Williams Field Services Group, LLC v. Caiman Energy II, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    WILLIAMS FIELD SERVICES GROUP, LLC, )
    )
    Plaintiff,                      )
    )
    v.                              )
    ) C.A. No. 2019-0350-JTL
    CAIMAN ENERGY II, LLC; ENCAP )
    FLATROCK MIDSTREAM FUND II, L.P.; )
    ENCAP     ENERGY    INFRASTRUCTURE )
    FUND, L.P.; TT-EEIF CO-INVESTMENTS, )
    LLC; UT EEIF SIDE CAR, LLC; LIC-EEIF )
    SIDECAR, LLC; OAKTREE CAPITAL )
    MANAGEMENT, L.P.; HIGHSTAR IV )
    CAIMAN II HOLDINGS, LLC; FR BR )
    HOLDINGS L.L.C.; JACK M. LAFIELD; )
    RICHARD D. MONCRIEF; STEPHEN L. )
    ARATA; WILLIAM R. LEMMONS, JR.; )
    DENNIS F. JAGGI; STEVEN GUDOVIC; and )
    BLUE RACER MIDSTREAM, LLC,           )
    )
    Defendants.                     )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: July 29, 2019
    Date Decided: September 25, 2019
    William M. Lafferty, Kevin M. Coen, Lauren Neal Bennett, Sabrina Hendershot, Lauren
    P. Russell, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
    Andrew Ditchfield, Paul S. Mishkin, Daniel J. Schwartz, Tina Hwa Joe, Alexa B. Lutchen,
    Connie L. Dang, DAVIS POLK & WARDWELL LLP, New York, New York; Counsel
    for Plaintiff Williams Field Services Group, LLC.
    Rolin P. Bissell, James M. Yoch, Jr., YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR,
    LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael C. Holmes, John C. Wander, Craig E. Zieminski,
    George M. Padis, Margaret D. Terwey, VINSON & ELKINS LLP, Dallas, Texas; Counsel
    for Defendants Caiman Energy II, LLC, Jack M. Lafield, Richard D. Moncrief, Stephen L.
    Arata, Steven Gudovic, and Blue Racer Midstream, LLC.
    A. Thompson Bayliss, ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Alan S.
    Goudiss, K. Mallory Brennan, Ryan Martin-Patterson, Susan Loeb, SHEARMAN &
    STERLING LLP, Counsel for Defendants EnCap Flatrock Midstream Fund II, L.P.,
    EnCap Energy Infrastructure Fund, L.P., TT EEIF Co-Investments, LLC, UT EEIF Side
    Car, LLC, LIC-EEIF Side Car, LLC, Dennis F. Jaggi, and William R. Lemmons.
    Raymond J. DiCamillo, Robert L. Burns, Brian S. Yu, RICHARDS, LAYTON &
    FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Paul C. Gluckow, SIMPSON THACHER &
    BARTLETT LLP, New York, New York; Counsel for Defendants FR BR Holdings, L.L.C.
    Raymond J. DiCamillo, Robert L. Burns, Brian S. Yu, RICHARDS, LAYTON &
    FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Michael J. Shipley, David A. Klein, KIRKLAND
    & ELLIS LLP, Los Angeles, California; Counsel for Defendants Oaktree Capital
    Management, L.P. and Highstar IV Caiman II Holdings, LLC.
    LASTER, V.C.
    This post-trial decision addresses the parties’ competing requests for declaratory
    judgments that interpret the currently operative limited liability company agreement of
    Caiman Energy II, LLC (“Caiman II”). The parties agree that the LLC agreement gives
    EnCap Capital Management (“EnCap”) the sole and exclusive right to cause Caiman II to
    approve an initial public offering that meets the definition of a “Qualified IPO.” They
    further agree that the LLC agreement gives EnCap the sole and exclusive right to take any
    action that is “required or necessary to facilitate” a Qualified IPO. Their superficial
    agreement on these realities masks a fundamental disagreement on the scope of authority
    that these provisions confer.
    The defendants read the provisions as granting plenary authority to EnCap in
    connection with a Qualified IPO, including the power to modify the definition of a
    Qualified IPO and to alter steps that the LLC agreement otherwise would require in
    connection with a Qualified IPO. Using the expansive authority that the defendants contend
    it possesses, EnCap has proposed an intricate, multi-step reorganization that will culminate
    in what the parties describe as an “Up-C IPO.” EnCap’s proposed transaction, however, is
    far more complex than a standard Up-C IPO. Among other things, it will invert the Caiman
    II entity structure, transforming Caiman II from its current status as the top-tier entity into
    a post-IPO role as the lowest-tier subsidiary. The defendants contend that EnCap has the
    authority to implement its Up-C IPO.
    The plaintiff reads the same provisions narrowly as granting, at best, limited
    authority to EnCap to approve what the LLC agreement defines as a Qualified IPO, and
    then to take actions that are necessary to achieve an IPO that meets the contractual
    definition. As the plaintiff sees it, EnCap cannot amend the definition of a Qualified IPO
    or evade otherwise mandatory steps for pursuing a Qualified IPO. More broadly, the
    plaintiff contends that EnCap cannot take action that would conflict with veto rights that
    the plaintiff possesses under other sections in the LLC agreement. The plaintiff concludes
    that EnCap lacks the authority to implement its Up-C IPO.
    This decision interprets the plain language of the LLC agreement differently than
    either of the extreme positions taken by the parties. This decision concludes that EnCap
    has the power to implement certain steps in its proposed Up-C IPO, but lacks the power to
    implement others. This decision further concludes that EnCap cannot rely on a cooperation
    clause in the LLC agreement to compel the plaintiff to give up its contractual rights.
    I.       FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The parties reached agreement on fifty-four stipulations of fact. During two days of
    trial, the parties introduced 250 exhibits and lodged fourteen depositions in evidence.
    Seven fact witnesses testified live. What follows are the court’s findings based on a
    preponderance of the evidence.1
    1
    Citations in the form “PTO ¶ ––” refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order. Dkt.
    138. Citations in the form “[Name] Tr.” refer to witness testimony from the trial transcript.
    Citations in the form “[Name] Dep.” refer to witness testimony from a deposition
    transcript. Citations in the form “JX –– at ––” refer to a trial exhibit with the page
    designated by the last three digits of the control or JX number. If a trial exhibit used
    paragraph or section numbers, then references are by paragraph or section.
    2
    A.     Caiman I
    In 2009, defendants Jack M. Lafield and Richard D. Moncrief formed Caiman
    Energy, LLC (“Caiman I”). Defendant Stephen L. Arata later joined the Caiman I
    management team. This decision refers to Lafield, Moncrief, and Arata as “Caiman
    Management.”
    Between 2009 and 2012, Caiman I acquired and developed midstream assets in the
    Marcellus Shale in West Virginia. In March 2012, Caiman I sold its assets to The Williams
    Companies, Inc. for $2.5 billion (the “Caiman I Sale”). As part of that transaction, Caiman
    Management entered into non-competition agreements that prohibited them from
    competing with their former business in its area of operations for a period of two years (the
    “Non-Compete Agreements”).
    B.     Caiman II
    In June 2012, three months after the Caiman I Sale, Caiman Management formed
    Caiman II. Through Caiman II, they planned to pursue the same midstream business model
    that Caiman I had used, this time in the Utica Shale in Ohio and Pennsylvania.
    Caiman II obtained funding from many of the same investors who had backed
    Caiman I. EnCap committed $285 million.2 Oaktree Capital Management (“Oaktree”)
    2
    EnCap invested through five separate funds, each of which is a defendant and
    counterclaim plaintiff: EnCap Flatrock Midstream Fund II, L.P., EnCap Energy
    Infrastructure Fund, L.P., TT-EEIF Co-Investments, LLC, UT EEIF Side Car, LLC, and
    LIC-EEIF Side Car, LLC. See PTO ¶¶ 17–21. EnCap manages the funds, and the
    distinctions among the entities are not important for purposes of this decision, which refers
    generally to “EnCap.” This simplified usage should not obscure the fact that the individual
    3
    committed $95 million.3 Caiman Management committed approximately $29 million, and
    a smattering of other individuals invested. See JX 1, sched. I.
    During the negotiations over the Caiman I Sale, Caiman Management had expressed
    interest in pursuing a follow-on venture, and Williams had expressed interest in investing.
    As a result, when Caiman Management formed Caiman II, they sought and obtained capital
    from Williams.4 Williams committed $380 million, making it the largest investor in
    Caiman II.
    Williams did not want Caiman Management to use Williams’ capital to compete
    with the business that Williams had only recently purchased in the Caiman I Sale. See
    Armstrong Dep. 146–48; Scheel Dep. 175. Williams had protection for the first two years
    in the form of the Non-Compete Agreements, but once they expired, Williams could find
    funds are the formal members of Caiman II and thus the parties that are bound by and have
    rights under its limited liability company agreement.
    3
    Oaktree’s predecessor firm, Highstar Capital, made the investment using
    defendant and counterclaim plaintiff Highstar IV Caiman II Holdings, LLC. See PTO ¶ 23.
    The distinctions between and among Oaktree, its predecessor, and the special purpose
    vehicle are not important for purposes of this decision, which refers generally to “Oaktree.”
    As with the references to EnCap, this simplified usage should not obscure the fact that the
    special purpose vehicle is the formal member of Caiman II.
    4
    Williams invested through its subsidiary, Williams Field Services Group, LLC,
    which is the plaintiff and counterclaim defendant. The distinction between The Williams
    Companies and Williams Field Services Group, LLC is not important for purposes of this
    decision. This decision therefore refers generally to “Williams.” As with the references to
    EnCap and Oaktree, this simplified usage should not obscure the fact that Williams Field
    Services is the formal member of Caiman II.
    4
    itself in the position of having funded a competitor. To address this risk, Williams insisted
    on a geographic limitation that would restrict Caiman II to the Utica Shale.5 Without the
    geographic limitation, Williams would not have invested in Caiman II.6
    The geographic limitation was memorialized in Caiman II’s original limited liability
    company agreement, dated as of July 9, 2012 (the “Original LLC Agreement”). In the
    initial draft, Caiman Management proposed that Caiman II could “acquire, own, hold,
    maintain, develop and operate Midstream Assets in the continental United States and the
    state and federal waters offshore thereto.” JX 13 at ‘217. Williams struck the reference to
    the continental United States and its offshore waters, substituting “Utica Shale in Ohio and
    northwestern Pennsylvania.” 
    Id. at ‘217
    to ‘218. Caiman Management accepted this change
    but added the language “and such other areas as determined by the Board with the approval
    required for a Special Voting Item.” JX 14 at ‘550 to ‘551. In the final version of the
    Original LLC Agreement, Section 1.3 provided as follows:
    Purpose. The purposes for which [Caiman II] is organized are:
    (a)      to acquire, own, hold, maintain, develop and operate Midstream
    Assets in the Utica Shale in Ohio and northwestern Pennsylvania and
    such other areas as determined by the Board with the approval
    required for a Special Voting Item;
    (b)      to sell, abandon and otherwise Dispose of Midstream Assets; and
    (c)      to engage in or perform any and all activities that are related to or
    incident to the foregoing or otherwise authorized by the Board in
    5
    See Miller Tr. 467; Reaves Tr. 587–89; Miller Dep. 24–25; Armstrong Dep. 143–
    48; Carmichael Dep. 42–44; Lemmons Dep. 22, 31; Scheel Dep. 39–40, 175.
    6
    See Scheel Tr. 73–74; Armstrong Tr. 23–25; JX 31 at 5.
    5
    accordance with the terms of this Agreement, and that may be lawfully
    conducted by a limited liability company under the Act.
    In carrying out the business and purposes of [Caiman II], [Caiman II] may
    act directly or indirectly through one or more entities.
    See JX 17, § 1.3 (formatting altered). This decision refers to this language as the “Original
    Purpose Clause.”
    Clause (a) of the Original Purpose Clause limited Caiman II’s operations to “the
    Utica Shale in Ohio and northwestern Pennsylvania and such other areas as determined by
    the Board with the approval required for a Special Voting Item.” See 
    id. (emphasis added).
    The concept of a “Special Voting Item” referenced an aspect of Caiman II’s governance
    regime. Under the Original LLC Agreement, Caiman II was a manager-managed LLC with
    a nine-member board of managers (the “Board”). Williams received the right to designate
    three of the members of the Board; it designated Curt Carmichael, David Keylor, and T.J.
    Rinke (the “Williams Managers”). EnCap received the right to designate two of the
    members of the Board; it designated William R. Lemmons, Jr. and Dennis F. Jaggi (the
    “EnCap Managers”). Oaktree received the right to designate one member of the Board; it
    designated Steven Gudovic (the “Oaktree Manager”). Caiman Management held the
    remaining three seats. See PTO ¶ 37.
    The Original LLC Agreement provided that as a general matter, valid Board action
    required a number of votes equal to or exceeding a majority of the managers then entitled
    to be designated to the Board. See JX 17, §§ 6.1, 6.8(a). In other words, with nine managers
    entitled to be designated to the Board, valid Board action required five votes. But the
    Original LLC Agreement then identified a list of eleven additional matters, each defined
    6
    as a “Special Voting Item,” for which valid Board action also required “the affirmative
    vote of at least one EnCap Manager and at least one [Williams] Manager.” See 
    id. § 6.8(b).
    If either EnCap or Williams opposed a Special Voting Item, their representatives could
    block it by withholding support, even if a majority of the Board otherwise approved.
    By providing that Caiman II could only operate outside of the Utica Shale “as
    determined by the Board with the approval required for a Special Voting Item,” Clause (a)
    of the Original Purpose Clause required approval from at least one EnCap Manager and at
    least one Williams Manager. As a result, Caiman II would not be able to operate outside
    the Utica Shale without both EnCap’s and Williams’ consent. Making this agreement
    doubly clear, the list of Special Voting Items included taking “any action that is
    inconsistent with [Caiman II’s] purpose, as set forth in Section 1.3.” 
    Id. § 6.8(b)(x).
    Other pertinent Special Voting Items included:
    (iii)    unless such matter is a Major Special Voting Item, to merge, combine,
    or consolidate [Caiman II] with any other entity, convert [Caiman II]
    into another form of entity, or exchange interests in [Caiman II] with
    any other person (except as part of a Drag-Along Sale effected
    pursuant to Section 9.3);
    ***
    (xi)    to approve a Qualified IPO; or
    (xii)    to take any action, authorize or approve, or enter into any binding
    agreement with respect to or otherwise omit to any of the foregoing.
    
    Id. § 6.8(b).
    As indicated by item (iii) in this list, the Original LLC Agreement identified an
    additional category of Board actions known as “Major Special Voting Items.” See 
    id. § 6.8(c).
    For these items, Board approval required the affirmative vote of one EnCap
    7
    Manager. 
    Id. A Major
    Special Voting Item could not be approved by any other means,
    meaning that a single EnCap Manager could determine unilaterally whether to approve a
    Major Special Voting Item. 
    Id. The list
    of Major Special Voting Items in the Original LLC
    Agreement identified only one substantive item, followed by a general catchall for actions
    related to that item:
    (i)    subject to the applicable requirements of Section 9.7, to enter into or
    consummate any transaction that will constitute an Exit Event,
    including
    the Disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of [Caiman II]
    (including by way of Disposition of all or any portion of any equity
    interests held by [Caiman II] or its subsidiaries),
    the Disposition of all of the Membership Interests as a Drag-Along
    Sale effected pursuant to Section 9.3, or
    a merger of [Caiman II] with and into another entity or pursuant to
    which [Caiman II] is not the surviving entity (any such transaction
    approved pursuant to this Section 6.8(c), a “Company Sale”), or
    (ii)   to take any action, authorize or approve, or enter into any binding
    agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to do any of the
    foregoing.
    
