David C. Fannin v. UMTH Land Development, L.P. ( 2020 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    DAVID C. FANNIN AND LUCILLE S.          )
    FANNIN AS CO-TRUSTEES OF THE DAVID      )
    C. FANNIN REVOCABLE TRUST DATED         )
    AUGUST 3, 1995 AND THE LUCILLE          )
    STEWART FANNIN REVOCABLE TRUST          )
    DATED AUGUST 3, 1995,                   )
    )      C.A. No. 12541-VCF
    Plaintiffs,             )
    )
    v.                                 )
    )
    UMTH LAND DEVELOPMENT, L.P., UMT        )
    SERVICES, INC., UMT HOLDINGS, L.P.,     )
    UMTH GENERAL SERVICES, L.P., UNITED )
    MORTGAGE TRUST, UNITED                  )
    DEVELOPMENT FUNDING, L.P., UNITED       )
    DEVELOPMENT FUNDING IV, UNITED          )
    DEVELOPMENT FUNDING X, L.P., TODD F. )
    ETTER, HOLLIS M. GREENLAW, MICHAEL )
    K. WILSON, BEN L. WISSINK, CARA D.      )
    OBERT, AND MELISSA H. YOUNGBLOOD, )
    )
    Defendants,              )
    )
    and                                )
    )
    UNITED DEVELOPMENT FUNDING III, L.P., )
    )
    Nominal Defendant.          )
    _______________________________________ )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: April 14, 2020
    Date Decided: July 31, 2020
    Robert J. Kriner, Jr. and Tiffany J. Cramer, CHIMICLES SCHWARTZ KRINER
    & DONALDSON-SMITH LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiffs
    David C. Fannin and Lucille S. Fannin as Co-Trustees of the David C. Fannin
    Revocable Trust Dated August 3, 1995 and the Lucille Stewart Fannin Revocable
    Trust Dated August 3, 1995.
    Steven L. Caponi, K&L GATES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; John W. Rotunno,
    Paul J. Walsen, Joseph C. Wylie II, Molly K. McGinley, Matthew A. Alvis, K&L
    GATES LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Attorneys for UMTH Land Development, L.P.,
    UMT Services, Inc., UMT Holdings, L.P., UMTH General Services, L.P., United
    Mortgage Trust, United Development Funding, L.P., United Development Funding
    IV, and United Development Funding X, L.P.
    Myron T. Steele, Timothy R. Dudderar, Jacqueline A. Rogers, POTTER
    ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for
    Defendants Todd F. Etter, Hollis M. Greenlaw, Michael K. Wilson, Ben L. Wissink,
    Cara D. Obert, and Melissa Youngblood.
    FIORAVANTI, Vice Chancellor
    United Development Funds is a family of investment funds that makes loans
    for the purpose of real estate development. The nominal defendant in this action,
    United Development Funding III, L.P. (“UDF III” or the “Partnership”), is a
    Delaware limited partnership and a member of the family. The plaintiffs are
    limited partners of UDF III. They allege that UDF III’s general partner and the
    entities and individuals that ultimately control UDF III used the Partnership’s
    funds to support earlier-formed funds within the family as part of a broader scheme
    to conceal the earlier funds’ losses and to support their continued payment of
    partnership distributions.   Plaintiffs allege the general partner and those that
    control it breached their fiduciary duties and UDF III’s limited partnership
    agreement, committed corporate waste, and were unjustly enriched. Plaintiffs also
    allege that affiliates of the general partner aided and abetted the breaches of
    fiduciary duty alleged in the complaint and were also unjustly enriched.
    The defendants have moved to dismiss for failure to plead demand futility,
    failure to state a claim, and laches. This opinion concludes that the motions to
    dismiss should be granted in part and denied in part.          The plaintiffs have
    adequately pleaded demand futility, and they have stated claims for breach of
    fiduciary duty and breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and aiding and abetting a
    breach of fiduciary duty. The claim for waste of partnership assets is dismissed for
    failure to state a claim.
    I.       FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The facts recited in this opinion come from the Verified Second Amended
    and Supplemental Derivative and Class Action Complaint (the “Complaint” or
    “SAC”), the exhibits attached thereto, and documents incorporated by reference
    into the Complaint.1
    A.     The Parties
    Plaintiffs own limited partnership units (“LP Units”) in the Partnership.2
    Plaintiffs bring their complaint derivatively on behalf of UDF III and directly on
    behalf of themselves and the unaffiliated holders of the LP Units (“Limited
    Partners”).
    The eight entity defendants reside within the United Development Funds
    family: (a) four engage in real estate loans: United Mortgage Trust (“UMT”),
    United Development Funding, L.P. (“UDF I”), United Development Funding IV,
    L.P. (“UDF IV”), and United Development Funding X, L.P. (“UDF X”); (b) the
    Partnership’s general partner, UMTH Land Development, L.P. (“UMTH LD” or
    the “General Partner”); 3 (c) the General Partner’s general partner, UMT Services,
    1
    Dkt. 119.
    2
    SAC ¶ 1. Plaintiffs purchased the LP Units for $250,000 in 2008 and have held the LP
    Units continuously since their purchase. Id. ¶ 25.
    3
    UMTH LD is a Delaware limited partnership. Id. ¶ 29.
    2
    Inc. (“UMT Services”); 4 (d) the 99.9% owner of the General Partner, UMT
    Holdings, L.P. (“UMT Holdings”); 5 and (e) UMTH General Services, L.P.
    (“UMTH General”), which assists the General Partner in the management of the
    Partnership and provides external advisory services to UMT and UDF IV. 6 The
    foregoing entities are referred to as the “Entity Defendants.”
    The six individual defendants are alleged to “control and ultimately own”
    the General Partner: Todd F. Etter, Hollis M. Greenlaw, Michael K. Wilson, Ben
    L. Wissink, Cara D. Obert, and Melissa H. Youngblood (each an “Individual
    Defendant,” and collectively, the “Individual Defendants”).7        The Individual
    Defendants indirectly own the General Partner through their collective 87.15%
    ownership of UMT Holdings.8 In addition, Etter, Greenlaw, and Wilson comprise
    the board of directors of UMT Services, which is the general partner of the General
    Partner.9
    4
    Id. ¶ 30. UMT Services is a Delaware corporation. Id.
    5
    Id. UMT Holdings is a Delaware limited partnership. Id. ¶ 39.
    6
    Id. ¶ 40. UMTH General is a Delaware limited partnership. Id. “UMTH General
    manages UMT’s day-to-day operations, providing it with administrative services, and
    managing its assets.” Id. ¶ 38.
    7
    Id. ¶ 4.
    8
    Id. ¶ 39.
    9
    Id. ¶¶ 30, 31(b), 32(b), 33(a).
    3
    B.    The United Development Funds
    All of the Defendants are involved in raising investor funds for the purpose
    of making loans to fund real estate development. 10 UMT is a real estate investment
    trust formed in 1996 for the purpose of raising investor capital to invest in
    mortgage loans.11 UMT is managed by an advisor controlled by Etter.12
    In 2003, Etter and Greenlaw formed UMT Services, UMT Holdings, UMTH
    General, and UMTH LD. 13            UMT Services is the general partner of UMT
    Holdings, UMTH General, and UMTH LD. 14 In Plaintiffs’ words, UMT Services
    is the entity “at the top of the Partnership’s control structure.” 15 UMTH LD is
    owned by UMT Holdings,16 and UMT Holdings is in turn owned primarily by the
    Individual Defendants. 17
    10
    See id. ¶¶ 4, 28-44.
    11
    Id. ¶ 45.
    12
    Id.
    13
    Id. ¶ 46.
    14
    Id.
    15
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 5, Dkt. 133; see also SAC ¶ 62 (“As the general partner of Land
    Development, Defendant UMT Services controls UDF III.”).
    16
    SAC ¶ 30.
    17
    Id. ¶ 39. The breakdown of ownership interests in UMT Holdings include Etter (30%),
    Greenlaw (30%), Wissink (10.09%), Wilson (7.41%), Youngblood (4.83%), and Obert
    (4.82%). Id. UMT Holdings also owns UMTH General, which manages and advises
    UMT’s day-to-day operations. Id. ¶¶ 38, 39. UMTH General’s general partner is UMT
    Services. Id. ¶ 30(d).
    4
    Etter and Greenlaw formed UDF I in 2003, nonparty United Development
    Funding II, L.P. (“UDF II”) in 2004, and UDF III in 2005. 18 UDF X, UDF IV, and
    UDF V were formed in 2007, 2009, and 2013, respectively. 19 UDF I, UDF II,
    UDF III, UDF IV, UDF V, and UDF X are each referred to as a “UDF Fund” or
    collectively as the “UDF Funds.”
    UDF III is governed by the Second Amended and Restated Agreement of
    Limited Partnership, dated April 21, 2006 (the “Partnership Agreement”).20
    According to the Partnership Agreement, UDF III was formed “[t]o originate,
    acquire, service and otherwise manage . . . a diversified portfolio of mortgage loans
    on real property . . . and to issue or acquire an interest in credit enhancements to
    borrowers (i.e., guarantees or letters of credit) . . . .” 21 UDF III is a public, unlisted
    limited partnership.22
    UMTH LD receives a 0.25% annual servicing fee from UDF III for all of
    UDF III’s outstanding loan balances.23 Accordingly, UMTH LD would receive a
    18
    Id. ¶¶ 3, 47.
    19
    Id. ¶¶ 41, 43, 55.
    20
    The Second Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of UDF III is
    attached as Exhibit A to the Entity Defendants’ Opening Brief, Dkt. 125.
    21
    SAC ¶ 64 (citing Partnership Agreement § 4.1).
    22
    Id. ¶ 56. UDF III registered with the SEC, can sell to the investing public, and is
    required to file reports with the SEC, but because UDF III is unlisted, there is no public
    market for UDF III’s LP Units. Id.
    23
    Id. ¶ 257.
    5
    higher servicing fee if UDF III did not write down its loans. UDF III paid the
    General Partner over $7.6 million in mortgage servicing fees through September
    2015. 24 In addition to fees from UDF III, UMTH LD has financial interests in
    UDF I and UDF II. First, UMTH LD receives an asset management fee from UDF
    I and UDF II. 25 Second, UMTH LD owns a 49.99% subordinated profits interest
    in UDF I and a 49.95% subordinated profits interest in UDF II, and would receive
    distributions that UDF I or UDF II paid in accordance with those subordinated
    profits interests.26
    UMTH LD is the general partner of UDF III and, as noted above, UMT
    Services is the general partner of UMTH LD. Plaintiffs allege that, because UMT
    Services is the general partner to UMTH LD, UMT Services controls UDF III, and
    that the Individual Defendants control UMTH LD because they are officers and/or
    directors of UMTH LD and/or UMT Services.27 In addition to their ownership of
    UMT Holdings, the Individual Defendants hold the following positions:
    24
    Id.
    25
    Id. ¶¶ 29(b), 340(a)-(b). The amount UMTH LD received through the asset
    management fee is not alleged.
    26
    Id. The amount UMTH LD received through these subordinated profits interests is not
    alleged.
    27
    Id. ¶¶ 60-62.
    6
    • Etter is UDF III’s original limited partner. 28           Etter is also the
    executive vice president of UMTH LD, and a 50% owner, chairman,
    and director of UMT Services. 29 Plaintiffs also allege that “UMT has
    been externally managed by an advisor controlled by Defendant Etter
    since its formation.” 30
    • Greenlaw is the current chief executive officer and former president of
    UMTH LD, and a 50% owner, president, chief executive officer, and
    director of UMT Services. 31
    • Wilson is the current president, former senior vice president of
    marketing, and a partner of UMT Holdings; 32 and executive vice
    president and director of UMT Services. 33 In addition, Wilson is
    alleged to have “directed the capital raise of over $1 billion across the
    affiliated entities.”34
    28
    Id. ¶ 31.
    29
    Id. ¶ 31(a)-(b).
    30
    Id. ¶ 45.
    31
    Id. ¶ 32(a)-(b).
    32
    Id. ¶ 33(b).
    33
    Id. ¶ 33(c).
    34
    Id. ¶ 33(f).
    7
    • Wissink is the current president and former chief operating officer of
    UMTH LD; 35 a partner of UMT Holdings;36 and chief operating
    officer of UMT Services.37 Etter, Greenlaw, and Wissink are also the
    three voting members of UMTH LD’s investment committee, and are
    35
    Id. ¶ 34(a).
    36
    Id. ¶ 34(b).
    37
    Id. ¶ 34(c).
    8
    alleged to have “made all investment, loan underwriting, and
    impairment decisions” on behalf of UDF III. 38
    • Obert is the chief financial officer of UMTH LD; 39 the former chief
    financial officer, former controller, and a partner of UMT Holdings;40
    and the treasurer of UMT Services. 41
    38
    Id. at Ex. 1 ¶¶ 11-13, 46 (Complaint, Sec. and Exch. Comm’n v. United Dev. Funding
    III, L.P., et. al., 3:18-cv-01735-L (N.D. Tex. 2018) [hereinafter the “SEC Complaint” or
    “SEC Compl.”]. The Court may consider the SEC Complaint and consent judgments,
    attached as Exhibits 1-3 to Plaintiffs’ Complaint, because the Complaint quotes from and
    incorporates them by reference. See Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. AIG Life Ins. Co., 
    860 A.2d 312
    , 320 n.28 (Del. 2004) (noting that the court may take judicial notice of contents of
    court records from another jurisdiction and SEC filings (citing Southmark Prime Plus,
    L.P. v. Falzone, 
    776 F.Supp. 888
    , 891-92 (D. Del. 1991))); see also In re LendingClub
    Corp. Deriv. Litig., 
    2019 WL 5678578
    , at *5 & n.24 (Del. Ch. Oct. 31, 2019) (taking
    judicial notice of an order by the SEC instituting proceedings against the defendants
    because “the Complaint quotes from and thus incorporates it by reference”); In re Tyson
    Foods, Inc. Consol. S’holder Litig., 
    919 A.2d 564
    , 578 (Del. Ch. 2007) (relying on a
    consent judgment with the SEC). Defendants’ argument that this Court may not consider
    the substance of the allegations contained in the SEC Complaint and consent judgments
    is not persuasive. Oral Arg. Tr. 34, Dkt. 142 (Walsen, counsel for Entity Defendants);
    see also Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 27-28, Dkt. 125. Defendants rely upon Lipsky v.
    Commonwealth United Corporation, in which the Second Circuit held that “neither a
    complaint nor references to a complaint which results in a consent judgment may
    properly be cited in the pleadings under the facts of this case.” 
    551 F.2d 887
    , 893 (2d
    Cir.1976). The court in Lipsky based that holding on Federal Rule of Evidence 410,
    which prohibits a plea of nolo contendere from being later used against the party who so
    pleaded, and struck references to a consent decree and complaint as immaterial under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f). Id. at 894. Courts have typically limited the
    application of Lipsky to prevent settlements and their pleadings from being admitted as
    evidence in subsequent litigations only as to liability, but allowed them to be admissible
    for other purposes, including proof of knowledge. See In re OSG Sec. Litig., 
    12 F. Supp. 3d 619
    , 622 (S.D.N.Y. 2014); see also In re Morgan Stanley Van Kampen Mut. Fund Sec.
    Litig., 
    2006 WL 1008138
    , at *2, 5, 7, & n.14 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 18, 2006) (holding that SEC
    and NASD settlement agreements were not legal precedents with a preclusive effect, but
    taking judicial notice of factual allegations from the SEC and NASD settlement
    agreements).
    9
    • Youngblood is the chief operating officer of UTMH LD; 42 a partner of
    UMT Holdings;43 and the executive vice president of UMT Service. 44
    C.       Overview of the Challenged Transactions
    The UDF Funds raise investor funds for the purpose of making loans to fund
    real estate development. To do so, UMT loaned money to UDF I and UDF II,
    which, in turn, loaned money to real estate developers.45 The collapse of the real
    estate markets beginning in 2007 resulted in the insolvency of many real estate
    lenders and real estate developers.46 Consequently, UMT, UDF I, and UDF II
    were faced with substantial impending liabilities, loan impairments, and losses
    relating to their loans. 47 Rather than writing down the value of the loans held by
    UMT, UDF I, and UDF II, however, certain Defendants used UDF III’s assets to
    make and increase loans and loan-related commitments to the earlier-formed UDF
    39
    SAC ¶ 35(a).
    40
    Id. ¶ 35(b).
    41
    Id. ¶ 35(d).
    42
    Id. ¶ 36(a).
    43
    Id. ¶ 36(b).
    44
    Id. ¶ 36(c). The Court has included a copy of the organizational chart submitted by
    Plaintiffs, id. ¶ 44, as an Appendix to this Opinion.
    45
    Id. ¶ 48.
    46
    Id. ¶ 69.
    47
    Id.
    10
    Funds. 48       In addition, UDF III made loans to two Texas-based real estate
    developers and their affiliates to enable them to repay earlier loans from UMT,
    UDF I, and UDF II.49 Plaintiffs contend that Defendants wanted to conceal the
    losses facing UMT, UDF I, and UDF II to ensure that they would continue to
    receive distributions and fees from those earlier-formed United Development Fund
    entities and to continue raising investor capital. 50 The scheme is alleged to have
    continued when later-formed UDF Funds directed funds and their Developer
    Borrowers to UDF III to prop up distributions to its own Limited Partners. 51
    Plaintiffs challenge four core groups of transactions: (1) UDF III’s purchase
    of a participation interest in UMT’s loan to UDF I; (2) UDF III’s loans to other
    UDF Funds or their subsidiaries; (3) UDF III’s guarantees of loans owed by other
    UDF Funds or their subsidiaries; and (4) UDF III’s loans to real estate developers
    that previously borrowed money from other United Development Funds and
    modifications to those loans.
    1.        The UMT Participation Interest Agreement
    48
    See, e.g., id. ¶ 91.
    49
    See, e.g., id. ¶¶ 6-8.
    50
    Id. ¶¶ 10-11, 91-92.
    51
    Id. ¶¶ 13, 145.
    11
    Shortly after UDF I’s formation in 2003, UMT extended a $7.5 million line
    of credit to UDF I (the “UMT Loan”).52 The principal amount of the UMT Loan
    increased several times, and the maturity date was extended multiple times. 53 By
    2006, the line of credit had been increased to $45 million. 54 When the real estate
    markets collapsed, it became unlikely that UDF I would be able to repay the UMT
    Loan.55          According to Plaintiffs, Defendants forced UDF III to assume
    responsibility for the UMT Loan. 56
    In September 2008, UDF III entered into an economic participation
    agreement with UMT (the “UMT Loan Participation Agreement”), whereby UDF
    III purchased: (1) a participation interest in the $45 million UMT Loan (the “UMT
    Participation Interest”), and (2) an option to acquire a full ownership economic
    participation interest in the UMT Loan (the “UMT Loan Option”).57 Under the
    UMT Loan Participation Agreement, UDF III agreed to reimburse UMT for all
    funds advanced to UDF I through the UMT Loan, regardless of whether the
    monies were advanced before or after entry into the UMT Loan Participation
    52
    Id. ¶ 79. UMT also made loans to UDF II. Id. ¶ 48.
    53
    Id. ¶¶ 79, 100.
    54
    Id. ¶ 79.
    55
    Id. ¶ 80.
    56
    Id. ¶ 98.
    57
    Id.
    12
    Agreement. 58 The UMT Loan amount was increased multiple times after UDF III
    entered into the UMT Loan Participation Agreement. 59 On April 1, 2015, UDF III
    exercised the UMT Loan Option, which converted UDF III’s economic interest in
    the UMT Loan into a full participation interest.60 The UMT Loan Participation
    Agreement effectively shifted the responsibility for the UMT Loan from UMT to
    UDF III. 61
    At the time of the UMT Loan Participation Agreement, Defendants knew
    that UDF I would be unable to repay the loan without new investor capital.62
    Plaintiffs allege that the UMT Loan Participation Agreement and the exercise of
    the UMT Loan Option were self-interested acts that benefited Defendants to the
    detriment of UDF III and the Limited Partners. 63                Plaintiffs allege these
    transactions permitted Defendants to fund UMT shareholder distributions in 2008
    and 2009, increased management and servicing fees, increased the value of UMTH
    LD’s subordinated profits interest in UDF I, and concealed losses from securities
    58
    Id.
    59
    Id. ¶ 100.
    60
    Id. ¶ 104.
    61
    Id. ¶ 98.
    62
    In its Annual Report for 2007, UMT disclosed that “continued or further deterioration
    of homebuilding conditions or in the broader economic conditions of the homebuilding
    market could . . . increase the likelihood of a default on the [UDF I] line of credit loan.”
    SAC ¶ 80 (quoting UMT, Form 10-K (filed Mar. 31, 2008)).
    63
    SAC ¶ 105.
    13
    broker-dealers to continue raising investor capital.64 Plaintiffs allege that, based on
    “the available evidence,” UDF I is (as of the filing of the Complaint) insolvent and
    that UDF III sustained massive losses as a consequence of its investment in the
    UMT Participation Interest.65
    2.   Loans to Other UDF Funds
    Plaintiffs allege that Defendants caused UDF III to make several self-
    interested loans to UDF I, UDF I’s wholly owned subsidiary Northpointe LLC, and
    UDF X.
    In December 2006, UDF III loaned approximately $6.3 million to UDF I
    (the “2006 UDF I Loan”). 66 The 2006 UDF I Loan was originally scheduled to
    mature on June 21, 2007.67 Defendants increased the principal amount of the loan
    and extended its maturity date on several occasions.68 On October 1, 2013, UDF I
    assigned a promissory note payable by “an unrelated party” in exchange for
    cancellation of the 2006 UDF I Loan. 69 The Complaint alleges that UDF III
    64
    Id. ¶¶ 90-92, 99, 105.
    65
    Id. ¶ 106. Plaintiffs elected not to pursue a books and records demand for additional
    information prior to filing any of its complaints.
    66
    Id. ¶ 108.
    67
    Id.
    68
    Id. ¶ 108(a), (b), (e)-(h). By June 30, 2012, the principal amount was $15.5 million,
    and the maturity date was June 30, 2015. Id. ¶ 108(f).
    69
    Id. ¶ 108(i).
    14
    suffered a substantial loss on the 2006 UDF I Loan based on the information
    Plaintiffs uncovered through SEC filings.70
    In December 2007, UDF III loaned $6 million to UDF I’s wholly owned
    subsidiary, Northpointe LLC (the “UDF NP Loan”). 71 In 2011, the loan amount
    was increased to $15 million, and the maturity date was extended to December
    2013, which was further extended two additional times to December 2015.72 UDF
    I’s subsidiary has not satisfied the loan.73 As of September 30, 2015, the UDF NP
