Searchlight CST, L.P. v. MediaMath Holdings, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    SEARCHLIGHT CST, L.P.,                  )
    )
    Plaintiff,            )
    )
    v.                                ) C.A. No. 2020-0652-SG
    )
    MEDIAMATH HOLDINGS, INC.,               )
    )
    Defendant.            )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: August 26, 2020
    Date Decided: September 28, 2020
    Eric D. Schwartz, Thomas W. Briggs, Jr., and Thomas P. Will, of MORRIS,
    NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL:
    Eric D. Winston, Kristen Bird, and Bennett Murphy, of QUINN EMANUEL
    URQUHART & SULLIVAN LLP, Los Angeles, California, Attorneys for Plaintiff
    Searchlight CST, L.P.
    Richard I.G. Jones, Jr., Michael W. McDermott, David B. Anthony, and Peter C.
    McGivney, of BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL:
    David H. Wollmuth, R. Scott Thompson, Brad J. Axelrod, Joshua M. Slocum, and
    John R. Hein, of WOLLMUTH MAHER & DEUTSCH LLP, New Yok, New York,
    Attorneys for Defendant MediaMath Holdings, Inc.
    GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
    This matter is before me on the Plaintiff’s request for a Temporary Restraining
    Order and the Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgement, which were argued
    together on an expedited basis. My consideration requires a straightforward exercise
    in contract interpretation.    The Plaintiff is an investor in the Defendant.          In
    connection with its purchase of preferred stock, it contracted (via an investor rights
    agreement) for certain limitations on the Defendant’s freedom of action, including a
    limit on the amount of indebtedness that the Defendant is able to incur. That is the
    contractual provision at issue here. The Defendant is in the process of negotiating a
    new credit facility, and the Plaintiff contends that the Defendant is contractually
    prohibited from entering the facility (or borrowing thereunder) without its consent.
    The Defendant construes the contractual provision to provide a debt limit such that
    it is permitted to enter the new debt facility, without obtaining the Plaintiff’s consent.
    It faces a potential default under the existing credit facility; thus the expedited nature
    of this litigation. The parties are in agreement that the contractual language at issue
    is unambiguous, but they fundamentally disagree about its meaning.
    Upon review, I find that the contract does not require the Defendant to obtain
    the Plaintiff’s consent before entering or borrowing under the proposed credit
    facility, up to $100 million. Accordingly, I grant the Defendant’s Motion for
    Summary Judgment, and the TRO request is moot. My reasoning follows.
    1
    I. BACKGROUND 1
    A. The Parties
    Defendant MediaMath Holdings, Inc. (“MediaMath”) is a Delaware
    corporation.2     MediaMath is in the digital advertising industry, and provides
    advertisers, advertising agencies, and brands with technology and support to plan,
    optimize, and analyze marketing programs across digital media. 3
    Plaintiff Searchlight CST, L.P. (“Searchlight”) is a Delaware limited
    partnership and a preferred shareholder of MediaMath.4 Searchlight invested in
    MediaMath in June of 2018.5
    B. MediaMath’s Credit Agreement
    In May 2017, more than a year before Searchlight’s investment, MediaMath
    executed a Credit and Guaranty Agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) with lenders
    including Goldman Sachs Bank USA, and Santandar Bank, N.A. (the “Lenders”).6
    The Credit Agreement provides for a secured revolving credit facility, pursuant to
    1
    I base the facts for this summary judgment ruling on the evidence submitted under affidavit with
    the parties’ papers as well as the parties’ pleadings where undisputed facts are involved.
    2
    Transmittal Aff. of Richard I. G. Jones, Jr., Esq. in Opp’n to TRO and in Supp. of Summ. J.
    (“Jones Aff.”), Ex. 1, Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of MediaMath Holdings,
    Inc. (“MediaMath Charter”), at 1, Dkt. No. 23.
    3
    Unsworn Declaration of Daniel Bisgeier (“Bisgeier Decl.”) ¶ 2, Dkt. No. 23.
    4
    Jones Aff., Ex. 2, Searchlight Capital Partners, L.P. Form ADV Part 2A (“Searchlight Form
    ADV”), at Item 4.A, Dkt. No. 23.
