the company
    Lisa will provide a complete accounting and will make
    those payments wherever you direct. If you are in
    agreement I will have Eddie prepare the documents to take
    you off of Omni, then Lisa can pay you any amounts that
    are available at that time. 88
    Neither party submitted an email response to this October 17 email into evidence.
    The next email submitted from Neal was on October 22. Henson asked,
    “Where did you and Jeff leave it [on Oct 17] with payroll for you? Not sure if I owe
    you or not and I will be working on payroll tomorrow.” 89 Neal responded:
    I can’t say for certain, but I would like for you to pay me
    and put all in 401K as we discussed. We need some
    money in account I know but hopefully a couple of my
    guys will pay on time and we can be in good shape by the
    end of the year. KEMI commission won’t kick in until
    December which will be for month of October and each
    month thereafter as I understand it. You and I need to
    discuss Invoicing Neal Insurance accounts which I need to
    do right now. 90
    88
    JX 65. A little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing. Hoops and Neal both use
    terms with legally distinct definitions interchangeably. I do not attribute legal
    significance to their layperson use of legal terms. Instead, I attempt to capture the
    spirit of their agreement.
    89
    JX 70.
    90
    
    Id. 25 Henson
    replied in part, “Need to talk to Jeff about all the moving of account. . . . I
    thought [on Oct 17] he said he was leaving your current accounts with you. We
    really need to get this settled. Need to talk to Jeff about additional $ in account as
    those are his personal funds.” 91
    On October 27, 2014, Neal emailed Hoops about Omni hiring a person to help
    with administrative work part time. At 11:11 a.m. Hoops responded, in part:
    I am really concerned about whether we are going to be
    able to make this work with Lisa and Heather as I spoke
    with both of them and it is not good.
    In the event we cannot get this worked out, I would
    propose we just unwind what we were going to do with
    Omni and you will get 50% of the commissions and keep
    everything you earn from Neal Insurance and just let our
    deal die when it comes up for renewal. Lisa is involved as
    CFO with all of my entities and she is an integral part of
    everything I am doing. It is clear you do not think much
    of Heather and I know little about insurance but she has
    done a great job for us the past 6 years and with all she and
    Joe are involved in for us, I cannot cut her loose.
    My gut is just work this out with you and give you the 50%
    and let you keep Neal and go back to the way it was for
    you before. I will eat the remodeling downstairs as I can
    probably use that space sometime in the future. If you are
    in agreement, I will get Eddie to draft up something that
    commits me to get you the 50% of commissions until
    October 5th, 2015 so you will have something in writing.92
    91
    
    Id. 92 JX
    72.
    26
    Hoops and Neal exchanged two other emails and then at 12:14 p.m., Neal wrote:
    “Ok. 50% is fine. Paid through audit which might extend past 10-5-15. Might mean
    I have to return some money but that would be fair. . . . Tell me how I can get out
    of the way. Several questions need to be cleared up.” 93 Hoops and Neal continued
    to discuss how they would go about winding up Omni via email on October 27 and
    28.94
    The relationship between Hoops and Neal continued to disintegrate. On
    October 30, 2014, Hoops sent Neal a letter on Omni letterhead purporting to
    terminate Neal’s employment with Omni. The letter ends, “As your employment is
    ending today, you are neither eligible for nor entitled to any benefits with your
    previous employment with Omni. You will be paid all wages due you through today,
    October 30, 2014.”95 The evidence submitted at trial showed that Hoops and Neal
    continued to communicate sporadically via email up to and including May 2016.96
    On October 30, 2014, Cunningham filed Articles of Incorporation for Black
    Diamond Insurance Group, LLC (“Black Diamond”) in the Commonwealth of
    93
    
    Id. 94 Id.
    95
    JX 75.
    96
    E.g., JX 110; JX 116; JX 135; JX 136; JX 167; JX 168; JX 170.
    27
    Kentucky. 97 Triple H is a fifty percent owner of Black Diamond, and Hammond and
    Jacobs are both twenty-five percent owners. 98 These members executed a written
    Operating Agreement for Black Diamond on November 10, 2018. 99
    D.       Procedural History
    Plaintiff filed its Verified Complaint on May 4, 2016. Defendant answered
    on May 30, 2016. Plaintiff filed its Amended Verified Complaint on October 20,
    2016.    Defendant filed his Answer and Counterclaim on November 3, 2016.
    Plaintiff answered the Counterclaim on November 21, 2016. I granted Defendant
    leave to amend his Counterclaim on October 4, 2017, and Defendant filed his
    Amended Counterclaim on October 5, 2017. Plaintiff answered on October 16,
    2017. Trial took place on November 6, 7, and 8, 2017. Post-Trial Argument
    occurred on April 19, 2018.
    II.     ANALYSIS
    “To succeed at trial, ‘Plaintiffs, as well as Counterclaim–Plaintiffs, have the
    burden of proving each element . . . of each of their causes of action against each
    Defendant or Counterclaim–Defendant, as the case may be, by a preponderance of
    97
    JX 82.
    98
    JX 83.
    99
    JX 84.
    28
    the evidence.’” 100 “Proof by a preponderance of the evidence means proof that
    something is more likely than not. It means that certain evidence, when compared
    to the evidence opposed to it, has the more convincing force and makes you believe
    that something is more likely true than not.” 101 The claims at issue in this case fall
    into three broad categories: (1) breach of contract; (2) breach of fiduciary duty; and
    (3) fraud. Triple H asserts breach of contract claims and breach of fiduciary duty
    claims against Neal and seeks judicial dissolution of Omni. Neal asserts breach of
    contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and fraud claims against Triple H and Hoops. For
    the reasons set forth below, I find that Neal breached some contractual and fiduciary
    duties; neither Triple H nor Hoops breached contractual or fiduciary duties or
    committed fraud; and judicial dissolution is unnecessary because Omni was
    dissolved by agreement of the members, but I order that Omni be wound up under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-803.
    100
    S’holder Representative Servs. LLC v. Gilead Scis., Inc., 
    2017 WL 1015621
    , at *15
    (Del. Ch. Mar. 15, 2017) (quoting inTEAM Assocs., LLC v. Heartland Payment Sys.,
    Inc., 
    2016 WL 5660282
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30, 2016)), aff’d, 
    177 A.3d 610
    (Del.
    2017).
    101
    Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 
    2010 WL 610725
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 2010)
    (quoting Del. Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older, 
    2002 WL 31458243
    , at *17 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 23, 2002)).
    29
    A.       The Contract Between Hoops and Neal
    The parties agree that Omni does not have a written operating agreement.102
    The parties instead entered into an oral agreement (the “Contract”) subject to the
    default provisions of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (the “LLC
    Act”). 103 The August 20 Email serves as contemporaneous evidence of the terms of
    the Contract. The parties have also stipulated to certain terms that do not appear in
    the August 20 Email.
    Based on the stipulations and contemporaneous writings of the parties, the
    terms of the Contract are: (1) Triple H and Neal each own 50% of Omni and have
    equal voting rights; 104 (2) Neal would “roll all of Neal’s Insurance’s insurance,
    consulting and bond business into Omni” 105 starting on October 1; 106 (3) Neal “will
    be provided a Base Salary plus Benefits” starting October 1; 107 and (4) Jacobs Risk
    Management would assist in placing Revelation’s insurance policies and receive ten
    102
    PTO ¶ 16.
    103
    Whittington v. Dragon Gp. L.L.C., 
    2008 WL 4419075
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. June 6, 2008).
    104
    PTO ¶¶ 2, 10.
    105
    
