Autumn Tangas v. IHOP ( 2019 )


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  •                  NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 19a0323n.06
    Case No. 18-3217
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    Jun 25, 2019
    AUTUMN LEE TANGAS,                                )                     DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                       )
    )      ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    v.                                                )      STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    )      THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    INTERNATIONAL HOUSE OF PANCAKES                   )      OHIO
    LLC; DINE EQUITY, INC.,                           )
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.                      )
    )
    ____________________________________/
    Before: MERRITT, DAUGHTREY, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge. The question in this diversity case under Delaware law is
    whether an employer must pay the legal bills of a former employee. Plaintiff Autumn Lee Tangas
    worked for years representing International House of Pancakes (“IHOP”) and its parent
    corporation, DineEquity, Inc., to restaurant franchises in the Midwest. IHOP terminated her
    employment when the FBI investigated a franchise owner in her assigned territory for money
    laundering and hiring undocumented workers. The owner and Tangas were indicted as co-
    conspirators, but the government dismissed the charges against Tangas. Because the dismissed
    charges related to her duties as a representative, Tangas claims that IHOP or DineEquity should
    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    indemnify her as promised in their respective governing documents. The Defendants say Tangas
    acted in bad faith and is not covered by their indemnification provisions.
    Legally, we must decide whether the District Court correctly analyzed the two employment
    documents containing IHOP’s promises to indemnify certain covered employees. See Tangas v.
    Int’l House of Pancakes, LLC, 
    298 F. Supp. 3d 1116
    (N.D. Ohio 2018). Their interpretation
    presents a close question. Moreover, if one or both of these documents cover Tangas, IHOP
    contends that she forfeited those rights by acting in bad faith. Because we conclude that the District
    Court did not interpret the employment contracts correctly as a matter of state law and, further,
    that there is a genuine dispute of material fact concerning Tangas’s conduct, we vacate the District
    Court’s order granting summary judgment to IHOP and remand this case for trial.
    I.      FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    IHOP is a Delaware limited liability corporation that franchises restaurants serving
    breakfast foods and, famously, pancakes. Like many other food chains in the United States,
    IHOP’s business model rests on a central restaurant blueprint that is replicated by local franchise
    owners. IHOP itself is a subsidiary of another Delaware corporation, DineEquity, Inc., which also
    owns the Applebee’s chain.       These corporate entities are governed by an LLC Operating
    Agreement (IHOP) and corporate bylaws (DineEquity). These documents are the source of any
    rights Tangas may hold.
    Tangas worked for IHOP for more than two decades, first as an Operations Consultant,
    then as Regional Manager of Operations Services, and finally as a Franchise Business Consultant.
    Franchise Business Consultants work on behalf of IHOP to help franchisees improve profits and
    liaise between the corporation and local franchise owners. In 2009, Tangas was named “IHOP
    Franchise Business Consultant of the year.” The District Court found that Tangas “helped
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    franchisees boost sales and ensured that they adhered to IHOP operating standards.” 
    Id. at 1120.
    Tangas’s role is important – she was representing the corporation in the field. The basic premise
    of a franchise-centered business is that each individual franchise will provide the same service and
    food. The person ensuring that corporate standards are met is a crucial figure in this business.
    One of the franchisees in Tangas’s territory was a man named Terek Elkafrawi, known as
    Terry Elk, who owned several IHOP franchises in the Toledo, Ohio area. The exact nature of the
    relationship between Elk and Tangas is unclear. The District Court found that Tangas had reported
    Elk as a problem franchisee to IHOP corporate because she suspected he was under-reporting sales.
    At the least, Tangas and Elk had a professional connection. But Tangas’s domestic partner, Lisa
    Ross, was a friend of Elk’s apart from Tangas’s work relationship. Ross declared in a summary
    judgment affidavit that she was friends with Elk, but that Tangas had always “held him at arm’s
    length” because of their (Elk and Tangas’s) working relationship.
    In 2004, Ross and Elk exchanged large sums of money. The District Court said that
    “[t]here is conflicting evidence as to the true purpose of this transaction.” 
    Id. at 1121.
    Tangas and
    Ross’s version of events is that Ross, without Tangas’s knowledge, withdrew $50,000 from Ross
    and Tangas’s joint bank account and loaned it to Elk. When Tangas discovered the transaction,
    she was upset because it created a conflict with respect to her role as the Franchise Business
    Consultant. Because she oversaw franchises, Tangas was not allowed to own a financial stake in
    a franchise. Ross asked Elk to return the money, and he did so, including an extra $8,000 in what
    he called “interest.” Ross then returned the extra $8,000 to Elk. Other evidence suggested that
    this transaction was an improper investment by Tangas in Elk’s business to put Ross on an Elk
    franchise healthcare plan. 
    Id. This back
    and forth—whatever its true purpose—took place in
    2004. What we know is that Tangas oversaw Elk’s franchises and reported him as a problem to
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    corporate. And in 2004, a transaction of unknown purpose occurred between Elk, Tangas, and
    Ross, its existence was unknown to IHOP, and eventually the money returned to its original holder.