    Id. (formatting altered).
    The possibility of effectuating an Exit Event through a “Drag-
    Along Sale” referred to Section 9.3 of the Original LLC Agreement, which gave EnCap
    the right to cause the Board to approve and Caiman II to engage in “a sale of [Caiman II]
    that will be an Exit Event . . . structured as a sale of the Membership Interests.” 
    Id. § 9.3(a).
    By making the effectuation of an Exit Event a Major Special Voting Item, Section
    6.8(c)(i) gave EnCap the unilateral ability to cause the Board to approve and Caiman II to
    consummate an Exit Event. Consistent with the examples included in Section 6.8(c)(i), the
    Original LLC Agreement defined “Exit Event” as
    8
    the sale of [Caiman II], in one transaction or a series of related transactions,
    whether structured as
    (i) a sale or other transfer of all or substantially all of the Equity Securities
    (including by way of merger, consolidation, share exchange, or similar
    transaction),
    (ii) the sale or other transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of [Caiman
    II], promptly followed by a dissolution and liquidation of [Caiman II],
    (iii) any other dissolution or liquidation of [Caiman II], or
    (iv) a combination of any of the foregoing.
    
    Id. § 2.1
    (formatting altered).
    Although EnCap had the unilateral ability to cause the Board to approve and Caiman
    II to consummate an Exit Event, the exercise and implementation of that right was not
    unfettered. EnCap’s rights under Section 6.8(c)(i) were “subject to the applicable
    requirements of Section 9.7.” In that section, Williams had a right of first offer under which
    EnCap had to provide Williams with written notice of the proposed Exit Event, then
    negotiate in good faith with Williams
    with respect to a transaction pursuant to which [Williams] would
    consummate an Exit Event pursuant to which [Williams] would acquire all
    of the Equity Interests (if a Drag-Along Sale), all of the assets of [Caiman II]
    (if a Company Sale) or all of the assets of [Caiman II] to be sold (if a Material
    Asset Sale) . . . .
    
    Id. § 9.7(b).
    EnCap’s right to effectuate a Drag-Along Sale under Section 9.3 was likewise
    subject to Williams’ right of first offer in Section 9.7. 
    Id. § 9.3(b).
    Through its right of first offer, Williams had the opportunity to consummate the Exit
    Sale itself. By doing so, Williams could avoid the prospect of a new owner buying Caiman
    9
    II, eliminating the Original Purpose Clause, and using Caiman II to compete with the
    business that Williams had purchased from Caiman I.
    C.    The Dominion Transaction
    In fall 2012, Caiman II identified an opportunity to partner with Dominion Energy,
    Inc. (“Dominion”) to form a joint venture that Caiman Management would manage (the
    “Dominion Transaction”). In November, Caiman II and Dominion negotiated a letter of
    intent, and Caiman II formed a wholly owned subsidiary called Blue Racer Midstream LLC
    (“Blue Racer”) to serve as the vehicle for the Dominion Transaction. See JX 20; JX 21; JX
    34 at 1. Blue Racer became and remains Caiman II’s only revenue producing asset. It is
    also the only entity through which Caiman II does business.
    In December 2012, Dominion effectuated the first step of the Dominion Transaction
    by causing its wholly owned subsidiary, Dominion Natrium Holdings, Inc., to contribute
    certain midstream assets to Blue Racer in exchange for cash at closing. Dominion also
    committed to cause Dominion Natrium to contribute additional assets over time in return
    for additional cash payments to be funded by Caiman II. As part of the Dominion
    Transaction, Dominion received equity interests reflecting a 50% ownership interest in
    Blue Racer, leaving Caiman II with the remaining 50% ownership interest. See generally
    JX 31; JX 33.
    In connection with the Dominion Transaction, Caiman II and Dominion entered into
    a new limited liability company agreement for Blue Racer. See JX 34 (the “Blue Racer
    LLC Agreement”). At around the same time, the members of Caiman II entered into an
    amended and restated limited liability company agreement for Caiman II. See JX 1. This
    10
    agreement is still the operative agreement that governs Caiman II, so this decision refers to
    it as the “Caiman LLC Agreement.”
    When entering into the Blue Racer LLC Agreement and the Caiman LLC
    Agreement, the parties addressed a variety of issues. Two are pertinent to the current
    dispute: (i) a modification to the geographic area in which Caiman II and Blue Racer would
    operate, and (ii) a restructuring of EnCap’s exit rights.
    1.     Geographic Scope
    Dominion contributed assets to Blue Racer that included certain assets located in
    West Virginia, near the assets that Williams had purchased in the Caiman I Sale. Under the
    Original Purpose Clause, Caiman II could not operate in West Virginia, and Caiman II
    would have violated the Original Purpose Clause by engaging in business in West Virginia
    through Blue Racer. The parties addressed this problem by including a modified
    geographic limitation in the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, then using that modified scope
    to frame a revised purpose provision in the Caiman LLC Agreement.
    The Blue Racer LLC Agreement addressed the geographic situation by defining the
    “Purposes of the Company” as follows:
    [Blue Racer] is formed for the purposes of developing the business of wet
    gas, lean gas, crude and condensate gathering, processing, and fractionation
    and NGL transportation within the AMI Area and, to the extent necessary for
    owning, operating and expanding the TL-404 Gathering Line, the Natrium
    Facility and G-150 Pipeline, within West Virginia (collectively, the
    “Company Business”). Each of the Members agrees to cause [Blue Racer]
    to conduct, directly and through its subsidiaries, the Company Business in
    accordance with the provisions of this Agreement and the Act.
    11
    JX 34, § 3.1 (the “Blue Racer Purpose Clause”). The Blue Racer LLC Agreement defined
    “AMI Area” as “the area of the Utica Shale formation, specifically the counties in the State
    of Ohio and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania set forth in Schedule 3, as may be
    modified pursuant to Section 10.4.”7 The Blue Racer Purpose Clause thus limited Blue
    Racer to operating in this area, except that Blue Racer could operate within West Virginia
    “to the extent necessary for owning, operating and expanding the TL-404 Gathering Line,
    the Natrium Facility and G-150 Pipeline.” 
    Id. § 3.1.
    These were specific assets that
    Dominion Natrium contributed to Blue Racer as part of the Dominion Transaction.
    The Caiman LLC Agreement addressed the geographic situation with a new purpose
    clause. Section 1.3 of the Caiman LLC Agreement provided as follows:
    Purpose. The purposes for which [Caiman II] is organized are:
    (a)    to acquire, own, hold, maintain, develop and operate Midstream
    Assets in the Utica Shale in Ohio and northwestern Pennsylvania,
    including all those areas covered by the AMI Area and, to the extent
    necessary for owning, operating and expanding the Natrium Facility,
    the G-150 Pipeline and the TL-404 Gathering Line, within West
    Virginia (provided that, except for the Replacement Natrium
    Processing Contracts (as such term is defined in the Blue Racer
    Investment Agreement), neither [Caiman II] nor its subsidiaries may
    enter into, or cause Blue Racer or its subsidiaries to enter into, new
    gathering, processing or fractionation agreements for hydrocarbons
    produced in West Virginia prior to April 27, 2014), and such other
    areas as determined by the Board with the approval required for a
    Special Voting Item;
    7
    
    Id. at A-1.
    Schedule 3 of the Blue Racer LLC Agreement listed thirty-five counties
    in Ohio and five counties in Pennsylvania. Pursuant to Section 10.4, Dominion could
    remove certain counties from the AMI Area under specified circumstances. 
    Id. § 10.4.
    This
    aspect of the Blue Racer LLC Agreement is not at issue.
    12
    (b)      to sell, abandon and otherwise Dispose of Midstream Assets; and
    (c)      to engage in or perform any and all activities that are related to or
    incident to the foregoing or otherwise authorized by the Board in
    accordance with the terms of this Agreement, and that may be lawfully
    conducted by a limited liability company under the Act.
    In carrying out the business and purposes of [Caiman II], [Caiman II] may
    act directly or indirectly through one or more entities. Notwithstanding the
    foregoing, prior to the Equalization Date, [Caiman II] shall not pursue any
    Operation and Enhancement Plans except through Blue Racer and its
    subsidiaries.
    JX 1, § 1.3 (formatting altered; the “Caiman Purpose Clause”).
    To ensure that the Blue Racer Purpose Clause and the Caiman Purpose Clause
    (together, the “Purpose Clauses”) tracked each other, the Caiman LLC Agreement defined
    the term “AMI Area” to have “the meaning set forth in the Blue Racer LLC Agreement.”
    
    Id. § 2.1
    . Recognizing that the scope of the Caiman Purpose Clause now turned on a
    definition in the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, the Caiman LLC Agreement expanded the
    list of Special Voting Items to include any action “to amend, modify or otherwise change
    (including by waiver or consent . . .) in any material respect any Blue Racer Agreement,
    including but not limited to an amendment of the definition of ‘AMI Area’ or ‘ROFO
    Development Opportunity’ under the Blue Racer Agreements . . . .” JX 1, § 6.8(b)(xii).8
    As a result of these changes, both before and after the Dominion Transaction,
    Caiman II could not compete with the business that Williams had purchased in the Caiman
    I Sale. The Caiman Purpose Clause only permitted Caiman II to operate in West Virginia
    8
    The provision authorized limited changes pursuant to exceptions not relevant here.
    13
    to the extent necessary to own, operate, or expand the specific assets it received in the
    Dominion Transaction. Otherwise, Caiman II could not operate outside of the Utica Shale.
    Before Caiman II could operate anywhere else, it had to receive the approval of both one
    EnCap Manager and one Williams Manager. Caiman II could not violate this limitation
    directly or indirectly, whether through Blue Racer or otherwise. Blue Racer also could not
    operate outside of that same designated area, and Caiman II could not authorize any change
    in this aspect of the Blue Racer LLC Agreement without the approvals necessary for a
    Special Voting Item. As a result, neither Caiman II nor Blue Racer could operate outside
    of their designated area without Williams’ consent.
    2.     Exit Rights
    A more significant set of changes to the Original LLC Agreement involved the
    members’ exit rights. This issue arose because the Blue Racer LLC Agreement
    contemplated that Dominion Natrium would contribute additional assets to Blue Racer in
    exchange for cash, and it obligated Caiman II to provide the capital necessary for Blue
    Racer to finance those transactions. See JX 22. During the lead up to the Dominion
    Transaction, Williams submitted a proposal to Caiman Management under which Williams
    would fund 100% of the required capital in return for additional member interests in
    Caiman II, which would result in Williams holding up to a 66% ownership interest in
    Caiman II. JX 24. In exchange for this commitment, Williams’ proposal contemplated that
    an Exit Event would no longer be a Major Special Voting Item that EnCap could control
    unilaterally. See id.; see also JX 23.
    14
    Knowing that EnCap would be focused on its need to exit as its funds entered their
    harvesting stage, Caiman Management questioned whether EnCap would be willing to give
    up its control over an Exit Event. But Caiman Management believed a compromise was
    possible, because they foresaw that the most likely outcome for Caiman II was either a sale
    to Williams or an IPO, and Caiman Management believed an IPO would likely generate
    greater value for EnCap. Caiman Management therefore thought that EnCap might be
    willing to give up its control over an Exit Right in return for greater control over an IPO.
    See JX 23.
    In crafting a counteroffer that would be acceptable to both Williams and EnCap,
    Caiman Management proposed swapping the approvals required for an Exit Event and a
    Qualified IPO. Under the Caiman Management proposal, an Exit Event would become a
    Special Voting Item, and a Qualified IPO would become a Major Special Voting Item only
    requiring the approval of an EnCap Manager. JX 25. Caiman Management also proposed
    that in the event of a Qualified IPO that was structured through a master limited partnership
    (“MLP”), the other investors in Caiman II “will sell their GP interest for cash to [Williams]
    using a defined valuation mechanism.” 
    Id. at ‘146.
    At the time, publicly traded midstream
    businesses were invariably organized as MLPs, and the parties expected Caiman II to go
    public as an MLP. Under this proposal, Williams would have the right to purchase all of
    the general partner interests in the MLP and control the post-IPO entity. The Caiman
    Management proposal also reduced Williams’ maximum capital contribution and resulting
    equity stake from 66% to 62.5%. See 
    id. In addition,
    Caiman Management proposed that
    the geographic restrictions in the Caiman LLC Agreement and the Blue Racer LLC
    15
    Agreement would fall away once Caiman II had satisfied all of its funding commitments
    to Blue Racer. See 
    id. at ‘147;
    JX 34 at A-6.
    Caiman Management ran its proposal by EnCap. See JX 26. EnCap struck the
    language eliminating its right to force an Exit Event, but kept the language that would let
    it unilaterally approve a Qualified IPO. Caiman Management sent the amended proposal
    to Williams. See JX 28. Williams restored the language eliminating EnCap’s right to force
    an Exit Event and struck the point about the geographic restrictions falling away. See JX
    30.
    The parties reached an agreement in principle based on Williams’ counterproposal.
    Looking back on the negotiations from May 2014, Arata summarized the basic deal as
    follows:
    When [Blue Racer] was formed, [Williams] negotiated for the option to
    increase its interest in Caiman II to 62.5%. An additional element of this
    change was [Williams’] request to not be able to be dragged into a sale of
    Caiman II (as they would now most likely be a majority owner of Caiman
    II). This was agreed to on the condition of [EnCap] being allowed to drag
    [Williams] into an IPO of either [Blue Racer] or Caiman II. The final element
    of the change of control adjustments was that, in the event of an IPO of either
    [Blue Racer] or Caiman II, [Williams] would have the right to buy out the
    other Caiman II owners’ interest in the GP of Caiman II for fair market value
    in cash at the closing of the IPO (with an agreed upon process for resolving
    a valuation dispute).
    JX 46 at ‘757 to ‘758.
    The lawyers implemented the business deal in the Caiman LLC Agreement. To
    document the agreement regarding an Exit Event, the Caiman LLC Agreement (i) struck
    Section 9.3 of the Original LLC Agreement in its entirety, thereby eliminating the concept
    of a Drag-Along Sale, and (ii) moved the approval of an Exit Event from Section 6.8(c)(i),
    16
    where it was a Major Special Voting Item, to Section 6.8(b)(xi), where it became a Special
    Voting Item. In a related change, the parties revised Section 6.8(b)(iii), which made it a
    Special Voting Item “to merge, combine, or consolidate [Caiman II] with any other entity,
    convert [Caiman II] into another form of entity, or exchange interests in [Caiman II] with
    any other person.” Previously, this provision included an exception that recognized
    EnCap’s right to authorize a merger or similar transaction as a Major Special Voting Item
    when it was part of an Exit Event. JX 17, § 6.8(b)(iii). The Caiman LLC Agreement
    eliminated that exception.
    To document the agreement regarding a Qualified IPO, the Caiman LLC Agreement
    moved the approval of a Qualified IPO from Section 6.8(b)(xi), where it had been a Special
    Voting Item, to Section 6.8(c)(i), where became a Major Special Voting Item. As a result,
    the list of Major Special Voting Items in the Caiman LLC Agreement consisted of the
    following:
    (i)      to approve a Qualified IPO, or
    (ii)  to take any action, authorize or approve, or enter into any binding
    agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to do any of the foregoing.
    
    Id. § 6.8(c).
    The Caiman LLC Agreement did not make any changes to the definition of a
    Qualified IPO. Both in the Original LLC Agreement and in the Caiman LLC Agreement,
    a “Qualified IPO” was defined as
    any underwritten initial public offering by the IPO Issuer of equity securities
    pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act for
    which aggregate cash proceeds to be received by the IPO Issuer from such
    offering (without deducting underwriting discounts, expenses and
    17
    commissions) are at least $75,000,000; provided that a Qualified IPO shall
    not include an offering made in connection with a business acquisition or
    combination pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-4 or any similar
    form, or an employee benefit plan pursuant to a registration statement on
    Form S-8 or any similar form.
    
    Id. § 2.1
    (a); JX 17, § 2.1(a).
    The definition of “Qualified IPO” referred to the concept of the “IPO Issuer,” and
    the Caiman LLC Agreement changed that definition. It now stated:
    “IPO Issuer” means (i) [Caiman II] or (ii) an Affiliate of [Caiman II] that will
    be the issuer in a Qualified IPO. For the avoidance of doubt, and without
    limiting the definition of Affiliate, Blue Racer and its subsidiaries will be
    considered Affiliates of [Caiman II] for purposes of this definition.
    JX 1, § 2.1(a). The qualification “[f]or the avoidance of doubt” was an addition. It made
    clear that Blue Racer or one of its subsidiaries could be the IPO Issuer.
    In the Original LLC Agreement, Section 9.5 governed the implementation of a
    Qualified IPO, and in the Caiman LLC Agreement, the parties made relatively limited
    changes to this set of provisions. See JX 1, § 9.5 (the “Qualified IPO Section”). To
    implement the agreement regarding who could control a Qualified IPO, the parties added
    language to Section 9.5(a) to make clear that (i) the decision to effectuate a Qualified IPO
    was a Major Special Voting Item and (ii) any references to approvals by the Board in
    Section 9.5 meant the approval necessary for a Major Special Voting Item, i.e., EnCap’s
    sole approval. See JX 1, § 9.5(a).
    The only other significant modification to the Qualified IPO Section addressed
    Williams’ right to acquire 100% of the general partner interest in the event of a Qualified
    IPO involving an MLP, which the Caiman LLC Agreement defined as an “MLP
    18
    Conversion.” To implement this agreement, the parties added a new Section 9.5(e) which
    granted Williams “the sole and exclusive right to purchase each other Investor’s Equity
    Interests in the general partner, including any incentive distribution rights and similar
    incentive securities” for cash in an amount equal to “fair market value.” See JX 1, § 9.5(e).
    The new section included a mechanism for determining fair market value, including for the
    appointment of an appraiser. See 
    id. In January
    2013, weeks after executing the Caiman LLC Agreement, Williams
    prepared a summary of its terms. The summary of the Qualified IPO Section stated:
    “Actions requiring Board approval in connection with a Qualified IPO are considered
    Major Special Voting Items (as defined below), which require the affirmative vote of one
    EnCap Manager and no other.” JX 35 at ‘448.
    D.     The Contemplated MLP Conversion In 2015
    Beginning in early 2014, Caiman Management explored the possibility of
    conducting a Qualified IPO, believing initially that it “would optimally be timed in early
    Q2 of 2015.” JX 46 at ‘757; see PTO ¶ 38; JX 55. Publicly traded midstream companies
    continued to be organized as MLPs, and Caiman Management expected that a Qualified
    IPO would take place through an MLP Conversion.
    Caiman Management did not want the MLP to face geographic restrictions and
    asked their outside counsel whether the restrictions would apply. In an email sent in May
    2014, counsel expressed the view that
    the restrictions in the Caiman II purpose clause would naturally fall away at
    a Caiman II level at IPO b/c we will have a new partnership agreement,
    however, absent amending the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, Caiman II would
    19
    still be limited by the purpose clause in Blue Racer to the extent it is pursuing
    activities through Blue Racer.
    JX 43 at ‘328. After receiving this advice, Caiman Management and EnCap discussed how
    to negotiate with Williams over removing the Blue Racer Purpose Clause. See JX 46 at
    ‘758. Their discussions assumed that the amendment would require Williams’ consent. See
    
    id. When EnCap
    engaged with Williams about the Qualified IPO, Williams suggested
    the possibility of buying Caiman II. See JX 50 at ‘021. For a time, the discussions focused
    on a sale of Caiman II to Williams. See JX 59.
    In November 2014, with the discussions over a sale bogging down, Caiman
    Management resumed their preparations for an MLP Conversion. Caiman Management
    anticipated that Williams would exercise its right to acquire 100% of the general partner
    and asked Williams to confirm that fact. Notwithstanding the advice they had received six
    months earlier about the Caiman Purpose Clause “fall[ing] away,” Caiman Management
    asked Williams to agree that the Purpose Clauses would be removed post-IPO “as they
    would be unduly restrictive for marketing purposes.” JX 70. Caiman Management argued
    this should be an easy concession for Williams because if Williams exercised its right to
    acquire 100% of the general partner, then Williams “will be in joint control of [Blue Racer]
    at that point” and could ensure that the MLP and Blue Racer did not expand into the
    Marcellus Shale. 
    Id. In January
    2015, counsel for Caiman II prepared a draft Form S-1. It disclosed as a
    risk factor that both the MLP’s limited partnership agreement and the Blue Racer LLC
    20
    Agreement would “limit[] our ability to expand [our or] Blue Racer’s operations beyond
    the Utica Shale and certain portions of the Marcellus Shale.” JX 71 at ‘139 (bracketed text
    in original). A drafting note from counsel called for confirming with Williams whether this
    disclosure needed to be retained, or whether Williams would agree to eliminate the
    geographic restrictions: “NTD: confirm [Williams] intent to leave purpose limitation in
    place.” 
    Id. Williams “held
    to the position that we did want to maintain [the business
    purpose limitation], and that it should be in the [S-1] disclosures.” Carmichael Tr. 124.
    Caiman II subsequently filed a preliminary Form S-1 on a confidential basis with
    the SEC on May 13, 2015. JX 77 at ‘710. The as-filed Form S-1 included the same risk
    factor language and contained additional disclosures regarding how the business purpose
    provisions would limit the operations of the post-IPO entities. It stated that the “sole
    purpose” of Caiman II and Blue Racer was “pursuing midstream energy opportunities in
    the Utica Shale.” 
    Id. at ‘716.
    It later stated that “Blue Racer’s assets are exclusively located
    in . . . the Utica Shale and certain adjacent areas in the Marcellus Shale, and the Blue Racer
    LLC Agreement restricts it from engaging in operations outside of this area.” 
    Id. at 749.
    The as-filed version added that “entry into any business other than the company’s stated
    purposes” would require approval of members holding 100% of Blue Racer’s member
    interests. 
    Id. at ‘763
    to ‘764. See generally PTO ¶¶ 3843.
    E.     The Contemplated MLP Conversion In 2017
    Because of adverse market conditions, Caiman II did not proceed with the MLP
    Conversion in 2015. Caiman Management revisited the prospect of an MLP Conversion in
    2017. This time, Caiman Management did not assume that Williams would exercise its
    21
    right to acquire 100% of the MLP’s general partner and proceeded with the expectation
    that the Form S-1 would have to disclose both the possibility that Williams would exercise
    its option and the possibility that the general partner would have multiple members. As
    before, Caiman Management wanted to remove the business purpose limitations, but did
    not believe it could be done without Williams’ consent. See Juban Dep. 111; see also JX
    137 at ‘828. When Caiman II filed a new Form S-1 confidentially in 2017, it disclosed that
    the business purpose provisions would limit the ability of IPO Issuer and Blue Racer to
    operate and discussed the resulting implications for investors.9
    While Caiman Management was preparing for the 2017 MLP Conversion, Williams
    supported the Qualified IPO, but proceeded slowly and deliberately. Williams had a
    contractual obligation to support a Qualified IPO, and it took care to comply with that
    obligation, but it also sought to limit its support to what was contractually required. At the
    same time, Williams continued to dangle the possibility of a purchase of Caiman II. By
    February 2017, little progress had been made, and Caiman Management and EnCap had
    9
    JX 126 at ‘461 (“Our limited partnership agreement and Blue Racer’s limited
    liability company agreement . . . limit our ability to expand our or Blue Racer’s operations
    beyond the Utica Shale and certain portions of the Marcellus Shale.”); 
    id. at ‘466
    (disclosing that Caiman II was formed “for the sole purpose of pursuing midstream energy
    opportunities in the Utica Shale”); 
    id. at ‘473
    (disclosing that Blue Racer was formed “for
    the limited purpose of” operating in Ohio and Pennsylvania); 
    id. at ‘475
    (disclosing that
    the Blue Racer Agreement “restricts [Blue Racer] from engaging in operations outside of
    the Utica Shale and certain adjacent areas in the Marcellus Shale”); 
    id. at ‘500
    (same); 
    id. at ‘515
    to ‘516 (disclosing as a risk factor that “entering into any business for any purpose
    other than the company’s stated purposes” would require approval from holders of 100%
    of Blue Racer’s member interests).
    22
    grown frustrated with Williams. See JX 112 at ‘132, JX 113 at ‘193. Those dynamics
    persisted through the balance of 2017. See, e.g., JX 140; JX 141; JX 142; JX 149; JX 154.
    Unfavorable market conditions in late 2017 put an end to the prospect of the MLP
    Conversion. In June 2018, when Caiman Management tried to re-start the IPO process.
    EnCap did not support the idea, believing it was “a waste of time unless Williams is on
    board.” JX 162.
    F.     First Reserve Buys Out Dominion.
    In September 2018, a private equity firm named First Reserve Corporation
    contacted EnCap. First Reserve was exploring a purchase of Dominion’s interest in Blue
    Racer but did not want to buy in without a path to liquidity. First Reserve proposed that the
    two private equity firms work together to achieve an Up-C IPO of Blue Racer in 2019 or
    2020 to open the door to secondary offerings that would enable them to exit from their
    positions. See JX 163.
    By agreement dated October 31, 2018, a subsidiary of First Reserve committed to
    purchase Dominion’s interest in Blue Racer. The acquisition closed on December 14, 2018.
    PTO ¶ 44. Through this transaction, First Reserve replaced Dominion as the other 50%
    member in Blue Racer. 
    Id. Under an
    agreement also dated October 31, 2018, the same
    subsidiary of First Reserve and EnCap committed to work together to achieve an IPO of
    Blue Racer. See JX 167.
    G.     The Up-C IPO
    After hearing from First Reserve, Caiman Management and EnCap began exploring
    the possibility of an Up-C IPO. See JX 165. In this structure, an existing limited liability
    23
    company that is taxed as a pass-through entity undertakes a public offering through a newly
    formed corporation (“NewCo”), which is structured as a holding company that owns an
    interest in the LLC. The basic steps in a typical Up-C are as follows:
     NewCo issues Class A common stock to the public in an IPO, with the Class A stock
    carrying both economic rights and voting rights.
     NewCo uses the proceeds from the IPO to purchase member interests in the LLC,
    giving NewCo an ownership interest in the LLC and diluting the ownership interest
    of the pre-IPO owners (the “Sponsors”).
     The Sponsors retain their pre-IPO member interests in the LLC, for which they
    continue to receive pass-through tax treatment.
     The Sponsors receive Class B common stock in NewCo, with the Class B stock
    carrying voting rights but no economic rights. The voting rights allocated to the
    Class B shares track the equity interest reflected by the Sponsor’s member interests
    in the LLC.
     NewCo is designated as the managing member of the LLC and is governed by a
    board of directors elected by the Class A and Class B stockholders of NewCo.
     Each Sponsor can exchange a member interest in the LLC and the corresponding
    shares of Class B stock for an equivalent amount of Class A stock.
    See JX 184 at ‘716. Although EnCap and Caiman Management ultimately sought to move
    forward with what they have called an Up-C IPO, their version is far more complex and
    involves many more steps than the typical Up-C transaction. See JX 225.
    During their initial exploration of an Up-C IPO, Caiman Management and EnCap
    did not perceive it as a means of eliminating the Purpose Clauses. Instead, during March
    2019, Caiman Management explored whether they could induce Williams to agree to
    change the Purpose Clauses, either by invoking their ability to exclude Williams from
    decisions about “competitive activities” or by withholding consent to a transaction that
    Williams wanted to pursue. See JX 180; JX 182; Arata Tr. 41314, 41920.
    24
    Around the same time, Arata suggested that maybe Williams would “lose[] the right
    to vote regarding changes to the business purpose clause in connection with the IPO.” JX
    181. The general counsel of Caiman II shot down that idea. After citing some points that
    might support Arata’s argument, he asked outside counsel, “[W]e can’t use the IPO reorg
    to strip Williams of rights it currently has, correct? Or have I missed something
    somewhere?” JX 181. Although the same counsel had expressed the view in an email five
    years earlier that the Caiman Purpose Clause would fall away in an IPO if there was a new
    entity, no one gave that advice at this point. Arata also texted with First Reserve about his
    idea of using an Up-C IPO to eliminate the Purpose Clauses. This was the first time First
    Reserve had heard of the idea. See JX 182.
    Later in March 2019, EnCap informed Williams that it was once again considering
    a Qualified IPO. Caiman Management and EnCap subsequently called a special meeting
    of the Board to consider moving forward with a Qualified IPO of Blue Racer “or an entity
    formed for such purpose” and to
    [a]uthorize management . . . to hire advisors, form, merge or consolidate
    entities, draft and file registration statements, file documents with such
    regulatory authorities as management deems necessary or appropriate and to
    take or cause to be taken any and all actions as and to the extent necessary to
    effectuate a Qualified IPO of Blue Racer.
    JX 185. Williams recognized that “EnCap has a right to take Caiman or [Blue Racer]
    public” and told Caiman Management that Williams would support the IPO “if our
    agreement rights are maintained.” JX 186; see JX 188. During a meeting on April 5, 2019,
    the Board unanimously approved the proposed resolutions. PTO ¶ 46.
    25
    On April 17, 2019, the Board held an organizational meeting to discuss the Qualified
    IPO. PTO ¶ 49. The Up-C structure as presented involved at least the following steps.
     Step One: Form three new entities.
    o Caiman Ohio Midstream, LLC (“Ohio Midstream”), an existing holding
    company through which Caiman II holds its 50% interest in Blue Racer, forms
    a wholly owned subsidiary called Blue Racer Midstream Inc. (“PubCo”).
    o PubCo forms a wholly owned subsidiary called Blue Racer Midstream Holdings,
    LLC (“HoldCo”).
    o HoldCo forms a wholly owned subsidiary called BR Holdco Merger Sub, LLC
    (“Holdco Merger Sub”).
     Step Two: Caiman II and Dominion amend and restate the Blue Racer LLC
    Agreement to convert Blue Racer’s member units into a single class.
     Step Three: Caiman II contributes its retained assets to Ohio Midstream, except for
    its ownership interest in Ohio Midstream.
     Step Four: Ohio Midstream distributes all of its Blue Racer units to Caiman II.
     Step Five: Caiman II distributes all of its newly received Blue Racer units to its
    members.
     Step Six: Caiman II distributes its ownership interest in Ohio Midstream to Caiman
    Management.
     Step Seven: Blue Racer forms a wholly owned subsidiary called BRM Merger Sub
    LLC.
     Step Eight: Caiman II merges with and into BRM Merger Sub LLC, with Caiman
    II surviving as a new entity named Blue Racer Midstream Management LLC.
     Step Nine: PubCo issues (i) Class A shares to the public in exchange for cash,
    contributing the cash to HoldCo, (ii) contributes Class B shares to Holdco, and (iii)
    agrees with Ohio Midstream to cancel Ohio Midstream’s interest in PubCo.
     Step Ten: HoldCo Merger Sub merges with and into Blue Racer, with Blue Racer
    surviving as a wholly owned subsidiary of HoldCo and former unitholders of Blue
    Racer receiving a combination of cash raised in the IPO, Class B stock in PubCo,
    and units of HoldCo.
    26
    See JX 184 at ‘722 to ‘728.
    At the meeting, Caiman Management asked Williams to consent to the removal of the
    Purpose Provisions. See JX 194 at ‘109. The lead Williams representatives said that
    Williams would not consent. Carmichael Tr. 147.
    H.      The Defendants Develop Their Strategy.
    Toward the end of April 2019, the defendants focused on using the Up-C IPO to
    eliminate the Purpose Clauses. On April 30, 2019, Caiman Management informed
    Williams that the Board would meet on May 7 to consider whether to remove the Purpose
    Clauses from the Caiman LLC Agreement and the Blue Racer LLC Agreement. During
    this call, Caiman Management mentioned that “maybe” Williams’ consent would not be
    required to remove the provisions in an IPO. Carmichael Tr. 15152. This was the first
    time anyone had expressed that view to Williams. 
    Id. at 152.
    On May 2, 2019, two EnCap representatives had a discussion with EnCap’s outside
    counsel about the “BRM purpose clause.” JX 241; Lemmons Tr. 54344. The next day,
    Caiman Management, EnCap, and First Reserve had a call about “strategy wrt [W]illiams
    and [the] purpose clause.” JX 213; see Reaves Tr. 61213. After the meeting, Caiman II’s
    Chief Financial Officer exchanged text messages with an EnCap representative about using
    a new entity to circumvent the Purpose Clauses. They decided that the idea would not work
    See JX 212.
    Three days later, on May 6, 2019, the board of managers of Blue Racer voted to
    amend the Blue Racer Purpose Clause to eliminate any geographic restrictions, subject to
    approval from the board of Caiman II. PTO ¶ 50. On May 7, 2019, the Board met to
    27
    consider changing the Purpose Clauses. Caiman Management formally proposed to amend
    the Caiman Purpose Clause to eliminate any geographic restriction and to approve the
    conditional amendment to the Blue Racer Purpose Clause that the Blue Racer board had
    approved. See JX 222; JX 223. The lead Williams representative stated that Williams
    would not consent to the proposed changes. The Williams Managers did not vote in favor
    of the proposal, causing it to fail. See JX 220; PTO ¶ 51.
    On May 8, 2019, Caiman Management advised Williams that although the Purpose
    Clauses could not be changed without Williams’ consent outside of an IPO, Caiman II
    could amend the Purpose Clauses as part of a Qualified IPO. PTO ¶ 52; Lafield Dep.
    16364. Before May 8, no one had taken this positon.
    Later in May 2019, Blue Racer filed a confidential Form S-1 for its IPO. In it, Blue
    Racer described the Up-C IPO somewhat differently, characterizing it as having the
    following steps:
     “Blue Racer LLC’s limited liability company agreement will be amended and
    restated to, among other things, create a single class of units in Blue Racer LLC,
    referred to herein as ‘Blue Racer Units,’ held by First Reserve, and following a
    distribution by Caiman of the Blue Racer Units to its members, the Legacy Caiman
    Owners[.]”
     “Holdco’s limited liability company agreement will be amended and restated to,
    among other things and as described further under ‘Certain Relationships and
    28
    Related Party Transactions—Limited Liability Company Agreement of Holdco,’
    create a single class of units in Holdco, referred to herein as ‘Holdco Units[.]’”
     “[W]e will issue     Class A shares to the public in this offering, representing 100%
    of the economic rights in Blue Racer Inc., at an initial offering price of $ per share
    (the midpoint of the price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus)[.]”
     “[W]e will issue and contribute Class B shares and a portion of the net proceeds
    received in the offering to Holdco in exchange for Holdco Units[.]”
     “Holdco will form a merger subsidiary, which will merge with and into Blue Racer
    LLC, with Blue Racer LLC surviving the merger as a wholly-owned subsidiary of
    Holdco and the Existing Owners receiving, as merger consideration, their allocable
    amounts of Holdco Units and a number of Class B shares equal to the number of
    Holdco Units received by such Existing Owner[.]”
     “[T]he remaining proceeds will be used to (i) pay down $ million in borrowings
    under the Blue Racer credit facility and (ii) purchase $ million of Holdco Units
    (along with a corresponding number of Class B shares, which will be cancelled)
    from the Existing Owners, with the total number of Holdco Units acquired by us
    from Holdco and the Existing Owners equaling the number of Class A shares sold
    by us in the offering.”
    JX 225 at ‘436.
    I.      This Litigation
    On May 13, 2019, Williams filed this lawsuit, naming as defendants Caiman II, Blue
    Racer, EnCap, Oaktree, Caiman Management, the EnCap Managers, and the Oaktree
    Manager. Count I asserted a claim for anticipatory breach of the Caiman LLC Agreement
    based on the defendants plan to amend the Caiman Purpose Clause and the Blue Racer
    Purpose Clause without Williams’ consent. Count II sought a declaratory judgment that
    the defendants could not amend the Caiman Purpose Clause or the Blue Racer Purpose
    Clause without Williams’ consent.
    On June 13, 2019, the defendants filed counterclaims and asserted affirmative
    defenses. The sole count in the counterclaims sought the following declaratory judgments:
    29
     “Williams is not entitled to dictate the terms of the Qualified IPO (including, among
    other things, insisting that the [Caiman Purpose Clause] be included in the IPO
    charter documents and remain in place forever unless Williams consents
    otherwise)[.]”
       “In connection with the IPO, Williams is limited to the protections set forth in
    Section 9.5 of the LLC Agreement[.]”
     “Williams is not entitled to consent rights regarding amendments to the charter of
    the IPO Issuer[.]”
     “Williams is not entitled to unilaterally block the Proposed Amendments under
    12.2(a)(v).”
    Dkt. 99 at 26–27. The parties agreed to litigate on an expedited basis.
    J.       Post-Litigation Developments
    While the litigation was proceeding, the parties continued to negotiate aspects of the
    Up-C IPO. See, e.g., JX 231; JX 233; JX 236. Williams advised Caiman II that Williams
    would view “as adverse” any amendments to the Caiman LLC Agreement that would
    “facilitate an Up-C Structure” or “make the economic waterfall provisions more
    advantageous to other parties in connection with an Up-C Structure . . . .” JX 244 at 1.
    In June 2019, Caiman Management met with financial advisors who were vying to
    lead the IPO. Barclays recommended an IPO size of approximately $650 million. JX 237
    at ‘709. Wells Fargo recommended an IPO of between $500 million and $750 million. JX
    238 at ‘022.
    II.     LEGAL ANALYSIS
    The dispute between the parties reduces to disagreements over their respective rights
    under the Caiman LLC Agreement. Each side seeks declaratory judgments establishing its
    30
    preferred interpretations. To the extent that each side seeks further relief, such as the
    issuance of an injunction, that relief is premised on its interpretations being correct.
    The party seeking a declaratory judgment assumes the burden of proving its
    position. See San Antonio Fire & Police Pension Fund v. Amylin Pharms., Inc., 
    983 A.2d 304
    , 316 n.38 (Del. Ch.), aff’d, 
    981 A.2d 1173
    (Del. 2009). Because both sides have sought
    declaratory judgments, each theoretically bears the burden of proving its position by a
    preponderance of the evidence. As a practical matter, the allocation of the burden of proof
    “becomes relevant only when a judge is rooted on the fence post and thus in equipoise.” In
    re S. Peru Copper Corp. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 
    52 A.3d 761
    , 791–92 (Del. Ch. 2011), aff’d
    sub nom. Ams. Mining Corp. v. Theriault, 
    51 A.3d 1213
    (Del. 2012).
    In this case, the competing burdens of proof are not at issue because this decision
    interprets the relevant provisions as a matter of law. For purposes of the factual findings
    set forth in this decision, the evidence was not in equipoise, and the preponderance-of-the-
    evidence standard would result in the same determinations, regardless of which party bore
    the burden of proof.
    A.     Principles of Contract Interpretation
    To resolve the parties’ disagreements requires interpretation of the Caiman LLC
    Agreement. When interpreting an LLC agreement, “a court applies the same principles that
    are used when construing and interpreting other contracts.” Godden v. Franco, 
    2018 WL 3998431
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 21, 2018). “When interpreting a contract, the role of a court
    is to effectuate the parties’ intent.” Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Am. Legacy Found., 
    903 A.2d 728
    , 739 (Del. 2006). Absent ambiguity, the court “will give priority to the parties’
    31
    intentions as reflected in the four corners of the agreement, construing the agreement as a
    whole and giving effect to all its provisions.” In re Viking Pump, Inc., 
    148 A.3d 633
    , 648
    (Del. 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “Unless there is ambiguity, Delaware courts interpret contract terms according to
    their plain, ordinary meaning.” Alta Berkeley VI C.V. v. Omneon, Inc., 
    41 A.3d 381
    , 385
    (Del. 2012). The “contract’s construction should be that which would be understood by an
    objective, reasonable third party.” Salamone v. Gorman, 
    106 A.3d 354
    , 367–68 (Del. 2014)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). “Absent some ambiguity, Delaware courts will not
    destroy or twist [contract] language under the guise of construing it.” Rhone-Poulenc Basic
    Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1195 (Del. 1992). “If a writing is
    plain and clear on its face, i.e., its language conveys an unmistakable meaning, the writing
    itself is the sole source for gaining an understanding of intent.” City Investing Co.
    Liquidating Tr. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 
    624 A.2d 1191
    , 1198 (Del. 1993).
    “In upholding the intentions of the parties, a court must construe the agreement as
    a whole, giving effect to all provisions therein.” E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Shell
    Oil Co., 
    498 A.2d 1108
    , 1113 (Del. 1985). “[T]he meaning which arises from a particular
    portion of an agreement cannot control the meaning of the entire agreement where such
    inference runs counter to the agreement’s overall scheme or plan.” 
    Id. “[A] court
    interpreting any contractual provision . . . must give effect to all terms of the instrument,
    must read the instrument as a whole, and, if possible, reconcile all the provisions of the
    instrument.” Elliott Assocs. v. Avatex Corp., 
    715 A.2d 843
    , 854 (Del. 1998).
    32
    “Contract language is not ambiguous merely because the parties dispute what it
    means. To be ambiguous, a disputed contract term must be fairly or reasonably susceptible
    to more than one meaning.” Alta 
    Berkeley, 41 A.3d at 385
    (footnote omitted). If the
    language of an agreement is ambiguous, then the court “may consider extrinsic evidence
    to resolve the ambiguity.” 
    Salamone, 106 A.3d at 374
    . Permissible sources of extrinsic
    evidence may include “overt statements and acts of the parties, the business context, prior
    dealings between the parties, [and] business custom and usage in the industry.” 
    Id. at 374
    (quoting In re Mobilactive Media, LLC, 
    2013 WL 297950
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2013)
    (alteration in original)). A court may consider “evidence of prior agreements and
    communications of the parties as well as trade usage or course of dealing.” Eagle Indus.,
    Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 
    702 A.2d 1228
    , 1233 (Del. 1997). “When the terms of
    an agreement are ambiguous, ‘any course of performance accepted or acquiesced in
    without objection is given great weight in the interpretation of the agreement.’” Sun-Times
    Media Gp. v. Black, 
    954 A.2d 380
    , 398 (Del. Ch. 2008) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
    OF   CONTRACTS § 202). “[T]he private, subjective feelings” of contract “negotiators are
    irrelevant and unhelpful to the Court’s consideration of a contract’s meaning, because the
    meaning of a properly formed contract must be shared or common.” United Rentals, Inc.
    v. RAM Hldgs., Inc., 
    937 A.2d 810
    , 835 (Del. Ch. 2007) (footnote omitted).
    B.      EnCap’s Authority Under Section 6.8(c)
    As described in Blue Racer’s confidential Form S-1, and as presented at trial, the
    defendants’ proposed Up-C IPO has many steps. As authority for EnCap’s ability to
    implement these steps, the defendants rely in the first instance on Section 6.8(c) of the
    33
    Caiman LLC Agreement. This section does not provide EnCap with the expansive
    authority that the defendants’ claim.
    Sections 6.8(a), (b), and (c) of the Caiman LLC Agreement identify different
    approvals that Caiman II must obtain before it can engage in identified actions. Section
    6.8(a) states:
    In addition to any other matters under Applicable Law or pursuant to
    the provisions of this Agreement that require the approval of or a
    determination by the Board . . . ,
    [Caiman II] (or the officers and agents acting on its behalf), on its own
    behalf or on behalf of any of its subsidiaries, shall not take any of the
    following actions without having first received Majority Board Approval,
    unless such matter is a Special Voting Item (in which event the
    approval set forth in Section 6.8(b) and no other shall be required)
    or a Major Special Voting Item (in which event the approval set forth
    in Section 6.8(c) and no other shall be required),
    and unless such actions were previously and expressly approved by
    the Board in connection with, or as a part of, approving the most recently
    approved Overhead Budget, Capital Budget, or Operation and Enhancement
    Plan . . . .
    JX 1, § 6.8(a) (formatting altered). Section 6.8(a) then lists the “actions” that Caiman II
    cannot engage in “without first having received Majority Board Approval.” 
    Id. The list
    of
    twenty-one actions includes item (xvii), which is “to make a distribution by [Caiman II] to
    the Members.” It also includes a catchall item (xxi), which is “to take any action, authorize
    or approve, or enter into any binding agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to do
    any of the foregoing.” 
    Id. § 6.8(a).
    The Caiman LLC Agreement defines “Majority Board Approval” as “the approval
    of those Managers having the Majority of the Voting Power.” 
    Id. at 10.
    It defines “Majority
    34
    of the Voting Power” to mean “those Managers whose aggregate votes equal or exceed,
    [sic] a majority of the votes then entitled to be exercised by Managers then entitled to be
    designated to the Board.” 
    Id. § 6.2(b).
    Because the Board consists of nine seats, before
    Caiman II can take any of the twenty-one identified actions, it must receive approval from
    at least five of the managers serving on the Board.
    As indicated by Section 6.8(a), Section 6.8(b) identifies a list of Special Voting
    Items, which are actions that Caiman II cannot engage in without both receiving Majority
    Board Approval and the approval of at least one EnCap Manager and one Williams
    Manager. In pertinent part, Section 6.8(b) states:
    Notwithstanding Section 6.8(a) . . . [Caiman II] (or the officers and agents
    acting on its behalf), on its own behalf or on behalf of any of its subsidiaries
    (and for the purposes of this Section 6.8(b), Blue Racer shall be deemed to
    be a “subsidiary” of [Caiman II]), shall not take any of the following actions
    (each a “Special Voting Item”) without having first received Majority Board
    Approval, which majority must include the affirmative vote of at least one
    EnCap Manager and at least one [Williams Manager] . . . .
    
    Id. § 6.8(b).
    The list of fourteen Special Voting Items includes item (xii), “to amend,
    modify or otherwise change . . . in any material respect any Blue Racer Agreement . . . .”
    
    Id. It also
    includes a catchall item (xiv), which is “to take any action, authorize or approve,
    or enter into any binding agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to do any of the
    foregoing.” 
    Id. As further
    indicated by Section 6.8(a), Section 6.8(c) identifies a list of Major
    Special Voting Items, which are actions that a single EnCap Manager has the sole and
    exclusive ability to approve. In its entirety, Section 6.8(c) states:
    35
    Notwithstanding Section 6.8(a) and Section 6.8(b) the following actions
    (each a “Major Special Voting Item”) shall only require the affirmative vote
    of one EnCap Manager, and upon such affirmative vote shall be deemed
    approved as an act of the Board (and, for the avoidance of doubt, such actions
    may not be taken by any other vote or approval of the Board):
    (i) to approve a Qualified IPO, or
    (ii) to take any action, authorize or approve, or enter into any binding
    agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to do any of the foregoing.
    
    Id. § 6.8(c).
    Although this provision empowers “a single EnCap Manager” with this
    authority, for simplicity, this decision refers to the authority as being vested in EnCap.
    The parties agree that Section 6.8(c) applies “[n]otwithstanding Section 6.8(a) and
    Section 6.8(b),” and they agree that Section 6.8(c)(i) gives EnCap the sole and exclusive
    authority to approve a Qualified IPO. They disagree about the implications of Section
    6.8(c)(ii). The defendants contend that Section 6.8(c)(ii) gives EnCap sole and exclusive
    authority to take any action with respect to a Qualified IPO. They read the authority “to
    take any action . . . with respect to . . . the foregoing” as meaning “to take any action with
    respect to a Qualified IPO.” They conclude that if the Caiman LLC Agreement requires or
    empowers the Board to take action on a particular item, and if Section 6.8(a) or (b) would
    require a different vote for Board action, then Section 6.8(c) vests EnCap with the sole and
    exclusive authority to take action on behalf of the Board if a Qualified IPO is involved.
    Williams reads Section 6.8(c)(ii) more narrowly. As Williams sees it, the grant of
    authority in Section 6.8(c)(ii) “to take any action . . . with respect to . . . the foregoing”
    means “to take any action with respect the approval of a Qualified IPO.” Williams does
    36
    not read the resulting authority as extending to any action in connection with a Qualified
    IPO, only the steps necessary to approve a Qualified IPO.
    To bolster its reading, Williams points out that the Caiman LLC Agreement contains
    the Qualified IPO Section, which contains twelve single-spaced paragraphs identifying
    actions that the Board can take in connection with a Qualified IPO and the rights that certain
    members have. See 
    id. § 9.5.
    In particular, Section 9.5(b) states:
    Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, at any time after
    the approval of a Qualified IPO in accordance with this Agreement, the
    Board shall be entitled
    [1] to approve the transaction or transactions to effect the IPO Exchange and
    [2] to take all such other actions as are required or necessary to facilitate the
    Qualified IPO including
    forming any entities required or necessary in connection with the
    Qualified IPO without the consent or approval of any other person
    (including any Member).
    
    Id. § 9.5(b)
    (formatting altered) (enumeration added). This decision refers to subpart [1] as
    the “IPO Exchange Clause,” subpart [2] as the “IPO Facilitation Clause,” and subpart [2]’s
    subsidiary right to form entities as the “Entity Formation Clause.”
    Williams correctly observes that under the defendants’ reading of Section 6.8(c)(ii),
    the Qualified IPO Section largely becomes surplusage. The IPO Facilitation Clause, for
    example, empowers EnCap “to take all such . . . actions as are required or necessary to
    facilitate the Qualified IPO . . . .” 
    Id. § 9.5(b)
    . If the defendants were correct that Section
    6.8(c)(ii) vested EnCap with the sole and exclusive authority “to take any action . . . with
    respect to . . . [a Qualified IPO],” then Section 9.5(b) would not serve any purpose, because
    Section 6.8(c)(ii) already would have covered the waterfront.
    37
    The defendants’ interpretation of Section 6.8(c) is also unreasonable because it has
    no natural limiting principle. As long as EnCap was acting with respect to a Qualified IPO,
    the defendants’ interpretation would give a single EnCap Manager the ability to take any
    action whatsoever, notwithstanding any requirement in Section 9.5 or any other section of
    the Caiman LLC Agreement. For example:
     Section 9.5(a) establishes requirements for proceeding with a Qualified IPO, and
    Sections 9.5(d) and (e) specify requirements for proceeding with an MLP
    Conversion. Under the defendants’ reading of Section 6.8(c)(ii), EnCap could
    override those provisions and effectuate a different transaction that failed to comply
    with those requirements.
     Sections 3.2, 3.7, 3.8 and 9.2 limit the situations under which new members can be
    admitted to Caiman II. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could admit new
    members in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 4.3 precludes the payment of interest on capital contributions and forecloses
    a member from requiring the return of its capital contribution. Under the defendants’
    reading, EnCap could recover its capital contribution, with interest, in connection
    with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.3(a) empowers the member that appointed a particular manager to remove
    the manager. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could remove a Williams
    Manager or the Oaktree Manager in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Sections 6.3(b) and (c) grant protections against removal to Caiman Management
    in their capacities as members of the Board. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap
    could override these protections in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.4(a) empowers Williams and Oaktree to designate a successor manager to
    fill any vacancy created by the death, disability, retirement, resignation, or removal
    of a designated manager. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could fill these
    vacancies in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.4(b) empowers certain “Management Investors” to fill any vacancy
    created by the death, disability, retirement, resignation, or removal of a
    38
    “Management Manager.” Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could fill these
    vacancies in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.5(d) requires a quorum for a valid meeting of the Board, and the same
    quorum requirement exists under Section 6.5(g) for action by written consent.
    Section 6.8(c) only addresses the voting standard, not the quorum requirement.
    Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could ignore the quorum requirement for any
    meeting of the Board, or any action by written consent, in connection with a
    Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.5(f) entitles Lafield to serve as chairman of any meeting of the Board as
    long as he is a member and empowers the chairman to determine the order of
    business and the procedure, including the manner of voting and conduct of
    discussion. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could take over meetings of the
    Board in connection with a Qualified IPO.
     Section 6.6 prohibits managers from receiving compensation for serving on the
    Board. Under the defendants’ reading, EnCap could pay managers for their service
    in connection with a Qualified IPO.
    To be clear, EnCap is not claiming that Section 6.8(c)(ii) gives it these rights.
    Nevertheless, a necessary implication of EnCap’s argument would be that its rights under
    Section 6.8(c)(ii) would sweep so broadly that they would override these aspects of the
    Caiman LLC Agreement. See Sun-Times, 
    954 A.2d 400
    –01 (describing the importance of
    considering “the practical implications” of a party’s interpretive position).
    Williams’ reading harmonizes Section 6.8(c)(i) with the Qualified IPO Section and
    gives meaning to both sections. Section 6.8(c)(i) gives EnCap the unilateral authority to
    approve a Qualified IPO. If EnCap exercises its authority, then the Qualified IPO Section
    governs what EnCap can do to structure and carry out the IPO.
    Williams’ reading also gives meaning to Section 6.8(c)(ii), which provides EnCap
    with unilateral authority to “to take any action, authorize or approve, or enter into any
    binding agreement with respect to or otherwise commit to [the approval of a Qualified
    39
    IPO].” Absent this additional authority, the quorum requirements in the Caiman LLC
    Agreement could interfere with the ability of a single EnCap Manager to act validly at a
    meeting or by written consent to approve a Qualified IPO, as could the power of the
    chairman of the Board to control the order of business and procedure at a meeting. See 
    id. §§ 6.5(d)–(g).
    Finally, Williams’ reading explains why Section 9.5(a) takes pains to specify that
    references in the Qualified IPO Section to the “Board” refer to “the Board with the approval
    required for a Major Special Voting Item.” 
    Id. § 9.5(a).
    Under the defendants’ reading of
    Section 6.8(c)(ii), there would have been no need to include this language because Section
    6.8(c)(ii) would have already provided EnCap with sole and exclusive authority “to take
    any action . . . with respect to . . . [a Qualified IPO].” Without this language, the references
    to “the Board” in the Qualified IPO Section would indicate that although EnCap could
    approve the Qualified IPO, only the Board as a whole had the authority to effectuate the
    Qualified IPO. The plain language of Section 9.5(a) addresses this problem by providing
    EnCap with the authority to effectuate a Qualified IPO. The inclusion of this language
    similarly indicates that Section 6.8(c) only grants EnCap authority with respect to the
    approval of a Qualified IPO, after which EnCap must look to the Qualified IPO Section to
    determine the scope of its authority to carry it out.
    Read in conjunction with other sections in the Caiman LLC Agreement, Section
    6.8(c) does not give EnCap expansive authority to take any conceivable action with respect
    to a Qualified IPO. Section 6.8(c)(i) grants EnCap sole and exclusive authority to approve
    or reject a Qualified IPO, and Section 6.8(c)(ii) ensures that EnCap has the power to take
    40
    all actions with respect to the approval of a Qualified IPO, notwithstanding potential
    procedural impediments in the Caiman LLC Agreement. Once EnCap has approved a
    Qualified IPO, the Qualified IPO Section determines what steps EnCap can take to
    effectuate the Qualified IPO.
    C.      EnCap’s Authority Under The Qualified IPO Section
    The defendants separately argue that EnCap has the unilateral power to carry out
    the multiple steps involved in the Up-C IPO under the Qualified IPO Section. Within the
    Qualified IPO Section, Section 9.5(b) grants EnCap the authority “to approve the
    transaction or transactions to effect the IPO Exchange and to take all such other actions as
    are required or necessary to facilitate the Qualified IPO . . . .” 
    Id. § 9.5(b)
    . Within this
    provision, the IPO Exchange Clause authorizes EnCap “to approve the transaction or
    transactions to effect the IPO Exchange,” and the IPO Facilitation Clause authorizes EnCap
    “to take all such other actions as are required or necessary to facilitate the Qualified IPO.”
    Providing an example of the latter grant of authority, the Entity Formation Clause
    authorizes the “forming any entities required or necessary in connection with the Qualified
    IPO.”
    1.     EnCap’s Authority Under The IPO Exchange Clause
    The defendants contend that in carrying out the Up-C IPO, EnCap can rely on the
    IPO Exchange Clause. Section 9.5(a) describes the requirements for an “IPO Exchange”
    as follows:
    [1] In connection with any proposed Qualified IPO approved in accordance
    with this Agreement, the outstanding Membership Interests will be converted
    or exchanged in accordance with this Section 9.5 into equity securities of the
    41
    IPO Issuer (“IPO Securities”) of the same class or series as the securities of
    the IPO Issuer proposed to be offered to the public in the Qualified IPO (the
    “Publicly Offered Securities”).
    [2] Each outstanding Membership Interest will be converted into or
    exchanged for IPO Securities at such time as determined by the Board with
    the approval required for a Major Special Voting Item in a transaction or
    series of transactions that give effect to the provisions of Section 5.4 (the
    “IPO Exchange”) such that each holder of Membership Interests will either
    (i) receive IPO Securities having a Fair Market Value equal to the
    same proportion of the aggregate Pre-IPO Value, if any, that such holder
    would have received if all of [Caiman II’s] cash and other property had been
    distributed by [Caiman II] in complete liquidation pursuant to the rights and
    preferences set forth in Section 10.2(h) as in effect immediately prior to such
    distribution assuming that the value of the IPO Issuer immediately prior to
    such liquidation distribution was equal to the Pre-IPO Value or
    (ii) have such Membership Interests cancelled for no consideration, if
    the application of the foregoing clause (i) would result in a holder of
    Membership Interests receiving no IPO Securities.
    
    Id. § 9.5(a)
    (formatting altered) (bracketed numbering added). The defendants contend that
    sentence [2] gives EnCap further (and, in their view redundant) authority to determine the
    “time” at which “[e]ach outstanding Membership Interest will be converted into or changed
    for IPO Securities.”
    The primary purpose achieved by the plain language of Section 9.5(a) is not to
    empower EnCap, but rather to establish the requirements for carrying out a Qualified IPO.
    Sentence [1] provides that in connection with any Qualified IPO, “the outstanding
    Membership Interests” must be exchanged for or converted into equity securities of the
    IPO Issuer “of the same class or series as the securities of the IPO Issuer proposed to be
    offered to the public in the Qualified IPO.” The Caiman LLC Agreement defines the term
    “Membership Interests” to mean “the interest of a Member in [Caiman II] . . . .” 
    Id. at 11.
    42
    Sentence [1] thus imposes two requirements for carrying out a Qualified IPO: (i) the
    membership interests in Caiman II must be converted into the securities of the IPO Issuer
    (the “Caiman Interests Requirement”), and (ii) the securities that the members receive must
    be “of the same class or series as the securities of the IPO Issuer proposed to be offered to
    the public” (the “Same Securities Requirement”).
    Sentence [2] starts with language to make clear that EnCap is empowered to act on
    behalf of the Board when taking the actions contemplated by the Qualified IPO Section,
    but the bulk of that provision imposes additional requirements for the IPO Exchange.
    Under sentence [2], “[e]ach outstanding Membership Interest”—a reiteration of the
    Caiman Interest Requirement—must be converted into or exchanged for IPO Securities “in
    a transaction or series of transactions that give effect to the provisions of Section 5.4.”
    Section 5.4 establishes a contractual waterfall for payouts “to the holders of Class A Units,
    Class B Units, Class C Units, Cass D Units and Class E Units” based on their respective
    “Sharing Percentages.” 
    Id. § 5.4.
    To calculate the amount of IPO Securities that each
    member is entitled to receive, EnCap must determine “the aggregate Pre-IPO Value, if any,
    that such holder would have received if all of [Caiman II’s] cash and other property had
    been distributed by [Caiman II] in complete liquidation pursuant to the rights and
    preferences set forth in Section 10.2(h) . . . .” See 
    id. § 9.5(a).
    The Caiman LLC Agreement
    defines Pre-IPO Value as
    the product of (a) the quotient obtained by dividing (i) the net proceeds to the
    IPO Issuer from a Qualified IPO (less the reasonably estimated expenses of
    such Qualified IPO to the IPO Issuer) by (ii) a fraction (expressed as a
    percentage), the numerator of which is the number of Publicly Offered
    Securities to be sold to the public in the Qualified IPO and the denominator
    43
    of which is the total number of securities of the same class or series as the
    Publicly Offered Securities (including the Publicly Offered Securities) that
    will be outstanding immediately after the Qualified IPO and (b) the
    difference between 100% and the percentage described in clause (a)(ii) of
    this definition.
    
    Id. at 13.
    The “rights and preferences set forth in Section 10.2(h)” incorporate the members’
    contractually defined “Sharing Percentages” from Section 5.4(c) and also take into account
    their capital account balances. See 
    id. §§ 10.2(d),
    (h).
    In substance, these calculations require that EnCap determine how much each
    Caiman II member would receive under the dissolution waterfall in a hypothetical sale of
    Caiman II for an amount equal to the anticipated IPO proceeds, and then use the resulting
    amounts to determine the members’ relative ownership stakes in Caiman II. In the IPO
    Exchange, the membership interests of each member in Caiman II must either be
    (i) converted or exchanged into IPO Securities “having a Fair Market Value equal to the
    same proportion of the pre-IPO Value,” or (ii) cancelled for no consideration if the member
    would not receive anything in the distribution (the “Waterfall Distribution Requirement”).
    The plain language of the IPO Exchange Clause authorizes EnCap “to approve the
    transaction or transactions to effect the IPO Exchange.” 
    Id. § 9.5(b)
    . The IPO Exchange,
    however, must comply with the requirements of Section 9.5(a), including the Caiman
    Interests Requirement, the Same Securities Requirement, and the Waterfall Distribution
    Requirement.
    In this case, the defendants cannot rely on the IPO Exchange Clause as a source of
    authority for the Up-C IPO because EnCap is not using its authority “to effect the IPO
    Exchange” as defined in Section 9.5(a). In the proposed Up-C IPO, the membership
    44
    interests of Caiman II would not be converted into the same IPO Securities that the public
    would receive, which would violate both the Caiman Interests Requirement and the Same
    Securities Requirement. The package of securities that the defendants have proposed to
    provide to the members of Caiman II appears to satisfy the allocative component of the
    Waterfall Distribution Requirement, but the defendants’ proposal does not contemplate
    providing that value in the form of IPO Securities, as called for by the Waterfall
    Distribution Requirement.
    The Qualified IPO Section does not recognize any situations in which the Qualified
    IPO can depart from the Caiman Interests Requirement or the Waterfall Distribution
    Requirement. The Qualified IPO Section only recognizes one situation in which the parties
    can depart from the Same Securities Requirement. Section 9.5(d) states that in the event of
    an MLP Conversion, the securities of the master limited partnership would be valued in
    accordance with the Waterfall Distribution Requirement “and distributed in two sequential,
    contemporaneous distributions . . . .” 
    Id. § 9.5(d).
    The first distribution would consist of
    “any cash, the common units and subordinated units of the master limited partnership,” and
    the second would consist of “any incentive distribution rights or similar incentive
    securities,” recognizing that the distributions made in the first tranche could result in
    changes in the amounts that holders would receive under the second tranche. 
    Id. Here, EnCap
    is not pursuing an MLP Conversion.
    Demonstrating that the Up-C IPO will not comply with the Caiman Interests
    Requirement, the Same Securities Requirement, or the Waterfall Distribution Requirement,
    EnCap proposes to amend Section 9.5(a) so that it authorizes the type of transaction that
    45
    EnCap wants to implement through the Up-C IPO. The defendants claim that EnCap can
    make those amendments, and then invoke the IPO Exchange Clause to carry out the IPO
    Exchange once EnCap has rewritten that clause. As discussed below, EnCap does not have
    the power to amend the Caiman LLC Agreement in pursuit of a Qualified IPO. See infra,
    Part II.D.2. EnCap can exercise the authority it possesses under the Caiman LLC
    Agreement to approve and effectuate a Qualified IPO, but EnCap does not have the power
    to change what constitutes a Qualified IPO or its component parts and thereby grant itself
    different and greater rights.
    In sum, the IPO Exchange Clause is not a meaningful source of authority for EnCap
    in pursuing the Up-C IPO. The IPO Exchange Clause authorizes EnCap to implement the
    IPO Exchange, but the contractual parameters of the IPO Exchange impose limitations on
    what EnCap can accomplish. The IPO Exchange Clause restricts what EnCap can do; it
    does not expand what EnCap can do.
    2.     EnCap’s Authority Under The IPO Facilitation Clause
    To support their position that EnCap can effectuate the proposed Up-C IPO, the
    defendants rely most heavily on the IPO Facilitation Clause. To reiterate, that clause states:
    Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, at any time after
    the approval of a Qualified IPO in accordance with this Agreement, [EnCap]
    shall be entitled . . . to take all such other actions as are required or necessary
    to facilitate the Qualified IPO . . . without the consent or approval of any
    other person (including any Member).
    JX 1, § 9.5(b).
    Under the plain language of the IPO Facilitation Clause, EnCap is entitled to take
    all such actions as are “required or necessary to facilitate the Qualified IPO.” “Something
    46
    required is necessary or essential, and a requirement is something that must take place.”
    CompoSecure, L.L.C. v. CardUX, LLC, 
    2019 WL 2371954
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. June 5, 2019),
    aff’d, --- A.3d ---, 
    2019 WL 3311949
    (Del. July 24, 2019). The term “necessary” is thus a
    synonym for “required.” Its inclusion is an example of “the law’s hoary tradition of
    deploying joint terms, such as ‘indemnify and hold harmless,’ where technically one term
    would suffice.” See Quadrant Structured Prods. Co. v. Vertin, 
    106 A.3d 992
    , 1024 (Del.
    2014).10 The word “facilitate” means “to make easier” or “help bring about.”11
    Here, the object of facilitation is a “Qualified IPO.” The Caiman LLC Agreement
    defines that term as
    any [1] underwritten initial public offering by the IPO Issuer of equity
    securities
    10
    See, e.g., Majkowski v. Am. Imaging Mgmt. Servs., LLC, 
    913 A.2d 572
    , 588 (Del.
    Ch. 2006) (declining to give separate meaning to the phrase “hold harmless”; noting that
    “[t]he terms ‘indemnify’ and ‘hold harmless’ have a long history of joint use throughout
    the lexicon of Anglo-American legal practice”); see also Amalgamated Bank v. Yahoo!
    Inc., 
    132 A.3d 752
    , 788 (Del. Ch. 2016) (discussing functional equivalence of the terms
    “necessary” and “essential”), abrogated on other grounds by Tiger v. Boast Apparel, Inc.,
    --- A.3d ---, 
    2019 WL 3683525
    (Del. Aug. 7, 2019); Sanders v. Ohmite Hldgs., LLC, 
    17 A.3d 1186
    , 1194 n.2 (Del. Ch. 2011) (same). See generally Bryan A. Garner, The Redbook:
    A Manual on Legal Style § 11.2 at 192 (2d ed. 2006) (“The doublet and triplet phrasing
    common in Middle English still survives in legal writing, especially contracts, wills, and
    trusts. That’s probably the worst possible soil for it to grow in because those who interpret
    legal writing are impelled to strain for distinctions so that no word is rendered surplusage.
    Yet that is exactly [what] all but one word . . . is [in these phrases].”).
    11
    See,    e.g.,    Facilitate,      Merriam-Webster,         https://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/facilitate (last visited Sept. 20, 2019) (“: to make easier : help bring
    about”); see also Facilitate, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (“To make the
    occurrence of (something) easier; to render less difficult.”); Facilitate, Bryan A. Garner, A
    DICTIONARY OF MODERN ENGLISH USAGE 373 (4th ed. 2016) (“to aid, help, ease”).
    47
    [2] pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act
    [3] for which aggregate cash proceeds to be received by the IPO Issuer from
    such offering (without deducting underwriting discounts, expenses and
    commissions) are at least $75,000,000;
    [4] provided that a Qualified IPO shall not include an offering made in
    connection with a business acquisition or combination pursuant to a
    registration statement on Form S-4 or any similar form, or an employee
    benefit plan pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-8 or any similar
    form.
    JX 1 at 14 (formatting altered) (enumeration added).
    Under the plain meaning of the IPO Facilitation Clause, EnCap is entitled to take
    actions that are “necessary or required to facilitate a Qualified IPO.” In other words, EnCap
    is entitled to take actions that are necessary or required to facilitate an IPO having the
    characteristics of a Qualified IPO as described in the Caiman LLC Agreement. Most
    obviously, EnCap can hire an underwriter, retain securities counsel, and take other actions
    required or necessary to facilitate an unwritten offering of equity securities pursuant to an
    effective registration statement, such as conducting due diligence and making filings with
    the SEC. More broadly, EnCap is empowered to take actions required or necessary to
    facilitate an offering that raises cash proceeds of at least $75 million, which is the amount
    targeted in the definition of a Qualified IPO. EnCap is not empowered to take actions to
    facilitate an IPO that would raise less than $75 million.
    A more difficult question is whether the IPO Facilitation Provision gives EnCap the
    power to disregard otherwise mandatory provisions of the Caiman LLC Agreement, such
    as the Caiman Interest Requirement, the Same Securities Requirement, and the Waterfall
    Distribution Requirement. This question can be answered by recognizing that when EnCap
    48
    takes action under the IPO Facilitation Provision, EnCap is acting on behalf of the Board.
    That provision therefore only gives EnCap the power to take action that the Board
    otherwise would have authority to take. Put differently, EnCap cannot take actions that the
    Caiman LLC Agreement does not empower the Board to take.12 For similar reasons, EnCap
    cannot take actions that the Caiman LLC Agreement has empowered specific members to
    take, such as designating or removing particular managers. See Part 
    II.B, supra
    (listing
    examples of mandatory provisions and members’ rights).
    The fact that EnCap is acting on behalf of the Board also means that the IPO
    Facilitation Provision does not empower EnCap to act unilaterally to amend the terms of
    the Caiman LLC Agreement. The scope of the Board’s authority over various matters and
    the votes required for the Board to take valid action are set forth in Sections 6.8(a), (b), and
    (c). Under Section 6.8(e), the Board’s exercise of authority under Sections 6.8(a), (b), and
    12
    This reading results from the distinction between (i) action that the entity either
    cannot take or must take under its governing statute or constitutive documents, and (ii) the
    discretionary authority of the appropriate decision-maker to cause the entity to take or not
    to take action that falls within the entity’s powers. In traditional corporate parlance, the
    former deals with the issue of whether the corporation has the capacity to take a particular
    action; the latter deals with the question of the approvals necessary for the action to be
    validly taken. See Carsanaro v. Bloodhound Tech., Inc., 
    65 A.3d 618
    , 648–54 (Del. Ch.
    2013) (discussing historical distinction between “capacity and power” and ability of
    particular constituencies, including the board, to exercise “capacity or power” on behalf of
    the corporation), abrogated on other grounds by El Paso Pipeline GP Co. v. Brinckerhoff,
    
    152 A.3d 1248
    , 1264 (Del. 2016); 1 David A. Drexler et al., Delaware Corporation Law
    and Practice §§ 11.01, 11.05 (2018) (same); 1 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein,
    The Delaware Law of Corporations and Business Organizations §§ 2.1, 2.3 (3d ed. Supp.
    2019-2) (same); see also Model Bus. Corp. Act. §§ 3.02, 3.04 (2016) (discussing parallel
    distinction under MBCA).
    49
    (c) is subject to Section 12.2, which governs amendments to the Caiman LLC Agreement.
    The Board cannot amend the Caiman LLC Agreement by invoking its authority under
    Section 6.8(a), (b), or (c); the Board must comply with the requirements of Section 12.2.
    By the same token, EnCap does not have the power under the IPO Facilitation
    Provision to amend the Caiman LLC Agreement. The IPO Facilitation Clause gives EnCap
    the power to carry out a Qualified IPO that the Board (through EnCap) has approved under
    Section 6.8(c). The fact that the Board (through EnCap) cannot amend the Caiman LLC
    Agreement under Section 6.8(c) when approving the Qualified IPO means that EnCap
    cannot amend the Caiman LLC Agreement when effectuating the Qualified IPO.
    Otherwise, EnCap would be able to approve a Qualified IPO, and then use the ensuing
    authority to amend the very sections that specify what a Qualified IPO means and entails,
    such as the definition of a Qualified IPO and the parameters for the IPO Exchange.
    The defendants argue that because the IPO Facilitation Clause begins with the
    phrase “[n]otwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement,” EnCap can ignore
    mandatory provisions in the Caiman LLC Agreement and act unilaterally to amend those
    provisions. Although that reading might be plausible when the IPO Facilitation Clause is
    read in isolation, it does not take into account the Caiman LLC Agreement as a whole,
    which contemplates EnCap effectuating a Qualified IPO that has been approved under
    Section 6.8(c) and is carried out in compliance with the Qualified IPO Section. The
    limitations in Section 6.8(e) and EnCap’s role in exercising the Board’s authority for
    purposes of the Qualified IPO Section mean that EnCap can take action that the Board
    otherwise could take, but cannot disregard mandatory requirements or amend them such
    50
    that they are no longer meaningful. The IPO Facilitation Clause empowers EnCap to make
    all discretionary decisions “[n]otwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement.”
    It does not empower EnCap to override or amend the Caiman LLC Agreement.
    D.       The Application Of The Provisions To Six Disputed Steps In The Up-C IPO
    Having construed the plain meaning of the various provisions in the Caiman LLC
    Agreement, the next task is to apply those provisions to six disputed steps in the proposed
    Up-C IPO. Williams contends that EnCap lacks the authority to implement the disputed
    steps.
    Before the Up-C IPO, in simplified form, the ownership structure for Caiman II and
    Blue Racer can be depicted as follows:
    This diagram does not reflect the fact that Caiman II holds its 50% interest in Blue Racer
    through Ohio Midstream.
    51
    After the Up-C IPO that EnCap intends to carry out, the same business will have the
    following ownership structure:
    To get from point A to point B, EnCap will take numerous actions, which can be
    grouped together in varying combinations. Williams has disputes EnCap’s ability to
    implement six of the steps:
     Disputed Step One: Form PubCo and HoldCo.
     Disputed Step Two: Amend the Caiman LLC Agreement.
     Disputed Step Three: Amend the Blue Racer LLC Agreement.
     Disputed Step Four: Distribute the Blue Racer units held by Caiman II to Caiman
    II’s members.
     Disputed Step Five: Form a subsidiary of HoldCo, merge it into Blue Racer, and
    convert the Blue Racer units into HoldCo units and Class B shares of PubCo.
     Disputed Step Six: Form a subsidiary of Blue Racer and merge it with Caiman II.
    52
    1.     Disputed Step One: Form PubCo And HoldCo.
    EnCap has already completed the first disputed step in the Up-C IPO, which
    involved creating the entities that it regards as necessary to facilitate the Up-C IPO. EnCap
    did not include provisions analogous to the Purpose Clauses in the governing documents
    of those entities. Williams claims that EnCap could not form entities that lacked analogous
    provisions, but under the IPO Facilitation Clause and the Entity Formation Clause, EnCap
    had the authority to omit those provisions from the new entities’ governing documents.
    On April 24, 2019, EnCap formed PubCo, the Delaware corporation that EnCap
    intends to use as the IPO Issuer. EnCap also formed HoldCo, the Delaware limited liability
    company that will serve as a pivotal intermediate entity in the post-Up-C IPO structure. If
    the Up-C IPO is completed, then PubCo’s only material asset will be membership interests
    in HoldCo, and HoldCo will own 100% of Blue Racer. JX 184 at ‘729.
    To effectuate the Up-C IPO, PubCo will issue two classes of shares. Class A shares
    will have one vote per share and carry economic rights, including the right to dividends.
    Class B shares will also have one vote, but will not have any economic rights. Public
    investors will purchase Class A shares in the Up-C IPO. Legacy members of Caiman II
    will receive Class B shares and member interests in HoldCo as a result of a merger between
    an acquisition subsidiary of HoldCo and Blue Racer. Each Class B share will be paired on
    a one-for-one basis with a member interest in HoldCo, with the latter carrying the economic
    rights that the former lacks. See 
    id. at ‘71617.
    As noted, the governing documents of PubCo and HoldCo do not contain provisions
    analogous to the Purpose Clauses. The defendants seek a declaration that EnCap has the
    53
    authority under the Entity Formation Clause to form entities to effectuate the Qualified IPO
    whose governing documents do not contain provisions analogous to the Purpose Clauses.
    At times, Williams does not seem to contend otherwise, arguing only that other steps in the
    Up-C IPO require Williams’ consent, and that “Williams will not consent to these steps”
    unless PubCo’s certificate of incorporation contains a clause analogous to the Purpose
    Clauses. Dkt. 159 at 5. At other times, Williams appears to contend that PubCo’s certificate
    of incorporation must contain such a clause.
    The IPO Facilitation Clause gives EnCap the power to form entities that are required
    or necessary to facilitate the Qualified IPO. The Entity Formation Clause expressly grants
    that power by providing that the authority conferred by the IPO Facilitation Clause
    “includ[es] forming any entities required or necessary in connection with the Qualified
    IPO.” JX 1, § 9.5(b). Nothing in the IPO Facilitation Clause or the Entity Formation Clause
    establishes any requirements for the contents of the governing documents of the entities
    that EnCap forms.
    Although the Caiman LLC Agreement contemplates that either Caiman II or Blue
    Racer could serve as the IPO Issuer, in which case the IPO Issuer’s governing documents
    would contain a Purpose Clause, the IPO Issuer can be another entity that is an “Affiliate”
    of Caiman II. The Caiman LLC Agreement defines an “Affiliate” as “any person directly
    or indirectly Controlling, Controlled By, or Under Common Control with such person.” 
    Id. at 3.
    The Caiman LLC Agreement defines “Controlling, Controlled By, or Under Common
    Control” as “the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the
    direction of management or policies (whether through ownership of securities or any
    54
    partnership or other ownership interest, by contract or otherwise) of a person.” 
    Id. at 6.
    The
    Caiman LLC Agreement thus recognizes that the IPO Issuer could be any entity that
    controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with Caiman II. When the definition
    of “Affiliate” is read together with the Entity Formation Clause, the IPO Issuer could be a
    newly formed entity that controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with
    Caiman II. There is nothing in the Caiman LLC Agreement that requires the governing
    documents of the Affiliate to have a provision analogous to the Purpose Clauses.
    Williams argues that because the IPO Issuer must be either Caiman II or an Affiliate
    of Caiman II, the governing documents of the IPO Issuer must contain a Purpose Clause.
    In support of this argument, Williams cites Section 12.8 of the Caiman LLC Agreement,
    which states that “[w]here any provision of this Agreement refers to action to be taken by
    any person, or which such person is prohibited from taking, such provision shall be
    applicable whether such action is taken directly or indirectly by such person, including
    actions taken by or on behalf of any Affiliate of such person.” This provision does not say
    that the governing document of an Affiliate must contain a Purpose Clause. It rather implies
    the opposite by saying that if Caiman II is required to act or prohibited from acting under
    the Caiman LLC Agreement, then Caiman II cannot achieve the same result by acting
    through an Affiliate. This suggests that the Affiliate is not under the same restriction
    because if it were, it already would be unable to take the specified action, and Section 12.8
    would not add anything.
    EnCap thus had the authority under the IPO Facilitation Clause and the Entity
    Formation Clause to form PubCo to serve as the IPO Issuer without including a Purpose
    55
    Clause in its certificate of incorporation. That does not mean that the formation of PubCo
    is without difficulties. The IPO Facilitation Clause and the Entity Formation Clause
    authorize EnCap to take actions required or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO, and as
    discussed in later sections, the Up-C IPO does not meet the requirements for a Qualified
    IPO because it does not comply with the Caiman Interests Requirement or the Same
    Securities Requirement. Because of these problems, the defendants failed to prove that
    forming PubCo was required or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO. But the defendants
    did prove that EnCap had the authority not to include a Purpose Clause in PubCo’s
    certificate of incorporation.
    The same is true for HoldCo. That entity’s role in the Up-C structure depends on
    the viability of PubCo issuing two different classes of stock and the legacy members of
    Caiman II initially owning different securities than the public holders will receive. Because
    these features do not conform to the requirements for a Qualified IPO, the defendants failed
    to prove that forming HoldCo was required or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO. But
    the defendants did prove EnCap had the authority not to include a Purpose Clause in
    HoldCo’s limited liability company agreement.
    2.     Disputed Step Two: Amend The Caiman LLC Agreement.
    Williams next disputes EnCap ability to amend and restate the Caiman LLC
    Agreement. Williams is correct that EnCap lacks the authority to effectuate these
    amendments unilaterally.
    EnCap proposes to make extensive changes to the Caiman LLC Agreement to
    enable the Up-C IPO to take place. The changes include, but are not limited to:
    56
     Altering the definition of “Available Cash” to include cash generated “with respect
    to any operations of [Caiman II] other than those conducted by Blue Racer . . . .” JX
    232 at ‘896.
     Altering the definition of “Qualified IPO” so that proceeds generated in secondary
    public offerings can be credited against the $75 million threshold. 
    Id. at ‘908.
     Adding new defined terms including “Blue Racer Members,” “BRM Additional
    Capital Contribution,” “Class A Common Stock,” “Class B Common Stock,”
    “Company Level Taxes,” “Company Representative,” “Covered Audit
    Adjustment,” “Holdco,” “Holdco Units,” “Incentive Award,” “IPO Value,” “LTIP,”
    “Partnership Tax Audit Rules,” “Secondary Public Offering,” “Up-C,” “Allocated
    Securities,” “Approved BRM Expenditure,” “Excess Tax Amount,” “Existing
    Agreement,” “Final Launch Notice,” “Final Participation Notice,” “Participation
    Notice,” “Preliminary Launch Notice,” “Preliminary Participation Notice,”
    “Retained Available Cash,” “Tax Contribution Obligation,” and “Tax Offset.” See
    
    id. at ‘895
    to ‘912.
     Deleting the term “Pre-IPO Value.” 
    Id. at ‘907.
     Altering the provisions of Section 5.1, which govern Capital Account Allocations.
    See 
    id. at ‘918
    to ‘921.
     Altering the provisions of Section 5.4, which specifies the waterfall for distributions
    to unitholders, to treat Incentive Awards under the newly defined LTIP as advances
    of distributions to holders of Class D Units. See 
    id. at ‘922
    to ‘923.
     Altering the provisions of Section 5.4(c) and introducing a new Section 5.4(d) to
    alter the requirement to distribute Available Cash and provide for the automatic
    retention of cash under particular circumstances. See 
    id. at ‘923
    to ‘924.
     Altering the provisions governing payment of distributions (Section 5.5) and tax
    distributions (Section 5.6). See 
    id. at ‘924
    to ‘927.
     Adding two new items requiring Majority Board Approval: the determination of the
    amount of Available Cash to be distributed (Section 6.8(a)(xvii)) and the
    determination of the amount of Available Cash to be reinvested (Section
    6.8(a)(xxi)). See 
    id. at ‘934
    to ‘935.
     Altering a Special Voting Item addressing a limitation on funding for Blue Racer
    (Section 6.8(b)(ii)). See 
    id. at ‘935
    to ‘936.
     Amending the Qualified IPO Section to eliminate the Same Securities Requirement
    in Section 9.5(a) and add language to authorize the Up-C IPO. 
    Id. at ‘952
    to ‘953.
    57
     Amending the Qualified IPO Section to provide that if EnCap determines to engage
    in an Up-C IPO and pursue an exchange in the manner EnCap contemplates, then
    “each holder of Units agrees to participate in such an exchange.” 
    Id. at ‘953.
     Amending the Qualified IPO Section to add an entirely new subsection with five
    lengthy subparts addressing the ability of members to participate in a secondary
    public offering. 
    Id. at ‘954
    to ‘955.
    The only contractual basis for EnCap to effectuate these amendments unilaterally is
    through the IPO Facilitation Clause. For the reasons discussed previously, EnCap’s power
    under that provision, like its approval power under Section 6.8(c), is subject to Section
    12.2, which governs amendments to the Caiman LLC Agreement. Assuming for the sake
    of argument that the defendants could satisfy the general requirements to amend the
    Caiman LLC Agreement, they still must confront Section 12.2(a)(v), which provides that
    the terms of the Caiman LLC Agreement “may not be amended in a way that adversely
    affects the rights or obligations of [Williams] without the approval of [Williams].” JX 1, §
    12.2(a)(v).
    The extensive changes that EnCap intends to make to the Caiman LLC Agreement
    are adverse to Williams. Without those changes, EnCap cannot implement the Up-C IPO
    because the structure of the Up-C IPO would contravene mandatory provisions in the
    Caiman LLC Agreement, such as the Caiman Interest Requirement, the Same Securities
    Requirement, and the Waterfall Distribution Requirement. As a result, without the
    amendments, EnCap cannot force Williams out of the current Caiman II structure and into
    the post-Up-C IPO structure. At present, Williams is a majority investor in a privately held
    entity that operates within a governance arrangement that provides Williams with
    significant rights and protections. Through the Up-C IPO, EnCap wishes to transform
    58
    Williams into a holder of two different securities: (i) units in a newly formed, privately
    held entity, plus (ii) Class B common stock in a publicly traded entity. In those new entities,
    Williams would be a minority investor without significant governance rights. The
    amendments would also alter the distribution waterfall under Section 5.4 of the Caiman
    LLC Agreement, which would change Williams’ financial rights. By amending the Caiman
    LLC Agreement, EnCap would make the Up-C IPO possible. By doing so, EnCap would
    radically alter Williams’ position, thereby affecting Williams adversely.
    To argue that the amendments are not adverse, the defendants compare Williams’
    position under the Up-C IPO with Williams’ position under a non-Up-C IPO. They claim,
    but have not established, that there would be no difference between the two for Williams
    except that the Up-C IPO would carry tax advantages. Even assuming that the defendants
    had proven that this was the only difference, it is still the wrong comparison. Section
    12.2(a)(v) calls for comparing the situation Williams currently enjoys with its situation
    under the proposed amendments. See 
    id. § 12.2(a)(v)
    (requiring Williams’ approval for
    “amendments to this Agreement” that adversely affect Williams’ rights and obligations)
    (emphasis added)). Section 12.2(a)(v) does not call for comparing Williams’ situation
    under one set of amendments with Williams’ situation under another set of amendments.
    Compared to the situation that Williams currently enjoys under the Caiman LLC
    Agreement, the amendments are adverse.
    The defendants also argue that if the amendments are viewed in isolation, nothing
    about them is adverse to Williams. According to the defendants, any adversity results from
    the follow-on Up-C IPO rather than from the amendments themselves. The defendants’
    59
    overly simplified approach ignores the fact that the amendments are designed to authorize
    and clear the path for the Up-C IPO, a transaction that adversely affects Williams. Without
    the amendments, EnCap lacks the ability to implement the Up-C IPO. With the
    amendments, EnCap has the ability to implement the Up-C IPO. The amendments load the
    gun, which adversely affects the target of the gun. They adversely affect Williams by
    eliminating the provisions that foreclose the Up-C IPO and exposing Williams to the threat
    of the Up-C IPO.
    Regardless, the amendments are sufficiently intertwined with the other steps in the
    Up-C IPO that they must be analyzed together for purposes of assessing adversity. “The
    [step transaction] doctrine treats the ‘steps’ in a series of formally separate but related
    transactions involving the transfer of property as a single transaction, if all the steps are
    substantially linked. Rather than viewing each step as an isolated incident, the steps are
    viewed together as components of an overall plan.” Noddings Inv. Gp., Inc. v. Capstar
    Commc’ns, Inc., 
    1999 WL 182568
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Mar. 24, 1999) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Greene v. United States, 
    13 F.3d 577
    , 583 (2d Cir. 1994)). “The purpose of the
    step transaction doctrine is to ensure the fulfillment of parties’ expectations
    notwithstanding the technical formalities with which a transaction is accomplished.”
    Coughlan v. NXP B.V., 
    2011 WL 5299491
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Nov. 4, 2011).
    The step-transaction doctrine applies if the component transactions meet one of
    three tests. See 
    id. First, under
    the “end result test,” the doctrine will be invoked “if it
    appears that a series of separate transactions were prearranged parts of what was a single
    transaction, cast from the outset to achieve the ultimate result.” Noddings, 
    1999 WL 60
    182568, at *6 (internal quotation marks omitted). Second, under the “interdependence
    test,” transactions will be treated as one if “the steps are so interdependent that the legal
    relations created by one transaction would have been fruitless without a completion of the
    series.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The third and “most restrictive alternative
    is the binding-commitment test under which a series of transactions are combined only if,
    at the time the first step is entered into, there was a binding commitment to undertake the
    later steps.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    omitted).
    The end result test and the interdependence test are both met here. EnCap designed
    the amendments to clear the path for the intricate steps necessary to effectuate the Up-C
    IPO, intending to achieve the end result contemplated of the post-Up-C IPO structure. But
    for the Up-C IPO, EnCap would have had no reason to propose the amendments and no
    basis on which to claim the power to implement them. Although EnCap has not bound
    itself contractually to carry out the Up-C IPO, a series of transactions need only meet one
    of the three tests to be treated as a single transaction. The satisfaction of the first two tests
    provides a sufficient basis to treat the amendments to the Caiman LLC Agreement as an
    integral part of the Up-C IPO for purposes of determining whether they are adverse to
    Williams. They are, and so they cannot be implemented without Williams’ consent.
    The nature of the amendments that EnCap seeks to implement further underscores
    how incongruous it would be to permit EnCap to rely on the IPO Facilitation Provision to
    implement them. The IPO Facilitation Provision authorizes EnCap to take action required
    or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO. Yet as part of that authority, EnCap claims the
    61
    ability to amend the definition of a Qualified IPO such that EnCap can use that authority
    to implement a different type of transaction.
    In this case, EnCap might claim that it is making a relatively minor change to the
    definition of Qualified IPO by aggregating the primary and secondary offerings to
    determine whether the threshold of $75 million is met. The effect of that change, however,
    is not minor, as it would enable EnCap to invoke its authority to implement a Qualified
    IPO, but to then redefine “Qualified IPO” to refer to a different type of transaction. Nor is
    the change in this case actually minor. Under the original definition of “Qualified IPO,”
    the IPO Issuer is entitled to receive proceeds of at least $75 million. The amendment would
    enable EnCap to sell its own shares as part of the Qualified IPO, in effect allowing EnCap
    to divert the proceeds of that sale to itself and yet credit those same proceeds against the
    $75 million requirement. The IPO Facilitation Clause authorizes EnCap to facilitate a
    Qualified IPO. It does not authorize EnCap to redefine Qualified IPO to refer to a different
    transaction and then implement that different transaction.
    Absent Williams’ consent, EnCap lacks the authority to amend the Caiman LLC
    Agreement in the manner contemplated for purposes of the Up-C IPO. EnCap therefore
    cannot carry out what this decision has described as step two of that transaction.
    3.     Disputed Step Three: Amend The Blue Racer LLC Agreement.
    In the third disputed step of the Up-C IPO, EnCap intends to amend and restate the
    Blue Racer LLC Agreement. In connection with a Qualified IPO, EnCap can act
    unilaterally on behalf of Caiman II to amend the Blue Racer LLC Agreement. But because
    62
    the defendants have not shown that the Up-C IPO is a Qualified IPO, they have not
    established that EnCap could properly exercise this power.
    Under the IPO Facilitation Provision, EnCap has the power to take actions that the
    Board could take to the extent that those actions are required or necessary to facilitate a
    Qualified IPO. Section 6.8(b)(xii) gives the Board the power to amend the Blue Racer LLC
    Agreement with the vote required for a Special Voting Item. In connection with a Qualified
    IPO, EnCap can take action that the Board otherwise could take.
    Although EnCap has the authority to amend the Blue Racer LLC Agreement in
    connection with a Qualified IPO, EnCap has failed to show that the Up-C IPO is a Qualified
    IPO. Instead, Williams has shown that the Up-C IPO depends on amendments to the
    Caiman LLC Agreement that EnCap lacks the power to make. Accordingly, in the context
    of the Up-C IPO, EnCap lacks authority to amend the Blue Racer LLC Agreement.
    4.     Disputed Step Four: Distribute The Blue Racer Units To Caiman II’s
    Members.
    In the fourth disputed step of the Up-C IPO, EnCap intends to cause Caiman II to
    distribute all of its Blue Racer units to Caiman II’s members. Under the IPO Facilitation
    Clause, EnCap possesses the power to take this step if it is required or necessary to facilitate
    a Qualified IPO. But because the defendants have not shown that the Up-C IPO is a
    Qualified IPO, they have not established that EnCap could properly exercise this power.
    If EnCap could properly amend the Blue Racer LLC Agreement to create a single
    class of units, then EnCap could effectuate a distribution of Caiman II’s Blue Racer units
    in connection with a Qualified IPO. Section 6.8(a)(xvii) of the Caiman LLC Agreement
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    gives the Board the authority “to make a distribution by [Caiman II] to [its] Members” with
    a majority vote of the Board. To the extent that the distribution was necessary or required
    to facilitate a Qualified IPO, EnCap would have the power under the IPO Facilitation
    Clause to exercise that authority.
    Williams argues that because the distribution would involve Caiman II’s entire
    ownership interest in its only operating asset, it amounts to an Exit Event over which
    Williams would have a veto. To reiterate, an Exit Event is defined as
    the sale of [Caiman II], in one transaction or a series of related transactions,
    whether structured as
    (i) a sale or other transfer of all or substantially all of the Equity Securities
    (including by way of merger, consolidation, share exchange, or similar
    transaction),
    (ii) the sale or other transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of [Caiman
    II] promptly followed by a dissolution and liquidation of [Caiman II],
    (iii) any other dissolution or liquidation of [Caiman II], or
    (iv) a combination of any of the foregoing.
    JX 1 at 8 (formatting altered). Williams reasons that by distributing the Blue Racer units,
    Caiman II would be transferring substantially all of its assets to its members, resulting in
    Caiman II’s members, rather than Caiman II itself, directly owning Blue Racer.
    Under Section 6.8(b)(xi), the Board can approve an Exit Event with the vote
    required for a Special Voting Item. Characterizing the distribution as an Exit Event thus
    changes the vote required for the Board to approve it outside of the context of a Qualified
    IPO. Within the context of a Qualified IPO, EnCap would have the power to exercise the
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    Board’s authority as long as the distribution was necessary or required to facilitate a
    Qualified IPO.
    EnCap alternatively relies on the IPO Exchange Clause to provide it with the
    authority to distribute Caiman II’s entire ownership interest in Blue Racer. The IPO
    Exchange Clause contemplates that the members’ interests in Caiman II will be exchanged
    for or converted into equity of the IPO Issuer. Under the Same Security Requirement, the
    members must receive the same type of equity that the IPO Issuer’s public investors
    receive. Although EnCap can achieve this outcome through one more or transactions, the
    distribution of Caiman II’s entire ownership interest in Blue Racer is not a step toward that
    end. After the distribution, the members of Caiman II would continue to hold their
    membership interests in Caiman II, and they also would hold membership interests in Blue
    Racer. Each type of interests would be converted subsequently into a different security,
    neither of which would be the same security that the IPO Issuer’s public investors would
    receive. EnCap is thus not relying on the requirements of the IPO Exchange Clause as
    written; EnCap is relying on the amended requirements that it has sought to effectuate.
    Because this decision has held that EnCap cannot effectuate those amendments, those
    amendments cannot provide EnCap with the authority to cause Caiman II to distribute its
    entire ownership interest in Blue Racer.
    Consequently, although EnCap has the authority to make the distribution in
    connection with a Qualified IPO, EnCap has failed to show that the Up-C IPO is a Qualified
    IPO that would give it the power to take this step. In the context of the Up-C IPO, EnCap
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    lacks the authority to cause Caiman II to distribute its entire ownership interest in Blue
    Racer to its members.
    5.     Disputed Step Five: Form An Acquisition Subsidiary Of HoldCo And
    Merge It With Blue Racer.
    In the fifth disputed step of the Up-C IPO, EnCap intends to form an acquisition
    subsidiary of HoldCo and merge it with and into Blue Racer. As a result of the merger, the
    membership interests in Blue Racer will be converted into a combination of HoldCo units
    and Class B shares of PubCo. EnCap lacks the authority to effectuate this step of the Up-
    C IPO.
    Under the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, the act of “commencing, initiating or
    participating in any amalgamation, merger, or consolidation of [Blue Racer], or any
    reconstruction, conversion, liquidation, dissolution, bankruptcy or similar proceedings,”
    requires the “prior approval of Members who in the aggregate hold one hundred percent
    (100%)” of its member interests. JX 34, § 7.11(b)(iv). At this point in the Up-C IPO, the
    member interests in Blue Racer would have been distributed to the current members of
    Caiman II, all of whom would have to vote in favor of the merger for it to be approved.
    Under the terms of the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, EnCap cannot accomplish this step
    unilaterally.
    EnCap contends that the IPO Facilitation Clause gives it the power to take this step
    because the Up-C IPO must be viewed as a unitary transaction. As discussed previously,
    the Up-C IPO is correctly viewed as a unitary transaction for certain purposes, such as
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    when determining whether it has an adverse effect on Williams. That fact does not relieve
    EnCap of its obligation to establish that it can validly carry out each step of the Up-C IPO.
    The IPO Facilitation Clause gives EnCap the authority to exercise power on behalf
    of Caiman II that the Board otherwise could exercise. As long as Caiman II owned units in
    Blue Racer and had corresponding rights under the Blue Racer LLC Agreement, EnCap
    (rather than the Board) could cause Caiman II to exercise those rights to the extent required
    or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO. The IPO Facilitation Clause does not give EnCap
    the authority to exercise rights or powers that the Board could not exercise.
    Under the structure of the Up-C IPO that EnCap has proposed, at the point when it
    would become necessary to approve the merger of the HoldCo merger subsidiary with and
    into Blue Racer, Caiman II would no longer own Blue Racer units and would be unable to
    vote those units in favor of the merger. At that point, Blue Racer would be a separate entity
    under common ownership with Caiman II, rather than an entity partially owned by Caiman
    II. Under the structure of the Up-C IPO that EnCap has proposed, EnCap would lack the
    ability to approve the merger without the unanimous consent of the other members of Blue
    Racer, including Williams.
    6.     Disputed Step Six: Form An Acquisition Subsidiary Of Blue Racer
    And Merge It With Caiman II
    In the last disputed step of the Up-C IPO, EnCap intends to form an acquisition
    subsidiary of Blue Racer and merge it with and into Caiman II. The Up-C IPO cannot reach
    this stage because of earlier problems. Assuming it did, then under the IPO Facilitation
    Clause, EnCap would possess the power cause Caiman II to merge if it was required or
    67
    necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO. In connection with the Up-C IPO, however, EnCap
    has not made the showing necessary to exercise this authority.
    Under the IPO Facilitation Provision, EnCap has the power to take actions that the
    Board could take to the extent that those actions are required or necessary to facilitate a
    Qualified IPO. Section 6.8(b)(iii) gave the Board the power “to merge, combine, or
    consolidate [Caiman II] with any other entity” with the vote required for a Special Voting
    Item. JX 1, § 6.8(b)(iii). If required or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO, then EnCap
    can take the action that the Board otherwise could take, including merging Caiman II with
    another entity.
    Although EnCap would have the authority to cause Caiman II to merge if required
    or necessary to facilitate a Qualified IPO, EnCap has failed to show that the Up-C IPO is a
    Qualified IPO that would give it the power to take this step. Instead, Williams has shown
    that the Up-C IPO depends on steps that EnCap lacks the power to take. Accordingly, in
    the context of the Up-C IPO, EnCap does not have authority to cause Caiman II to merge
    with the Blue Racer acquisition subsidiary.
    E.     The Post-IPO Application Of Section 12.8
    Williams argues that because Caiman II will survive the Qualified IPO, albeit as the
    lowest-tier subsidiary in the entity stack, the Caiman Purpose Clause will continue to bind
    PubCo, HoldCo, and Blue Racer under Section 12.8 of the Caiman LLC Agreement
    because they will be Affiliates of Caiman II.
    To reiterate, Section 12.8 states: “Where any provision of this Agreement refers to
    action to be taken by any person, or which such person is prohibited from taking, such
    68
    provision shall be applicable whether such action is taken directly or indirectly by such
    person, including actions taken by or on behalf of any Affiliate of such person.” 
    Id. § 12.8.
    This provision seems most clearly applicable to a parent entity that acts through a
    subsidiary, or a sibling entity that acts on behalf of another sibling entity when both entities
    are wholly owned by the same parent. It seems unlikely that a lower-tier, wholly owned
    subsidiary would be acting indirectly through a higher-tier entity, as opposed to the other
    way around, but it would be premature to rule out a possible factual scenario in which that
    might occur. Whether Caiman II could be found to be acting “indirectly” through PubCo,
    HoldCo, Blue Racer, or any other Affiliate would be a fact-dependent question that cannot
    be answered on the current record.
    The defendants have argued that because Williams will no longer own any
    membership interest in Caiman II after the Up-C IPO, it will not have standing to assert a
    claim under Section 12.8. It is premature to address questions of Williams’ standing, which
    could involve a multi-level derivative action or the novel question of a Williams Manager
    seeking to sue derivatively.
    F.     The IPO Cooperation Clause
    The defendants contend that even if there are steps in the Up-C IPO that require
    Williams’ consent, Williams is required to consent under the second sentence of Section
    9.5(b). That provision states that if EnCap approves a Qualified IPO, then each of Caiman
    II’s members shall:
    (i) take such actions as may be reasonably requested by [EnCap] in
    connection with consummating the IPO Exchange, including
    69
    (x) such actions as are required to transfer all of the issued and
    outstanding Membership Interests or the assets of [Caiman II] to an IPO
    Issuer or its general partner (including a Blocker Corporation) and
    (y) such actions as are required in order to merge or consolidate
    [Caiman II] into or with an IPO Issuer or its general partner and
    (ii) use commercially reasonable efforts to
    (x) cooperate with the other Members so that the IPO Exchange is
    undertaken in a tax-efficient manner and
    (y) if any Institutional Investor or its limited partners or investors has
    a structure involving ownership of all or a portion of its interests in [Caiman
    II], directly or indirectly, through one or more Blocker Corporations, at the
    request of such Institutional Investor, merge its Blocker Corporation into the
    IPO Issuer in a tax-free reorganization, utilize such Blocker Corporation as
    the IPO Issuer or otherwise structure the transaction so that the Blocker
    Corporation is not subject to a level of corporate tax on the Qualified IPO or
    subsequent dividend payments or sales of stock.
    
    Id. § 9.5(b)
    . This decision refers to this sentence as the “IPO Cooperation Clause.”
    Part (i) of the IPO Cooperation Clause obligates Williams to take such actions as
    may be reasonably requested by EnCap in connection with consummating the IPO
    Exchange. As discussed previously, EnCap is not carrying out the IPO Exchange. EnCap
    instead proposes to amend the Caiman LLC Agreement to authorize a different type of
    transaction. In the Up-C IPO that EnCap is seeking to implement, the membership interests
    in or assets of Caiman II are not being transferred to the IPO Issuer, and Caiman II is not
    merging or consolidating with the IPO Issuer. Part (i) of the IPO Cooperation Clause thus
    does not aid the defendants.
    Part (ii)(x) of the IPO Cooperation Clause requires that Williams use commercially
    reasonable efforts to assist EnCap in undertaking the IPO Exchange in a tax-efficient
    70
    manner. Here again, EnCap is not undertaking the IPO Exchange. EnCap is trying to
    implement a different structure.
    More generally, an obligation to take reasonable actions or use commercially
    reasonable efforts obligates a party “to take all reasonable steps to solve problems and
    consummate the transaction” on the terms set forth in the governing agreement. Akorn, Inc.
    v. Fresenius Kabi AG, 
    2018 WL 4719347
    , at *91 (Del. Ch. Oct. 1, 2018) (quoting Williams
    Cos. v. Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., 
    159 A.3d 264
    , 272 (Del. 2017)), aff’d, 
    198 A.3d 724
    (Del. 2018) (TABLE). It does not require a party “to sacrifice its own contractual rights for
    the benefit of its counterparty.” 
    Id. To the
    extent that Williams has rights under the Caiman
    LLC Agreement, such as a right to refuse to consent to amendments that are adverse to its
    interests, then Williams can stand on that right. EnCap cannot rely on the IPO Cooperation
    Clause to force Williams to waive or compromise its right.
    G.     The Stockholders Agreement
    Blue Racer and First Reserve seek a declaration that they are not obligated to enter
    into a stockholders agreement with Williams that would replicate certain governance
    features of Caiman II in the context of PubCo. Nothing in the Caiman LLC Agreement
    requires a stockholders agreement. The parties may negotiate one if they choose, but there
    is no obligation to enter into one.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    This decision has construed the plain language of the Caiman LLC Agreement and
    applied it to critical steps in the Up-C IPO. Because of the determinations made in this
    decision, EnCap cannot proceed with the Up-C IPO as currently structured. The parties
    71
    shall prepare a form of final order that implements the rulings made in this decision. If
    there are additional matters that must be addressed before a final order can be entered, the
    parties shall submit a joint letter within ten days that identifies the issues and proposes a
    path for bringing this matter to conclusion at the trial level.
    72