    Id. ¶ 11.
    106
    JX 17.
    107
    
    Id. 30 percent
    of the commissions received for any “existing business” and thirty percent
    of the commissions for “new business.”108
    Neal and Hoops also each argue that other terms were included in the
    Contract. Neal seems to contend that in addition to the above terms, the parties also
    agreed that Omni would place Revelation’s insurance policies in perpetuity. 109 Neal
    does not point to any evidence in the record, however, that supports his assertion
    that the parties agreed that Omni would place Revelation’s insurance policies in
    perpetuity. Instead, Neal points to two email strings, one from September 1-2, 2014,
    where Neal and Hoops discuss concerns about placing Revelation’s and Hoops’s
    polices by the required 2014 dates,110 and one from October 17, 2014, where Hoops
    summarizes his understanding of the deal, which does not discuss Revelation or
    Revelation’s policies.111 This evidence does not support the contention that Neal
    and Hoops agreed that Omni would place Revelation’s policies in perpetuity. In
    fact, the evidence directly contradicts this. On September 2, Hoops wrote, “Thought
    108
    PTO ¶ 18.
    109
    Def.’s Opening Br. 34 (“Hoops/Triple H breached their contract by terminating
    Omni’s business and diverting and directing from Omni, to a new insurance agency,
    Black Diamond, the present and future insurance business that Omni had or could
    have had.”).
    110
    JX 23.
    111
    JX 66.
    31
    based on your conversation with Jim last week you were confident you could get
    everything done. Agree getting business covered is critical and if you see that cannot
    be done, then we can pull the plug on everything and go back to the way it is right
    now.”112 Neal responded, “Hopefully separation will be a long time in coming and
    better yet not ever. We can sale it if all goes well.” 113 Thus, Neal has not shown by
    a preponderance of the evidence that the parties agreed that Omni would place
    Revelation’s policies in perpetuity.
    Hoops argues that in addition to the terms above, the parties agreed that “a
    material condition to forming Omni” 114 was that “Neal was to timely procure and
    service Revelation’s and Hoops’s 2014 renewal insurance policies.” 115 The evidence
    does not support this contention. Hoops points to no evidence in the record that
    suggests the parties agreed that the placement of Hoops’s and Revelation’s policies
    was a condition to the formation of Omni. Instead, both parties knew all along that
    placing Revelation’s and Hoops’s polices by October 5 and October 15 respectively
    would be a challenge. 116 In fact, Hoops understood that his personal policies may
    112
    JX 23.
    113
    
    Id. 114 Pl.’s
    Opening Br. 23.
    115
    
    Id. at 41.
    116
    Tr. 56 (Hoops).
    32
    have to be placed by another agent entirely. 117 Regarding the Revelation policies, at
    the beginning of September, Hoops wrote, “Agree getting business covered is
    critical and if you see that cannot be done, then we can pull the plug on everything
    and go back to the way it is right now.”118 While Hoops’s email may evidence his
    subjective understanding of the importance of placing Revelation’s policies, it does
    not show that Neal and Hoops agreed it would be a material condition at the time
    they entered into the Contract. At most, Hoops’s email is an attempt to modify the
    original agreement to which Neal does not assent. Neal responded by cautioning
    Hoops that he might not be able to place all the policies, and “[w]orst case, you can
    renew with [Van Meter Insurance].” 119        Thus, Hoops has not shown by a
    preponderance of the evidence that a successful renewal of any of Revelation’s or
    Hoops’s personal insurance policies was a material condition to the formation of
    Omni.
    117
    JX 25 (“had thought we could do personal policies as they are a month behind
    others, but if that is all we can do then we have no choice”).
    118
    JX 23.
    119
    
    Id. 33 B.
        Dissolution of Omni by Agreement of the Members
    Omni’s life was short. The members of Omni agreed to dissolve under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-801(a) in October 2014. 120 The Contract does not address dissolution; thus
    the LLC Act controls. Under the version of 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-801(a) in effect in October
    2014, “[a] limited liability company is dissolved and its affairs shall be wound up . . .
    [u]nless otherwise provided in a limited liability company agreement, upon the
    affirmative vote or written consent of the members of the limited liability
    company.” 121 The members, with Hoops as Triple H’s agent, agreed to dissolve
    Omni on October 15, 2014, and memorlized that agreement in writing on October
    27, 2014.
    Hoops testified that on October 15, he and Neal agreed “Omni would be
    dissolved and that we would go our separate ways and that we would split the
    commissions for the next year 50-50.” 122 On October 16 at 1:19 p.m. Neal wrote an
    email that is consistent with this testimony, and with Neal’s pattern of behavior,
    “Regardless of how or whether we change our Omni concept. We are in agreement
    120
    The parties have requested judicial dissolution under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-802, but because
    the members of Omni agreed to dissolve under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-801(a), judicial
    dissolution under Section 18-802 is unnecessary. Spellman v. Katz, 
    2009 WL 418302
    , at *3 n.26 (Del. Ch. Feb. 6, 2009).
    121
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-801(a)(3) (1999).
    122
    Tr. 78 (Hoops); Tr. 299 (Neal).
    34
    on a 50/50 split for this year. Correct?”123 Hoops replied, “Lisa has been waiting to
    give you a check for nearly 2 weeks. Believe I want to go direction I laid out
    yesterday.” 124 Each testified that they met on October 17 and acted in accordance
    with their agreement to dissolve Omni by splitting equally the majority of the
    commissions Omni had received at that point. 125 At 9:15 a.m. the same day, Hoops
    emailed Neal and Henson, consistent with their pattern of behavior, a summary of
    what Neal and Hoops agreed to:
    As you know on September 1, 2014 we agreed to the
    following structure for Omni:
    1) Omni owned 50/50 by you and Triple H family LP
    2) You would be paid a salary of $100K per year plus
    benefits to manage Omni
    3) All commissions including what you projected
    from Neal Insurance deals in place of $65,000
    would go to Omni
    4) Jacobs will receive 10% of commissions on
    Revelation deal and 33% on any new business
    they bring.
    5) Then as cash built up in Omni we would
    periodically distribute the earnings on a 50/50
    basis
    Given the recent turn of events it appears the best path
    forward would be to unwind Omni and I would like for
    you to surrender your 50% interest for the following
    consideration:
    1) You keep all income from Neal Insurance
    123
    JX 61.
    124
    