    Loan had been transferred from UDF III to UDF IV. 74
    In November 2007, UDF III loaned $70 million to UMTH LD’s wholly
    owned subsidiary, UDF X (the “UDF X Loan”). 75 The loan’s maturity date was
    extended four times—most recently in 2015 to extend the maturity date to
    November 2016—but UDF X has not made timely payments on this loan since
    2014. 76
    70
    Id. ¶ 108(j).
    71
    Id. ¶ 109.
    72
    Id. ¶ 109(c)-(d).
    73
    Id. ¶ 109(f).
    74
    Id.
    75
    Id. ¶¶ 111-12.
    76
    Id. ¶¶ 113-14, 235-36.
    15
    3.    The Guarantees
    From 2009 through 2014, UDF III entered into eight agreements
    guaranteeing loan obligations totaling $96.9 million owed by UDF IV, UMT, UDF
    I, or their subsidiaries (the “Guarantees”).77 Plaintiffs allege that the controllers of
    UDF III knew that UDF IV, UMT, and UDF I lacked the ability to satisfy their
    underlying loan obligations and that UDF III’s controllers used UDF III’s assets to
    satisfy the loan obligations of these entities. 78    For example, UDF IV’s loan
    obligations represent approximately $85 million of the $96.9 million UDF III
    guaranteed.79 UDF IV does not appear to have the financial ability to satisfy its
    loan obligations. In February 2016, following news that the FBI had raided the
    corporate offices of the UDF Funds, UDF IV stock dropped by more than 50%
    before trading in UDF IV stock was halted. 80 In May 2016, UDF IV announced
    that it defaulted on a $35 million loan from an unaffiliated party. 81 Plaintiffs allege
    that because of UDF IV’s financial condition UDF III’s assets and value were put
    at risk through the Guarantees.
    77
    Id. ¶¶ 248, 251, 255.
    78
    See id. ¶¶ 246, 250, 254, 256.
    79
    Id. ¶ 223.
    80
    Id. ¶¶ 17(g)-(h), 225.
    81
    Id. ¶ 223.
    16
    4.      The Developer Borrower Loans
    From 2003 to 2006, UDF I extended at least 27 loans to Buffington Land
    Development, LLC (“Buffington Land”) and its affiliates and at least 13 loans to
    CTMGT, LLC (“CTMGT”) and its affiliates (collectively, as defined above, the
    “Developer Borrowers”).82           UMT also made multiple loans to the Developer
    Borrowers.83
    Shortly after its formation, UDF III began loaning money to the Developer
    Borrowers.84           Plaintiffs allege that UDF III’s direct loans to the Developer
    Borrowers were not used to fund real estate development projects, but rather to pay
    down their earlier loans from UDF I and UDF II. 85 This repayment scheme is
    alleged to have allowed UDF I and UDF II to continue making distributions to
    their investors. 86
    Plaintiffs point to loans made to Shahan Prairie L.P. (“Shahan Prairie”), an
    entity affiliated with CTMGT as an example of the scheme. In 2004, UDF I made
    82
    Id. ¶¶ 71, 76. UDF III participated pro rata in all of UDF I’s loans to the Developer
    Borrowers. Id. ¶ 76.
    83
    Id. ¶¶ 71, 75.
    84
    Id. ¶ 121. Plaintiffs also contend that Buffington Land is not a third-party borrower
    because UMTH LD is a limited partner of Buffington Homebuilding Group, Ltd., an
    affiliate of Buffington Land. Id. ¶ 74.
    85
    Id. ¶ 122. Plaintiffs theorize that the Developer Borrowers willingly participated in this
    scheme because their total indebtedness remained the same and their costs may have even
    gone down because UDF III loaned money at lower rates than its earlier affiliates. Id. ¶
    124.
    86
    Id. ¶ 122.
    17
    real estate development loans to Shahan Prairie.87 In September 2007, UDF III
    loaned approximately $1.9 million to Shahan Prairie, an entity affiliated with
    CTMGT, and later increased the loan to approximately $4.8 million. 88            In
    November 2007, Shahan Prairie repaid the loan to UDF I in full. 89 In June 2015,
    UDF V made an $18.1 million loan to Shahan Prairie, and “[i]mmediately
    thereafter, [Shahan] Prairie repaid its loan in full to UDF III.” 90 Yet more than a
    decade after UDF I made the initial real estate development loan to Shahan Prairie,
    the land owned by Shahan Prairie remains undeveloped. 91 Plaintiffs contend the
    loans to Shahan Prairie serve as “a clear example of Defendants’ practice of
    causing successive affiliated entities to make loans to real estate developers that
    had borrowed from earlier affiliated entities.” 92
    In December 2007, UDF III loaned $25 million to CTMGT (the “CTMGT
    Loan”) secured by multiple investments that are cross-collateralized and secured
    by collateral-sharing arrangements, which allocate the proceeds of the co-
    investment collateral between UDF I and UDF III.              The CTMGT Loan
    87
    Id. ¶¶ 129-30.
    88
    Id. ¶ 131.
    89
    Id.
    90
    Id. ¶ 132.
    91
    Id. ¶ 281.
    92
    Id. ¶ 129.
    18
    commitment was increased to $112.9 million over the next several years.93
    Effective July 1, 2015, UDF III agreed to defer some or all of its payment
    preference to allow CTMGT to pay UDF I before UDF III. 94
    Although it remains unclear from the pleadings the exact date when UDF
    III’s loans to Buffington Land first began, the Complaint alleges that UDF III
    extended loans to Buffington Land soon after UDF III was initially formed. 95 UDF
    III also increased the principal loan balance to Buffington Land over the years,
    from $77 million as of March 2013 to more than $122 million by January 2016,
    while knowing Buffington Land was unable to pay the loans and concealing this
    information from the Limited Partners.96 On December 2016, UDF III forgave
    Buffington Land’s $122 million of indebtedness for minimal consideration and
    personal releases.97 Plaintiffs also allege that UDF III will be forced to record
    impairments on its loans to CTMGT. 98
    93
    Id. ¶¶ 140-41.
    94
    Id. ¶ 142.
    95
    See id. ¶ 121.
    96
    Id. ¶¶ 151, 153, 214; see also SEC Compl. ¶¶ 35-40.
    97
    SAC ¶ 183; see also id. ¶ 217 (“The UDF Funds entered into an agreement releasing
    Buffington Land and its affiliates and subsidiaries from any and all liabilities, including
    forgiveness of UDF III’s $122 million loan, in exchange for ‘6 finished residential lots
    and approximately 4.56 acres of land in Pflugerville, Travis County, Texas.’”).
    98
    Id. ¶ 222.
    19
    Plaintiffs allege that the loans to the Developer Borrowers also violate the
    concentration limit set in the Partnership Agreement, which prohibits UDF III from
    investing more than 20% of its offering proceeds in loans to any borrower.99
    D.    UDF III’s Auditor Resigns, and the Partnership Ceases
    Distributions.
    As of September 20, 2015, more than 90% of UDF III’s loan portfolio
    consisted of loans to UDF I and its subsidiaries, UDF X, and the Developer
    Borrowers.100 These loans consisted primarily of: a balance of approximately
    $71.2 million of the UMT Participation Interest in the UMT Loan; a balance of
    approximately $16.4 million in the UDF X Loan; a balance of approximately
    $106.5 million in loans to Buffington Land; a balance of approximately $115.9
    million in loans to CTMGT with an additional balance in loans to CTMGT’s
    affiliates that comprised approximately 13% of the Partnership’s outstanding loan
    portfolio. 101 Plaintiffs allege that each of these counterparties is insolvent and will
    not be able to repay these loans to UDF III. 102
    99
    Id. ¶¶ 291-93. The Partnership Agreement requires that no more than 20% of UDF
    III’s offering proceeds may be invested in loans to any one borrower. Partnership
    Agreement § 11.3(b).
    100
    SAC ¶ 238.
    101
    Id.
    102
    See id. ¶¶ 239-44.
    20
    In November 2015, the long-time outside auditor to UDF III, the General
    Partner, UMT, UDF I, UDF II, UDF IV, UDF V, and UDF Holdings resigned.103
    UDF III ceased filing quarterly and annual reports with the SEC in November
    2015, and despite engaging a new auditor in June 2016, has not resumed the filing
    of quarterly or annual reports.104 After January 2016, UDF III ceased paying
    distributions to its Limited Partners. 105
    E.       The SEC Investigates and Files an Action Against UDF III, UDF
    IV, and Certain Individual Defendants.
    Three weeks after announcing the resignation of its auditor, the Partnership
    announced that UDF III and UDF IV had been the subjects of a nonpublic fact-
    finding investigation by the SEC that began in April 2014.106 On October 18,
    2016, UDF III revealed in a Form 8-K filing that UDF III, UMTH LD, and certain
    of the Individual Defendants had received Wells Notices 107 from the SEC, in which
    the SEC had made a preliminary determination to recommend filing an
    enforcement action against UDF III and certain unnamed individuals “associated
    103
    Id. ¶¶ 17(a), 197, 269.
    104
    Id. ¶¶ 197-99.
    105
    Id. ¶ 17(e).
    106
    Id. ¶ 148.
    107
    A Wells Notice is a notification from the SEC that it intends to recommend bringing
    an enforcement action against a company or individual and to provide them with an
    opportunity to respond before the recommendation. See 
    17 C.F.R. § 202.5
    (c) (2008).
    21
    with the Partnership and its general partner.” 108 The October 18, 2016 Form 8-K,
    signed by the General Partner stated the Partnership’s belief that “no enforcement
    action is warranted against the Partnership or any individuals associated with the
    Partnership and its general partner” and that “the Partnership intends to contest any
    charges that may be brought.”109
    On July 18, 2018, the SEC filed a complaint against UDF III, UDF IV,
    Greenlaw, Etter, Wissink, Obert, and David Hanson, 110 accusing them of loaning
    money from UDF IV to the Developer Borrowers, so that the Developer Borrowers
    could pay back their loan from UDF III with UDF IV’s money and allow UDF III
    to pay distributions (the “SEC Action”). 111 The SEC Complaint alleges that the
    defendants violated Sections 17(a)(2) and (3) of the Securities Act of 1933 and
    Sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of
    1934. The SEC Complaint alleges that Etter, Greenlaw, Wissink, and Obert were
    involved in all of the “investment, loan underwriting and impairment decisions for
    108
    SAC ¶ 148.
    109
    UDF III, Form 8-K (filed Oct. 18, 2016); see SAC ¶ 148 (quoting the Form 8-K). The
    Form 8-K is incorporated by reference into the Complaint. Wal-Mart Stores, 
    860 A.2d at 320
     (noting that on a motion to dismiss, the Court may consider documents that are
    “incorporated by reference” or “integral” to the complaint).
    110
    David Hanson is the Chief Accounting Officer and former Chief Operating Officer for
    UDF IV. SEC Compl. ¶ 15. Hanson is not alleged to have served a role on UDF III. Id.
    ¶ 49 (“During the Relevant Period, Hanson did not hold a position at UDF III and did not
    serve on the UDF Investment Committee or participate in its investment, loan
    underwriting, and impairment decisions.”).
    111
    SAC ¶ 149; see also SEC Compl. ¶¶ 1, 3.
    22
    UDF III and UDF IV.” 112 Etter, Greenlaw, Wissink, and Obert are alleged to have
    known that the loans to the Developer Borrowers were not being used to develop
    projects and directed the Developer Borrowers to use the proceeds to pay down
    interest and principal on the Developer Borrowers’ outstanding loans to UDF
    III. 113 On the same day that the SEC Complaint was filed, each of the defendants
    in the SEC Action entered into consent judgments, whereby Greenlaw, Etter,
    Wissink, and Obert agreed to collectively pay $7.45 million in disgorgement,
    prejudgment interest, and civil penalties. 114        Plaintiffs have attached and
    incorporated by reference the SEC Complaint and the consent judgments into the
    Complaint.115
    F.    Hayman Capital Management Reports on the UDF Scheme.
    In December 2015, Hayman Capital Management, L.P. (“Hayman”), a
    hedge fund with a short position in the stock of UDF IV, began to publish reports
    accusing certain Defendants of using loans by newer UDF Funds to bail out and
    112
    SEC Compl. ¶¶ 11-14, 46.
    113
    SAC ¶ 250, SEC Compl. ¶ 27.
    114
    SAC Exs. 2-3.
    115
    Id. at Exs. 1-3. Under the consent judgments, UDF III, UDF IV, Greenlaw, Etter,
    Wissink, and Obert did not admit or deny the allegations of the SEC Complaint, but
    agreed to be permanently restrained and enjoined from violation of Sections 17(a)(2) and
    (3) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B) of the
    Exchange Act. Id. at Exs. 2-3 ¶ 2.
    23
    support loans made by earlier UDF Funds.116 The Complaint does not attach any
    of Hayman’s reports, but relies on Hayman’s allegations that “new investor
    money” raised through UDF III, UDF IV, and UDF V provided liquidity to earlier-
    formed United Development Fund entities. 117 Hayman noted that UDF III’s loan
    portfolio was concentrated in loans to the two Developer Borrowers that had
    borrowed from earlier-formed UDF Funds. 118 Hayman also raised concerns about
    the resignation of the UDF Funds’ auditor. 119
    G.       This Litigation
    On July 7, 2016, Plaintiffs filed a Verified Derivative and Class Action
    Complaint for Breach of Fiduciary Duties against entities and individuals related to
    116
    Id. ¶¶ 17(c), 273. Several United Development entities filed suit against Hayman and
    others challenging Hayman’s reports and assert claims for, inter alia, business
    disparagement, tortious interference with contract and business relationship, and civil
    conspiracy. See United Dev. Funding, L.P., et al. v. Hayman Capital Management, L.P.,
    et al., Case No. CC-17-06253-B (County Court at Law No. 2, Dallas County, Texas)
    (Nov. 28, 2017); see also Bass v. United Dev. Funding, L.P., 
    2019 WL 3940976
    , at *1
    (Tex. App. Aug. 21, 2019), review denied (Mar. 13, 2020). On June 11, 2018, the court
    in that action entered an order denying Hayman’s motion to dismiss under the Texas
    Citizens Participation Act, finding that the plaintiffs had established a prima facie case
    against Hayman. See Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 9, n.3. On August 21, 2019, the Court of
    Appeals for the Fifth District of Texas affirmed the trial court’s denial of Hayman’s
    motion to dismiss, finding that Hayman had motive to maximize profits from its $59
    million short position in UDF IV. See Bass v. United Dev. Funding, L.P., 
    2019 WL 3940976
    , at *1; Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 1, Dkt. 137.
    117
    SAC ¶ 17(c).
    118
    Id. ¶ 17(c).
    119
    Id. ¶ 273.
    24
    the Entity Defendants. 120         On March 17, 2017, Plaintiffs amended that
    complaint.121
    On January 16, 2018, the Court stayed this action pending the resolution of
    five earlier-filed actions pending in the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Texas that included claims against many of the same
    Defendants here (the “Texas Actions”). 122
    On March 28, 2019, following the resolution of the Texas Actions and the
    SEC Action, the Court entered the parties’ stipulation to lift the stay of this
    action. 123       On April 29, 2019, Plaintiffs filed the Complaint, incorporating
    allegations from the SEC Complaint and consent judgments.             The Complaint
    contains seven counts. Counts I, III-V, and VII are pleaded as derivative claims,
    and Counts II and VI are pleaded as direct claims.
    • Count I (“Derivative Claim, On Behalf of UDF III, For Breach of
    Fiduciary Duty”): Count I is a derivative claim on behalf of UDF III
    against Etter, Greenlaw, Wilson, Wissink, Obert, Youngblood, UMT
    120
    Dkt. 1.
    121
    Am. Derivative and Class Action Compl. Dkt. 54.
    122
    Order Granting Mot. to Stay. Dkt. 93. The “Texas Actions” include the federal
    derivative actions on behalf of UDF IV and UDF V, Evans v. Greenlaw et al, 3:16-cv-
    00635 (N.D. Tex.), and the federal and state law securities class actions on behalf of
    purchasers of UDF IV and UDF V stock, In re United Dev. Funding IV Sec. Litig., Case
    No. 3:15-cv-4030-M (N.D. Tex.) and Hay v. United Dev. Funding IV, et al., Case No.
    4:16-cv-00188 (N.D. Tex.).
    123
    Dkt. 117.
    25
    Services, and UMTH LD for breach of fiduciary duty. Plaintiffs
    allege that UMTH LD owes fiduciary duties to UDF III because it is
    the general partner of UDF III;124 that UMT Services owes fiduciary
    duties because it is the general partner of UMTH LD; that Etter and
    Greenlaw owe fiduciary duties because they are the “ultimate
    controllers and owners of UMT Services”; 125 that Etter, Greenlaw,
    and Wilson owe fiduciary duties because they are directors and
    officers of UMT Services and “controllers of the decisions and
    conduct which injured UDF III”; 126 and that Wissink, Obert, and
    Youngblood owe fiduciary duties as “senior executive decision-
    makers concerning the conduct that injured UDF III.” 127 Plaintiffs
    argue that each of these Defendants breached their fiduciary duties
    through “conflicted and self-dealing conduct.”128
    • Count II: (“Direct Claim, On Behalf of the Class, for Breach of
    Fiduciary Duties”): Count II asserts a direct claim on behalf against
    Etter, Greenlaw, Wilson, Wissink, Obert, Youngblood, UMT
    124
    SAC ¶ 357.
    125
    Id. ¶ 354.
    126
    Id. ¶ 355.
    127
    Id. ¶ 358.
    128
    Id. ¶¶ 354-58.
    26
    Services, and UMTH LD for the same breach of fiduciary duty.129
    Plaintiffs allege these Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by
    their decision to cease distributions of the Cash Available for
    Distribution to UDF III’s Limited Partners since January 2016 and by
    omitting and misstating material information provided to the Limited
    Partners concerning UDF III and its assets. 130
    • Count III (“Derivative Claim, On Behalf of UDF III, for Waste of
    Partnership Assets”):       Count III alleges that Etter, Greenlaw,
    Wilson, Wissink, Obert, Youngblood, UMT Services, and UMTH LD
    wasted Partnership assets by engaging in the challenged loan
    transactions and for failing to enforce UDF III’s rights under the loan
    agreements. 131   In response to Defendants’ briefs, Plaintiffs have
    abandoned this claim as to all defendants except UMTH LD. 132
    • Count IV (“Derivative Claim, On Behalf of UDF III, for Aiding
    and Abetting Breach of Fiduciary Duty”): Count IV asserts a
    derivative claim on behalf of UDF III against UMT, UMT Holdings,
    129
    Id. ¶¶ 360-65.
    130
    Id. ¶ 366.
    131
    Id. ¶ 370.
    132
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 98 n.61.
    27
    UMTH General, UDF I, UDF IV, and UDF X for aiding and abetting
    the breaches of fiduciary duty described in Counts I and II. 133
    • Count V (“Derivative Claim, on Behalf of UDF III, for Breach of
    Contract”): Count V is a derivative claim against UMTH LD for
    breach of the Partnership Agreement.        Plaintiffs contend that by
    causing UDF III to invest in and/or to make loans to UDF I and its
    subsidiaries and to the Developer Borrowers, UMTH LD breached
    Section 11.3(b) of the Partnership Agreement, which provides loan
    concentration limitations to any single borrower.134 Plaintiffs allege
    that UMTH LD also breached the Partnership Agreement by failing to
    obtain appraisals in connection with the UMT Participation Interest
    and UMT Option. 135
    • Count VI (“Direct Claim, on Behalf of the Class, for Breach of
    Contract”): Count VI is a direct claim against UMTH LD for breach
    of the Partnership Agreement. Plaintiffs contend that UMTH LD’s
    decision to cease distributions of the Cash Available for Distribution
    133
    SAC ¶ 375.
    134
    Id. ¶¶ 379-80.
    135
    Id. ¶ 381.
    28
    and to cease distributions of financial reports for UDF III breached the
    Partnership Agreement.136
    • Count VII (“Derivative Claim, on Behalf of UDF III, for Unjust
    Enrichment”): Count VII is a claim for unjust enrichment against all
    Defendants. 137
    On June 28, 2019, the Entity Defendants and Individual Defendants each
    filed separate motions to dismiss the Complaint.138 On April 14, 2020, this Court
    held oral argument on the Motions to Dismiss. 139
    II.       ANALYSIS
    The Defendants have moved to dismiss pursuant to Court of Chancery Rules
    12(b)(6) and 23.1. The Defendants contend the Complaint does not state a claim
    under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6), because (1) claims based on transactions
    that occurred and were disclosed more than three years prior to the commencement
    of this action are barred by laches and statutes of limitations; (2) the Plaintiffs have
    failed to allege injury; and (3) the Complaint fails to state claims as to each of the
    causes of actions.140 Second, the Individual Defendants argue that they do not owe
    136
    Id. ¶ 385.
    137
    Id. ¶¶ 389-90.
    138
    Entity Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss, Dkt. 125; Individual Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss, Dkt. 124.
    139
    Dkt. 142.
    140
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 2.
    29
    fiduciary duties to UDF III or its limited partners. 141 This argument urges the
    Court to reject the well-established precedent of In re USACafes, L.P. Litigation142
    and its progeny, which held that the persons who ultimately control a corporate
    general partner owe fiduciary duties to the limited partnership. Wissink, Obert,
    and Youngblood separately argue that even if this Court follows USACafes, Counts
    I, II, and VII should be dismissed as to them because the Plaintiffs have failed to
    allege that these specific Defendants exercise sufficient control over UDF III to
    impose fiduciary duties upon them. 143         The Defendants further argue that the
    derivative claims based upon the transactions with “unaffiliated, third-party
    borrowers” must be dismissed pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 for failure
    to plead demand futility. 144
    A.     Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim
    The pleading standards governing a motion to dismiss under Court of
    Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) are minimal. Central Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley
    Mortg. Cap. Hldgs. LLC, 
    27 A.3d 531
    , 536 (Del. 2011). On a motion to dismiss
    for failure to state a claim:
    (i) all well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as
    true; (ii) even vague allegations are well-pleaded if they
    141
    Individual Defs.’ Opening Br. 8.
    142
    