    5
    Verified Compl. For Injunctive Relief (“Compl.”) ¶ 16, Dkt. No. 1; Def.’s Answer to Pl.’s
    Verified Compl. And Def.’s Verified Countercl. with Certificate of Service (“Answer”) ¶ 16, Dkt.
    No. 62.
    6
    Compl., Ex. B, Credit and Guaranty Agreement (“Credit Agreement”).
    2
    which the Lenders committed to fund up to $175 million from which MediaMath
    could borrow. 7
    The Credit Agreement limits MediaMath’s ability to incur “Indebtedness”
    subject to certain exceptions.8 The term “Indebtedness” is a category encompassing
    eight different types of obligations, one of which is “all indebtedness for borrowed
    money.” 9    The remaining seven types of obligations do not necessarily involve
    borrowed money. For example, Indebtedness also includes “notes payable and
    drafts accepted representing extensions of credit whether or not representing
    obligations for borrowed money” 10 and “any obligation owed for all or any part of
    the deferred purchase price of property or services.”11 One type of permitted
    Indebtedness is that MediaMath may incur the “Obligations.”12 The “Obligations”
    are, in essence, the principal, interest, and other obligations of MediaMath incurred
    under the Credit Agreement. 13
    The aggregate amount of the “Revolving Commitments” of the Lenders is
    $175 million. 14    This means that that the Lenders must be prepared to lend
    MediaMath loans in that aggregate amount. But the amount MediaMath may borrow
    7
    Id. 8
    
    Id., § 6.1.
    9
    
    Id., § 1.1, “Indebtedness.”
    
    10
    Id., § 1.1(iii). 11
    
    Id., § 1.1(iv).
    12
    
    Id., § 6.1(a).
    13
    
       Id., § 1.1, “Obligations.”
    
    14
    Id., § 1.1, “Revolving
    Commitment.”
    3
    is also limited by another factor. Specifically, the aggregate principal amount of all
    outstanding loans under the Credit Agreement15 cannot exceed the lesser of (i) $175
    million and (ii) the “Borrowing Base.” 16 The Borrowing Base’s primary input is
    “Eligible Accounts,” 17 which includes MediaMath’s accounts receivable with
    certain exclusions.18 Therefore, the aggregate amount MediaMath may borrow
    under the Credit Agreement—and, consequently, the maximum Obligations
    MediaMath can be responsible to repay19—is limited by way of a test on
    MediaMath’s accounts receivable through the Borrowing Base.
    C. Searchlight’s Investment in MediaMath
    On June 29, 2018, Searchlight invested $119.7 million in MediaMath in return
    for 126,000 shares of Series D Preferred Stock (the “Series D Preferred Stock”),
    pursuant to a Series D Preferred Stock purchase agreement. 20 The key economic
    elements of Searchlight’s Series D Preferred Stock investment included (a) a flat
    15
    Plus “Letter of Credit Usage,” which is not pertinent here.
    16
    Credit Agreement, § 2.2.
    17
    Id., § 1.1 “Borrowing
    Base” (“‘Borrowing Base’ means, as of any date of calculation, a dollar
    amount equal to (i) the sum of: (x) 85% of Eligible Accounts calculated pursuant to the Borrowing
    Base Certificate most recently delivered to the Agents in accordance with the terms hereof plus
    (y) if a Permitted Overadvance Period is then in effect in accordance with the terms of this
    Agreement, the Permitted Overadvance, minus (ii) (without duplication of any criteria or
    limitations addressed by the definition of Eligible Accounts) Reserves then established by the
    Administrative Agent in its Permitted Discretion in accordance with Section 2.2(d).”).
    18
    Id., § 1.1 “Eligible
    Accounts,” “Accounts.” The accounts receivable that are excluded from
    Eligible Accounts (and thus from Borrowing Base) are determined according to the definition of
    “Eligible Accounts,” which is complex and need not be fully recited for the purposes of this
    Opinion.
    19
    And which are permitted Indebtedness.
    20
    Compl. ¶ 16; Answer ¶ 16.
    4
    15% annual interest rate, paid-in-kind and compounded quarterly and (b) 3.0%
    detachable warrants, of which 50% were struck at a cost basis of $1.3 billion equity
    value and 50% with a de minimis cost basis. 21 Searchlight’s investment is the most
    senior equity security in MediaMath’s debt waterfall.22
    When Searchlight invested in MediaMath, the parties entered into an
    Amended and Restated Investor Rights Agreement (the “IRA”). 23 For purposes of
    this Memorandum Opinion, the only relevant parts of the IRA are Section 3.10(a)(iii)
    and Section 3.10(b). 24 Section 3.10(a)(iii) provides, that:
    (a) At any time when shares of Series D Stock are outstanding, in
    addition to any other vote or consent required by the Certificate or by
    law, the Company shall not, nor permit any subsidiary of the Company
    to, effect or validate any of the following actions (whether by
    amendment, merger, consolidation, or otherwise), without the written
    approval of Searchlight (the “Series D Approval”):
    (iii) incur indebtedness that (A) is in excess of the greater of (x) three
    times (3x) the Company’s Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA (as defined
    in the agreements governing the Credit Facility 25 (as defined below),
    the “Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA”) for the preceding twelve (12)
    months as shown on the latest financial statements delivered to the
    Administrative Agent under the Company’s credit facility which is in
    place as of the date of this Agreement (the “Credit Facility”) and (y)
    21
    Compl. ¶ 21; Answer ¶ 21.
    22
    Compl. ¶ 30; Answer ¶ 30.
    23
    Compl., Ex A, Amended and Restated Investor Rights Agreement (“IRA”).
    24
    The parties, at oral argument, each took positions regarding Sections 2.2(c) and 2.13(e), by way
    of assisting in the interpretation of Section 3.10(a)(iii). I do not find that either section is
    particularly helpful in parsing the language of Section 3.10(a)(iii); although Section 3.10(a)(iii) is
    lengthy, I find that it speaks for itself, as an unambiguous provision tends to do.
    25
    The IRA refers to the credit facility provided for in the Credit Agreement as the “Credit Facility.”
    For purposes of this Opinion, I will refer to the agreement itself as the Credit Agreement, which
    lays out a scheme for a secured revolving credit facility with a $175 million loan commitment.
    5
    the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted under the terms of the
    Credit Facility or any successor or replacement facility having financial
    terms regarding maximum indebtedness no less restrictive than those
    applicable to the Credit Facility, assuming the Credit Facility could be
    fully drawn but not giving effect to any repayments and borrowings
    thereunder, or (B) would cause the Company’s total indebtedness for
    borrowed money (excluding, for the avoidance of doubt, obligations
    with respect to the Series D Stock and Indebtedness (as defined in the
    agreements governing the Credit Facility) permitted to be incurred by
    the Company or its subsidiaries in accordance with the terms of the
    Credit Facility), after giving effect to such incurrence, to exceed
    $175,000,000; provided that on and after January 1, 2019, if the
    Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA for the preceding twelve (12) months
    as shown on the latest financial statements delivered to the
    Administrative Agent under the Credit [Agreement] or any subsequent
    period of twelve (12) months as shown on the latest financial statements
    delivered to the Administrative Agent under the Credit [Agreement] is
    at least $43,000,000, then such maximum permitted indebtedness
    amount shall increase from $175,000,000 to $225,000,000[.]26
    Section 3.10(b) provides the remedy for violations of Section 3.10(a)(iii):
    Any resolution authorizing, any agreement or arrangement entered into
    which obligates the Company to take any action and any action taken
    by the Company, the Board or any Person acting on behalf of or at the
    direction of the foregoing in contravention of the provisions of this
    Section 3.10 shall be deemed to be unauthorized and shall be void ab
    initio. 27
    In addition to entering the IRA, the parties (and the Lenders) also amended
    the Credit Agreement in connection with Searchlight’s investment (the
    “Amendment”). 28 The Amendment added a concept called a “Covenant Trigger
    26
    IRA, § 3.10(a)(iii).
    27
    Id., § 3.10(b). 28
       Compl., Ex. B, Amendment No. 1 to Credit and Guaranty Agreement (“the Amendment”).
    6
    Event,” which occurs when the monthly average (as of the last day of each month)
    of MediaMath’s cash is less than $45,000,000.29 On the last day of the fiscal quarter
    in which a Covenant Trigger Event occurs, and continuing until MediaMath’s
    monthly average cash is equal to or greater than $45,000,000 (once again, as of the
    last day of the month), MediaMath enters a “Covenant Testing Period.” 30 During
    the Covenant Testing Period, MediaMath is subject to certain financial covenants. 31
    For example, during a Covenant Testing Period, MediaMath must maintain a
    minimum “Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA.” 32                   The minimum Consolidated
    Adjusted EBITDA for the twelve-month period ending on September 30, 2020 is
    $30 million.33     MediaMath’s failure to comply with any negative covenant—
    including the financial covenants that arise while in a Covenant Testing Period—
    constitutes an “Event of Default” under the Credit Agreement. 34 The Amendment
    did not make any changes to the definition of “Indebtedness.” 35                  The Credit
    Agreement—as amended by the Amendment—is still in effect.36
    29
    The Amendment, at 2. The test is actually of “Qualified Cash” which means cash and cash
    equivalents held by MediaMath and its subsidiaries (plus certain additions). Credit Agreement,
    § 1.1, “Qualified Cash.” For purposes of this Opinion, it is sufficient to consider the Covenant
    Trigger Event to occur when MediaMath has insufficient cash.
    30
    The Amendment, at 2.
    31
    The Amendment, at 5–6.
    32
    The Amendment, at 5–6.
    33
    The Amendment, at 6.
    34
    Credit Agreement, § 8.3.
    35
    See generally the Amendment.
    36
    See generally Compl.
    7
    D. MediaMath’s Performance Risks Default
    MediaMath has posted net losses from operations every year since
    Searchlight’s investment.       It ended 2018 with a $24.6 million net loss from
    operations and 2019 with a $47.9 million net loss from operations. 37 Its financial
    performance declined in early 2020 and has continued to decline after the onset of
    the COVID-19 pandemic. 38 MediaMath recognized in late 2019 and early 2020 that
    it was at risk of breaching some of the Credit Agreement covenants sometime during
    2020. 39 At the time of the filing of the Complaint, MediaMath projected that it
    would have only $34.4 million of cash as of September 30, 2020 and $43.3 million
    by the end of 2020.40 At that time, MediaMath also projected that, for the fiscal year
    ending in 2020, it will have a negative EBITDA of $7.2 million.41
    In April 2020, MediaMath hired restructuring and legal advisors, and, in May
    2020, MediaMath retained Centerview Partners (“Centerview”) to advise it on
    financial matters and explore a range of potential capital solutions with existing and
    prospective investors. 42 Centerview engaged with potential investors and lenders in
    order to explore possible financing options while Searchlight advocated a sale
    37
    Compl. ¶¶ 48–49; Answer ¶¶ 48–49.
    38
    Compl. ¶¶ 52–53; Answer ¶¶ 52–53.
    39
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 5.
    40
    Compl. ¶ 81; Answer ¶ 81.
    41
    Compl. ¶ 70; Answer ¶ 70. Since the filing of the Complaint, MediaMath’s financial situation
    appears to have stabilized. Decl. of Heather Gray ¶ 8, Dkt. No. 39.
    42
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶7.
    8
    transaction.43     On August 17, 2020, MediaMath’s Chief Investment Officer
    acknowledged that MediaMath was at “increasingly high risk of breaching the Credit
    [Agreement’s] covenants in 2020.” 44
    E. MediaMath Attempts to Replace the Credit Agreement
    On July 15, 2020, in an effort to avoid impending default under the Credit
    Agreement, MediaMath executed a term sheet (“MidCap Term Sheet” or “Term
    Sheet”) with a prospective lender, MidCap Financial Services, LLC (“MidCap”).45
    The loan facility under the MidCap Term Sheet would replace the one provided for
    by the Credit Agreement.46
    The MidCap Term Sheet provides for a maximum financing commitment of
    $100 million (versus $175 million under the Credit Agreement). 47 Although the
    maximum commitment under the MidCap Term Sheet is lower than that of the
    Credit Agreement, the Term Sheet in fact contains some provisions more favorable
    to MediaMath. For instance, the limitations on the permitted borrowing amount are
    more lenient under the Term Sheet than under the Credit Agreement. 48 Another is
    43
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 8–9.
    44
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 8.
    45
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 10.
    46
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 10.
    47
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 10.
    48
    Specifically, the Credit Agreement’s definition of the “Borrowing Base” is more restrictive than
    the Term Sheet’s definition and excludes certain accounts receivable that the Term Sheet includes.
    Pl.’s Br. in Supp. of its Mot. for a TRO (“TRO Opening Brief”) 24–25, Dkt. No. 4; Def.’s
    Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. for a TRO and Opening Br. in Supp. of Def.’s Mot. for
    9
    that the concept of a “Covenant Testing Period,” and other financial maintenance
    covenants, are eliminated and replaced with less restrictive financial covenants. 49
    The Term Sheet’s more lenient limitations would significantly lower
    MediaMath’s risk of default as compared to the Credit Agreement.50 According to
    Searchlight, the Credit Agreement, at the time the Term Sheet was executed, would
    only allow MediaMath to borrow up to $64.3 million, of which MediaMath had
    already borrowed $63.3 million (both as of June 30, 2020). 51 The Term Sheet’s
    more lenient limitations would allow MediaMath to borrow at least $5–10 million
    more. 52
    Searchlight notified MediaMath on July 21, 2020 that its consent was required
    for the MidCap Term Sheet under Section 3.10(a)(iii) of the IRA and that Searchlight
    refused to give its consent. 53 On July 23, 2020, MediaMath’s counsel responded by
    rejecting Searchlight’s contention that Searchlight’s consent was required under the
    section cited. 54
    Summ. J. (“Summ. J. Opening Brief”) 12, Dkt. No. 23; compare Credit Agreement § 1.1 , “Eligible
    Accounts” with Compl., Ex. C, MidCap Term Sheet, at 2.
    49
    TRO Opening Br. 25; see generally MidCap Term Sheet.
    50
    Bisgeier Decl. ¶ 10.
    51
    TRO Opening Br. 23–24.
    52
    Id. 53
       Compl. ¶ 73; Answer ¶ 73.
    54
    TRO Opening Br. 26–27.
    10
    F. Procedural History
    Searchlight filed its Verified Complaint for Injunctive Relief (the
    “Complaint”) on August 5, 2020. Searchlight seeks a declaratory judgment that
    MediaMath “was obligated to seek Searchlight’s consent, and cannot proceed with,
    the [MidCap Term Sheet] transaction” and that “pursuant to Section 3.10(b) of the
    IRA, authorizing or consummating the [MidCap Term Sheet] transaction is
    unauthorized and void ab initio.” 55 Searchlight also asserts a claim for breach of
    contract (the IRA) and seeks attorney’s fees under a “loser pays” provision in the
    IRA. 56
    Concurrently with the Complaint, Searchlight filed a Motion for TRO.
    Searchlight seeks an order that: “Defendant MediaMath Holdings, Inc. and its
    officers, agents, servants, employees and attorneys, and those persons in active
    concert or participation with it, are hereby ENJOINED from consummating the
    [MidCap Term Sheet] transaction.”57 MediaMath filed its opposition to the Motion
    for TRO on August 17, 2020 concurrently with a Motion for Summary Judgment. I
    expedited the matter and heard Oral Argument on Searchlight’s TRO Motion and
    MediaMath’s Summary Judgment Motion on September 23, 2020 and now consider
    the matter fully submitted.
    55
    Compl. ¶¶ 85–89.
    56
    Compl., ¶¶ 91–104.
    57
    [Proposed] Order Granting Pl. Searchlight CST, L.P.’s Mot. for a TRO ¶ 2, Dkt. 4.
    11
    II. ANALYSIS
    Put simply, this case is about the interaction between two contracts and one
    would-be contract, which is the target of Searchlight’s TRO. These documents are:
    (1) the IRA, (2) the Credit Agreement, and (3) the MidCap Term Sheet. The central
    issue is whether MediaMath can replace document (2) with document (3) without
    obtaining Searchlight’s consent under document (1).
    When contractual language is the source of the dispute, the Court “give[s]
    priority to the intention of the parties . . . by looking to the four corners of the
    contract to conclude whether the intent of the parties can be determined from its
    express language. In interpreting contract language, clear and unambiguous terms
    are interpreted according to their ordinary and usual meaning.”58 The parties do not
    contest the meaning or language of either the Credit Agreement or the MidCap Term
    Sheet; rather, they disagree as to how the IRA—specifically Section 3.10(a)(iii) of
    that agreement—applies to these documents.
    A. The Relevant Text of the IRA and the Parties’ Arguments
    As noted above, Section 3.10(a)(iii) of the IRA reads:
    (a) At any time when shares of Series D Stock are outstanding, in
    addition to any other vote or consent required by the Certificate or by
    law, the Company shall not, nor permit any subsidiary of the Company
    to, effect or validate any of the following actions (whether by
    amendment, merger, consolidation, or otherwise), without the written
    approval of Searchlight (the “Series D Approval”):
    58
    Paul v. Deloitte & Touche, LLP, 
    974 A.2d 140
    , 145 (Del. 2009).
    12
    (iii) incur indebtedness that (A) is in excess of the greater of (x) three
    times (3x) the Company’s Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA (as defined
    in the agreements governing the Credit Facility (as defined below), the
    “Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA”) for the preceding twelve (12)
    months as shown on the latest financial statements delivered to the
    Administrative Agent under the Company’s credit facility which is in
    place as of the date of this Agreement (the “Credit Facility”) and (y)
    the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted under the terms of the
    Credit Facility or any successor or replacement facility having financial
    terms regarding maximum indebtedness no less restrictive than those
    applicable to the Credit Facility, assuming the Credit Facility could be
    fully drawn but not giving effect to any repayments and borrowings
    thereunder, or (B) would cause the Company’s total indebtedness for
    borrowed money (excluding, for the avoidance of doubt, obligations
    with respect to the Series D Stock and Indebtedness (as defined in the
    agreements governing the Credit Facility) permitted to be incurred by
    the Company or its subsidiaries in accordance with the terms of the
    Credit Facility), after giving effect to such incurrence, to exceed
    $175,000,000; provided that on and after January 1, 2019, if the
    Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA for the preceding twelve (12) months
    as shown on the latest financial statements delivered to the
    Administrative Agent under the Credit [Agreement] or any subsequent
    period of twelve (12) months as shown on the latest financial statements
    delivered to the Administrative Agent under the Credit [Agreement] is
    at least $43,000,000, then such maximum permitted indebtedness
    amount shall increase from $175,000,000 to $225,000,000[.]59
    Although its length appears daunting and its organization is needlessly
    complex, Section 3.10(a)(iii) can easily be broken down into three subsections:
    (A)(x), (A)(y), and (B). Each of these three subsections provides a cap on the
    amount of indebtedness MediaMath may incur—although only one of (A)(x) and
    (A)(y) will actually be prohibitory because Section 3.10(a)(iii)’s prohibition is
    59
    IRA, § 3.10(a)(iii).
    13
    against borrowing more than the larger of the amounts provided for in the two
    subsections. Despite the existence of arguably three potential caps, the parties both
    concede that the caps provided for in Subsections (A)(x) and (B) do not apply to the
    situation at hand.       Nevertheless, given the apparent complexity of Section
    3.10(a)(iii), I will endeavor to address all parts of it.
    Because I find the language unambiguous, I address MediaMath’s Summary
    Judgment Motion;60 because that motion resolves the first prong of any TRO
    inquiry—likelihood of success on the merits—against Searchlight, the TRO request
    becomes moot.
    I first note the while Searchlight construes the relevant contractual language
    as a restriction on MediaMath entering a new credit facility, on its face the
    contractual language only limits MediaMath’s maximum indebtedness, and not the
    source of the indebtedness. The contractual language, as explained below, provides
    a series of yardsticks by which that maximum indebtedness must be measured. This
    makes sense in light of Searchlight’s interests in entering the IRA, which included
    protecting its investment by curtailing MediaMath’s ability to incur debt without
    Searchlight’s consent. With this in mind, I turn to the issue of whether MediaMath’s
    60
    Contractual disputes lend themselves to motions for summary judgement, as the meaning of an
    unambiguous contract is an issue of law. Seidensticker v. Gasparilla Inn, Inc., 
    2007 WL 4054473
    ,
    at *2 (Del. Ch. Nov. 8, 2007) (“Where the dispute centers on the proper interpretation of an
    unambiguous contract, summary judgment is appropriate because such interpretation is a question
    of law.”).
    14
    exercise of its full borrowing ability under the MidCap Term Sheet would violate
    Subsection (A)(y) of Section 3.10(a)(iii). To address the parties’ arguments on
    (A)(y), it is instructive to first parse the three subsections of which Section
    3.10(a)(iii) is composed.
    The first subsection in Section 3.10(a)(iii) is Subsection (A)(x), which
    prohibits MediaMath from “incur[ring] indebtedness that . . . is in excess of . . . three
    times the Company’s Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA . . . for the preceding twelve
    months . . . .”61—a one-year rolling average EBITDA test. This subsection is, of
    course, not applicable to MediaMath’s current situation 62 because MediaMath’s
    forecasted Adjusted EBITDA for the 2020 fiscal year is negative and will therefore
    be less than (A)(y)—and MediaMath is only capped by the greater of (A)(x) and
    (A)(y).
    Subsection (B) prohibits MediaMath from “incur[ring] indebtedness that . . .
    would cause its total indebtedness for borrowed money . . . , after giving effect to
    such incurrence, to exceed $175,000,000 . . .” and, in certain circumstances, up to
    $225,000,000.63 In other words, even if the limits in Subsection A would permit
    borrowing in excess of these hard limits—for instance, if the 3x EBITDA provision
    allowed it—Subsection B places hard limits on indebtedness. This subsection is also
    61
    IRA, § 3.10(a)(iii).
    62
    The parties do not contest that Subsection (A)(x) does not apply. TRO Opening Br. 33.
    63
    IRA, § 3.10(a)(iii).
    15
    not applicable—and the parties do not argue that it is 64—because it caps
    MediaMath’s total amount of borrowed money at $175 million, which is well in
    excess of the $100 loan commitment provided for in the MidCap Term Sheet.
    This leaves Subsection (A)(y), which is the only subsection the parties dispute
    the meaning of.         That subsection prohibits MediaMath from “incur[ring]
    indebtedness that . . . exceeds . . . the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted
    under the terms of the Credit Facility or any successor or replacement facility having
    financial terms regarding maximum indebtedness no less restrictive than those
    applicable to the Credit Facility, assuming the Credit Facility could be fully drawn
    but not giving effect to any repayments and borrowings thereunder.” 65
    The parties offer two competing interpretations of Subsection (A)(y).
    Searchlight argues that the “maximum amount of indebtedness permitted” means the
    amount that MediaMath could effectively borrow at the time it executed the MidCap
    Term Sheet, given the applicable limitations imposed by the “Borrowing Base” at
    that time—$64.3 million. Again, the Credit Agreement has a borrowing limit of
    $175 million, but the Lenders are permitted to restrict borrowing to a lower
    amount—the “Borrowing Base”—which itself is derived from certain accounts
    receivable. 66 This construction would mean that (A)(y) provides a variable ceiling—
    64
    Summ. J. Opening Br. 18.
    65
    IRA § 3.10(a)(iii).
    66
    Credit Agreement, § 1.1 “Borrowing Base”; see 
    n.17 supra
    .
    16
    a ceiling that MediaMath was within $1 million of at the time it signed the MidCap
    Term Sheet—rather than a ceiling fixed at the loan commitment of the Credit
    Agreement ($175 million).67                 According to Searchlight, because Section
    3.10(a)(iii)(A)(y) provides a variable ceiling of whatever was permitted to be
    borrowed at the time of the execution of the Term Sheet ($1 million more), and
    because the MidCap Term Sheet allows MediaMath to borrow more than the $1
    million that the Credit Agreement allowed MediaMath to borrow as of that time,
    Searchlight has a consent right regarding the Term Sheet. 68
    MediaMath disagrees with this interpretation. MediaMath contends that the
    terms “maximum amount of indebtedness permitted under the Credit Facility” and
    “assuming the Credit Facility could be fully drawn” both indicate that (A)(y) refers
    to the loan commitment maximum of $175 million. 69
    67
    In support of this construction, Searchlight argues that: (1) the words “maximum” and
    “permitted” would not make sense unless (A)(y) refers to a variable ceiling; (2) the subsection
    cannot refer to the $175 million loan commitment because the parties would have simply
    referenced the loan commitment or the amount $175 million; and (3) the term “no less restrictive”
    would make no sense if Subsection (A)(y) referred to the loan commitment. TRO Opening Br. 18–
    33.
    68
    In support of its TRO, