Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc. ( 2021 )


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  •                             COURT OF CHANCERY
    OF THE
    STATE OF DELAWARE
    417 S. State Street
    JOSEPH R. SLIGHTS III                                           Dover, Delaware 19901
    VICE CHANCELLOR                                              Telephone: (302) 739-4397
    Facsimile: (302) 739-6179
    Date Submitted: August 31, 2021
    Date Decided: November 18, 2021
    Nicholas G. Kondraschow, Esquire            David J. Teklits, Esquire
    Rhodunda, Williams &                        Thomas P. Will, Esquire
    Kondraschow                                 Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnel LLP
    1521 Concord Pike, Suite 205                1201 North Market Street
    Wilmington, DE 19803                        Wilmington, DE 19801
    Re:    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
    Dear Counsel:
    Plaintiff, Georgia Notes 18, LLC, has demanded to inspect certain books and
    records of Defendant, Net Element, Inc. (“Net Element” or the “Company”), under
    8 Del. C. § 220. The Company objects to Plaintiff’s demand on several grounds,
    including that Plaintiff has failed to state a proper purpose for inspection. After
    carefully considering the evidence presented at trial and the arguments of counsel,
    I agree with the Company that Plaintiff has failed to prove a proper purpose.
    Specifically, the preponderance of the evidence reveals that Plaintiff’s purpose for
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
    November 18, 2021
    Page 2
    inspection is to advance its interest as a creditor of the Company, not its interests as
    a stockholder. My reasoning follows.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The Court presided over a one-day trial on August 31, 2021.1 The following
    facts were either stipulated to or proven by a preponderance of the evidence.2
    A. The Parties
    Defendant, Net Element, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its principal
    place of business in Miami-Dade County, Florida.3 Plaintiff, Georgia Notes 18,
    LLC, is a Florida limited liability company that has continuously owned
    Net Element stock since July 2014.4
    1
    Pre-Trial Stip. and Order (D.I. 23) (“PTO”) § 9.
    2
    Joint trial exhibits are cited as “JX #.” I cite to docket items as “D.I. __,” Pl.’s Verified
    Compl. to Compel Inspection of Books and Records (D.I. 1) as “Compl. __,” and the Trial
    Transcript (D.I. 36) as “Tr. __.”
    3
    PTO § 3, ¶ 2.
    4
    PTO § 3, ¶¶ 1, 5.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    Page 3
    Non-party, Leon Goldstein, is the sole member and a manager of
    Georgia Notes.5 Goldstein maintained a friendship with non-party, Oleg Firer, from
    2007 through at least 2019.6 Firer has served as Net Element’s chief executive
    officer since April 16, 2013.7
    B. Debt for Equity Exchange
    On January 1, 2014, Firer, on behalf of Net Element, executed a Term Loan
    Note in favor of Georgia Notes for the principal sum of $13,268,000, with a maturity
    date of January 1, 2017 (the “Note”).8 Later that year, on September 11, 2014, as
    part of a debt-for-equity exchange (the “2014 Exchange Transactions”), third-party,
    Crede CG III Ltd. (“Crede”), agreed to purchase Net Element’s long-term debt,
    including the Note, for the principal amount and interest accrued in the total amount
    of $13,533,360 (the “Debt Exchange Amount”).9 At approximately the same time
    5
    JX 41 at 2; Tr. 70:2–⁠70:5.
    6
    JX 44 at 5; Tr. 21:3–22:6; Tr. 30:9–⁠30:13.
    7
    JX 42 at 48.
    8
    PTO § 3, ¶ 3; JX 05.