    Id. 125 Tr.
    81-82 (Hoops); Tr. 299 (Neal).
    35
    2) I will eat the expense of remodeling the main floor
    for $65,000 to accommodate the offices
    3) You will receive the following:
    - 50% of the commissions after the following
    expenses are deducted
    - Any salary paid to you to date
    - Any expense incurred to ate for benefits or 401-K
    match
    - Half of the 10% commission we agreed to pay
    Jacobs
    4) This will be paid to you by Omni as the
    commissions flow into the company
    Lisa will provide a complete accounting and will
    make those payments wherever you direct. If you are in
    agreement I will have Eddie prepare the documents to take
    you off of Omni, then Lisa can pay you any amounts that
    are available at that time. 126
    Neither party submitted an email response to this October 17 email into evidence,
    but Hoops and Neal exchanged emails on October 27, 2014, which constitute written
    consent of the members to dissolve Omni.
    On October 27, Neal emailed Hoops about Omni hiring a person to help with
    part-time administrative work.127 At 11:11 a.m. Hoops responded by laying out the
    terms of the October 15 agreement a third time. Hoops wrote, “In the event we
    cannot get this worked out, I would propose we just unwind what we were going to
    do with Omni and you will get 50% of the commissions and keep everything you
    126
    JX 65.
    127
    JX 73.
    36
    earn from Neal Insurance and just let our deal die when it comes up for renewal.”128
    At 11:59 a.m. Neal responded, in part, “I will agree with what needs to be done but
    it is a real shame.” 129 Hoops wrote back at 12:04 p.m., in part, “Hopefully it worked
    out ok for you and you got a nice payday out of it and I guess I got the bottom floor
    remodeled, so it was a win for everyone.”130 Neal responded at 12:14 p.m., “OK.
    50% is fine. Paid through audit which might extend past 10-5-15. Might mean I
    have to return some money but that would be fair. . . . Tell me how I can get out of
    the way.    Several questions need to be cleared up.” 131      This email exchange
    constitutes the written consent of the members to dissolve Omni.
    After the parties consented to dissolve Omni, they could not agree on the next
    steps that needed to be taken during the winding up process. Neal’s concerns mostly
    centered on how Revelation’s 2014-2015 policies would be serviced because he felt
    he had a legal obligation to continue servicing them. 132 Neal also wanted to know
    what Hoops was planning to do for his insurance after October 5, 2015. 133 Hoops
    128
    
    Id. 129 Id.
    130
    
    Id. 131 Id.
    132
    Id.; Tr. 302 (Neal).
    133
    JX 73.
    37
    said he thought he would go back to Van Meter Insurance because “they stepped up
    and done my personal at the last minute.”134 Hoops and Neal never succeeded in
    winding up Omni.
    Under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-803, “the Court of Chancery, upon cause shown, may
    wind up the limited liability company’s affairs upon application of any member or
    134
    
    Id. Neal argues
    that Hoops made “false representations” in order to induce Neal to
    agree to dissolve Omni by saying he (Hoops) was going “get out of the insurance
    business” and go back to Van Meter Insurance. Def.’s Opening Br. 50-51. This
    argument is not supported by the evidence. No one points to any evidence that
    Hoops’s plans after Omni were discussed at either the October 15 or 17 meetings.
    In his October 27, 2014 email at 11:11 a.m., Hoops wrote, “My gut is to just worth
    this out with you and give you the 50% and let you keep Neal and go back to the
    way it was for you before.” JX 73. After he agrees to dissolve Omni at 12:14 p.m.,
    Neal sends Hoops another email, seemingly in response to Hoops’s 11:11 a.m.
    email, asking, “When you say you are going back to how you were, what does that
    mean right now? Back to [Van Meter]? Someone else?” 
    Id. Hoops then
    responds,
    “I am going to do what I said, which is keep Revelation with Omni until October
    5th, then most likely will go back to [Van Meter] as they stepped up and done my
    personal at the last minute . . . . If you want to turn it over to lawyers and let them
    deal with it, I am happy to do that as well and in the meantime I will move everything
    back to [Van Meter] and you can keep the $75,000.” 
    Id. Neither these
    emails, nor
    any other evidence pointed to by Defendant, show that Hoops represented that he
    was “getting out of the insurance business” prior to Neal agreeing to dissolve Omni.
    Defendant also points to Dweck v. Nasser, 
    2012 WL 161590
    (Del. Ch. Jan. 18,
    2012), to argue that Neal did not “consent” to dissolve Omni. This reliance is
    misplaced. In Dweck, Dweck argued that Nasser had given Dweck permission to
    compete with the company at issue in that case. 
    Id. at *14.
    Dweck then used the
    company’s resources to directly compete with the company. 
    Id. This Court
    made
    a credibility determination and held that Dweck had never asked for permission. 
    Id. at *15.
    Thus, Nasser had never consented to the competition, so Dweck could not
    rely on the consent as a defense to the competition. 
    Id. Dweck is
    far from on point.
    Here, the parties agreed to dissolve Omni. Hoops did not need Neal’s permission
    or consent to compete because, as discussed, Omni was dissolved when the alleged
    competition took place.
    38
    manager, . . . and in connection therewith, may appoint a liquidating trustee.”135
    Despite Neal and Hoops’s agreement in October 2014 to dissolve Omni, they have
    been unable to successfully wind up the affairs of Omni. This is in large part due to
    Neal attempting to renegotiate the terms of the dissolution and winding up, including
    during the course of this litigation. 136 I find that due to this pattern of behavior, good
    cause has been shown, and I order that Omni be wound up under Section 18-803.
    Triple H has requested that it be appointed liquidating trustee. 137 Neal did not
    respond to this request. Therefore, I appoint Triple H liquidating trustee. Triple H
    will wind up Omni’s affairs in accordance with 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-804 and Hoops and
    Neal’s agreement.
    C.     Breach of Fiduciary Duty Claims Against Hoops and Triple H
    1.     Hoops owed fiduciary duties as a de facto manager of Omni
    Under the LLC Act, a manager of an LLC is defined as “a person who is
    named as a manager of a limited liability company in, or designated as a manager of
    135
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-803(a) (2015).
    136
    See, e.g., JX 116 (“We will have to play the Omni dissolution date by ear. I would
    say by 12-1-15 we should have everything wrapped up.”); JX 167 (“I agree we need
    to close out Omni. I have problem in being part of the $10000+ payment to Jacobs
    which was n 2014 possibly.”); JX 168 (“I am asking you for $1,000,000 to settle
    versus going forward with $7-10,000,000 in damages . . . I made about $150,000
    and you will make that plus all the additional you stole from me.”); JX 170 (“I would
    need something from Meluney dropping the Complaint”).
    137
    Pl.’s Opening Br. 51.
    39
    a limited liability company pursuant to, a limited liability company agreement or
    similar instrument under which the limited liability company is formed.” 138 But,
    Delaware case law has recognized that a person who is not named or designated a
    manager in the LLC’s governing documents may nonetheless be deemed a de facto
    manager and fiduciary of the LLC. 139 In WaveDivision, then-Vice Chancellor, now-
    Chief Justice Strine recognized that a person who “had unfettered access to [the
    LLC’s] confidential information, helped plan [the LLC’s] responses to various
    outside parties on important issues, and co-presented with [the LLC’s CEO] during
    [the LLC’s] updates to its lenders” was a de facto manager, and fiduciary, of the
    LLC. 140 The de facto manager in WaveDivision was not an official officer or part of
    the management committee, which on paper was separately managed.141
    Nonetheless, this Court held that his access and actions made him a de facto
    manager, and in that context he owed fiduciary duties and could bind the company
    as an agent. 142
    138
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-101(10).
    139
    WaveDivision Hldgs., LLC v. Millennium Digital Media Sys., L.L.C., 
    2010 WL 3706624
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 17, 2010).
    140
    WaveDivision Hldgs., 
    2010 WL 3706624
    , at *3.
    141
    