    Years later, in September 2011, the FBI raided Elk’s IHOP locations. FBI agents came to
    Tangas’s home and asked her questions about Elk’s business. Tangas had the impression after the
    interview that she was in trouble. That same day, she spoke with Christine Son, the in-house
    counsel of IHOP’s parent company DineEquity, who told Tangas that as an IHOP employee,
    Tangas had no choice but to divulge the details of the FBI interview to her. Tangas did so, even
    though the agents had asked her not to discuss their conversation. IHOP, therefore, was informed
    quickly and thoroughly about the FBI’s investigation into the Elk franchises.
    In February 2012, Son asked Tangas to come to IHOP’s headquarters in California for an
    interview as part of IHOP’s internal investigation into the Elk matter. Tangas’s attorney told Son
    that the U.S. Attorney’s Office considered Tangas herself the subject of a criminal probe.
    Accordingly, Tangas’s lawyer told Son that Tangas would invoke the 5th Amendment in response
    to questions “in any collateral matters.” Son replied that IHOP’s Global Code of Conduct required
    Tangas to cooperate and that her employment would be terminated if she refused. When Tangas’s
    attorney reiterated that Tangas would not respond to questions, IHOP terminated Tangas for
    violating IHOP’s Global Code of Conduct. Whatever the Code of Conduct said, Tangas and her
    lawyer’s decision to focus on the criminal inquiry is understandable. When a client is faced with
    potential criminal liability in a federal investigation, the lawyer’s job is to limit the client’s
    exposure. Admissions in a collateral investigation could hurt the client later in the criminal
    proceeding.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    The U.S. Attorney’s Office indicted Elk, Tangas, and sixteen others in May 2012.1 The
    indictment listed counts of money laundering and hiring undocumented workers at Elk’s IHOP
    locations. Relevant here, the indictment alleged that Tangas conspired with Elk to shield him from
    IHOP’s scrutiny in return for putting “L.R.” (Lisa Ross) on the payroll and health insurance roster
    of an Elk franchise. Tangas testified in her deposition in this case that the charges “flabbergasted”
    her, that none of the allegations against her were true, and that she was the only defendant whose
    charges were dismissed without a plea. In May 2014, the U.S. Attorney’s Office dismissed all
    charges against Tangas without prejudice. She incurred roughly $130,000 in legal fees and used
    her retirement savings to pay her attorney.
    In July 2015, Tangas sued IHOP and its parent company, DineEquity, in Ohio state court,
    alleging that she was wrongfully terminated and seeking indemnity for her attorneys’ fees in the
    Elk matter. IHOP removed the case to the Northern District of Ohio and filed a 12(b)(6) motion.
    The District Court allowed Tangas to amend her complaint to state a claim for indemnity under
    Delaware rather than Ohio law. See Tangas v. Int’l House of Pancakes LLC, No. 3:15–CV–1566,
    
    2016 WL 614006
    , at *4 (N.D. Ohio Feb. 16, 2016). Both parties filed a motion for summary
    judgment. Tangas did not oppose IHOP’s motion for summary judgment on the wrongful
    termination 
    claim. 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1124
    , n.1. So the sole issue remaining on summary judgment
    was indemnity. The District Court granted summary judgment to IHOP and agreed that Tangas
    was not entitled to indemnification. 
    Id. at 1132.
    The District Court came to several conclusions in its summary judgment order. First, it
    said that Tangas was not entitled to indemnity under the bylaws of DineEquity, IHOP’s parent
    corporation. Second, it found that Tangas was not entitled to indemnity under IHOP’s LLC
    1
    United States v. Elkafrawi, et al., Docket No. 3:12-cr-00262-BYP (N. D. Ohio May 22, 2012).
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Agreement. The Court also applied the business judgment rule to IHOP’s decision to fire Tangas
    and concluded that “no reasonable jury could find that IHOP failed to undertake an adequate
    investigation and make a reasoned decision that Tangas’s fraudulent conduct ‘with respect to’ the
    criminal case extinguished any right to indemnification.” 
    Id. at 1132.
    This appeal followed.
    II.    LEGAL ANALYSIS
    The question presented in this case is whether the District Court correctly granted summary
    judgment to IHOP on Tangas’s indemnity claim. The District Court’s basis for so ruling was the
    conclusion that the governing documents of Tangas’s employer do not cover her claim for
    indemnity. Those documents are the IHOP LLC Agreement and the bylaws of DineEquity, Inc.
    Our review is de novo, and we may not resolve any issues of disputed fact. Williams v. Mehra,
    
    186 F.3d 685
    , 689 (6th Cir. 1999); Felix v. Young, 
    536 F.2d 1126
    , 1130 (6th Cir. 1976). Because
    we disagree with the District Court’s interpretation of the agreements and Delaware law, we vacate
    the judgment of the District Court. These parties do not agree on how Tangas’s conduct affects
    her rights under these contracts, and this genuine dispute of material fact precludes summary
    judgment. We analyze the contracts in this opinion, but a trier of fact must measure Tangas’s
    conduct and ask if her actions amount to bad faith.
    Certain basic principles inform our review of the DineEquity bylaws and the IHOP LLC
    Agreement. Delaware affords corporations a great deal of latitude in how indemnification rights
    are granted to employees and directors. Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 145. The Delaware General
    Corporation Law “requires a corporation to indemnify a person who was made a party to a
    proceeding by reason of his service to the corporation” and is successful in that proceeding, and
    the statute “prohibits a corporation from indemnifying a corporate official who was not successful
    in the underlying proceeding and has acted, essentially, in bad faith.” Hermelin v. K-V Pharm.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Co., 
    54 A.3d 1093
    , 1094 (Del. Ch. 2012). Between the extremes of success and bad faith, a
    corporation has discretion to define its indemnification obligations by charter, bylaw, or contract.
    
    Id. at 1095.
    A bedrock principle of Delaware law is that indemnity is designed to insulate corporate
    employees from unjustified claims: it allows officers to do their jobs while litigation might be
    pending. One commentator noted:
    The invariant policy of Delaware legislation on indemnification is to promote
    the desirable end that corporate officials will resist what they consider unjustified
    suits and claims, secure in the knowledge that their reasonable expenses will be
    borne by the corporation they have served if they are vindicated.
    Hibbert v. Hollywood Park, Inc., 
    457 A.2d 339
    , 343–44 (Del. 1983) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also 
    Hermelin, 54 A.3d at 1094
    . Indemnity in Delaware is designed for precisely
    the kind of case that Tangas became involved in, where the charges against her were later
    dismissed. The promise of indemnity allows a corporate official the opportunity to continue work
    untroubled by an unsubstantiated claim. The Hermelin case is particularly instructive in applying
    these principles.
    Both governing documents in this case contain expansive provisions to indemnify various
    corporate actors. See 
    Hermelin, 54 A.3d at 1095
    (discussing contractual means of indemnity). We
    will analyze each document, but they share a common linguistic feature. Both the DineEquity
    Bylaws and the IHOP LLC Agreement employ the directive language “shall” in discussing when
    the corporate entity must indemnify covered people. The documents direct the corporation to
    indemnify covered persons when possible. Thus, “the discretion of the decision-maker [as to
    whether to grant indemnity] is very much circumscribed.” R. Franklin Balotti and Jesse A.
    Finkelstein, 
    1 Del. L
    . of Corp. and Bus. Org. § 4.12 Indemnification, 
    2006 WL 2450248
    (3d ed.,
    2018 Supp.) (citing VonFeldt v. Stifel Fin. Corp., No. 15688, 
    1999 WL 413393
    , at *3 (Del. Ch.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    June 11, 1999) (“By using the phrase ‘shall indemnify,’ the bylaw not only mandates
    indemnification; it also effectively places the burden on [the corporation] to demonstrate that the
    indemnification mandated is not required.”)); see also Stockman v. Heartland Indus. Partners,
    L.P., Nos. 4227–VCS, 4427–VCS, 
    2009 WL 2096213
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. July 14, 2009) (“[I]n the
    case of a mandatory indemnification provision, the burden rests on the party from whom
    indemnification is sought to prove that indemnification is not required.”). This choice of phrasing
    suggests that in a dispute like this, where the corporation is trying to deny indemnification, the
    burden is on the corporation to show it should not pay.
    A. Indemnity Under DineEquity’s Bylaws
    DineEquity is a Delaware corporation and its bylaws set forth the terms for indemnity. The
    bylaws state that the corporation:
    shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a
    party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether
    civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (other than an action by or in the
    right of the Corporation) by reason of the fact that he is or was a director or officer
    of the Corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the Corporation as a
    director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint
    venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise, against expenses
    (including attorneys’ fees) judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement
    actually and reasonably incurred by him in connection with such action, suit or
    proceeding if he acted in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed to
    be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation, and, with respect
    to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct
    was unlawful.
    (emphasis added). This provision is a broad grant of indemnity rights. It is directive, employing
    the word “shall,” and contemplates a wide range of proceedings. It is explicit in providing
    indemnity to former employees, using the words “is or was.” The parties agree that Tangas was
    never an “officer” or “director” of DineEquity. So the question under this agreement is whether
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Tangas “served [IHOP, a DineEquity subsidiary] at the request of” DineEquity. If she served
    IHOP at the request of DineEquity, then she is covered.
    We disagree with the District Court’s conclusion that “an employee of a subsidiary
    company serves ‘at the request of’ its parent company only when the parent company appoints the
    employee to a specific 
    position.” 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1125
    . Delaware courts have found an
    employee of a subsidiary corporation served “at the request of” the owner of the parent company
    even when not appointed to a specific position. See Zaman v. Amedeo Holdings, Inc., No. 3115–
    VCS, 
    2008 WL 2168397
    , at *19 (Del. Ch. May 23, 2008). Moreover, in VonFeldt v. Stifel
    Financial Corp., 
    714 A.2d 79
    , 82–83 (Del. 1998), the Delaware Supreme Court said that the exact
    nature of the parties’ relationship—and thus the answer to the question of whether an employee
    served one corporation at the request of another—was a factual determination. Under Delaware
    law, a trier of fact must evaluate Tangas’s status under DineEquity’s bylaws.
    We agree with the District Court that Tangas could be characterized primarily as an
    employee of IHOP. IHOP paid her salary, issued her a W-2, and her supervisors were IHOP
    employees. But Tangas points to her receipt of a service award displaying both IHOP and
    DineEquity’s logos, the fact that DineEquity’s legal team fired her, and that she was fired for
    violating DineEquity’s Code of Conduct as proof that she was serving IHOP at the request of
    DineEquity. The District Court found these facts unconvincing but conceded that DineEquity and
    IHOP share services, including legal 
    services. 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1126
    . Tangas also argued on
    summary judgment that the then-CEO of IHOP, Julia Stewart, who is now the CEO of DineEquity,
    came to Toledo, Ohio, and specifically met with Tangas to discuss her job and to assist Tangas in
    bringing Elk’s IHOP branches into compliance with IHOP’s basic standards for franchises.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Tangas also points to a letter from Julia Stewart in the DineEquity Code of Conduct, which casts
    DineEquity and IHOP as one entity.
    Summary judgment was not the stage to resolve these disputes of material fact. The
    essence of Tangas’s job description undercuts the conclusion that no reasonable jury could find
    that Tangas served IHOP at the request of DineEquity. It was Tangas’s responsibility to ensure
    uniformity amongst franchises and report back to corporate. From her perspective, DineEquity
    wanted her to represent “the company” (legal distinctions aside) in the field. In an ecosystem of
    franchisees with a central entity, Tangas represented and acted on behalf of the central entity. It
    is thus not clear to us on this record that Tangas was necessarily not serving IHOP at the request
    of DineEquity. VonFeldt, the seminal case on this issue, held that the inquiry is a factual one. See
    
    VonFeldt, 714 A.2d at 85
    (“Other cases will have to be decided on their own facts concerning what
    constitutes one corporation’s request to serve another corporation.”). Cf. Narayanan v. Sutherland
    Glob. Holdings Inc., No. 11757–VCMR, 
    2016 WL 3682617
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. July 5, 2016) (post-
    trial finding that plaintiff served at the request of different entity).
    In addition to resolving factual disputes over whether Tangas was serving IHOP at the
    request of DineEquity, a trier of fact must also examine whether Tangas acted in good faith. The
    DineEquity bylaws condition indemnification on the indemnitee “[acting] in good faith and in a
    manner he reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation, and,
    with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct
    was unlawful.” Good faith is also a legal prerequisite for indemnification. Sun-Times Media Grp.,
    Inc. v. Black, 
    954 A.2d 380
    , 404, n.93 (Del. Ch. 2008) (“[A]s far as [Del. Code Ann. tit. 8] § 145
    is concerned, Delaware corporations lack the power to indemnify a party who did not act in good
    faith or in the best interests of the corporation.”) (quoting VonFeldt, 
    1999 WL 413393
    , *2);
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Majkowski v. Am. Imaging Mgmt. Servs., LLC, 
    913 A.2d 572
    , 586 (Del. Ch. 2006)
    (“[A]n indemnification dispute generally cannot be resolved until after the merits of the underlying
    controversy are decided because the good faith standard requires a factual inquiry into the events
    that gave rise to the lawsuit.”). Here, Tangas is seeking indemnity for her legal fees in the Elk
    matter, in which the charges against her were dismissed. But she may have contributed to the
    appearance of malfeasance through the confusion with the Ross-Elk loan. Even if Tangas was
    serving IHOP at the request of DineEquity, her conduct could still vitiate her rights to
    indemnification. The parties disagree on basic facts, but a trier of fact could easily conclude that
    Tangas served IHOP at the request of DineEquity, acted in good faith, and had no cause to believe
    her conduct unlawful—not least because the U.S. Attorney decided her criminal liability in the Elk
    matter was zero.
    The Delaware statute discussing corporate indemnity articulates a policy favoring
    indemnity for former officers and directors. Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 145(c). Although this suit
    does not relate to statutory indemnity under § 145(c), Delaware courts have consistently held that
    dismissal of charges in a criminal proceeding is by definition a success on the merits. See
    
    Hermelin, 54 A.3d at 1107
    –09. Nevertheless, dismissal does not carry the day for Tangas on the
    issue of bad faith. She may be legally blameless, but there are disputes of material fact as to
    whether she acted in good faith. In the permissive contractual indemnity context, a trial is
    necessary on the issue of good faith in some cases. 
    Id. at 1111–14.
    This case is one of them.2
    As to the DineEquity bylaws, on remand the District Court must hold a trial to assess
    whether: (a) Tangas was serving IHOP at the request of DineEquity, and (b) whether Tangas’s
    2
    As discussed later, Delaware cases have not consistently said that a trial on the issue of good faith is necessary in
    indemnity cases interpreting contracts or LLC Agreements containing indemnity rights. The District Court should
    follow Hermelin in resolving these issues of good faith as to both the DineEquity bylaws and the IHOP LLC
    Agreement, discussed in a separate section.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    actions vitiated whatever rights she held under that agreement. In determining whether Tangas
    was serving IHOP at the request of DineEquity, the trier of fact must examine the specific facts
    regarding Tangas’s service to the company, including her interactions with the CEO. VonFeldt is
    clear that each case must be decided on its facts, but we also read VonFeldt to mean that in a
    contractual indemnity case—where a right to indemnity comes from a contract rather than a
    statute—what a corporation says matters. “If a corporation wishes not to extend indemnification
    rights to those who serve elsewhere at its request, it can say so in its bylaws, or it can say nothing
    at all, thereby achieving the same result.” 
    VonFeldt, 714 A.2d at 86
    . DineEquity did not have to
    provide contractual indemnification rights to anyone. But it did. A trial is necessary on these
    components of the indemnity claim.
    B. Indemnity under IHOP’s LLC Agreement
    The second avenue for Tangas to secure indemnity is through the IHOP LLC Agreement.
    With respect to indemnity, the IHOP LLC Agreement provides:
    To the fullest extent permitted by law, the Company shall indemnify and hold
    harmless each Covered Person from and against any and all losses, claims,
    demands, liabilities, expenses, judgments, fines, settlements and other amounts
    arising from any and all claims, demands, actions, suits or proceedings, civil,
    criminal, administrative or investigative (‘Claims’), in which the Covered Person
    may be involved, or threatened to be involved, as a party or otherwise, by reason
    of its management of the affairs of the Company or which relates to or arises out of
    the Company or its property, business or affairs. A Covered Person shall not be
    entitled to indemnification under this Section 8.2 with respect to (i) any Claim with
    respect to which such Covered Person has engaged in fraud, willful
    misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence or (ii) any Claim initiated by such
    Covered Person unless such Claim (or part thereof) (A) was brought to enforce such
    Covered Person’s rights to indemnification hereunder or (B) was authorized or
    consented to by the Member. Expenses incurred by a Covered Person in defending
    any Claim shalt be paid by the Company in advance of the final disposition of such
    Claim upon receipt by the Company of an undertaking by or on behalf of such
    Covered Person to repay such amount if it shall be ultimately determined that such
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Covered Person is not entitled to be indemnified by the Company as authorized by
    this Section 8.2.
    (emphasis added). The Agreement defines a “Covered Person” as “the Member, or any officers,
    directors, stockholders, partners, employees, affiliates, representatives or agents of any of the
    Member, nor any officer, employee, representative or agent of the Company.” (emphasis added).
    This section is another broad grant of indemnity applying to many different actors. The parties
    agree that Tangas was a “Covered Person” until March 2, 2012, the date of her termination. IHOP
    argues that after she was fired, Tangas was no longer entitled to indemnity.
    There are four legal issues bearing on this agreement: (a) Tangas’s status as a “former”
    employee under the agreement; (b) whether her rights to indemnity vested at some point;
    (c) whether the business judgment rule applies to IHOP’s conclusion that Tangas had acted in bad
    faith; and (d) the issue of bad faith itself. We conclude that the LLC Agreement made promises
    to Tangas that vested, and on remand the District Court must hold a trial as to whether Tangas’s
    actions constitute bad faith, which would cause a forfeiture of her rights. As with the DineEquity
    bylaws discussed above, the problem is that the parties in this case disagree about whether
    Tangas’s conduct—to be exact, her conduct with respect to the Elk-Ross transaction and her degree
    of cooperation with IHOP in 2011 and 2012—should affect her rights. The District Court must
    resolve this issue.
    a) Current Versus Former Employees
    Because most of Tangas’s legal bills were incurred after her termination, one basic question
    is whether the language in the LLC Agreement includes “terminated” or “former” employees. The
    definition of “Covered Person” does not say. This omission presents a murky question, but
    ultimately an ancillary one. The question of coverage as a “current” versus a “former” employee
    does not matter because Tangas’s indemnity rights vested before her termination. We address
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    vesting in a separate section, but we explore the “current” versus “former” issue here because
    IHOP thinks that this issue decides the case. It does not.
    Unlike the DineEquity bylaws,3 the IHOP LLC Agreement says nothing about “current”
    versus “former” employees. The District Court found that the lack of a modifier before the list of
    covered persons in the IHOP LLC Agreement suggested that only current employees were eligible
    for 
    indemnity. 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1128
    –29. The Court quoted Charney for this proposition. See
    Charney v. Am. Apparel, Inc., No. 11098–CB, 
    2015 WL 5313769
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Sept. 11, 2015)
    (“When the words ‘officers’ and ‘directors’ are not qualified by the adjective ‘former’ (or a similar
    adjective), Delaware courts have interpreted those words to refer to current officers and current
    directors.”). We do not think that this quotation applies to the instant matter.
    First, the quoted section of Charney relates to advancement rather than indemnity.
    “Advancement provides corporate officials with immediate interim relief from the personal out-
    of-pocket financial burden of paying the significant on-going expenses inevitably involved with
    investigations and legal proceedings.” Homestore, Inc. v. Tafeen, 
    888 A.2d 204
    , 211 (Del. 2005).
    Advancement is related to indemnity, but they are distinct rights. See Tafeen v. Homestore, Inc.,
    No. 023–N, 
    2004 WL 556733
    , at *6, n.30 (Del. Ch. Mar. 22, 2004) (discussing the distinctions).
    Second, commentators have noted that Charney is not the sole authority on this point. Balotti and
    Finkelstein, 
    1 Del. L
    . of Corp. and Bus. Org. § 4.12 at n.496 (discussing Charney). We do not
    think that Charney opens a window into the mind of the drafter of the IHOP LLC Agreement, and
    it does not insert words into the contract. Cf. Branin v. Stein Roe Inv. Counsel, LLC, No. 8481–
    VCN, 
    2014 WL 2961084
    , at *6, n.43 (Del. Ch. June 30, 2014) (“Case law must be used cautiously
    3
    Recall that the DineEquity bylaws clearly contemplate coverage for people who once served at the request of the
    corporation but no longer do so. The bylaws use the explicit phrase “is or was.”
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    in searching for the intent of the parties for an indemnification provision in a limited liability
    company agreement.”).
    The District Court’s reliance on Charney was misplaced because, as Tangas persuasively
    argues, “legal claims do not always present themselves immediately.” Indemnity would be a
    hollow promise if it did not extend to former employees. Investigations and civil suits can take
    years before claims accrue or before a dispute morphs into litigation. Mobility would be reduced
    if an employee lost all the protections of indemnity after he or she has moved on to a new role. To
    the extent that the IHOP LLC agreement does not distinguish between current and former
    employees, that ambiguity should be construed against the drafter. See, e.g., Miller v. Palladium
    Indus., Inc., No. 7475–VCN, 
    2012 WL 6740254
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 31, 2012) (noting that
    Delaware policy “supports the approach of resolving ambiguity in favor of indemnification and
    advancement.”); Greco v. Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp., No. 16801, 
    1999 WL 1261446
    , at
    *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 12, 1999) (holding an ambiguity in an indemnification provision against the
    drafter).
    We also find support for the proposition that indemnity should apply to former employees
    in Delaware’s statutes. A provision of the Delaware indemnity statute provides that statutory
    indemnification rights shall “continue” as to a person who is no longer an employee. Del. Code
    Ann. tit. 8, § 145(j) (West 2018); see also Marino v. Patriot Rail Co., 
    131 A.3d 325
    , 342–43 (Del.
    Ch. 2016) (“The public policy foundation for advancement and indemnification rights
    has particular salience when lawsuits target former directors and officers for actions taken during
    their periods of service.”). Granted, this is not a case where the party seeking indemnity is invoking
    some statutory right to indemnity. The posture of this case is focused on the rights this company
    gave covered persons in an LLC Agreement—an agreement, however, that mimics the language
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    of the statute. Delaware law clearly recognizes that the policy imperatives behind indemnity
    remain active even after an employee has left her post.
    The question of whether this LLC Agreement contemplates indemnity for “former”
    employees is a close one. From a purely textual perspective, the agreement does not use the term
    “former.” Thus, because it does not explicitly grant former employees coverage, a court should
    not rewrite the Agreement to confer a right that the drafter did not intend to grant. Conversely, the
    indemnification provision is expansive, using terms like “to the fullest extent permitted by law”
    and “shall.” The Delaware indemnification statute also explicitly mentions former employees.
    We think the more logical conclusion is that former employees are included in an ambiguous LLC
    Agreement for the policy reasons articulated by Delaware statutory and case law.
    We need not settle this issue because, as discussed below, Tangas’s rights vested before
    her termination. But the District Court’s method of resolving the “current” versus “former”
    problem—comparing the IHOP LLC Agreement and the DineEquity bylaws—was inapt. 298 F.
    Supp. 3d at 1128 (“It contrasts, rather starkly, with the language of DineEquity’s bylaws . . .”).
    The documents are independent and were drafted differently, and while they may afford different
    rights, we do not think they should be read against each other. That is, we do not think that the
    clearer document informs the more ambiguous document by virtue of the first document’s clarity.
    We proceed to vesting.
    b) Vesting
    Regardless of the solution to the “former” versus “current” employee question under the
    LLC Agreement, there is a better perspective to assess whether the Agreement’s indemnity
    provision covered Tangas after her termination. As the District Court 
    noted, 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1129
    , Delaware courts have held that indemnity clauses can function as contingent rights that vest.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    The District Court in particular cited two cases, Branin, 
    2014 WL 2961084
    , and Salaman v.
    National Media Corp., No. 92C–01–161, 
    1992 WL 808095
    (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 8, 1992), but said
    that “it is impossible to read these cases as announcing a free-standing right to vested
    indemnification for any and all current and former employees of a limited liability 
    company.” 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1129
    . The District Court then held that the principles articulated in these cases
    did not extend to Tangas. We disagree.
    In Branin, an LLC agreed to indemnify a new employee when he was sued by his former
    employer. A month after the new employee was sued, his new superiors at the LLC amended their
    corporate bylaws to exclude his claims from the indemnity provision. Ten years later, when the
    claims against the new employee were finally dismissed, he sought indemnity under the LLC’s
    original and amended bylaws. The Delaware Chancery Court concluded that the initial, unaltered
    indemnity provision functioned to confer on the employee “an enforceable right to indemnification
    that vests in accordance with the terms of the agreement and thereafter may not be rescinded by
    amendment of the operating agreement.” Branin, 
    2014 WL 2961084
    , at *8.
    The District Court distinguished Branin: “Branin simply did not address the issue that this
    case presents: whether a fired employee remains entitled to indemnification even after her firing,
    when she is no longer a ‘Covered 
    Person.’” 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1130
    . In a general sense, that
    statement is accurate. But the principles that Branin articulated – namely, that an indemnification
    provision can be viewed as a right that vests – apply squarely to Tangas’s situation. When did
    Tangas need indemnification (part of the benefit of the bargain) most? When the U.S. Attorney
    and the FBI came to call. And in fact, despite her indictment, her conduct was later deemed not
    criminal. And the claim against her arose in the course of her employment at the company. As in
    Branin, the indemnifying corporation reneged on its promise when that promise mattered most.
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    The Salaman case addressed a similar fact pattern, and it also characterized the plaintiff’s
    indemnity rights as “vested contract right[s].” Salaman, 
    1992 WL 808095
    , at *6.
    Branin and Salaman both concerned high-level employees or directors who were seeking
    indemnity. It is true that these cases do not announce that all indemnity provisions everywhere
    function as rights that vest. But corporations offering indemnity rights are bound to deliver that
    benefit when a covered person is targeted, presuming of course that the employee acted in good
    faith. Otherwise, a corporation could simply fire anyone under investigation, rendering indemnity
    provisions a nullity. This inequity is exactly what Delaware law guards against. When the FBI
    came to Tangas’s door, her indemnity rights vested because the LLC Agreement is written
    expansively to contemplate coverage for threatened and investigative actions. Indemnity is
    designed for precisely this situation when an employee is sued and is later found not guilty or not
    liable. The distinction between “former” and “current” employees is irrelevant because Tangas’s
    rights vested under the Agreement when the FBI began investigating her and before IHOP fired
    her.
    c) The Business Judgment Rule
    According to IHOP, even if Tangas was entitled to indemnity under the LLC Agreement,
    her bad conduct bars her indemnification claim. Recall that the IHOP LLC Agreement states: “A
    Covered Person shall not be entitled to indemnification under this Section 8.2 with respect to (i)
    any Claim with respect to which such Covered Person has engaged in fraud, willful misconduct,
    bad faith or gross negligence.” (emphasis added). IHOP argues that Tangas did two things that
    bar her claim: (a) failing to report the $50,000 Elk transaction to her superiors as a conflict of
    interest in 2004, and (b) failing to cooperate in the internal IHOP investigation in 2011 and 2012.
    These two actions, IHOP says, amount to fraud, willful misconduct, and bad faith under the LLC
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    Agreement. Further, IHOP asserts that it is entitled to deference on its determination that Tangas
    engaged in these activities.
    After motions for summary judgment were filed, the District Court asked the parties for
    supplemental briefing on whether it would be appropriate to defer to IHOP’s finding that Tangas
    engaged in fraud. In its summary judgment ruling, the Court applied the business judgment rule
    to conclude that no reasonable jury could challenge IHOP’s 
    decision. 298 F. Supp. 3d at 1130
    –
    31. We disagree with this means of analyzing the case. If a corporation is entitled to deference in
    reneging on its promise to indemnify an employee, then its promise is meaningless.
    In general, the business judgment rule in Delaware allows the board of a corporation to
    make a business decision without second-guessing by courts. See generally In re Orchard
    Enterprises, Inc. Stockholder Litig., 
    88 A.3d 1
    , 33–34 (Del. Ch. 2014). Put simply, the business
    judgment rule is irrelevant to this case because there is no decision over which a corporation’s
    board could exercise its business judgment. A legal question of contract interpretation is not within
    a board’s purview. Grimes v. Donald, No. 13358, 
    1995 WL 54441
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Jan. 11, 1995)
    (“The question whether these contracts are valid or not does not fall into the realm of business
    judgment; it cannot be definitively determined by the informed, good faith judgment of the board.
    It must be determined by the court.”); see also 18B Am. Jur. 2d Corporations § 1452 (“The
    business judgment-rule also does not apply to a decision which construes and applies a statute and
    a corporate bylaw. Nor does it allow a board of directors to rewrite a contract to expand its own
    discretionary authority and diminish the contractual rights and protections given the other party.”).
    The business judgment rule applies to indemnification only if there is no contract on point.
    Here, there is a contract on point. In fact there are two: the LLC Agreement and the DineEquity
    bylaws. Cf. Palladium Industries, 
    2012 WL 6740254
    , at *3 (“However, absent a bylaw or
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    contractual provision that makes advancement mandatory, Delaware law leaves the decision to
    advance expenses to the business judgment of the board.” (emphasis added)). The business
    judgment rule might be relevant in an indemnity context if the bylaws or operating agreement
    make indemnity discretionary. That is not true here because the drafter of the LLC Agreement
    employed the word “shall.” We do not think the business judgment rule applies in this case.
    d) Bad Faith
    Even if the business judgment rule does not apply, IHOP still claims that Tangas is not
    entitled to indemnity, effectively, because she broke the rules with regard to the Elk transaction
    and cooperating with management in 2011 and 2012. Both issues are hotly disputed by the parties.
    Compare Tangas’s Brief at 10–11 (Elk transaction), 35–36 (cooperation), with IHOP’s Brief at 4–
    5 (Elk transaction), 5–7 (cooperation).      Again, the LLC Agreement contains language that
    specifically cabins IHOP’s ability to deny a Covered Person indemnity: “A Covered Person shall
    not be entitled to indemnification under this Section 8.2 with respect to (i) any Claim with respect
    to which such Covered Person has engaged in fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith[,] or gross
    negligence.” (emphasis added). The simple intent of this passage is to ensure that a Covered
    Person cannot seek indemnity with unclean hands. Tangas argues that because the indictment is
    the “claim” at issue, she has done nothing wrong with respect to that claim. In other words, Tangas
    says, concealing the Elk transaction and refusing to cooperate in IHOP’s internal investigation,
    even if established, would not relate to the charges in the indictment.
    As to the Elk transaction, it is difficult to argue that the exchange is factually unrelated to
    the federal indictment, which specifically discusses it as a part of a broader scheme that admittedly,
    was never proven as to Tangas. The nature of this transaction is a material dispute of fact. If a
    jury finds that Tangas’s version of events is true, then there is no misconduct because she acted to
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    remedy the conflict before it became an issue by telling Ross to get the loaned money back from
    Elk. Years passed without further event, and any belated criminal charges referencing that
    transaction were dismissed. If a jury instead believes IHOP’s version of events – that the
    transaction was an undocumented and improper investment in a franchise – then it could relate to
    the claim because it was part of a scheme that could harm the company. Even if no criminal
    liability attached, Tangas’s conduct could still bespeak “fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith[,] or
    gross negligence.”
    With regard to Tangas’s involvement with IHOP’s internal investigation, the record is
    again disputed as to whether she cooperated. Tangas certainly discussed her initial meeting with
    the FBI with counsel for IHOP when the agents explicitly told her not to. The fact that she
    communicated with counsel for IHOP about the meeting quickly could show that she cooperated.
    As to the meeting at IHOP’s headquarters, the reasoning behind Tangas’s attorney’s hesitations is
    apparent. When a client is faced with potential criminal liability, ancillary investigations with
    potential admissions can lead to legal problems for the client. Conversely, IHOP was beginning
    its own internal investigation just as Tangas’s cooperation ebbed. Tangas signed a document
    saying she would cooperate and then arguably did less than she could have. A trier of fact must
    hold these two perspectives side by side and compare them. Even if an indemnitee succeeds in
    defending a claim, then bad faith, willful misconduct, or the like might still be present, justifying
    withholding of indemnity.
    There are different perspectives in Delaware as to when a proceeding examining good faith
    is required. The Stockman case held that “when the criminal charges against an Indemnitee are
    dismissed without any finding of liability, the contract argument for examining what the
    Indemnitee did and whether the Indemnitee acted with an innocent state of mind is arguably
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    irrelevant as there is no underlying violation to examine.” Stockman, 
    2009 WL 2096213
    , at *17;
    see also Meyers v. Quiz-DIA LLC, No. 9878–VCL, 
    2017 WL 2438328
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. June 6,
    2017) (holding that when an indemnity provision used “to the fullest extent permitted by law”
    language, there was no need to show good faith). These cases suggest that if there is no underlying
    criminal liability, an agreement’s expansive language creates a presumption of good faith. Other
    authority concludes otherwise. See 
    Hermelin, 54 A.3d at 1113
    (“Thus, additional discovery—in
    some instances mimicking the very litigation avoided by the settlement—may be required to
    permit a determination on whether the indemnitee acted in good faith.”); Branin, 
    2014 WL 2961084
    , at *10 (holding that there was a dispute of material fact over good faith).
    We think that the deliberate inclusion of the good faith requirement in both the LLC
    Agreement and the DineEquity bylaws is crucial in effectuating the intent of the drafter, especially
    in a case like this where the parties dispute the facts. Cf. Owens Corning v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins.
    Co. of Pittsburgh, 
    257 F.3d 484
    , 496 (6th Cir. 2001) (“Given that this presumption of good faith
    stands unrebutted by the party ultimately made responsible, the indemnification proceeded
    ‘according to law,’ and was not made in breach of the Policy.”) (applying Delaware law). IHOP
    is not entitled to deference on the good faith question because its indemnification procedures are
    directive and broad. But holding that the dismissal of Tangas’s charges satisfies the good faith
    provision would render the provision of the LLC Agreement discussing misconduct a nullity.
    Thus, a trial is necessary.
    e) Scope of Remand
    On remand, with respect to the IHOP LLC Agreement, the crucial question is whether
    Tangas’s actions fall under the bad faith clause of the Agreement that eliminates indemnification
    for bad faith actors.     The Agreement says: “A Covered Person shall not be entitled to
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    Case No. 18-3217, Tangas v. IHOP, et al.
    indemnification under this Section 8.2 with respect to (i) any Claim with respect to which such
    Covered Person has engaged in fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence.” A trier
    of fact must ask whether Tangas’s actions in the Ross-Elk transaction and in the internal
    investigation amount to fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith, or gross negligence with respect to
    the federal indictment (the claim at issue). There is no need for the District Court to revisit the
    “former” versus “current” employee question because Tangas’s rights vested before her
    termination.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    Delaware public policy is clear that indemnity is one of the most important promises that
    a corporation can make to an employee. It protects the covered person from defending frivolous
    claims so that the covered person’s work for the corporation may continue. Delaware also affords
    corporations formed under its laws a great deal of latitude in structuring indemnity procedures.
    IHOP and DineEquity made conscious choices to create expansive indemnification rights in their
    governing documents. We agree that Tangas is not necessarily entitled to protection under these
    rights because of her actions. But these disputed issues of fact must be presented to a jury. For
    the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the orders of the District Court and REMAND this case for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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