    9
    PTO § 3, ¶ 4; JX 15.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
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    as the 2014 Exchange Transactions, Georgia Notes agreed to cancel the Note for a
    payment of $10 million, which was a discount of more than $3.5 million.10
    On September 16, 2014, Firer sent the escrow agent an email outlining the
    disbursement instructions for the Debt Exchange Amount.11 Consistent with the
    terms of the underlying exchange agreement, the total escrow proceeds were
    $13,533,360.12 According to the disbursement email, Georgia Notes was to receive
    $10 million and the remainder of the Debt Exchange Amount was to be distributed
    10
    JX 13. Goldstein contends that he only agreed to accept a discounted payoff because
    Firer told him that the most a third party would pay for the note was $10 million, and if
    Goldstein did not accept this offer, then he would “probably lose the entire amount which
    Net Element owed to Georgia Notes.” Tr. 25:16–⁠25:21. According to Goldstein, he never
    knew the name of the third party who purchased the Note. Tr. 27:5–⁠27:11. Net Element
    contends, however, that Crede and Georgia Notes entered into a Note Purchase Agreement
    dated as of September 11, 2014 (the “Note Purchase Agreement”), that Goldstein’s
    daughter executed the Note Purchase Agreement on behalf of Georgia Notes as the
    Managing Member, and that Firer acknowledged the Note Purchase Agreement on behalf
    of Net Element. Defendant Pre-Trial Brief at 6; JX 12 at 3. At trial, Goldstein insisted that
    his daughter did not sign the Note Purchase Agreement because “she will not talk directly
    to Firer about business at all. I am the one who’s conducting everything. And she will not
    do anything without me, so she did not talk to Firer.” Tr. 73:20–⁠74:3. Ultimately, the
    resolution of this factual dispute is unnecessary to the outcome here. As discussed below,
    what is relevant is that Georgia Notes, as creditor, contends that Net Element wrongfully
    induced it to accept less than what was owed on the Note.
    11
    JX 16 at 1.
    12
    Id.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    to four other entities (the “Transferees”), none of which were identified in the
    Escrow Agreement that was entered into in connection with the 2014 Exchange
    Transactions.13 Goldstein first learned of the amounts paid to the Transferees in
    September 2020 through discovery taken in unrelated litigation between Goldstein
    and Firer.14
    C. Plaintiff’s Inspection Demand
    After learning about the amounts paid to the Transferees, Goldstein initiated
    litigation “against Firer because it’s—to me, it was very obvious that my money, the
    money for my company, went to some other companies.”15 Approximately six
    months later, on March 11, 2021, Plaintiff sent a letter to Net Element seeking to
    inspect Company documents under Section 220 (the “Demand”).16
    According to the Demand, the purpose for the inspection is to “investigat[e]
    the misconduct committed by Firer as a director and officer of the Company, on or
    13
    JX 27; JX 16 at 1.
    14
    Tr. 30:2–⁠32:14; 41:24–⁠44:5.
    15
    Tr. 46:16–⁠46:21.
    16
    PTO § 3, ¶ 6; JX 35.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    about September 16, 2014, when he required that $3,532,360.00 in funds
    (the ‘Funds’), belonging to the Company or in which the Company enjoyed a
    beneficial interest,” be paid to four entities.17 The four entities were the Transferees.
    Net Elements responded to the Demand on March 18, 2021. It declined to
    produce the books and records sought because (i) Georgia Notes had failed to state
    a proper purpose for the Demand; (ii) there was no evidence of possible
    mismanagement identified in the Demand; (iii) the documents sought in the Demand
    related to a single transaction in which Georgia Notes was directly involved as
    creditor and that had occurred more than six years before the Demand was made;
    and (iv) any claims brought by Georgia Notes or Goldstein would be barred either
    by the general release both had signed in connection with the 2014 Exchange
    Transactions or the statute of limitations.18
    17
    JX 35.
    18
    Id.; JX 40.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
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    D. Procedural History
    On March 22, 2021, Georgia Notes filed its operative Complaint against
    Net Element under Section 220.19              The parties submitted pre-trial briefs on
    August 20, 2021,20 and the Court convened trial on August 31, 2021.21 The matter
    was submitted for decision that day.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Section 220 permits a stockholder of a Delaware corporation to inspect the
    corporation’s books and records if the stockholder’s demand complies with the
    statute’s form and manner requirements and states a proper purpose for inspection.22
    Net Element does not argue that the Demand failed to satisfy the statute as to form
    and manner.23 Instead, the Company argues that Georgia Note’s primary purpose
    for inspection is unrelated to its status or interests as a stockholder.24 The Company
    19
    Pl.’s Verified Compl. to Compel Inspection of Books and Records (D.I. 1) (“Compl.”).
    20
    D.I. 20, 21.
    21
    Tr. at 1.
    22
    8 Del. C. § 220(c).
    23
    Def.’s Pre-Trial Brief (D.I. 20) (“Def.’s Brief”) at 16.
    24
    Def.’s Brief at 16.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    also maintains that Georgia Notes has not come close to satisfying its burden of
    demonstrating a credible basis to suspect that mismanagement or wrongdoing has
    occurred.25 Finally, the Company asserts that, even if Georgia Notes has proven a
    proper purpose for inspection, its Demand is still improper because: (i) Georgia
    Notes and Goldstein expressly released their rights to pursue litigation related to the
    2014 Exchange Transactions; (ii) any litigation related to the 2014 Exchange
    Transactions would be time-barred; and (iii) the Demand for documents is too
    broad.26
    For reasons explained below, I agree that Georgia Notes has not proven a
    proper purpose for inspection. Accordingly, I need not reach the Company’s other
    grounds to reject the Demand.
    According to the statute, a “proper purpose” is “a purpose reasonably related
    to [the plaintiff’s] interest as a stockholder.”27 In a Section 220 trial, the stockholder
    plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence “that [its] primary purpose
    25
    Def.’s Brief at 23.
    26
    Def.’s Brief at 19, 20, 21, 28.
    27
    8 Del. C. § 220(b).
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    as to each category of the [d]emand is proper.”28 When a corporation has reason to
    believe the stockholder plaintiff has advanced a purpose that does not reflect its true
    purpose, the corporation “[u]nquestionably is entitled to challenge the plaintiff’s
    stated purpose and to show that as a factual matter, the plaintiff’s true purpose is
    other than what is stated in the demand.”29 Likewise, the corporation may resist a
    demand for inspection when it “establishe[s] factually” that “the plaintiff’s demand
    is made for purposes adverse to the corporation’s best interests.” 30
    During trial, Goldstein acknowledged he had two purposes for making the
    Demand.31 Both proffered purposes arise from a desire to investigate Net Element’s
    “wrongdoing and other improper conduct” in connection with the 2014 Exchange
    28
    Khanna v. Covad Commc’ns Gp., Inc., 
    2004 WL 187274
    , at *5–⁠6 (Del. Ch. Jan. 23,
    2004) (citing Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 
    681 A.2d 1026
    , 1031–⁠33
    (Del. 1996)).
    29
    Coit v. Am. Century Corp., 
    1987 WL 8458
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 20, 1987); see also
    DONALD J. WOLFE, JR. & MICHAEL A. PITTENGER, CORPORATE AND
    COMMERCIAL PRACTICE IN THE DELAWARE COURT OF CHANCERY § 8.6(g)
    (2005) (collecting cases).
    30
    Coit, 
    1987 WL 8458
    , at *3.
    31
    Tr. 127:17–⁠128:6.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    Transactions and subsequent disbursement of funds to the Transferees.32 One
    purpose is to obtain information to support a claim that Georgia Notes could pursue
    against Net Element as a former creditor (the “Creditor Purpose”),33 and the second
    is to obtain information to support a claim for a breach of fiduciary duty against
    Firer, which purportedly would be brought on behalf Net Element Defendant in a
    derivative action (the “Stockholder Purpose”). According to Georgia Notes, “there
    [is] nothing to suggest that [the Creditor Purpose] [is] [Goldstein’s] primary
    purpose.”34 I disagree.
    32
    Compl. ¶ 7(a).
    33
    At trial, Goldstein admitted that he believed Firer had defrauded Georgia Notes and that
    this was “one of the reasons” he was seeking the documents requested in his Demand:
    Q: And you also feel that Mr. Firer defrauded Georgia Notes by never telling
    you that the purchaser of the promissory note was paying more than
    $10 million; right?
    A: Right.
    Q: And you feel that that damaged Georgia Notes and cost you $3 ½ million
    [3.5 million]; right?
    A: Right.
    Q: And that is the purpose why you want to get the documents that you’re
    seeking in this case, correct, because you were defrauded by Mr. Firer?
    A: It’s one of the reasons. Tr. 65:16–66:18.
    34
    Tr. 128:3–⁠128:5.
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
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    Goldstein made clear during his deposition that he sought the Company’s
    books and records because he believes he was defrauded by his one-time friend,
    Firer.35 Indeed, Goldstein revealed his primary purpose when he testified, “I was
    defrauded by Firer, who is CEO of the company Net Element and was [a] friend of
    mine. That is the purpose of all these investigations.”36 He then explained:
    Q. What did you tell Net Element was the reason that you
    were asking for the documents?37
    A. The reason? Because the money—which, like I said,
    [was] wired to different companies—$3,533,360
    supposed to belong to Georgia Notes [as payment on the
    Note]. And that’s, we feel, a wrongful transaction.
    We want to find out why this money did not [end] up at
    Net Element company.38
    As his testimony reveals, in Goldstein’s view, the allegedly missing
    $3,532,360 belongs to Georgia Notes.39         And it belongs to Georgia Notes as
    35
    Goldstein Dep. 57:19–⁠58:16.
    36
    Goldstein Dep. 39:19–40:7; 57:19–58:16 (emphasis added).
    37
    Tr. 55:11–55:12.
    38
    Tr. 55:13–55:18.
    39
    During trial, when referring to the amount that Georgia Notes believes it is owed by
    virtue of Net Elements (Firer’s) wrongful conduct, the parties and Goldstein sometimes
    pegged the Debt Exchange Amount as $13,533,360 and at other times mentioned
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
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    Page 12
    repayment in full on the Note. Goldstein initiated this Section 220 action on behalf
    of Georgia Notes to obtain evidence to support that claim. While the claim may well
    be valid, it is a claim Georgia Notes will assert as a Net Elements creditor, not as a
    Net Elements stockholder. Section 220 is not a tool available to advance non-
    stockholder interests and is certainly not a tool to obtain pre-litigation discovery of
    claims to be asserted nominally by a stockholder to advance non-stockholder causes
    against the Company.40
    * * * * *
    The preponderance of the evidence (and then some) demonstrates that, despite
    Goldstein’s assurances to the contrary, he is seeking the Company’s books and
    records as pre-litigation discovery to enhance his claim as a creditor with respect to
    the Note. To the extent the Stockholder Purpose is even real, it is clearly secondary
    $13,532,360. Tr. 42:10–11, 44:11, 55:15, 55:24, 77:4, 107:3, 113:5. According to the Pre-
    trial Stipulation, the Debt Exchange Amount was $13,533,360, the amount paid to the
    Transferees was $3,532,360 and the escrow agent received $1,000 in fees. PTO § 3, ¶ 4;
    JX 14; JX 27 at § 6(e).
    40
    See Skoglund v. Ormand Indus., Inc., 
    372 A.2d 204
    , 207 (Del. Ch. 1976) (holding that
    the stockholder’s purpose must “not be adverse to the interests of the corporation”); Disney
    v. Walt Disney Co., 
    857 A.2d 444
    , 450 (Del. Ch. 2004) (same); Grimes v. DSC Commc’ns
    Corp., 
    724 A.2d 561
    , 565 (Del. Ch. 1998) (same).
    Georgia Notes 18, LLC v. Net Element, Inc.
    C.A. No. 2021-0246-JRS
    November 18, 2021
    Page 13
    and subordinate to the Creditor Purpose. Since Georgia Note’s primary purpose for
    inspection is to advance its interests as creditor, not as stockholder, the Company’s
    rejection of the Demand was justified.41
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, judgment is entered against Plaintiff in favor of
    Defendant. Defendant shall submit a form of final judgment to that effect on notice
    to Plaintiff within ten (10) days.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Very truly yours,
    /s/ Joseph R. Slights III
    41
    See BBC Acq. Corp. v. Durr-Fillauer Med., Inc., 
    623 A.2d 85
    , 91 (Del. Ch. 1992)
    (rejecting demand where the purpose for the inspection related to a plaintiff’s “status as a
    bidder,” and not “its status as a [] stockholder”); 
    id. at 88
     (observing, “[s]ince [] a
    shareholder [seeking to inspect books and records] will often have more than one purpose,
    [the proper purpose requirement] has been construed to mean that the shareholder’s
    primary purpose must be proper; any secondary purpose, whether proper or not, is
    irrelevant”). I acknowledge that discerning one’s purpose or intent is not a precise exercise
    and generally is the product of assessing credibility and circumstantial evidence. That
    exercise has led to the conclusion that Georgia Notes’ Stockholder Purpose does not
    “predominate[] over [its] ulterior purpose.” Helmsman Mgt. Serv., Inc. v. A&S Consult.,
    Inc., 
    525 A.2d 160
    , 167 (Del. Ch. 1987) (addressing whether stockholder was seeking
    inspection primarily to advance its interest as stockholder or creditor, and observing that
    “[t]he issue of whether a concept so elusive as purpose or motive is ‘primary’ or
    ‘secondary,’ involves a judgment that necessarily is qualitative, not mathematical”).