    Id. 142 Id.
    40
    Here, Hoops’s actions, taken in their totality, exhibit the same degree of
    control over Omni as the de facto manager in WaveDivision and mandate the same
    result.143 Hoops signed Omni’s Certificate of Formation as organizer; 144 retained
    and directed his personally attorney to set up Omni, including drafting Omni’s
    operating agreement;145 directed the CFO of his other business to handle the back
    office work for Omni, including setting up a website, ledger, and back accounts;146
    loaned the initial working capital to Omni; 147 staffed Omni with Jacobs and
    Hammond; 148 managed the relationship between Neal and Hammond; 149 approved
    Neal’s hiring decisions and payment of Omni employees; 150 and sent a letter to Neal
    purporting to terminate him as an employee of Omni. 151 Hoops was sufficiently
    143
    Plaintiff does not grapple with the distinction between Hoops and Triple H here.
    Plaintiff only argues that Hoops’s actions were not sufficient to make him a de facto
    manager of Omni. Thus, I do not consider the distinction in my analysis.
    144
    JX 21.
    145
    JX 17. Neal never signed this agreement. Tr. 48-49 (Hoops); Tr. 248 (Neal).
    146
    JX 17.
    147
    
    Id. 148 JX
    10; Tr. 490 (Hammond).
    149
    JX 27.
    150
    JX 72.
    151
    JX 75.
    41
    involved in, and had sufficient control over, the management of Omni to consider
    him a de facto manager, which makes him a fiduciary. 152
    Plaintiff argues that Hoops is not a de facto manager because the Contract
    designates Neal as “President and CEO.” 153 First, an LLC can have more than one
    manager;154 the fact that Neal was a manager of Omni does not preclude Hoops from
    also being a manager, de facto or otherwise. Second, under WaveDivision, a person
    other than a named officer can act as a de facto manager. 155 Third, Plaintiff relies
    on Ensing v. Ensing 156 to support their argument that a person cannot serve as a de
    facto manager if there are written agreements to the contrary. 157 Ensing is not on
    point. In Ensing, this Court found that a clear, unambiguous, fully integrated
    operating agreement precluded the court from taking notice of the fact that the
    member not designated as a manager was “the financial impetus behind the
    acquisition and operation of the vineyard,” that he has always acted as the “de facto
    152
    
    Id. 153 Pl.’s
    Answering Br. 30.
    154
    Child Care of Irvine v. Facchina, 
    1998 WL 409363
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. July 15, 1998).
    155
    WaveDivision Hldgs., 
    2010 WL 3706624
    , at *3.
    156
    
    2017 WL 880884
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Mar. 6, 2017).
    157
    Pl.’s Answering Br. 32.
    42
    manager,” or from considering any extrinsic evidence. 158 I am not similarly limited
    here, as there is no fully integrated operating agreement.159 Moreover, all the parties
    repeatedly rely on extrinsic evidence to support their arguments when it suites them.
    For example, Plaintiff points to no less than three different emails as evidence that
    Neal was a manager of Omni. Plaintiff offers no explanation for why I can look to
    various different pieces of evidence to determine that Neal was a manager but am
    prevented from looking at the evidence to determine if Hoops acted as a manager.
    When I consider all the evidence of Hoops’s involvement in the management and
    decision-making process of Omni, I find that he acted as a de facto manager and
    fiduciary of Omni. As discussed above, fiduciaries of a LLC owe fiduciary duties
    to the LLC, and I find that Hoops did here as well.
    2.     Hoops and Triple H did not usurp Omni’s corporate
    opportunities
    Neal asserts breach of fiduciary duty claims against Hoops and Triple H,
    alleging they used Black Diamond to usurp Omni’s corporate opportunity to place
    Revelation’s insurance policies. The corporate opportunity doctrine in Delaware
    158
    