    600 A.2d 43
     (Del. Ch.), appeal refused, 
    602 A.2d 1082
     (Del. 1991).
    143
    Individual Defs.’ Opening Br. 35-41.
    144
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 2.
    30
    give the opposing party notice of the claim; (iii) the
    Court must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the
    non-moving party; and ([iv]) dismissal is inappropriate
    unless the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover under
    any reasonably conceivable set of circumstances
    susceptible to proof.
    Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 
    812 A.2d 894
    , 896-97 (Del. 2002) (internal citations and
    quotations omitted); accord Central Mortg., 
    27 A.3d at 536
    . Although the Court
    must accept as true the well-pleaded allegations in the Complaint, the Court “need
    not accept inferences or factual conclusions unsupported by specific allegations of
    fact.” Transdigm Inc. v. Alcoa Glob. Fasteners, Inc., 
    2013 WL 2326881
    , at *4
    (Del. Ch. May 29, 2013).       “[A] trial court is required to accept only those
    ‘reasonable inferences that logically flow from the face of the complaint’ and ‘is
    not required to accept every strained interpretation of the allegations proposed by
    the plaintiff.’” In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 
    897 A.2d 162
    , 168
    (Del. 2006) (quoting Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1082 (Del. 2001)).
    “Moreover, a claim may be dismissed if allegations in the complaint or in the
    exhibits incorporated into the complaint effectively negate the claim as a matter of
    law.” Malpiede, 
    780 A.2d at 1083
    .
    1.     Plaintiffs’ Claims Predating July 7, 2013 Are Partly Barred
    By Laches.
    “Laches is an affirmative defense that the plaintiff unreasonably delayed in
    bringing suit after learning of an infringement of his or her rights. . . .      In
    31
    determining whether an action is barred by laches, the Court of Chancery will
    normally . . . apply the period of limitations by analogy.” Levey v. Brownstone
    Asset Mgmt., LP, 
    76 A.3d 764
    , 769 (Del. 2013).           The statute of limitations
    governing each of Plaintiffs’ claims is three years. Dubroff v. Wren Holdings,
    LLC, 
    2011 WL 5137175
    , at *12 (Del. Ch. Oct. 28, 2011) (breach of fiduciary duty,
    aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment); Marnavi
    S.p.A. v. Keehan, 
    900 F. Supp. 2d 377
    , 395 (D. Del. 2012) (waste of partnership
    assets); Bear Stearns Mortg. Funding Tr. 2006-SL1 v. EMC Mortg. LLC, 
    2015 WL 139731
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Jan. 12, 2015) (breach of contract). Under Delaware law,
    “a cause of action accrues ‘at the time of the wrongful act, even if the plaintiff is
    ignorant of the cause of action.’” ISN Software Corp. v. Richards, Layton &
    Finger, P.A., 
    226 A.3d 727
    , 732 (Del. 2020) (quoting Wal-Mart Stores, 
    860 A.2d at 319
    ), reargument denied (Mar. 20, 2020). The Plaintiffs filed their original
    complaint on July 7, 2016, and by analogy, transactions that occurred and were
    disclosed prior to July 7, 2013 are barred by laches.
    Defendants list twelve transactions that they argue are barred by laches, in
    full or in part. 145 These transactions include loans in which the borrowed amounts
    were increased and the maturity dates were extended multiple times after their
    145
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 36-37 (list of conduct challenged as time-barred because
    they are based on “allegations relying in whole or in part upon conduct that occurred
    prior to July 2013”).
    32
    origination.      The parties, however, have acknowledged that extensions and
    increases in lending which occurred within the three-year limitations period would
    not be barred by laches, even if they relate to a loan or agreement that originated
    prior to the three-year limitations period. 146 Thus, as a practical matter, the only
    transactions that are subject to the three-year limitations period are the transactions
    that occurred prior to July 7, 2013, rather than the later extensions and increases to
    the loans, which could independently serve as the basis for a claim. Therefore, the
    transactions at issue here are:
    (1)    Originating and four increases in, and extensions to the maturity date
    of, the UDF I Loan;147
    (2)    Entry into the UMT Participation Interest Agreement; 148
    (3)    Originating and an increase in, and extension to the maturity date of,
    the UDF NP Loan;149
    (4)    Originating the UDF X Loan;150
    (5)    Guaranteeing UMTHF’s loan; 151
    146
    See, e.g., Oral Arg. Tr. 59:22-60:4 (Walsen, counsel for Entity Defendants)
    (challenging the extension of the maturity date and increase in loan balance to the 2006
    UDF I Loan that occurred before 2013); id. at 69:12-19 (Kriner, counsel for Plaintiffs).
    147
    SAC ¶ 108 (alleging that UDF III originated the 2006 UDF I Loan in December 2006
    and that the amount of the 2006 UDF I Loan was increased and its maturity date extended
    four times before December 2012).
    148
    Id. ¶¶ 98-100 (alleging that UDF III entered into the UMT Loan Participation
    Agreement in September 2008, that UMT advanced funds to its shareholders in 2008 and
    2009, and that the commitment in the UMT Loan was increased and its maturity date
    extended twice before the beginning of 2013).
    149
    Id. ¶ 109 (alleging that UDF III originated the UDF NP Loan in December 2007 and
    that, before September 2011, the amount of the UDF NP Loan was increased to $15
    million and its maturity date extended to December 2013).
    150
    Id. ¶¶ 111-13 (alleging that UDF III originated the UDF X Loan in November 2007).
    33
    (6)    Guaranteeing UDF IV Home Finance, L.P.’s loan; 152
    (7)    Guaranteeing UMT 15th Street L.P.’s loan;153
    (8)    Guaranteeing UDF IV Acquisitions L.P.’s loan; 154
    (9)    Guaranteeing UDF IV Finance II L.P.’s loan; 155
    (10)   Guaranteeing UMT HF III L.P.’s loan; 156
    (11)   Originating the loan to Shahan Prairie, an affiliate of CTMGT; 157 and
    (12)   Entering into the CTMGT Loan. 158
    151
    Id. ¶ 118(1) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in August 2009
    binding UDF III as the guarantor for UMTHF’s repayment of a loan to Texas Capital
    Bank, National Association).
    152
    Id. ¶ 118(2) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in April 2010
    binding UDF III as the guarantor for UDF IV Home Finance L.P.’s repayment of a loan
    to Community Trust Bank of Texas).
    153
    Id. ¶ 118(3) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in April 2010
    binding UDF III as the guarantor for UMT 15th Street, L.P.’s repayment of a loan to
    Community Trust Bank of Texas and that UMT 15th Street is a wholly owned subsidiary
    of UMT).
    154
    Id. ¶ 118(4) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in August 2010
    binding UDF III as the guarantor for UDF IV Acquisitions, L.P.’s repayment of a loan to
    Community Trust Bank of Texas and that UDF IV Acquisitions, L.P. is a wholly owned
    subsidiary of UDF IV).
    155
    Id. ¶ 118(5) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in December
    2010 binding UDF III as the guarantor for UDF IV Finance II’s repayment of a loan to
    The F&M Bank and Trust Company n/k/a Prosperity Bank, and that UDF IV Finance II
    is a wholly owned subsidiary of UDF IV).
    156
    Id. ¶ 118(6) (alleging that UDF III entered into a guaranty agreement in May 2011
    binding UDF III as the guarantor for UMT HF III’s repayment of a loan to Veritex
    Community Bank, N.A., and that UMT HF III is a wholly owned subsidiary of UMT).
    157
    Id. ¶¶ 130-31 (alleging that UDF III loaned $1.9 million to Shahan Prairie in
    September 2007 and that it increased its loan twice before the end of 2012); see also id. ¶
    132 that Shahan Prairie repaid the loan to UDF III in June 2015, after UDF V made an
    $18.1 million loan to Shahan Prairie).
    158
    Id. ¶¶ 140 (alleging that UDF III originated a secured loan to CTMGT and its
    subsidiaries in December 2007, the amount of which was increased twice before the
    beginning of 2013).
    34
    Plaintiffs argue that the analogous statute of limitations must be tolled for
    two reasons. 159 First, Plaintiffs argue that their claims are subject to equitable
    tolling, contending that they “reasonably relied . . . upon the Fiduciary Defendants
    to make and disclose investments in good faith in accordance with their fiduciary
    duties.”160 Plaintiffs argue that they were not aware of any issues with UDF III
    until late 2015, “when the [UDF III’s] auditor resigned, [UDF III] acknowledged
    that it had been subject to an SEC investigation since April 2014, Hayman Capital
    issued reports regarding the self-dealing conduct within the UDF family of entities,
    and      the    Fiduciary       Defendants   halted   payment   of   limited   partnership
    distributions.” 161 Second, Plaintiffs broadly contend that the Complaint generally
    demonstrates that Defendants engaged in fraudulent concealment until 2015. 162
    a.    Plaintiffs’ Claims Relating to the Developer Borrower
    Loans, the UMT Loan, and the UMT Participation
    Interest Agreement Are Equitably Tolled.
    The doctrine of equitable tolling stops a statute of limitations from running
    while a plaintiff has “reasonably relied upon the competence and good faith of a
    159
    “If a prima facie basis for laches exists from the face of the complaint, the plaintiff
    bears the burden to plead specific facts to demonstrate that the analogous statute of
    limitations was tolled.” Bean v. Fursa Capital P’rs, LP, 
    2013 WL 755792
    , at *4 (Del.
    Ch. Feb. 28, 2013) (citing In re Dean Witter P'ship Litig., 
    1998 WL 442456
    , at *6 (Del.
    Ch. July 17, 1998)).
    160
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 53.
    161
    
    Id.
     at 54 (citing SAC ¶ 17).
    162
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 52.
    35
    fiduciary.” Tyson Foods, 919 A.2d at 585. The statute of limitations resumes
    running, however, after the injured party is put on inquiry notice of the claim. In
    re Ebix, Inc. Stockholder Litig., 
    2014 WL 3696655
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. July 24, 2014).
    Plaintiffs bear the burden of pleading facts demonstrating that they were not on
    inquiry notice of the facts underlying their purported claims. Weiss v. Swanson,
    
    948 A.2d 433
    , 451 (Del. Ch. 2008). “No evidence of actual concealment is
    necessary in such a case, but the statute is only tolled until the investor knew or
    had reason to know of the facts constituting the wrong.” Tyson Foods, 919 A.2d at
    585 (citations omitted).
    According to Plaintiffs, Defendants used each of the challenged transactions
    to wrongfully cover debts of other affiliated entities at UDF III’s expense. UDF
    III’s public filings disclose the challenged transactions but, as described above,
    Plaintiffs argue that they lacked inquiry notice of the scheme in late 2015, when a
    hedge fund disseminated a report asserting that the United Development Fund
    entities were operating as a “Ponzi-like scheme,” UDF III’s auditor resigned, and
    UDF III announced that it was the subject of an SEC investigation. 163            The
    Complaint sufficiently alleges that Plaintiffs were not on inquiry notice of their
    pre-July 7, 2013 claims relating to the UMT Loan and the UMT Participation
    163
    SAC ¶ 17 (“In late 2015, information began to surface which cast doubt on the
    integrity and value of the Partnership’s assets and the completeness and candor of the
    information historically provided to the Limited Partners.”).
    36
    Interest Agreement and the CTMGT Loan. The remainder of Plaintiffs’ pre-July 7,
    2013 claims are not equitably tolled.
    Plaintiffs have alleged that UDF III’s disclosures with respect to the
    CTMGT Loan, the UMT Loan, and the UMT Participation Interest Agreement
    were misleading. Plaintiffs have alleged that UDF III disclosed that the purpose of
    the loans was to fund real estate development projects, not to benefit other United
    Development Funds, as Plaintiffs allege.164 Plaintiffs are entitled to rely on these
    disclosures, and the well-pleaded allegation that this disclosure was false refutes
    that they were on inquiry notice that the loans were being used for another
    purpose. 165
    164
    Id. ¶¶ 121-39 (alleging that the loans to the Developer Borrowers were shams to
    permit them to repay loans to UDF III affiliates at lower rates and that the Limited
    Partners were misled to believe that the loans “were made for the purpose of funding
    actual real estate development projects”); see also UDF III, Form 10-Q (filed Sept. 30,
    2015) (“The purpose of the UMT Loan is to finance UDF I’s investments in real estate
    development projects.”). Defendants do not specifically argue that any pre-2013 loans to
    Buffington Land in their list of transactions are barred by laches, see Entity Defs.’
    Opening Br. 35-37, but that challenge would fail for the same reasons described here.
    See also SEC Compl. ¶¶ 37-40 (alleging that UDF III disclosed in its annual report for
    2013 that “full collectability” for the Buffington Land loan was considered “probable,”
    and that “UDF knew or should have known that full collectability . . . was not probable
    and, at best, highly uncertain.”); SAC ¶ 285 (alleging that UDF III made a false
    representation regarding the bankruptcy proceeding for Lennar Buffington Stonewall
    Ranch L.P., an affiliate of Buffington Land (“Lennar Buffington”)). The SEC Complaint
    does not identify Buffington Land by name, but the facts of record indicate that the
    Austin-based developer named in the SEC Complaint was Buffington Land.
    165
    Forsythe v. ESC Fund Mgmt. Co. (U.S.), Inc., 
    2007 WL 2982247
    , at *14 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 9, 2007) (“Reasonable reliance on the competence and good faith of fiduciaries can
    toll the running of the statute of limitations.”).
    37
    Plaintiffs’ allegations with respect to the remainder of their pre-July 7, 2013
    claims fail to satisfy their burden to demonstrate that they were not on inquiry
    notice of their claims. Plaintiffs’ first argument is that a November 2015 letter
    demonstrates that they reasonably relied on UDF III’s representations that its loans
    to affiliates of its general partner were beneficial. 166 On November 9, 2015, certain
    Defendants issued a letter to the Limited Partners recommending that they reject a
    tender offer of $14.50. Plaintiffs allege that this was a false representation that the
    tender offer price was less than the then-current $20 reported unit price and
    potential long term value of the LP Units. Plaintiffs, however, fail to connect any
    representation in this letter to the challenged transactions pre-dating July 7, 2013.
    In fact, the public filings cited by Plaintiffs disclose the terms of the
    allegedly wrongful transactions prior to July 7, 2013 and, unlike UDF III's
    disclosures relating to the UMT Loan and the loans to Developer Borrowers,
    Plaintiffs have not specifically alleged facts demonstrating that UDF III's
    disclosures regarding the other challenged transactions misled them. For example,
    Plaintiffs allege that Defendants originated, increased, and extended the 2006 UDF
    I Loan at a time when UDF I was unable to meet its loan requirements. While
    Plaintiffs allege that UDF I is currently insolvent, the Complaint does not contain
    any well-pleaded allegation that Defendants knowingly extended or increased the
    166
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 53-54.
    38
    2006 UDF I Loan at a time when UDF I was unable to meet its loan obligations
    before July 7, 2013. 167 Indeed, Plaintiffs acknowledge that they were informed
    through UDF’s 2011 annual report that the principal amount of the 2006 UDF I
    Loan had increased from $6.9 million when the loan was originated to $12.8
    million without any increase in collateral.168 Plaintiffs’ claim that the 2006 UDF I
    Loan was knowingly undercollateralized is therefore untimely.
    Plaintiffs’ claims with respect to the UDF X Loan, the UDF NP Loan, the
    Shahan Prairie loan, and the guarantees to related entities fail for the same reasons:
    Plaintiffs have failed to plead specific facts establishing that they were not on
    inquiry notice of their pre-July 7, 2013 claims as to these transactions. Plaintiffs
    do not allege that UDF III’s public filings omitted any information relating to the
    UDF X Loan. Plaintiffs conclusorily allege that “UDF X was not an economically
    sound borrower” at the time that UDF III originated the UDF X Loan, but that
    allegation is contradicted by Plaintiffs’ allegation that UDF X made payments
    under the UDF X Loan to UDF III until 2014.169 Plaintiffs base their pre-July 7,
    2013 claims regarding the UDF NP Loan, the Shahan Prairie loan, and the
    167
    See also SAC ¶¶ 98-110 (alleging that the UMT Loan, the 2006 UDF I Loan, the UDF
    NP Loan, and the UDF X Loan were made to support UDF I and UDF X at UDF III’s
    expense); ¶¶ 242-44 (alleging that UDF I and UDF X are insolvent).
    168
    Id. ¶ 108.
    169
    Compare id. ¶ 112 (alleging that UDF III originated the UDF X Loan in November
    2007), with id. ¶ 242 (alleging that UDF X stopped making loan payments to UDF III in
    2014).
    39
    guarantees to related entities on the fact that the transactions were to related
    entities or that UDF III failed to obtain an increase in collateral at the same time its
    loans were increased, but as with the 2006 UDF I Loan, these facts were also
    disclosed to Plaintiffs. 170
    Plaintiffs have thus failed to plead specific facts sufficient to equitably toll
    their challenges to Defendants’ actions with respect to the 2006 UDF I Loan, the
    UDF X Loan, the UDF NP Loan, and guarantees to UDF affiliates to the extent
    those acts pre-date July 7, 2013.171
    b.        Plaintiff Has Not Established Fraudulent
    Concealment.
    Plaintiffs have waived any argument that they have pleaded fraudulent
    concealment. A statute of limitations may be disregarded when a defendant has
    “fraudulently concealed from a plaintiff the facts necessary to put him on notice of
    the truth.” Tyson Foods, 919 A.2d at 585. Plaintiffs bear the burden of pleading
    specific facts to demonstrate that the analogous statutes of limitations were tolled.
    170
    See id. ¶ 109 (alleging that UDF III’s November 14, 2011 Form 10-Q disclosed that
    the UDF NP Loan was increased to $15 million without any increase in collateral); see
    also ¶ 118 (describing UDF III’s guaranty agreements for affiliates by reference to UDF
    III’s public disclosures), ¶ 131 (alleging, without more, that UDF III provided a loan to
    Shahan Prairie in 2007).
    171
    To the extent that discovery shows that pre-July 7, 2013 claims barred by laches
    should have been equitably tolled, Plaintiffs may seek to revisit this issue “should future
    developments provide a compelling reason for doing so,” subject to the law of the case
    doctrine. In re Dell Techs. Inc. Class V S’holders Litig., 
    2020 WL 3096748
    , at *43 (Del.
    Ch. June 11, 2020).
    40
    Eni Holdings, LLC v. KBR Grp. Holdings, LLC, 
    2013 WL 6186326
    , at *13 (Del.
    Ch. Nov. 27, 2013). “Claims of fraudulent concealment are subject to a heightened
    pleading standard” and must be stated “with particularity.”                IMO Estate of
    Lambeth, 
    2018 WL 3239902
     at *4.
    Plaintiffs’ argument as to fraudulent concealment is relegated to a footnote,
    referring to the failure to disclose Buffington Land’s inability to satisfy its
    indebtedness.172 But Defendants have not argued that Plaintiffs’ claims as to that
    transaction are time-barred.173           Plaintiffs have not established fraudulent
    concealment as a basis to avoid laches for their pre-July 7, 2013 claims. 174
    2.     The Claims Are Not Barred Under the Partnership
    Agreement.
    The Defendants seek dismissal of Counts I-IV and VII (claims for breach of
    fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, waste, and unjust
    enrichment) because they are based upon conduct disclosed and permitted in the
    Partnership Agreement and UDF III’s public filings.175 The Defendants argue that
    the Plaintiffs bought their LP Units with knowledge that the Partnership
    Agreement and UDF III’s public filings disclosed the potential for the conflicts of
    172
    See Pls.’ Ans. Br. 56-57 & n.28.
    173
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 36-37 (list of conduct challenged as time-barred).
    174
    “Issues not briefed are deemed waived.” Emerald P’rs v. Berlin, 
    726 A.2d 1215
    , 1224
    (Del. 1999).
    175
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 38-43.
    41
    interest and the actions underlying Counts I-IV and VII, and therefore, Plaintiffs
    cannot now complain about those same transactions. 176
    A limited partner may, under limited circumstances, be precluded from
    asserting claims based upon conflicts of interest where the conflicts of interest are
    disclosed in the partnership agreement or a prospectus. Seafood Funding Ltd.
    P’shp v. M&M Assocs. II, L.P., 
    672 A.2d 66
    , 72 (Del. Ch. 1995) (“A conflict of
    interest disclosed in a prospectus or partnership agreement and a plaintiff’s
    acceptance of the terms of the prospectus or Partnership Agreement precludes the
    plaintiff from bringing a derivative claim based on the facts disclosed in those
    documents.” (emphasis added)); see also Boxer v. Husky Oil Co., 
    1983 WL 17937
    ,
    at *6 (Del. Ch. June 28, 1983) (where partnership agreement and prospectus
    specifically contemplated that a general partner with a disclosed conflict would
    play a role in selecting an appraiser, the plaintiffs could not base a cause of action
    on the mere fact that the general partner in fact played the very role contemplated
    for it when it came time to select an appraiser), aff’d, 
    483 A.2d 633
     (Del. 1984)
    (ORDER); Werner v. Miller Tech. Mgmt., L.P., 
    831 A.2d 318
    , 334 (Del. Ch. 2003)
    (“In some instances, disclosure of conflicts of interest may preclude a claim for
    breach of the duty of loyalty” (citing Boxer, 
    1983 WL 17937
    )).
    176
    Id. at 39.
    42
    Defendants cite only one provision of the Partnership Agreement to support
    this defense, which they acknowledge merely provides “for the possibility that
    UDF III may extend loans or engage in transactions with earlier UDF
    programs.” 177 Section 13.3 of the Partnership Agreement prohibits loans to the
    General Partner or affiliates of the General Partner, except under certain
    conditions. 178 The Defendants also point to boilerplate disclosures in one of UDF
    III’s public filings about potential conflicts of interest. 179 Defendants cite no
    authority where a limited partner was barred from bringing a breach of fiduciary
    duty claim because a potential conflict of interest was recited in a public filing.
    Thus, Defendants are left with the loan limitation restriction in Section 13.3. 180
    In order to foreclose a plaintiff from complaining about a corporate action,
    the plaintiff must have “full knowledge of all the facts [in which] he or she has
    concurred.” Werner, 
    831 A.2d at 334
    . In Werner, the Court concluded that a
    private placement memorandum “did not disclose the potential for conflicts of
    interest with enough specificity to prevent [the plaintiff] from bringing a duty of
    177
    Id. at 42.
    178
    Partnership Agreement § 13.3(a)-(b).
    179
    Entity Defs’ Opening Br., Ex. J, at 5-6, 12-13 (UDF III, Annual Report (filed Apr. 2,
    2007)).
    180
    For this reason, Defendants’ legal authorities do not carry the day. Litman v.
    Prudential-Bache Props., Inc., 
    1993 WL 5922
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Jan. 4, 1993) (referring to
    “acceptance of the terms in the prospectus and partnership agreement”); Goodman v.
    Futrovsky, 
    213 A.2d 899
    , 903 (Del. 1965) (conflict disclosed in prospectus).
    43
    loyalty claim.” 
    Id.
     Just as in Werner, Section 13.3 of the Partnership Agreement
    could not “convey full knowledge” that UMTH LD would cause UDF III to enter
    into interested transactions with earlier UDF Funds for the purpose of concealing
    their losses and enabling them to make distributions to their limited partners. 
    Id.
    This conclusion is further supported by considering the Partnership
    Agreement as a whole. The Partnership Agreement requires that, “[t]he General
    Partner shall exercise its fiduciary duty for the safekeeping and use of all funds and
    assets of the Partnership . . . and shall not employ, or permit another to employ,
    such funds or assets in any manner except for the exclusive benefit of the
    Partnership. In addition, the Partnership shall not permit the Partners to contract
    away the fiduciary duty owed to the Partners by the General Partner under
    common law.” 181 Viewed in context, Section 13.3 cannot be read to foreclose the
    Limited Partners from pursuing derivative claims for breaches of fiduciary duty.
    That is particularly true where, as here, the creators of the Partnership chose not to
    eliminate fiduciary duties owed to the Partnership or the Limited Partners arising
    from conflicted transactions. See 6 Del. C. § 17-1101(d); see also infra Section
    II(A)(4)(b).
    181
    Partnership Agreement § 11.3(g).
    44
    3.   The Complaint Adequately Alleges Injury.
    Defendants argue that the Plaintiffs have failed to allege injury arising from
    the challenged conduct.        Defendants contend that “most losses alleged in the
    [Complaint] either are losses allegedly sustained by a UDF affiliate . . . or by a
    Developer Borrower.” 182 The Defendants further contend that Plaintiffs cannot
    allege injuries stemming from guaranty agreements that have not yet matured and
    that the allegations of loss suffered by UDF III generally involve only a risk of loss
    or inference of loss. 183 Defendants also assert that Plaintiffs failed to allege how
    the Limited Partners suffered tangible injury as a result of UDF III’s failure to file
    quarterly and annual reports with the SEC. 184
    Plaintiffs respond they have provided factual allegations evidencing the
    “systematic collapse and financial devastation of UDF III” 185 and that “[UDF III’s]
    failure to distribute financial statements have prevented Plaintiffs and other limited
    partners from making informed decisions on their investment in UDF III, the
    calculation of damage for which can be later determined by the Court.”186
    Plaintiffs argue, “The total damages to UDF III, the Plaintiffs and Limited Partners
    182
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 46.
    183
    Id. at 46.
    184
    Id. at 47.
    185
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 59. See also SAC ¶¶ 119-20 (alleging that the “guaranty amounts
    pursuant to these agreements . . . expos[ed] UDF III to the risk of massive losses for
    which UDF III was receiving inadequate consideration.”)
    186
    Pls.’ Ans. 59, n.30.
    45
    cannot currently be determined because the Fiduciary Defendants have failed to
    file with the SEC, or to publicly disclose any quarterly or annual report, or audited
    or unaudited financial statement, for UDF III since November 16, 2015 . . . .” 187
    Damages can be pleaded generally. See Bamford v. Penfold, L.P., 
    2020 WL 967942
    , at *21 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2020). “Proof of . . . damages and of their
    certainty need not be offered in the complaint in order to state a claim.” Anglo Am.
    Sec. Fund, L.P. v. S.R. Glob. Int’l Fund, L.P., 
    829 A.2d 143
    , 156 (Del. Ch. 2003).
    Plaintiffs’ fiduciary duty claims are based on a breach of the duty of loyalty.
    “Delaware law dictates that the scope of recovery for a breach of the duty of
    loyalty is not to be determined narrowly.” Thorpe by Castleman v. CERBCO, Inc.,
    
    676 A.2d 436
    , 445 (Del. 1996); see also Encite LLC v. Soni, 
    2011 WL 5920896
    , at
    *25 (Del. Ch. Nov. 28, 2011) (“Where this Court finds that a breach of fiduciary
    duty has occurred, the specificity and amount of evidence required from the
    Plaintiff on the issue of damages is minimal.”).
    Plaintiffs have pleaded sufficient injury to survive a motion to dismiss.
    First, Plaintiffs identified that UDF III forgave $122 million of indebtedness to
    Buffington Land, and that UDF III acknowledged this loan forgiveness may have a
    “material adverse impact on UDF III’s financial statements.” 188 Second, Plaintiffs
    187
    SAC ¶ 19; see also Pls.’ Ans. Br. 59.
    188
    SAC ¶¶ 84, 218-20.
    46
    have alleged other loans are also uncollectible because CTMGT, UDF I, and UDF
    X are insolvent.189 This includes the UMT Loan, in which UDF III exercised its
    UMT Participation Interest, the UMT NP Loan, and the UDF X Loan190 Third,
    Plaintiffs have alleged that UDF III paid over $7.6 million in mortgage servicing
    fees to UMTH LD through September 2015 for an inflated loan balance because
    Defendants knew or should have known that many of the loans in UDF III’s loan
    portfolio were materially impaired.191 Plaintiffs seek to recover the fees and profits
    that Defendants obtained as a result of their breaches of fiduciary duty. At this
    stage, Plaintiffs’ allegations of injury are sufficient to state a claim.
    4.     Counts I and II Allege Breaches of Fiduciary Duty as to
    UMTH LD, UMT Services, Etter, Greenlaw, Wilson, and
    Wissink.
    Count I is a derivative claim against UMTH LD, UMT Services, Etter,
    Greenlaw, Wilson, Obert, Wissink, and Youngblood for breach of fiduciary duty.
    Count II is asserted as a direct claim for breach of fiduciary duty.
    “A claim for breach of fiduciary duty requires proof of two elements: (1)
    that a fiduciary duty existed and (2) that the defendant breached that duty.” Beard
    Research, Inc. v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    , 601 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff’d, 
    11 A.3d 749
     (Del.
    189
    Id. ¶¶ 241-43. To the extent Plaintiffs are asserting a claim as to the loan extended to
    Shahan Prairie, see id. ¶¶ 129-34, Plaintiffs admit that the loan was repaid in full and
    have not adequately alleged damages as to that transaction. See infra n.259.
    190
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 44-45.
    191
    SAC ¶¶ 257-59.
    47
    2010). The Defendants argue that the Individual Defendants do not owe fiduciary
    duties to UDF III or its Limited Partners, and even if they do, the Plaintiffs have
    not alleged a breach of duty as to several of their claims.
    a.     USACafes and Stare Decisis
    The Individual Defendants contend the managers and directors of the
    corporate General Partner should not be held to owe fiduciary duties to the
    Partnership or the Limited Partners. The Individual Defendants acknowledge that
    in USACafes, then-Chancellor Allen held that directors and controllers of a
    corporate general partner owed fiduciary duties to the limited partnership and the
    limited partners.192 The Individual Defendants recognize that USACafes has been
    ensconced in Delaware alternative entity law for nearly three decades.193
    Nevertheless, they argue that “USACafes was wrongly decided and, more
    importantly, presents an irreconcilable conflict with current Delaware law
    regarding alternative entities.”194
    Stare decisis (“to stand by things decided”) is the legal term for fidelity to
    precedent. Black’s Law Dictionary 1696 (11th ed. 2019). 195 The doctrine “finds
    ready application in Delaware corporate law.” Leonard Loventhal Account v.
    192
    Individual Defs.’ Opening Br. 9-10, Dkt. 124 (citing USACafes, 600 A.2d at 48-49).
    193
    Id.
    194
    Id. at 30.
    195
    For a recent discussion of stare decisis, see June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 
    140 S. Ct. 2103
    , 2134 (2020) (Roberts, C.J. concurring).
    48
    Hilton Hotels Corp., 
    780 A.2d 245
    , 248 (Del. 2001). “It is axiomatic . . . that once
    a trial judge decides an issue, other trial judges on that court are entitled to rely on
    that decision as stare decisis.” Gatz Properties, LLC v. Auriga Capital Corp., 
    59 A.3d 1206
    , 1209 (Del. 2012); see also Leonard Loventhal Account v. Hilton Hotels
    Corp., 
    2000 WL 1528909
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Oct. 10, 2000) (observing that the
    doctrine of stare decisis is applicable to “a decision of a court higher in rank, or of
    the same rank” (quoting 20 Am. Jur. Courts § 201 (1965)), aff’d, 
    780 A.2d 245
    (Del. 2001).
    This Court has “followed USACafes consistently.” Feeley v. NHAOCG,
    LLC, 
    62 A.3d 649
    , 671 (Del. Ch. 2012). While the contours of the fiduciary
    obligations have been debated, it is well established that, at a minimum, the
    individuals and entities that own and control the general partner owe the limited
    partners “the duty not to use control over the partnership’s property to advantage
    the corporate director at the expense of the partnership.” Bay Ctr. Apartments
    Owner, LLC v. Emery Bay PKI, LLC, 
    2009 WL 1124451
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. Apr. 20,
    2009); accord Feeley, 
    62 A.3d at 671
    ; see generally Martin I. Lubaroff et al.,
    Lubaroff & Altman on Delaware Limited Partnerships § 14.01[C], at 14-19 (2d ed.
    2020) (“USACafes, L.P. does not fully define the scope of a common law fiduciary
    duty of a director of a corporate general partner to a limited partnership and to its
    limited partners.”).   Corporate practitioners and drafters of alternative entity
    49
    agreements are well advised of this precedent and the importance of it when
    drafting alternative entity agreements. See, e.g., Lubaroff § 14.01[C], at 14-19; IV
    Robert S. Saunders et al., Folk on the Delaware Corporation Law § 17-403.05[H]
    (6th ed. 2020).
    Controllers may avoid or at least minimize the duty that USACafes
    recognized by structuring their limited partnership agreements to eliminate
    fiduciary duties. Delaware limited partnership jurisprudence has long recognized
    broad license to limit fiduciary duty protections in limited partnership agreements.
    See Sonet v. Plum Creek Timber Co., L.P., 
    722 A.2d 319
    , 322 (Del. Ch. 1998). In
    a 2004 amendment to the Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership Act (the “LP
    Act”), Section 17-1101(d) clarified that the drafters of limited partnership
    agreements may eliminate duties, including fiduciary duties, owed by “a partner or
    other person . . . to a limited partnership or to another partner or to another person
    that is a party to or is otherwise bound by a partnership agreement.” 6 Del. C. §
    17-1101(d). In the same amendment, Section 17-1101(f) clarified that the limited
    partnership agreement may provide for the limitation or elimination of liabilities
    for breach of fiduciary duty.
    The Individual Defendants’ request for this Court to reject USACafes is a tall
    order indeed. To depart from USACafes would require the Court to ignore that
    creators of Delaware limited liability companies have drafted their agreements
    50
    with full knowledge of the USACafes holding as well as the ability of the drafters
    of their agreements to limit or eliminate fiduciary duties.          See Lubaroff, §
    14.01[C], at 14-19 (discussing USACafes and “recommend[ing] that the duties
    (including fiduciary duties) of such persons to a limited partnership and to the
    partners of such partnership and to other persons that are parties to or are otherwise
    bound by a partnership agreement to be defined in the partnership agreement in
    accordance with Section 17-1101(d)”); id. at 14-15 (“The best way to protect an
    affiliate of a general partner of a limited partnership is by drafting into a
    partnership agreement the desired standard by which such persons or entities are to
    be judged.”).
    Some partnership agreements have eliminated fiduciary duties; 196 others
    have not. The Defendants here did not, but that was a conscious decision on their
    part.    To be sure, UDF III was formed in 2005, one year after the 2004
    amendments to Section 17-1101(d) and 17-1101(f) of the LP Act. The Individual
    Defendants have not shown that USACafes reflects “a clear manifestation of error”
    196
    See, e.g., Hite Hedge LP v. El Paso Corp., 
    2012 WL 4788658
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 9,
    2012) (granting motion to dismiss where partnership agreement eliminated fiduciary
    duties); Allen v. El Paso Pipeline GP Co., 
    113 A.3d 167
    , 186 (Del. Ch. 2014) (limited
    partnership agreement eliminated all fiduciary duties); In re Kinder Morgan, Inc. Corp.
    Reorganization Litig., 
    2015 WL 4975270
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 2015) (granting
    motion to dismiss where limited partnership agreement eliminated fiduciary duties);
    Inter-Marketing Gp. USA, Inc. v. Armstrong, 
    2019 WL 417849
    , at *5-6 (Del. Ch. Jan. 31,
    2019) (holding plaintiffs did not establish demand futility where limited partnership
    agreement eliminated fiduciary duties).
    51
    or that there are “urgent reasons” for this Court to abandon its holding. Loventhal,
    789 A.2d at 248. If USACafes is to be jettisoned, that is a determination for the
    Delaware Supreme Court. Feeley, 
    62 A.3d at 671
    .
    b.     The Complaint Adequately Alleges that UMT
    Services, Etter, Greenlaw, Wilson, and Wissink Owe
    Fiduciary Duties.
    The Partnership Agreement does not eliminate or limit fiduciary duties owed
    by UMTH LD or any other person. Therefore, UMTH LD owes fiduciary duties to
    UDF III as its general partner. Feeley, 
    62 A.3d at 662
     (“General partners owe
    default fiduciary duties.”). Defendants do not dispute that UMTH LD and UMT
    Services owe fiduciary duties to UDF III and its Limited Partners. 197
    Pursuant to USACafes and its progeny, the “individuals and entities who
    control the general partner owe to the limited partners at a minimum the duty of
    loyalty.” Feeley, 
    62 A.3d at 670
    . Defendants concede that if USACafes applies,
    Etter, Greenlaw, and Wilson also owe fiduciary duties to UDF III and its Limited
    Partners. 198     The Individual Defendants contend, however, that even under
    USACafes, Wissink, Obert, and Youngblood do not owe fiduciary duties because
    those Individual Defendants are not alleged to exert sufficient control over the
    197
    Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 42.
    198
    See Individual Defs.’ Reply Br. 21-26, Dkt. 136.
    52
    assets of UDF III. 199 “[T]o have any fiduciary duties to an entity, the affiliate must
    exert control over the assets of that entity.” Bay Ctr. Apartments, 
    2009 WL 1124451
    , at *9 (citing Wallace v. Wood, 
    752 A.2d 1175
    , 1118 (Del. Ch. 1999)
    (“Officers, affiliates and parents of a general partner, may owe fiduciary duties to
    limited partners if [they] control the partnership’s property.”)).
    Wissink is the president and former chief operating officer of UMTH LD
    and one of three voting members of UMTH LD’s investment committee (Etter and
    Greenlaw being the other two).200 Wissink is further alleged to have participated
    in all investment, loan underwriting, and impairment decisions on behalf of UDF
    III, including the challenged transactions. 201 Specifically, by March 2014, UDF III
    allegedly knew that “full collectability from [Buffington Land] was not probable
    and, at best, highly uncertain[,]” yet the investment committee continued to extend
    the maturity date and increase the loan to Buffington Land.202          Wissink also
    personally executed the agreements on behalf of UDF III for the UMT
    Participation Loan, the UMT Loan Option, and the UDF X Loan. 203                Those
    allegations are enough at the pleading stage to support a reasonable inference that
    199
    
    Id.
    200
    SAC ¶ 34.
    201
    Id. ¶ 34; SEC Compl. ¶¶ 11-13, 46.
    202
    SAC ¶ 136 (quoting the SEC Complaint).
    203
    Id. ¶ 162.
    53
    Wissink exercised sufficient “control” along with Etter, Greenlaw, and Wilson
    over the assets of UDF III to justify the imposition of fiduciary duties on him.
    Obert and Youngblood are senior officers of UMTH LD, but there are no
    specific allegations that either individual exerted actual control over UDF III’s
    assets. UDF III’s public filings disclosed that UDF III’s “success depends to a
    significant degree on the diligence, experience and skill of certain executive
    officers and other certain key personnel of our general partner, including . . .
    Youngblood and . . . Obert.”204 Those allegations are not sufficient to establish a
    reasonable pleading stage inference that Obert and Youngblood exercised
    sufficient “control” over the assets of UDF III to justify the imposition of fiduciary
    duties on them. See Lewis v. AimCo Properties, L.P., 
    2015 WL 557995
     (Del. Ch.
    Feb. 10, 2015) (allegations that an individual holds officer positions in affiliated
    entities and that the individual made some public statements on behalf of the
    limited partnership, without more, are not enough to show that the individual
    exercised control of the relevant defendant entities).
    The Court concludes that UMTH LD, UMT Services, Etter, Greenlaw,
    Wilson, and Wissink owe fiduciary duties to UDF III and the Limited Partners.
    Accordingly, Counts I and II are dismissed as to Obert and Youngblood only. For
    204
    Id. ¶ 161.
    54
    the remainder of this Opinion, UMTH LD, UMT Services, Etter, Greenlaw,
    Wilson, and Wissink are collectively referred to as the “Fiduciary Defendants.”
    c.     The Complaint Fails to Allege a Direct Breach of
    Fiduciary Duty for the Failure to Distribute Cash
    Available for Distribution.
    Count II alleges that the Fiduciary Defendants breached their fiduciary
    duties by their failure to cause UDF III to distribute Cash Available for
    Distribution from January 2016 to the present. Count II also alleges the Fiduciary
    Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by omitting and misstating material
    information provided to the Limited Partners concerning UDF III and its assets.205
    Defendants argue that Count II must be dismissed for failure to state a claim as to
    these two allegations.
    Section 9.1 of the Partnership Agreement provides that “Cash Available for
    Distribution for each applicable accounting period shall be distributed (a) 90% to
    the Limited Partners and the General Partner . . . and (b) 10% to the General
    Partner.”206 Section 3.13 defines “Cash Available for Distribution” as “cash funds
    received by the Partnership from operations . . . , including, without limitation,
    interest, points or dividends from interim investments and proceeds from
    borrowings, if any, less all cash used to pay [UDF III’s] expenses and debt
    205
    SAC ¶ 366.
    206
    Partnership Agreement § 9.1.
    55
    payments and amounts set aside for reserves.”207          Defendants argue that the
    Partnership Agreement provides the General Partner with absolute discretion to
    maintain cash reserves, which are excluded from the Cash Available for
    Distribution.208      Therefore, Defendants argue, the decision to maintain cash
    reserves and cease distributions was a valid exercise of business judgment.209
    Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs do not allege that there was, in fact, Cash
    Available for Distribution. The Individual Defendants argue that Count II is not a
    fiduciary duty claim, but rather a claim for breach of contract and that the General
    Partner, which among the Defendants is the only party to the LPA, is the only one
    with potential liability.
    Plaintiffs contend, however, that even if the General Partner has absolute
    discretion to determine reserves, it does not supplant the General Partner’s duty to
    act loyally in exercising that discretion.210 Plaintiffs also argue that this claim is a
    distinct from the breach of contract claim because it relies on additional facts.
    Plaintiffs claim that the fiduciary decision to preserve cash was made to allow the
    Fiduciary Defendants “to fund their own special interests at the unfair expense of
    207
    Id. § 3.13.
    208
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 49.
    209
    Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 44.
    210
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 95-96 (citing Paige Capital Mgm’t, LLC v. Lerner Master Fund, LLC,
    
    2011 WL 3505355
     at *32 (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2011).
    56
    the limited partners.” 211 Plaintiffs specifically point to paragraphs 151, 181, and
    183 of the Complaint for allegations that “the Fiduciary Defendants continued to
    cause the Partnership to make loan advancements to Buffington Land after January
    2016.” 212 But, as Defendants note, none of those paragraphs alleges any loan
    advancements to Buffington Land after January 2016. At minimum, Plaintiffs
    contend their allegations are sufficient to rebut the business judgment rule. 213
    The Complaint does not allege facts sufficient to create a reasonable
    inference that there was Cash Available for Distributions or that distributions were
    ceased and cash preserved starting in January 2016 to fund the Fiduciary
    Defendants’ own special interests.        Accordingly this portion of Count II is
    dismissed for failure to state a claim.
    Count II also alleges the Fiduciary Defendants breached their fiduciary
    duties by omitting and misstating material information provided to the Limited
    Partners concerning the Partnership and its assets.214 Count II purports to allege a
    direct fiduciary duty claim for two types of communications or omissions. The
    first is in the context of a request for stockholder action concerning the November
    9, 2015 letter dissuading UDF III Limited Partners from tendering into a mini-
    211
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 94.
    212
    
    Id.
    213
    See id. at 96.
    214
    SAC ¶ 366.
    57
    tender offer.     The second is in the context of providing false or materially
    misleading communications about the Partnership’s operations in general. The
    first category falls within the duties of care and loyalty and is referred to as a
    “fiduciary duty of disclosure.” Dohmen v. Goodman, 
    2020 WL 3428213
    , at *4
    (Del. June 23, 2020) (noting that communications concerning investment decisions
    such as tendering stock is a request for stockholder action). In that circumstance, a
    stockholder alleging a breach of the duty of disclosure need not allege damages.
    
    Id.
     (“In this context, we have characterized a fiduciary’s damages liability as ‘per
    se.’”).
    The second category concerns communications not associated with
    stockholder action, “such as when directors make periodic financial disclosures
    required by securities laws.” 
    Id.
     In this context, the “fiduciary duty of disclosure”
    is not implicated; nevertheless, under the duties of care and loyalty, “the directors
    must deal honestly with stockholders.” 
    Id.
     To state a claim in this context, the
    directors must have knowingly disclosed false information. In addition, damages
    is an element of the claim. 
    Id.
     This type of claim is also considered derivative. In
    re INFOUSA, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    953 A.2d 963
    , 990 (Del. Ch. 2007).
    In their opening brief, the Entity Defendants argued that the claims
    concerning alleged omissions and misrepresentations in Count II should be
    58
    dismissed for failure to allege injury. 215 The portion of Count II concerning the
    November 9, 2015 letter to Limited Partners implicates the fiduciary duty of
    disclosure. The Entity Defendants’ argument that this claim fails for failure to
    allege damages fails, because damages is not an element that Plaintiffs are required
    to plead. Dohmen, 
    2020 WL 3428213
    , at *4.216 Accordingly, this portion of
    Count II states a disclosure claim. 217
    The remaining claims in Count II concerning communications to Limited
    Partners do not involve a request for stockholder action. Plaintiffs allege that the
    Defendants purposefully misled the Limited Partners by concealing information
    concerning the Partnership and its assets. Plaintiffs also allege that UDF III’s
    public filings misled the Limited Partners to believe that UDF III’s distributions
    215
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 50. In their opening brief, the Individual Defendants argued
    that if the Court holds that any of the Individual Defendants are held to owe fiduciary
    duties under USACafes, then Count II should be dismissed for failure to rebut the
    business judgment rule, referring to an argument in the Entity Defendants’ opening brief.
    Individual Defs.’ Opening Br. 32. But that argument section of the brief does not address
    the disclosure claim.
    216
    In a footnote in their reply brief, the Entity Defendants argued that the claim should be
    dismissed because plaintiffs have not adequately alleged that the “representations [in the
    letter] were actually false at the time they were made.” Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 30 n.8.
    The Court does not consider this argument as it was not fairly raised in the opening brief,
    nor does the legal standard governing the duty of disclosure require that the
    representation be false to state a claim. See Stroud v. Grace, 
    606 A.2d 75
    , 84 (Del. 1992)
    (recognizing a fiduciary duty to “disclose fully and fairly all material information within
    the board’s control when it seeks shareholder action”); Gantler v. Stephens, 
    965 A.2d 695
    , 710 (Del. 2009) (“The essential inquiry [in a fiduciary duty of disclosure claim] is
    whether the alleged omission or misrepresentation is material.”).
    217
    The parties have not briefed the issue of whether the disclosure claim implicates the
    duties owed by the individual Fiduciary Defendants under USACafes.
    59
    were being paid through operations of the Partnership, when in fact they were
    being paid through transfers from UDF IV. 218 These derivative claims require a
    plaintiff to plead knowingly false disclosure and damages. Dohmen, 
    2020 WL 3428213
    , at *4.         In their brief, the only specific allegation they point to is
    paragraph 288 of the Complaint, which concerns the allegations pertaining to the
    November 9, 2015 letter, which relates to the direct disclosure claim, not the
    derivative claim. 219 Accordingly, the derivative portion of the claims in Count II is
    dismissed for failure to state a claim.
    5.     Count III Fails to Allege a Derivative Claim for Waste.
    Count III asserts a derivative claim on behalf of UDF III against UMTH LD
    for waste. 220 Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have failed to meet the high standard
    for pleading a claim for corporate waste. For a waste claim to survive a motion to
    dismiss, a plaintiff must show “economic terms so one-sided as to create an
    inference that no person acting in a good faith pursuit of the corporation's interests
    218
    SAC ¶ 150 (“UDF III investors were led to believe that their distributions were being
    paid from the operation of their fund. . . . UDF III investors would have considered it
    important when making an investment decision that the true source of a portion of their
    received distributions were not actually coming from funds from operations as disclosed
    in UDF III’s filings . . . but instead were the results of transfer from UDF IV.” (quoting
    SEC Compl. ¶¶ 32, 34)).
    219
    See Pls.’ Ans. Br. 96-97.
    220
    Plaintiffs originally asserted this claim against UMTH LD, UMT Services, and all of
    the Individual Defendants. In response to arguments in the Individual Defendants’ briefs,
    Plaintiffs dropped their claim for waste against all Defendants except UMTH LD. Pls.’
    Ans. Br. 98, n.61.
    60
    could have approved the terms.” Sample v. Morgan, 
    914 A.2d 647
    , 670 (Del. Ch.
    2007); see also Quadrant Structured Prod. Co. v. Vertin, 
    102 A.3d 155
    , 192 (Del.
    Ch. 2014) (same). “The pleading burden on a plaintiff attacking a corporate
    transaction as wasteful is necessarily higher than that of a plaintiff challenging a
    transaction as ‘unfair’ as a result of the directors' conflicted loyalties . . . .” Harbor
    Fin. P'rs v. Huizenga, 
    751 A.2d 879
    , 892 (Del. Ch. 1999). As a result, a “claim for
    waste will arise only in the rare, unconscionable case where directors irrationally
    squander or give away corporate assets.” In re Walt Disney Co. Derivative Litig.,
    
    906 A.2d 27
    , 74 (Del. 2006).
    The Complaint falls short of the high standard to plead a claim for waste of
    partnership assets. The challenged transactions fail to show economic terms “so
    one-sided” that they are “unconscionable.” For example, extending the maturity
    date and accepting assignments for some of the challenged loans rather than
    writing them off would not be unconscionable if it increased the likelihood that
    they would be repaid. Furthermore, Plaintiffs do not allege facts to show that the
    Partnership received no consideration for the challenged loans and transactions.
    Accordingly, Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for waste of partnership assets.
    6.     Count IV States a Claim for Aiding and Abetting a Breach
    of Fiduciary Duty.
    Count IV alleges UMT, UMT Holdings, UMTH General, UDF I, UDF IV,
    and UDF X aided and abetted the Fiduciary Defendants’ breaches of fiduciary
    61
    duties. Under Delaware law, a person or entity that knowingly and substantially
    participates in a breach of fiduciary duty is jointly and severally liable with the
    fiduciary for the breach. RBC Capital Markets, LLC v. Jervis, 
    129 A.3d 816
    , 872
    (Del. 2015). To state a claim for aiding and abetting, a plaintiff must allege “(1)
    the existence of a fiduciary relationship, (2) a breach of the fiduciary’s duty, . . . (3)
    knowing participation in that breach by the defendants, and (4) damages
    proximately caused by the breach.”           Malpiede, 
    780 A.2d at 1096
     (internal
    quotations omitted).
    The Defendants that are the subject of this claim challenge Count IV only on
    the premise that Plaintiffs are precluded from bringing claims based on interested
    transactions disclosed in UDF III’s public filings and Partnership Agreement. As
    discussed supra Section II(A)(2), the Court rejects Defendants’ arguments on that
    issue. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss Count IV is denied.
    7.     Count V Fails to Allege a Derivative Claim for Breaches of
    Sections 11.3(b) and 13.3, but States a Claim for Breach of
    Section 11.3(c).
    “[T]o survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a breach of contract
    claim, the plaintiff must demonstrate: first, the existence of the contract, whether
    express or implied; second, the breach of the obligation imposed by that contract;
    and third, the resultant damage to the plaintiff.” VLIW Tech., LLC v. Hewlett-
    Packard Co., 
    840 A.2d 606
    , 612 (Del. 2003). Moreover, “[a]n allegation, though
    62
    vague or lacking in detail, is nevertheless ‘well-pleaded’ if it puts the opposing
    party on notice of the claim being brought against it.” VLIW Tech., 
    840 A.2d at 611
    .
    Counts V asserts a derivative claim on behalf of UDF III that UMTH LD
    breached the Partnership Agreement: (1) by causing UDF III to concentrate assets
    “to or from any one borrower that would exceed, in the aggregate, an amount
    greater than 20% of the Offering Proceeds” in violation of Section 11.3(b); 221 and
    (2) by failing to obtain the appraisals in connection with the UMT Participation
    Interest and UMT Option in violation of Sections 11.3(c) and 13.3.222                  The
    Defendants argue that Count V must be dismissed because the Complaint fails to
    plead that UMTH LD violated the express terms of the Partnership Agreement. 223
    Section 11.3(b) of the Partnership Agreement prohibits the General Partner
    from causing the Partnership to “invest in or make mortgage loans to or from any
    221
    SAC ¶¶ 172-86, 379-80.
    222
    Id. ¶ 381.
    223
    In the opening brief, the Entity Defendants also argue that Count V, a derivative
    breach of contract claim on behalf of UDF III, must be dismissed because UDF III is not
    a party to the Partnership Agreement. Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 50-51. The Defendants
    do not appear to defend this argument in their reply brief, and it fails as a matter of law.
    Section 17-101(4) of the LP Act provides that the “limited partnership is bound by its
    partnership agreement whether or not the limited partnership executes the partnership
    agreement.” 6 Del. C. § 17-101(14). By binding UDF III to the Partnership Agreement,
    Section 17-101(14) makes it a party to the Partnership Agreement and therefore can
    enforce the Partnership Agreement. See Seaport Vill. Ltd. v. Seaport Vill. Operating Co.,
    LLC, 
    2014 WL 4782817
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 24, 2014) (holding that under the parallel
    provision of the LLC Act, an LLC is a party to its operating agreement and therefore can
    enforce that agreement’s fee-shifting provision against another party to that agreement).
    63
    one borrower that would exceed, in the aggregate, an amount greater than 20% of
    the Offering proceeds.”224         The Complaint alleges that UMTH LD breached
    Section 11.3(b) when it concentrated more than 20% of UDF III’s offering
    proceeds in loans to UDF I, Buffington Land, and CTMGT.225 The obvious flaw
    in this claim is that Plaintiffs consolidated the loans of each of UDF I, Buffington
    Land, and CTMGT’s affiliated entities to allege a breach of the 20% concentration
    limit. 226
    Plaintiffs argue that the Court should allow consolidation at the pleading
    stage because Section 11.3(b) is designed to “protect[] the Partnership from
    overexposure of its assets to the credit risk of any entity.” 227 In the alternative,
    Plaintiffs argue that this Court should find Section 11.3(b) ambiguous as to
    whether it allows such consolidation. 228
    Section 11.3(b) prohibits the Partnership from making loans “to or from any
    one borrower that would exceed, in the aggregate, an amount greater than 20% of
    224
    Partnership Agreement § 11.3(b) (emphasis added).
    225
    SAC ¶¶ 172-86, see also Pls.’ Ans. Br. 100.
    226
    Compare, e.g., SAC ¶ 168 (alleging that CTMGT comprised 31% of the outstanding
    loan balance of UDF III’s portfolio), with Entity Defs.’ Opening Br., Ex. O (promissory
    note to CTMGT and its subsidiaries as co-borrowers).
    227
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 102.
    228
    Id. 103.
    64
    the Offering Proceeds.”229        The language of Section 11.3(b) is unambiguous.
    “One” means “a single person or thing.”              Merriam Webster’s Collegiate
    Dictionary 812 (10th ed. 1997).            Delaware courts construe contract terms
    according to their plain meaning. Parker v. Barley Mill House Assocs., L.P., 
    38 A.3d 1255
    , at *2 (Del. 2012) (TABLE). Plaintiffs have not shown an adequate
    reason for this Court to ignore the plain meaning of the Partnership Agreement or
    to disregard the separate and distinct legal identities of affiliates of UDF I,
    Buffington Land, CTMGT, and their respective subsidiaries and affiliates when
    applying this provision of the contract.
    Plaintiffs also argue that the 20% loan concentration limit in Section 11.3(b)
    was breached solely as to loans to UDF I. 230          Plaintiffs allege that UDF III
    concentrated more than 20% of UDF III’s offering proceeds in UDF I as a single
    borrower through the UMT Participation Interest and the 2006 UDF I Loan.231
    This argument fails for the same reason discussed above. The allegations of the
    Complaint refer to loans to “UDF I and its subsidiaries” and “lending to UDF I and
    its affiliates” as exceeding the 20% threshold. 232 Plaintiffs have cited no facts to
    support an argument that subsidiaries and affiliates comprise one borrower. Nor
    229
    Partnership Agreement § 11.3(b).
    230
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 103.
    231
    SAC ¶ 176.
    232
    Id. ¶¶ 176-79.
    65
    do they offer legal argument to support that theory for purposes of applying this
    provision of the contract.
    Plaintiffs next allege that UMTH LD breached Sections 11.3(c) and 13.3 of
    the Partnership Agreement by failing to “obtain the required appraisals of the
    properties and collateral supposedly supporting the UMT Loan.” 233 Defendants
    argue that Section 11.3(c) does not require UDF III to independently obtain
    appraisals; it requires only that any loans be supported by “an appraisal of the
    property which secures the loan,” whether that appraisal was obtained by UDF III
    or by another lender. 234 That may be so, but Plaintiffs have alleged that the
    Partnership “did not [ ] obtain any appraisals of the collateral or other assurance
    that the loan was properly secured.”235 On the low pleading threshold on a motion
    to dismiss, this supports an inference that there were no appraisals of the properties
    supporting the UMT Loan from any source. Accordingly, this claim cannot be
    233
    Id. ¶¶ 187-89.
    234
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 64.
    235
    SAC ¶ 189.
    66
    dismissed. 236 Therefore, Plaintiffs have stated a claim for a breach of Section
    11.3(c).
    Section 13.3 requires that loans made to affiliates of UMTH LD be
    supported by a fairness opinion from an independent advisor.237                 The Entity
    Defendants’ Opening Brief attached UDF III’s Form 10-Q for the period ended
    September 30, 2015 (which is also incorporated by reference into the Complaint),
    which expressly states that UDF III “obtained an opinion from Jackson Claborn
    stating that the transactions are fair and at least as reasonable to the Partnership as
    a transaction with an unaffiliated party in similar circumstances.” 238 Plaintiffs
    made no argument on this issue in their Answering Brief, and the Court concludes
    that Plaintiffs have abandoned this claim. See Emerald P'rs, 
    726 A.2d at 1224
    (“Issues not briefed are deemed waived.”). Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ claim for
    breach of Section 13.3 is dismissed. Count V is dismissed, except for the breach of
    contract claim relating to Section 11.3(c).
    236
    Plaintiffs argue that even if an appraisal is obtained by another entity, Section 11.3(c)
    requires that UDF III maintain that appraisal in its records. Pls.’ Ans. Br. 104. Plaintiffs,
    however, have not pleaded that the appraisal is not in UDF III’s records. This new
    assertion only surfaced in Plaintiffs’ Answering Brief. Because the claim is not being
    dismissed, the Court need not address this late-blooming assertion. Nevertheless,
    Plaintiffs have not alleged how the mere failure to maintain an appraisal in the
    Partnership’s records could give rise to any damages.
    237
    SAC ¶ 188; Partnership Agreement § 13.3(a)(ii).
    238
    Defs.’ Opening Br., Ex. O. The Court does not take judicial notice of the truth of this
    representation in the SEC filing, but notes it to plausibly explain why Plaintiffs appear to
    have abandoned this claim.
    67
    8.    Count VI Alleges a Direct Breach of Contract Claim.
    Count VI asserts a direct claim that UMTH LD breached the Partnership
    Agreement: (1) by causing UDF III to cease distributions of the Cash Available for
    Distribution; 239 and (2) by causing UDF III to cease distributions of financial
    reports for UDF III. 240 Plaintiffs argue that Count VI fails to state a claim because
    the Complaint does not allege that there was any Cash Available for Distribution,
    and that Count VI should be dismissed for laches 241 and a failure to plead injury or
    damages resulting from any purported breach. 242
    As explained earlier, Plaintiffs have not stated a claim for breach of
    fiduciary duty for ceasing distributions of Cash Available for Distribution. The
    same reasoning is applicable here. Plaintiffs have not alleged that UDF III in fact
    has any Cash Available for Distribution in UDF III and, accordingly, have failed to
    plead a breach of Section 9.1 of the Partnership Agreement.
    Section 15.2 of the Partnership Agreement states that the “General Partner
    shall prepare or caused to be prepared” numerous reports, including required
    quarterly and annual reports to be filed with the SEC, 243 as well as an annual report
    239
    SAC ¶ 385.
    240
    Id.
    241
    The Court has already resolved which transactions are not barred by laches. See supra
    Section II(A)(1).
    242
    Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 53.
    243
    Partnership Agreement §§ 15.2(c), (d), (g), (h).
    68
    containing financial statements and a report of activities of the Partnership for the
    year to be sent to the Limited Partners. 244 In addition, “[t]he General Partner shall
    furnish each Limited Partner an annual statement of estimated Unit value.”245
    Plaintiffs allege that the General Partner has not provided these reports since
    2015. 246 Defendants’ only argument is that Plaintiffs have not alleged damages,
    relying upon Villare v. Beebe Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    2014 WL 1095331
    , at *4 (Del.
    Super. Mar. 19, 2014). Villare is inapposite. Villare was a decision on summary
    judgment where the court held there was no contract and even if there were, the
    plaintiff could not establish its lost profits theory of damages because the plaintiff
    did not have an expert. Here, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have met their
    minimal burden of alleging injury.         Furthermore, Plaintiffs have requested
    equitable relief, which could be available to enforce their information rights.
    Accordingly, the motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part as to Count
    VI.
    9.    The Complaint States a Claim for Unjust Enrichment.
    Count VII alleges that, “[b]y their wrongful acts and omissions, each
    Defendant was unjustly enriched at the expense of and to the detriment of UDF
    244
    
    Id.
     § 15.2(b).
    245
    Id. § 15.2(f).
    246
    SAC ¶¶ 264-267, 385.
    69
    III.” 247    Plaintiffs assert that the Fiduciary Defendants were unjustly enriched
    through their breach of fiduciary duty, while the remaining Defendants knowingly
    participated in and unjustly benefited from those breaches. 248              The Entity
    Defendants argue the unjust enrichment claim must be dismissed because the
    parties’ relationship is governed by contract, which precludes an unjust enrichment
    claim. They also argue Plaintiffs fail to specify a direct relationship between the
    challenged transactions and any benefit to several of the Entity Defendants.249
    Wissink, Obert, and Youngblood separately move to dismiss the unjust enrichment
    claim on the grounds that it is premised upon the breach of a fiduciary duty that
    they do not owe. 250
    Unjust enrichment is the “unjust retention of a benefit to the loss of another,
    or the retention of money or property of another against the fundamental principles
    of justice or equity and good conscience.” Nemec v. Shrader, 
    991 A.2d 1120
    , 1130
    (Del. 2010). The elements of unjust enrichment are: (i) an enrichment, (ii) an
    impoverishment, (iii) a relation between the enrichment and impoverishment,
    (iv) the absence of justification, and (v) the absence of a remedy provided by law.
    Id.; Jackson Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Kennedy, 
    741 A.2d 377
    , 393 (Del. Ch. 1999).
    247
    Id. ¶ 388.
    248
    Id. ¶ 390.
    249
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 55-56.
    250
    Individual Defs.’ Opening Br. 40-41.
    70
    Courts developed unjust enrichment as a theory of recovery to remedy the absence
    of a formal contract. ID Biomedical Corp. v. TM Tech., Inc., 
    1995 WL 130743
    , at
    *15 (Del. Ch. Mar. 16, 1995).
    In evaluating the unjust enrichment claim, the Court must first determine
    whether a contract governs the parties’ relationship.               “If a contract
    comprehensively governs the parties’ relationship, then it alone must provide the
    measure of the plaintiff’s rights, and any claim of unjust enrichment will be
    denied.” Great Hill Equity P’rs IV, LP v. SIG Growth Equity Fund I, LLLP, 
    2014 WL 6703980
    , at *27 (Del. Ch. Nov. 26, 2014) (internal quotations omitted).
    “[T]his Court routinely dismisses unjust enrichment claims that are premised on an
    ‘express, enforceable contract that controls the parties’ relationship’ because
    damages is an available remedy at law for breach of contract.” Veloric v. J.G.
    Wentworth, Inc., 
    2014 WL 4639217
    , at *19 (Del. Ch. Sept. 18, 2014) (quoting
    Kuroda v. SPJS Holdings, L.L.C., 
    971 A.2d 872
    , 891 (Del. Ch. 2009)).
    Furthermore, the Plaintiffs cannot use “a claim for unjust enrichment to extend the
    obligations of a contract to [persons] who are not parties to the contract.” Kuroda,
    
    971 A.2d at 892
    .
    Plaintiffs argue the relationship here is governed not only by contract, but “is
    also governed by common law fiduciary duties” and that the unjust profits are the
    71
    result of breaches of fiduciary duty. 251          Plaintiffs also assert that the unjust
    enrichment claim is an alternative to damages for breach of fiduciary duty. 252
    The essence of the unjust enrichment claim is that the Fiduciary Defendants
    breached their fiduciary duties through the challenged loan transactions to
    affiliated UDF funds or the Developer Borrowers and were unjustly enriched—
    directly or indirectly—through additional fees and increased value of their
    subordinated profits interests in UDF I and UDF II. 253
    Based upon the allegations in the Complaint and the parties’ briefing, the
    parties have not sufficiently joined issue on whether each of the challenged
    transactions are governed by a contract that comprehensively governs the
    relationship among UDF III and the Entity Defendants. The Entity Defendants
    seemingly rely on Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V., 
    62 A.3d 26
     (Del.
    Ch. 2012), for the proposition that Plaintiffs do not allege a direct relationship
    between UDF III’s loans to affiliates and non-parties and any corresponding
    benefit to UMT, UMT Holdings and UMTH General.254 Vichi was a decision on
    summary judgment, not a motion to dismiss where the pleading standard is much
    lower. In Vichi, the plaintiff sought to hold a non-party to the contract liable for
    251
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 106.
    252
    
    Id.
    253
    SAC ¶¶ 150, 316, 326, 334, 340.
    254
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 56; Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 54.
    72
    the counter-party’s breach. The Court granted summary judgment for the non-
    contracting defendant because a contract governed the relationship and the plaintiff
    could not use unjust enrichment to hold a non-contracting party liable. The Court
    also rejected plaintiff’s argument that the loan directly benefited the non-
    contracting party through reduced investment risk and enhanced reputational
    benefits. 
    Id. at 60-61
    . Unlike in Vichi, the Plaintiffs here have alleged facts to
    support more than a reasonable inference that the benefits obtained were financial
    and direct. Accordingly, the Court cannot determine, as a matter of law, that any
    of the unjust enrichment claims should be dismissed solely on the grounds that
    relationships were comprehensively governed by contract.
    As to the other grounds for dismissal, the Court concludes that the claim for
    unjust enrichment must be dismissed as to UMT Services and UMT. Plaintiffs
    specifically pointed to paragraphs 150, 316, 326, 330, 334, and 340 of the
    Complaint as allegations showing “unjust profits obtained” by several of the Entity
    Defendants as a result of the Partnership’s lending. But those paragraphs do not
    allege facts to support a reasonable inference that UMT Services or UMT were
    unjustly enriched. Therefore, Count VII is dismissed as to those two Defendants.
    At this stage, the Court cannot dismiss the unjust enrichment claims as to the
    Individual Defendants. It is unlikely that those who have been determined to owe
    fiduciary duties—UMTH LD, UMT Services, Greenlaw, Etter, Wilson, and
    73
    Wissink—“could be liable for unjust enrichment under circumstances when they
    would not also be liable for a breach of fiduciary duty.” Frederick Hsu Living
    Trust v. ODN Hldg. Corp., 
    2017 WL 1437308
    , at *43 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017).
    Yet it is possible that they could have a defense to fiduciary duty liability but the
    profits they received could have resulted from a fiduciary breach. 
    Id.
     Under those
    circumstances, the unjust enrichment claim could be a vehicle for the Partnership’s
    recovery. 
    Id.
     That same rationale supports the Plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claims
    against Obert and Youngblood. Although the Court has concluded that they do not
    owe fiduciary duties, the Plaintiffs may be able to show that the profits they are
    alleged to have obtained are without justification.
    B.     Motion to Dismiss for Demand Futility
    1.     The Legal Standard
    The Defendants have moved to dismiss the derivative claims arising from
    the Partnership’s loan transactions with the Developer Borrowers for failure to
    plead demand futility. 255 A limited partner seeking to pursue a derivative claim on
    behalf of the limited partnership must “set forth with particularity the effort, if any,
    of the plaintiff to secure initiation of the action by a general partner or the reasons
    for not making the effort.” 6 Del. C. § 17-1003. “Delaware courts look to
    pleading standards developed in the corporate context to determine whether a
    255
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 10.
    74
    limited partner has alleged particularized facts satisfying section 17-1003
    requirements.” Forsythe, 
    2007 WL 2982247
    , at *5.
    The parties agree that demand futility here is governed by the Aronson
    test.256   Under Aronson, “to show demand futility, [Plaintiffs] must provide
    particularized factual allegations that raise a reasonable doubt that (1) the directors
    are disinterested and independent [or] (2) the challenged transaction was otherwise
    the product of a valid exercise of business judgment.” In re Citigroup Inc., 964
    A.2d at 120 (second alteration in original) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). Under the first prong:
    Disinterested means that directors can neither appear on
    both sides of a transaction nor expect to derive any
    personal financial benefit from it in the sense of self-
    dealing, as opposed to a benefit which devolves upon the
    corporation or all stockholders generally. Independence
    means that a director’s decision is based on the corporate
    merits of the subject before the board rather than
    extraneous considerations or influences.
    In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 
    906 A.2d 808
    , 821 (Del. Ch. 2005)
    (internal quotations omitted). With respect to the second prong, this Court has
    explained that Plaintiffs must “plead particularized facts sufficient to raise (1) a
    reason to doubt that the action was taken honestly and in good faith or (2) a reason
    256
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 12-13; Pls.’ Ans. Br. 29. See Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
     (Del. 1984). The Aronson test applies when “a decision of the board of directors is
    being challenged in the derivative suit.” Rales v. Blasband, 
    634 A.2d 927
    , 933 (Del.
    1993).
    75
    to doubt that the board was adequately informed in making the decision.” Lenois
    v. Lawal, 
    2017 WL 5289611
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. Nov. 7, 2017) (quoting In re J.P.
    Morgan Chase, 
    906 A.2d at 824
    )). “Certainly, if this is an ‘interested’ director
    transaction, such that the business judgment rule is inapplicable to the board
    majority approving the transaction, then the inquiry ceases.” Aronson, 
    473 A.2d at 815
    . Under those circumstances, the defendant directors—or the general partner
    and its controllers in the case of a limited partnership—face sufficient risk from a
    lawsuit challenging the transaction they approved for demand to be futile. Hughes
    v. Xiaoming Hu, 
    2020 WL 1987029
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Apr. 27, 2020).
    On a motion to dismiss, the “well-pleaded factual allegations of the
    derivative complaint are accepted as true on such a motion.” Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 931
    . “[T]he court [is] bound to draw all inferences from those particularized facts
    in favor of the plaintiff, not the defendant, when dismissal of a derivative
    complaint is sought.” Delaware Cty. Employees Ret. Fund v. Sanchez, 
    124 A.3d 1017
    , 1022 (Del. 2015). “The requirement of factual particularity does not entitle
    a court to discredit or weigh the persuasiveness of well-pled allegations.”
    Louisiana Mun. Police Employees’ Ret. Sys. v. Pyott, 
    46 A.3d 313
    , 351 (Del. Ch.
    2012), rev’d on other grounds, 
    74 A.3d 612
     (Del. 2013). Plaintiffs only need to
    “make a threshold showing, through the allegation of particularized facts, that the[]
    claims have some merit.” Pyott, 
    46 A.3d at 351
     (quoting Rales, 
    634 A.2d at 934
    ).
    76
    The court will examine all facts pleaded to determine whether, when taken
    together, they cast a reasonable doubt on the general partner’s disinterest or
    independence in considering a demand to pursue claims concerning the Developer
    Borrower transactions.     See Cal. Pub. Empl. Ret. Sys. v. Coulter, 
    2002 WL 31888343
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Dec. 18, 2002) (“If taken separately, none of the
    individual allegations would be adequate to raise a reasonable doubt as to
    Mandigo's disinterest or independence. . . . Taken together, they give this Court
    reason to doubt that Mandigo is disinterested and independent.”).
    The parties disagree as to whether the demand futility analysis should be
    conducted solely from the perspective of UDF III’s General Partner, UMTH LD,
    or the individuals with ultimate decision-making authority regarding any litigation
    demand. Defendants argue that the Court may only consider whether the General
    Partner is disinterested and independent.257 Plaintiffs argue that the Court should
    also look to Etter and Greenlaw, who constitute a majority of the board of UMT
    257
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 13-14. The Defendants argue that demand futility must be
    considered only at the General Partner level and not to the humans that control it. For
    this proposition, the Defendants primarily rely upon Gotham v. Hallwood Realty
    Partners, L.P., 
    1998 WL 32631
     (Del. Ch. Nov. 10, 1998), and Wenske v. Blue Bell
    Creameries, Inc., 
    2018 WL 3337531
     (Del. Ch. July 6, 2018). Because I conclude that
    Plaintiffs have established demand futility as to the General Partner, I need not decide
    this issue. Cf. DiRienzo v. Lichtenstein, 
    2013 WL 5503034
    , at *18 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30,
    2013) (holding demand should be directed to the board of the general partner because the
    board was elected by the limited partners and owed fiduciary duties to the limited
    partners).
    77
    Services, the general partner to UMTH LD. 258 As discussed below, Plaintiffs have
    alleged facts sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt that UMTH LD is disinterested
    and independent, and the Court needs not consider whether demand futility can be
    satisfied by raising reasonable doubt as to the disinterestedness and independence
    of Etter and Greenlaw.
    2.     Plaintiffs Have Pleaded Facts Giving Rise to a Reasonable
    Doubt that UMTH LD Is Disinterested and Independent.
    Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ claims relating to (1) the Shahan Prairie
    loan,259 (2) the violation of the loan concentration limits in the Partnership
    Agreement, and (3) the other loans to the Developer Borrowers and their affiliates
    must be dismissed for failure to plead demand futility. 260 Any claim relating to the
    Shahan Prairie loan and the derivative claims alleging violation of the loan
    concentration limitations in the Partnership Agreement have already been
    dismissed. Therefore, the remaining derivative claims subject to challenge for
    failure to plead demand futility are the remaining loans to the Developer
    Borrowers and their affiliates.
    258
    Pls.’ Ans. Br. 28-31.
    259
    Plaintiffs do not appear to bring a claim challenging the Shahan Prairie loan, but rather
    allege the unusual circumstances surrounding the Shahan Prairie loan and its repayment
    as a “demonstration of the existence of the overall scheme[.]” Pls.’ Ans. Br. 62 n.32.
    The allegations relating to the Shahan Prairie loan do not independently state a claim
    because the Complaint alleges the loan has been repaid in full and does not allege
    damages as to that transaction.
    260
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 15-16; Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 15.
    78
    The Complaint sufficiently alleges that UMTH LD, as the general partner of
    UDF III, is not disinterested and independent with respect to each of UDF III’s
    loans to CTMGT, Buffington, and their respective affiliates. Plaintiffs have
    adequately alleged that UMTH LD derives a financial benefit not shared with the
    Limited Partners and that its actions were designed to enrich UMTH LD and its
    controllers at UDF III’s expense with respect to its loans to the Developer
    Borrowers. See In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 
    906 A.2d 808
    , 821
    (Del. Ch. 2005) (defining disinterestedness and independence).
    a.     Plaintiffs Have Pleaded Facts From Which the Court
    Can Reasonably Infer that UMTH LD Was Engaged
    in a Scheme to Pay Affiliated Funds Through Loans
    to the Developer Borrowers.
    As a threshold matter, the Complaint contains well-pleaded allegations that
    Defendants, including UMTH LD, were involved in a general scheme to funnel
    money from later-formed UDF Funds to pay debts of earlier UDF Funds. While
    some of Plaintiffs’ allegations do not directly relate to injuries sustained by UDF
    III and its Limited Partners, they are nevertheless well-pleaded allegations that
    Defendants have been improperly shuttling money from one UDF entity to another
    through real estate developers as part of a broader scheme to permit the earlier
    entities to pay off loans and make distributions.
    79
    Although the Shahan Prairie loan did not cause injury to UDF III because
    the loan to UDF III has been repaid, the Shahan Prairie loan remains an illustrative
    example of how Plaintiffs allege the scheme operates. Shahan Prairie is an affiliate
    of CTMGT and owns 102 acres of undeveloped property in Denton, Texas.261
    UDF I loaned $2.4 million to Shahan Prairie in 2004. 262 In September 2007, UDF
    III made a $1.9 million loan to Shahan Prairie secured by land.263           Shortly
    thereafter, in November 2007, Shahan Prairie repaid the UDF I loan in full. UDF
    III then increased the loan to Shahan Prairie three times, the final increase in
    February 2014 to approximately $4.8 million.264 In June 2015, UDF V made an
    $18.1 million loan to Shahan Prairie.        Immediately thereafter, Shahan Prairie
    repaid the UDF III loan in full. 265 The Complaint alleges that as of December
    2015, the Shahan Prairie land in Denton, Texas remains undeveloped.266
    The Plaintiffs also rely on allegations in the SEC Complaint as further
    evidence of a scheme sweeping in numerous United Development Fund entities.
    261
    SAC ¶¶ 129-30.
    262
    Id. ¶ 130.
    263
    Id. ¶ 131.
    264
    Id.
    265
    Id. ¶ 132.
    266
    Id. ¶ 134.
    80
    According to the SEC Complaint,267 in 2011, UDF IV began making loans to
    developers who had also borrowed money from UDF III. 268 When UDF III did not
    have sufficient funds to pay partnership distributions, the developers were directed
    to use the funds received from UDF IV to pay down their UDF III loans.269 In
    most of these cases, the developers never actually received the borrowed funds at
    all. Instead, the money was simply transferred from UDF IV to UDF III. 270 The
    Complaint alleges these transactions, which had not been disclosed to investors,
    resulted in at least $67 million of distributions to UDF III limited partners from
    UDF IV funds—or half of all distributions from January 2011 through December
    2015. 271 The Complaint alleges that the General Partner did not disclose to the
    Limited Partners that distributions were not being funded from operations of the
    fund, but rather through loans from affiliated funds to the Developer Borrowers.272
    267
    The SEC Complaint was filed after a four-year investigation and is attached to and
    incorporated by reference in the SAC.
    268
    SEC Compl. ¶ 3.
    269
    Id.
    270
    Id.
    271
    Id. ¶¶ 30-31.
    272
    SAC ¶ 150 (“UDF III investors were led to believe that their distributions were being
    paid from the operation of their fund. . . . UDF III investors would have considered it
    important when making an investment decision that the true source of a portion of their
    received distributions were not actually coming from funds from operations as disclosed
    in UDF III’s filings . . . but instead were the results of transfer from UDF IV.” (quoting
    SEC Compl. ¶¶ 32, 34)).
    81
    Defendants argue that any alleged scheme stopped short before it harmed
    UDF III. 273 Defendants note that the Shahan Prairie loan was repaid in full, and
    that the SEC Complaint contained no allegations that UDF III loans to the
    Developer Borrowers were used to repay loans to earlier funds within the United
    Development Funds family. Therefore, according to Defendants, Plaintiffs have
    not alleged particularized allegations to establish a disabling conflict as to UMTH
    LD for purposes of excusing demand. If these were the only allegations supporting
    demand futility, Defendants would prevail. But they are not the only allegations,
    and Plaintiffs have alleged well-pleaded facts from which the Court can reasonably
    infer that the alleged scheme did not, in fact, stop at UDF IV.
    b.    Plaintiffs Have Pleaded Facts From Which the Court
    Can Reasonably Infer that UMTH LD Has Siphoned
    Funds from UDF III.
    Plaintiffs have adequately alleged that UMTH LD is not independent with
    respect to the Developer Borrower transactions because those transactions were
    undertaken for the benefit of UDF I and II at the expense of UDF III and the
    Limited Partners.
    The Complaint contains allegations from which it is reasonable to infer that
    UDF III made loans to Buffington Land and its affiliates to benefit other UDF
    273
    See Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 19 (“Thus, UDF III Unit Holders such as Plaintiffs
    would benefit from the conduct alleged by the SEC.” (emphasis in original)).
    82
    affiliates. In November 2015, UDF III filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition
    against Lennar Buffington claiming a debt of $106.5 million. 274 According to
    Plaintiffs, the bankruptcy filings revealed that Lennar Buffington’s land remained
    undeveloped, that Lennar Buffington had a much smaller loan on its balance sheet
    to UDF I, and that Lennar Buffington had no ability to repay UDF III. 275 Plaintiffs
    allege that UDF III’s disclosures misled its investors into believing that these loans
    were used to fund real estate development projects. 276
    The Complaint contains well-pleaded allegations that any risk relating to the
    loans to Buffington Land were concealed from the Limited Partners. Plaintiffs
    make particularized allegations supporting a reasonable inference that the General
    Partner withheld from UDF III’s auditors the projections by Buffington Land that
    showed its inability to pay its loan balance to UDF III.             Instead, different
    projections were created to show Buffington Land being able to pay off the loan.277
    Thereafter, the Buffington Loan commitment was increased to $85 million and
    UDF III disclosed that full collectability was considered probable. In January
    2017, UDF III forgave more than $122 million in indebtedness and UDF I forgave
    274
    SAC ¶ 211 (“UDF III is listed in the debtor’s schedules of the Lennar Buffington
    bankruptcy proceeding as holding a $106.5 million claim. UDF I is listed in the debtor’s
    schedules as holding a $30.7 million claim.” (emphasis omitted)).
    275
    Id. ¶¶ 214-15.
    276
    Id. ¶ 122.
    277
    Id. ¶¶ 151-53.
    83
    more than $33 million in indebtedness to Buffington Land, including Lennar
    Buffington, for minimal consideration.278
    The Complaint also contains allegations that Defendants have caused UDF
    III to act against the interests of its Limited Partners with respect to the CTMGT
    Loan to CTMGT and its subsidiaries.           The CTMGT is a co-investment loan
    secured by collateral-sharing agreements which allocate the proceeds of the co-
    investment collateral between UDF III and UDF I. 279 Plaintiffs allege that, in July
    2015, Defendants caused UDF III to enter into an agreement permitting UDF III to
    defer its payment preference from CTMGT so that CTGMT and its subsidiaries
    could prioritize payments to UDF I.280 Such allegations are sufficient to raise a
    reasonable doubt that UMTH LD, as the General Partner of UDF III, was not
    independent regarding the UDF III’s Development Borrower loans.
    Plaintiffs have also alleged that UMTH LD was self-interested in the
    Developer Borrower transactions because UMTH LD had a financial interest in
    supporting UDF I and II, as well as to increase UDF III’s loan balance. According
    to Plaintiffs, UMTH LD derived two types of benefits from by originating,
    extending, and increasing UDF III’s loans to the Developer Borrowers. First,
    UMTH LD owns a 49.99% subordinated profits interest in UDF I and a 49.95%
    278
    See id. ¶ 217.
    279
    Id. ¶ 141.
    280
    Id. ¶ 142.
    84
    subordinated profits interest in UDF II.281 Second, UMTH LD directly benefits
    from greater loan balances at UDF III because it extracts a 0.25% annual servicing
    fee from UDF III for UDF III’s aggregated outstanding loan balances.282 These
    allegations support a reasonable inference that UMTH LD had a pecuniary interest
    not shared with the Limited Partners in originating, extending, and increasing loans
    to the Developer Borrowers.         According to the Complaint, the Developer
    Borrowers were incentivized to accept the loans from UDF III to pay their loans to
    UDF I and II because their total indebtedness remained the same, and the UDF III
    loans were provided at a lower rate than the prior loans to UDF I and II. 283 Given
    the number and magnitude of these loans, it is a reasonable inference that any
    financial benefits UMTH LD obtained through these transactions were material. 284
    Defendants raise two arguments that UMTH LD can impartially evaluate a
    demand. First, Defendants argue that UMTH LD does not technically stand on
    both sides of a transaction with UDF III because the Developer Borrowers, UDF I,
    281
    Id. ¶ 340(a)-(b).
    282
    Id. ¶ 257. UDF III paid UMTH LD over $7.6 million in mortgage servicing fees
    through September 2015. Id.
    283
    Id. ¶¶ 123-24.
    284
    See id. ¶¶ 127 (“UDF III’s SEC filings indicate that as of September 30, 2015, UDF
    III’s loan to Buffington Land had comprised 25% of its loan portfolio; its loans to
    CTMGT comprised another 31% of the portfolio; and its loans to CTMGT’s affiliates
    comprised an additional 13%.”); 135 (alleging that UDF III’s forgiveness of $122 million
    indebtedness owed to UDF III by Buffington Land represented “approximately 31% of
    UDF III’s loan portfolio as of September 30, 2015”).
    85
    and UDF II serve as intermediaries.285 Notably, however, Defendants do not argue
    that the Complaint fails for demand futility regarding other challenged transactions
    between UDF III, UDF IV, and UDF IV subsidiaries, and merely interposing the
    Developer Borrowers as a mechanism to funnel funds from one related entity to
    another related entity does not render the allegations so “remote” and “circuitous”
    as to defeat the reasonable inference that these transactions were intended to
    benefit UMTH LD at UDF III’s expense.286
    Second, the Defendants argue that the CTMGT and Buffington loans
    challenged in the Complaint consist of several loans to affiliates of those entities
    that are not individually challenged. However, Defendants correctly acknowledge
    285
    Entity Defs.’ Opening Br. 20 (citing In re Coca-Cola Enters., Inc. S’holders Litig.,
    
    2007 WL 3122370
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct. 17, 2007)). Coca-Cola is distinguishable. In
    Coca-Cola, the Court found that allegations of shared control were insufficient where
    Coca-Cola Company was alleged to control Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc. but only named
    three of the latter company’s thirteen directors and owned a 36% share. By contrast, the
    Complaint alleges facts sufficient to reasonably infer that UMTH LD, UDF III, and UDF
    I are dominated by the same persons. For example, among the many interrelationships
    between Defendants, Etter and Greenlaw collectively own a majority of UMT Holdings
    (the owner of UMTH LD) and are joint owners of UMT Services, which is argued to be
    at the “top of [UDF III’s] control structure.” Pls.’ Ans. Br. 5. Etter and Greenlaw also
    own a majority of UDF I’s general partner and the entirety of UDF II’s general partner.
    Etter and Greenlaw are also alleged to have acted in concert by forming UMT Services,
    UMT Holding, UMTH General, and UMTH LD. SAC ¶¶ 31-32, 46.
    286
    SAC ¶ 122 (“The proceeds of the loans that Defendants caused UDF III to make to the
    Developer Borrowers were not used to fund real estate development projects. Rather,
    UDF III’s loan proceeds allowed the Developer Borrowers to pay down loans to earlier
    affiliates of UDF III. Upon information and belief, including the SEC Action’s
    allegations based on its multi-year investigation, Defendants specifically directed the
    Developer Borrowers to use UDF III’s loan proceeds in this manner.”); see also id. ¶ 9
    (alleging that the Developer Borrowers were directed to use loan proceeds to pay off
    earlier United Development Funds).
    86
    that the Court is not required to view any one transaction in isolation or ignore the
    allegations that provide relevant context. 287 In its totality, the Complaint contains
    allegations sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt that UMTH LD is disinterested
    and independent with respect to each of the loans to the Developer Borrowers. 288
    Although the Court is not determining demand futility based upon the
    independence or disinterestedness of the humans that ultimately control it, it is
    relevant to note that in responding to a demand, the General Partner would be
    required to consider litigation against all three individuals that ultimately control
    the General Partner (Etter, Greenlaw, and Wilson) and six individuals that
    ultimately own nearly 100% of the General Partner (Etter, Greenlaw, Wilson,
    Wissink, Obert, and Youngblood).
    Of those six individuals, two of them—Etter and Greenlaw—constitute a
    majority of the board of the General Partners’ general partner, and they indirectly
    own a majority interest in the General Partner. In that regard, the General Partner
    287
    Entity Defs.’ Reply Br. 5. “In deciding whether to consider a sequence of transactions
    separately or collectively, the Court reviews the circumstances surrounding the
    challenged transactions, as alleged by the particularized facts of the complaint, to decide
    whether it can be reasonably inferred that those transactions constituted a single, self-
    interested scheme.” In re Nat’l Auto Credit, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    2003 WL 139768
    , at
    *9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10, 2003).
    288
    See SAC ¶¶ 136 (alleging that UDF III made an approximately $77 million loan to
    Buffington Land in 2008), 140 (alleging that UDF III originated a $25 million loan to
    CTMGT and its subsidiaries in 2007); see also id. ¶ 121 (alleging that UDF III began to
    make loans to CTMGT and Buffington Land shortly after UDF III’s formation); 76
    (alleging that UDF I made loans to CTMGT, Buffington Land, and their affiliates, and
    that UDF II participated in those loans).
    87
    publicly stated just three months after the filing of the original complaint in this
    action that it would “contest any charges that may be brought” by the SEC against
    “the Partnership or any individuals associated with the Partnership and its general
    partner.” 289 Although the full details of the Wells Notice that triggered the General
    Partner’s response were not released, the Wells Notice followed an investigation
    that began in April 2014 and culminated in the SEC complaint and simultaneous
    consent judgment that were filed in July 2018. If the General Partner were to
    move forward with pursing the claims asserted by the Plaintiffs in this action, it
    likely would have undercut the persuasive force of any Wells submission that the
    General Partner said would “explain the Partnership’s views and its believe that no
    enforcement action is warranted against the Partnership or any individuals
    associated with the Partnership and its general partner.”290 It also could have
    potentially undercut the Partnership’s avowed intention to “contest any charges
    that may be brought.” 291 C.f. In re Fitbit, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2018 WL 6587159
    ,
    at *16-17 (Del. Ch. Dec. 14, 2018) (observing that if the corporation were to
    pursue derivative claims against directors it would undercut or even compromise
    the defense of all defendants in a parallel securities action).
    289
    UDF III, Form 8-K (Oct. 18, 2016); see also SAC ¶ 148 (referencing the October 18,
    2016 Form 8-K).
    290
    
    Id.
    291
    
    Id.
    88
    The General Partner’s public rebuke of any and all potential claims against
    “any individuals associated with the Partnership and its general partner” further
    supports a pleading stage inference that the General Partner could not exercise
    independent and disinterested business judgment in responding to a demand to
    commence litigation against the three directors that control the General Partner and
    the six persons that own it.292
    At bottom, evaluating the ability of a board—or in this instance, a general
    partner—to impartially consider a demand is a “contextual inquiry.” 293 Viewed in
    292
    I find the General Partner’s statements here to be distinguishable from those in
    Highland Legacy Ltd. v. Singer, 
    2006 WL 741939
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Mar. 17, 2006), and
    Tilden v. Cunningham, 
    2018 WL 5307706
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Oct. 26, 2018). In both of
    those cases, the Court would not impute to otherwise independent and disinterested
    directors a statement by the company that derivative litigation was without merit. Singer,
    
    2006 WL 741939
    , at *6 (“It would be unreasonable for this court to conclude that a board
    made up of a majority of independent directors could not be asked to pursue this
    litigation simply because the company expressed a belief in a public filing that the claims
    in a series of related litigations were unfounded.” (emphasis added)); Tilden, 
    2018 WL 5307706
    , at *11 (“Independent and disinterested directors are presumed to be fit to
    evaluate impartially the merits of a demand to pursue legal claims.”); see also Kops v.
    Hassell, 
    2016 WL 7011569
    , at *2-3 (Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2016) (concluding that a
    proclamation of innocence in a newspaper advertisement did not constitute de facto
    rejection of a derivative demand where there was no showing that the board or special
    committee considering the demand was “involved in drafting, preparing, or authorizing
    the advertisement”). Unlike in Singer and Tilden, the demand inquiry here is not, at least
    in the first instance, considered from the perspective of an otherwise disinterested and
    independent board, but rather the General Partner itself—which is the entity that issued
    the statement. Cf. Biondi v. Scrushy, 
    820 A.2d 1148
    , 1166 (Del. Ch. 2003) (finding that a
    special committee's “publicly and prematurely issued statements exculpating one of the
    key company insiders whose conduct is supposed to be impartially investigated,” while
    the investigation was underway, undermined the court's confidence in the special
    litigation committee's process).
    293
    Beam v. Stewart, 
    845 A.2d 1040
    , 1049 (Del. 2004).
    89
    isolation, any one or even several of the allegations summarized above would not
    be sufficient to excuse demand on the General Partner as to the Developer
    Borrower transactions.        Viewed collectively, however, with all reasonable
    inferences drawn in Plaintiffs’ favor, I am persuaded that Plaintiffs have alleged
    sufficient particularized facts that to support a reasonable inference that the
    General Partner was involved in a broad scheme that utilized UDF III loans to two
    favored real estate development firms and their affiliates to maintain partnership
    distributions at affiliated funds. The allegations are sufficient to excuse demand as
    to the derivative claims concerning the specific Borrower Loan transactions
    alleged in the Complaint. See Sanchez, 
    124 A.3d at 1019
     (“[I]t is important that
    the trial court consider all particularized facts pled by the plaintiffs about the
    relationships between the director and the interested party in their totality and not
    in isolation from each other, and draw all reasonable inferences from the totality of
    those facts in favor of the plaintiffs.”).
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6), the
    motion to dismiss is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part and as to as to Counts
    I, II, V, and VI, DENIED as to Count IV, and GRANTED as to Counts III and VII.
    The motion to dismiss pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 is DENIED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    90
    APPENDIX
    91