    Id. 159 Plaintiff
    argues “even though Omni does not have a formal operating agreement, its
    affairs are governed by the parties’ writings.” 
    Id. at 31.
    43
    was elucidated in Guth v. Loft and its progeny. 160 The doctrine, on the one hand,
    bars an officer or director from taking a business opportunity for his own if:
    (1) the corporation is financially able to exploit the
    opportunity; (2) the opportunity is within the corporation’s
    line of business; (3) the corporation has an interest or
    expectancy in the opportunity; and (4) by taking the
    opportunity for his own, the corporate fiduciary will
    thereby be placed in a position inimicable to his duties to
    the corporation.161
    On the other hand, a director or officer may take a corporate opportunity if:
    (1) the opportunity is presented to the director or officer in
    his individual and not his corporate capacity; (2) the
    opportunity is not essential to the corporation; (3) the
    corporation holds no interest or expectancy in the
    opportunity; and (4) the director or officer has not
    wrongfully employed the resources of the corporation in
    pursuing or exploiting the opportunity. 162
    Neither Hoops nor Triple H usurped a corporate opportunity from Omni
    because Omni was dissolved before the opportunities allegedly usurped arose.
    Neither party addresses how the corporate opportunity doctrine is effected by the
    dissolution of the entity. Under Delaware corporate and limited liability law,
    however, dissolution of an entity causes any new business to cease.163 The parties
    160
    
    5 A.2d 503
    (Del. 1939).
    161
    Broz v. Cellular Info. Sys., Inc., 
    673 A.2d 148
    , 154–55 (Del. 1996).
    162
    
    Id. (citing Guth,
    5 A.2d at 509).
    163
    Under Delaware corporate law there is a statutory three-year winding up period.
    Addy v. Short, 
    89 A.2d 136
    , 139 (Del. 1952) (“During the three-year period of
    44
    first agreed to the terms of dissolution on October 15, and Omni was dissolved in
    writing on October 27, 2014. At the earliest, Black Diamond was formed on October
    30, 2014.164 If Omni was dissolved and winding up, and thus not doing any new
    business, before Black Diamond was even formed, then it would be impossible for
    Black Diamond to usurp an opportunity that Omni was “financially able to exploit”
    or in which Omni had an interest or expectancy. 165 It is unnecessary to continue the
    analysis any further.      Neither Hoops nor Triple H usurped any corporate
    opportunities, and thus, neither Hoops nor Triple H violated any fiduciary duties.
    winding up, the corporation functions exactly as it had functioned before
    dissolution, with the important qualification that its powers are limited to closing its
    affairs and do not extend to carrying on the business for which it was established”).
    The LLC Act does not have a similar mandatory winding up period, but generally
    states that once a LLC has been dissolved it is winding up until the certificate of
    termination has been filed. 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-801; 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-803(b).
    164
    Defendant is concerned about how quickly Hoops began making plans to replace
    him in Omni and arranged Black Diamond. Hoops does not discuss replacing Neal
    until after they had agreed to dissolve Omni. JX 69. Black Diamond is not formed
    until after Hoops and Neal confirm their October 15 agreement in writing on
    October 27. Moreover, the timeline on which Black Diamond was established is in
    line with the timeline on which Omni was formed. Compare JX 5 (Omni is first
    discussed on August 17) and JX 17 (Omni solidifies LLC agreement in writing on
    August 20) with JX 69 (Black Diamond is first discussed in some form on October
    17) and JX 84 (Black Diamond solidifies LLC agreement on November 10)
    165
    See 
    Broz, 673 A.2d at 156-57
    (“CIS was actively engaged in the process of divesting
    its cellular license holdings . . . . Thus, CIS had no interest or expectancy in the
    Michigan–2 opportunity.”).
    45
    D.     Fraud Claims Against Hoops and Triple H
    To prove his fraud claim, Defendant must prove, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, that Hoops (1) “made a false representation”; 166 (2) “knew the
    representation was untrue or made the statement with reckless indifference to the
    truth”;167 (3) “intended for [Defendant] to rely on the representation; (4) [Defendant]
    justifiably relied on the representation; and (5) damage occurred to [Defendant] as a
    result of that reliance.” 168 Defendant has failed to prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that Hoops made a false representation.
    Defendant avers that Hoops concocted a scheme to use Neal as an
    intermediary to move his insurance away from Van Meter and then replace Neal
    with Jacobs and Hammond. 169 Defendant’s support for this proposition is that the
    contract between Jacobs Risk Management and Van Meter Insurance Group contains
    a non-solicitation provision.170 The non-solicitation provision, in relevant part,
    ensures that “[d]uring the terms of this contract and for a period of 24 months after
    166
    Paron Capital Mgmt., LLC v. Crombie, 
    2012 WL 2045857
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. May 22,
    2012), aff’d, 
    62 A.3d 1223
    (Del. 2013).
    167
    
    Id. 168 Id.
    169
    Def.’s Opening Br. 44.
    170
    
    Id. 46 termination
    of this contract, [Jacobs Risk Management] will not directly or indirectly
    solicit VAN METER INSURNCE GROUP clients or prospects.” 171 Defendant’s
    theory fails for three reasons.
    First, Defendant presented no evidence that Hoops was a client of Van Meter
    rather than Jacobs Risk Management. In fact, the evidence introduced at trial
    supports a finding that Hoops was a client of Jacobs Risk Management rather than
    Van Meter, 172 and thus, the non-solicitation provision does not apply to Hoops.
    Second, even if Hoops was a client of Van Meter, the non-solicitation clause does
    not bind Hoops. As the client, Hoops is free to hire whomever he pleases, whenever
    he pleases. Therefore, Neal’s theory that Hoops was forced to use an intermediary
    to circumvent a contract that does not bind him makes no sense.
    Third, Plaintiff presented ample evidence at trial that the end of Omni was a
    result of underwhelming job performance on the part of Neal rather than a nefarious
    plot on the part of Hoops. At trial, Hoops showed that Neal failed to secure, in a
    timely manner, D&O coverage for Revelation and insurance for Hoops’s personal
    171
    JX 4, at 2.
    172
    Tr. 20 (Hoops) (“[B]asically all of our contact was with Jacobs, but they used
    another agency. Van Meter Insurance Group out of Lexington, Kentucky, was the
    actual underwriter -- or I guess broker or actually wrote the policies.”); Tr. 485
    (Hammond) (testifying that Jacobs Risk Management had serviced Revelation’s
    insurance policies since its inception).
    47
    assets, possibly exposing Hoops to millions of dollars of risk.173 These failures
    happened on October 5 and October 15, respectively.             Both exposures were
    ultimately remedied, and neither Revelation nor Hoops suffered any actual harm.
    But Hoops made it clear to Neal that he was extremely unhappy with Neal’s
    performance. 174 In light of these potentially catastrophic failures to secure insurance
    for Omni’s only real customers, it is more probable than not that Hoops decided to
    terminate his relationship with Neal due to Neal’s performance as an insurance agent
    as opposed to concocting a months-long scheme that Hoops personally financed to
    the tunes of tens of thousands of dollars to get around a non-solicitation provision
    that does not actually seem to prevent him from accomplishing his supposed aim.
    For these reasons, Defendant has failed to carry his burden at trial and his fraud claim
    fails.
    E.       Breach of Contract and Breach of Fiduciary Duty Claims Against
    Neal
    Neal breached both his contractual and fiduciary duties.       He breached his
    contractual duties by failing to roll Neal Insurance’s business into Omni. He
    breached his fiduciary duties by misrepresenting to Hoops that Revelation had
    173
    Tr. 70-71 (Hoops); JX 47; JX 54.
    174
    JX 54.
    48
    insurance when it did not and exposing Omni to serious potential liability and
    reputational harm with the lapse.
    1.   Neal breached the Contract
    “To prove a breach of contract claim, a plaintiff must show: “the existence of
    a contract, the breach of an obligation imposed by that contract, and resulting
    damages to the plaintiff.” 175 Post-trial, “a claimant asserting a breach of contract
    must prove the elements of its claim by a preponderance of the evidence.”176 As
    discussed above, and as the parties concede, Neal and Hoops entered into a contract.
    As part of the Contract, Neal agreed to “roll all of Neal’s Insurance’s insurance,
    consulting and bond business into Omni” 177 starting on October 1. 178 The parties
    stipulated that “Neal did not roll any of Neal Insurance’s business into Omni.”179
    Therefore, Neal breached the Contract. The only remaining element is damages.
    175
    In re Mobilactive Media, LLC, 
    2013 WL 297950
    , at *14 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2013)
    (quoting Weichert Co. of Pa. v. Young, 
    2007 WL 4372823
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Dec. 7,
    2007)).
    176
    Estate of Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 
    2009 WL 2586783
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Aug.
    20, 2009) (citing United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Hldgs., Inc., 
    937 A.2d 810
    , 834 n. 112
    (Del. Ch. 2007)).
    177
    PTO ¶ 11.
    178
    JX 17.
    179
    PTO ¶ 32.
    49
    Plaintiff sufficiently proved his damages. Plaintiff’s expert, Stephen Scherf,
    “quantified the revenues earned by Neal Insurance over the damages period” by
    using the checks deposited into Neal Insurance’s checking accounts.180 He then
    “quantif[ed] and substract[ed] the costs incurred by Neal Insurance . . . that are
    appropriate” and divided by two “to calculate the amount due to Triple H.”181 Neal
    does not contest Scherf’s methodology or the amount of damages he calculated.182
    While this methodology is acceptable, the expert calculated the damages from
    August 25, 2014 to October 17, 2014. 183 The actual damages period is October 1,
    2014 (the date Hoops and Neal agreed Neal would roll over Neal Insurance) to
    October 27, 2014 (the date when Omni was dissolved by written agreement of the
    members). Thus, Plaintiff’s damages are “the benefit that Neal withheld from
    Omni” measured using Scherf’s methodology from October 1, 2014 to October 27,
    2014 only.
    Plaintiff is not entitled to recover these damages, however, because the parties
    resolved this particular dispute when they dissolved Omni. Plaintiff represented in
    multiple contemporaneous written documents and throughout this litigation that
    180
    JX 183, at 6.
    181
    
    Id. 182 JX
    185.
    183
    JX 183.
    50
    Neal and Hoops agreed that Neal would keep all of his income from Neal Insurance
    when Omni was dissolved.184 Plaintiff relies on this agreement to dissolve as support
    for its defense against Neal’s breach of fiduciary duty claim against Plaintiff. I find
    Plaintiff’s testimony and the contemporaneous documents credible on this point, and
    I find they agreed that Neal would keep all of Neal Insurance’s income. In other
    parts of this memorandum opinion, this agreement to dissolve has favorable legal
    consequences for Plaintiff. Plaintiff offers no explanation for why it should not now
    be held to the agreement that it admittedly made with Neal, and I see no reason to
    allow Plaintiff to cherry pick from the agreement it relies upon.
    2.     Neal breached his fiduciary duties to Omni
    Managers of a Delaware LLC owe default fiduciary duties. 185                  “[T]he
    traditional duties of loyalty and care . . . are owed by managers of Delaware
    184
    See, e.g., JX 65; JX 72; Pl.’s Opening Br. 31-32.
    185
    Auriga Capital Corp. v. Gatz Props., 
    40 A.3d 839
    , 851 (Del. Ch. 2012), aff’d, 
    59 A.3d 1206
    (Del. 2012). Hoops alleges both breach of contract and usurpation of
    corporate opportunity related to the same behavior by Neal: failing to roll Neal
    Insurance into Omni. Hoops also seeks the same remedy for the alleged breach of
    contract and breach of fiduciary duty: disgorgement of half the profits made by Neal
    Insurance before Omni was dissolved. I address only the breach of contract claim
    because the usurpation of corporate opportunities claim is duplicative. Stewart v.
    BF Bolthouse Holdco, LLC, 
    2013 WL 5210220
    , at *14 (Del. Ch. Aug. 30, 2013). I
    also do not address additional breach of fiduciary duty claims raised by Hoops only
    in the context of an unclean hands defense. These include allegations that Neal
    breached his fiduciary duties by opening an additional bank account for Omni and
    redirecting KEMI commissions to that account without Neal’s knowledge;
    falsifying the application for that bank account; failing to secure insurance coverage
    for certain assets Revelation purchased in January 2015; and “misleading the Court
    51
    LLCs . . . in the absence of a contractual provision waiving or modifying those
    duties.”186 “The duty of loyalty mandates that the best interest of the corporation
    and its shareholders takes precedence over any interest possessed by a director,
    officer or controlling shareholder and not shared by the stockholders generally.” 187
    The duty of care requires that managers avoid “conduct that constitutes reckless
    indifference or actions that are without the bounds of reason.”188 I find that Neal
    breached these duties by misleading his only customer about a serious lapse in the
    customer’s insurance coverage. Neal did not breach these duties in relation to the
    October 17 distribution.
    a.     The October 2014 lapse
    Revelation was Omni’s biggest customer. 189 On October 1, 2014, Neal
    emailed Hoops, Revelation’s CEO, to report that Omni had successfully renewed all
    to secure an unfair tactical advantage.” Pl.’s Answering Br. 19-22. Because I do
    not find for Neal on any of his breach of contract or breach of fiduciary duty claims
    against Plaintiff, I do not address Plaintiff’s unclean hands defense.
    186
    
    Id. at 843.
    Delaware courts “look to the corporation law when assessing the extent
    to which a managing member owes common law fiduciary duties when those duties
    are not clearly defined in the entity’s operating agreement.” A&J Capital, Inc. v.
    Law Office of Krug, 
    2018 WL 3471562
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. July 18, 2018).
    187
    Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    634 A.2d 345
    , 361 (Del. 1993) (citing Pogostin v.
    Rice, 
    480 A.2d 619
    , 624 (Del. 1984)).
    188
    McPadden v. Sidhu, 
    964 A.2d 1262
    , 1274 (Del. Ch. 2008).
    189
    Tr. 70 (Hoops).
    52
    eleven of Revelation’s insurance policies, ahead of the October 5 deadline. 190 On
    October 4, however, Neal emailed Hoops and Henson, “I was not able to get the
    policy number on the D&O from the wholesaler representing Westchester. The
    wholesaler said there was a concern with the questions on Friday.” 191 Hoops replied,
    “Are we going to be without insurance for some period of time now? Having
    coverage is more important than anything else as I would not Want to e itch out
    insurance for one minute as we have people on our jobs 24/7.” 192 Neal assured
    Hoops that everything was fine, writing, “Most likely someone of authority with
    Westchester was out Friday afternoon and upon return Monday morning will
    approve and coverage will be in effect midnight Sunday morning – 10-05-14 as if
    nothing happened.” 193 Hoops replied, “I would have submitted financing without
    D&O as I would never take the chance of not having liability and equipment
    coverage. Will anything be covered as of midnight tomorrow night? If not I would
    190
    JX 41.
    191
    JX 47.
    192
    
    Id. 193 Id.
    53
    shut the operations down until something is in place. That cost us about $1.1mm
    per day.” 194 Revelation’s D&O policy lapsed at midnight on October 5, 2014. 195
    October 4 was a Saturday. 196 Neal did not respond to Hoops’s last email until
    a little after 8 a.m. on Monday, October 6. 197 He told Hoops and Henson, “All
    coverages are bound, went into effect at midnight Sunday morning. I have the policy
    numbers for them except the D&O. The D&O might be bound as well and they tell
    us this morning that they just did not have time to get us the policy number.”198
    Meanwhile, Neal emailed the insurance intermediary asking what is happening with
    the D&O insurance.199 Neal also emailed other insurance providers trying to find
    another D&O policy for Revelation.200 He was still sending these emails on October
    8, three days after the D&O policy lapsed. 201 The evidence suggests that from
    October 5 until at least October 8, Revelation did not have D&O insurance. The
    194
    
    Id. 195 JX
    48.
    196
    Tr. 69 (Hoops).
    197
    JX 47.
    198
    
    Id. 199 JX
    310.
    200
    JX 48.
    201
    JX 60.
    54
    parties do not point to any evidence that Neal informed Hoops that he was trying to
    procure replacement insurance.
    Revelation is a coal mining business.202 If some disaster had occurred during
    the time when the D&O insurance was not in place, it is very unlikely that Revelation
    would have been able to find an insurance provider that would cover the claim. 203
    What is more, Neal did not respond to Hoops after 7:42 p.m. on October 4 and then
    continued to keep him in the dark about the actual status of the D&O insurance. In
    fact, he affirmative assured Hoops on Monday that “all coverages [were] bound and
    went into effect at midnight Sunday morning.”204 Neal knew this was not quite true
    and continued to search for D&O coverage for days. 205 The failure to secure
    coverage, and the failure to truthfully and fully inform his client of that failure,
    exposed Omni to a significant risk of monetary and reputational harm. At the very
    least, this behavior was not in the best interest of Omni and constitutes a breach of
    Neal’s fiduciary duties.
    202
    PTO ¶ 14.
    203
    See JX 54 (where Neal explains that there could be a problem with getting a claim
    covered in the period between when the prior coverage lapses and the new coverage
    is bound).
    204
    JX 47.
    205
    JX 48; JX 60; JX 310.
    55
    Thankfully no tragedy occurred during the time Revelation was uninsured,
    and Neal eventually procured a D&O policy effective October 5, averting disaster.
    Plaintiff does not request any damages for Neal’s breach of fiduciary duty. It appears
    that Hoops is content not to seek a remedy for this breach but instead to just be done
    with Neal and Omni. Therefore, I award nominal damages for Neal’s breach of his
    fiduciary duty.
    b.     The distribution
    Plaintiff argues that Neal breached his fiduciary duties to Omni by “strong-
    arming” Hoops into making a distribution. On October 17, 2014, Henson and Neal
    met to sign the financing agreement that would govern the financing for the
    premiums that Revelation needed to pay. 206 Hoops testified that Henson called him
    down to her office to address an issue.207 He further testified that he went down to
    her office, and she told him that Neal was refusing to sign the finance agreement
    “which is obviously required in order to get the additional premiums that are
    necessary to be paid to the underwriter. So without that, we would not have
    insurance coverage”208 unless Henson wrote “him a check for the full commissions
    206
    See JX 64.
    207
    Tr. 81 (Hoops).
    208
    
    Id. 56 at
    the time, which were $200,000.”209 Hoops testified that he told Neal “‘Jerry, our
    deal was 50-50. You don’t get all the commissions. It’s 50-50.’ So eventually we
    agreed that we would distribute $150,000. And so 75,000 was given to Jerry and
    75,000 was given to Triple H Family Limited Partnership, leaving about $50,000 in
    Omni at that time.” 210
    Neal also testified about the events of October 17. He testified that he “just
    needed some money” but did not know that a distribution was required.211 He further
    testified, “But in reality, the business sense of it was that we probably did both have
    to take a distribution, as [Hoops] said. And then [Hoops] said 75 K. I said, Okay,
    fine. It didn’t last a minute, and that was the end of that.” 212 Neal further explained
    that he had discussed this possible payment with Hoops twice over the prior two
    days: “And, you know, we talked about it on the 16th, the evening. We talked about
    it on the 15th. I told him when I came in there I wanted half the commissions, which
    were mine. This was normal policy for agents to do that in agencies. If it would be
    in the agency, I wanted my half.”213 Neal continued:
    209
    
    Id. 210 Tr.
    82 (Hoops).
    211
    Tr. 299 (Neal).
    212
    
    Id. 213 Tr.
    418 (Neal).
    57
    And [Hoops] comes down, at some point, and he said we,
    you know, he -- we were talking about getting the other
    monies for the accounts, as well, I mean, getting money in
    there. And there’s an issue, something wrong with the
    checks. We had to go to the bank and do some of this.
    So it was not going to be a quick, easy process, but we had
    to figure out how much to pay the carriers. And I had a
    little net premium summary that we had looked at, and I
    scribbled on the right-hand side what the commissions
    were. It came up to whatever it was, 205-, 212,000,
    something in that neighborhood.
    He said, we should leave something in there. We can’t take
    it all out. I have to take whatever you have to take. I said,
    Oh, okay, 75,000. Let’s take 75. Okay. That’s the end of
    it. It lasted about a minute. You know, and he’s gone. 214
    After this testimony, Plaintiff’s counsel confronted Neal with an undated,
    typed document that Neal authenticated as a “synopsis of some points that I was
    putting together for an attorney.” 215 The document includes the following paragraph:
    I arranged a Premium Finance agreement for about half of
    the Revelation Premiums which generated about $200,000
    of commission immediately. I demanded to get paid before
    I signed the Finance Agreement and Jeff and I took
    $75,000 each much to his objection. No reason not to take
    the money. We left $50,000 in the account for expenses
    etc.216
    In response to being shown this document, Neal testified:
    214
    Tr. 418-19 (Neal).
    215
    Tr. 420 (Neal).
    216
    JX 190.
    58
    But my testimony is that I didn’t demand that money. We
    didn’t get to that point. I didn’t have to demand it. He
    pretty much -- there wasn’t any reason to leave the money
    in there. As manager of what I -- I mean, I didn’t see any
    reason. He didn’t -- I made that point to him.
    If we left 50,000 in there, as we did, we arrived at that very
    quickly in a discussion. That was enough money. And then
    we were going to get the KEMI monies in there. And then
    if we decided to keep going, then the other insurance
    monies was going to be there.
    So there was no reason for me to not -- that I could see for
    leaving that money in there, especially with what had been
    taking place a couple days earlier. He was already talking
    about unwinding it. And I hadn’t won any of these deal
    with any of them. 217
    Counsel for Plaintiff then asked, “Mr. Neal, you knew that this demand would work
    because two weeks before this, he told you he would rather shut down his operations
    and lose $1.1 million a day than let him go uninsured. So you knew that this strong-
    arm tactic would work. Isn’t that right?”218 Neal responded:
    The policies had been in effect and bound two weeks
    earlier, and he’s been in 10 businesses at this time and 23
    now. He knows what a binder is. We had sent certificates
    of insurance to the states, the Division of Mined Land
    Reclamation in Virginia, and we sent them to the DNR in
    West Virginia with policy numbers on them, evidencing
    coverage. And we had, with HIIG, which wrote I think
    five of eleven policies, we had something like 60 days
    from the get-go on it, to pay them. While they generally
    217
    Tr. 421 (Neal).
    218
    Tr. 422 (Counsel for Plaintiff).
    59
    want the finance contract done in 30 days, they would like
    it done earlier.219
    While I find Hoops’s testimony that Neal forcefully requested a distribution
    on October 17 credible, I also find Neal’s testimony that insurance coverage was in
    place and would not lapse if the finance agreement was not signed on October 17
    credible. Furthermore, the distribution is consistent with the Hoops and Neal’s
    October 15 agreement to dissolve Omni and split the commissions equally, rather
    than some strong-arm tactic.220 Finally, the distribution did not violate 
    6 Del. C
    . §
    18-607. Thus, I do not find that Neal breached his fiduciary duties or that the
    ultimate distribution was contrary to the best interests of Omni at the time it was
    made.
    F.    Attorneys’ Fees
    Both Plaintiff and Defendant have requested attorneys’ fees and costs incurred
    in connection with this litigation. Under the “American Rule,” “each party is
    normally obliged to pay only his or her own attorneys’ fees, whatever the outcome
    of the litigation.”221 Under my equitable powers, I may shift attorneys’ fees and
    costs in certain limited circumstances, including (1) if there is express statutory
    219
    Tr. 422 (Neal).
    220
    JX 61; Tr. 78 (Hoops); Tr. 323 (Neal).
    221
    Johnston v. Arbitrium (Cayman Islands) Handels AG, 
    720 A.2d 542
    , 545 (Del.
    1998).
    60
    authorization or a contractual fee shifting provision; (2) “the presence of a ‘common
    fund created for the benefit of others;’” (3) “where the judge concludes a litigant
    brought a case in bad faith or through his bad faith conduct increased the litigation’s
    cost; and” (4) “cases in which, although a defendant did not misuse the ‘litigation
    process in any way, ... the action giving rise to the suit involved bad faith, fraud,
    “conduct that was totally unjustified, or the like” and attorney’s fees are considered
    an appropriate part of damages.’” 222       I may also “award fees in the limited
    ‘circumstances of an individual case [that] mandate that the court, in its discretion,
    assess counsel fees ‘where equity requires.’” 223 “To justify an award under the bad
    faith exception, ‘the Court must conclude that the party against whom the fee award
    is sought has acted in subjective bad faith.’” 224 None of these circumstances are
    present here. Therefore, all requests for attorneys’ fees are DENIED.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    I award Plaintiff nominal damages for Neal’s breach of fiduciary duty. I also
    order that Omni be wound up pursuant to 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-803 and that its assets be
    222
    Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC v. ASB Allegiance Real Estate Fund,
    
    68 A.3d 665
    , 686-87 (Del. 2013).
    223
    
    Id. (quoting Burge
    v. Fid. Bond & Mortg. Co., 
    648 A.2d 414
    , 421 (Del.1994)).
    224
    K&G Concord, LLC v. Charcap, 
    2018 WL 3199214
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. June 28, 2018)
    (quoting In re Del Monte Foods Co. S’holders Litig., 
    2011 WL 2535256
    , at *6 (Del.
    Ch. June 27, 2011)).
    61
    distributed in accordance with 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-804 and Hoops and Neal’s agreement.
    I appoint Triple H liquidating trustee to wind up Omni’s affairs. All other requested
    relief is denied. The parties shall submit an implementing form of order within five
    days of the issuance of this memorandum opinion.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    62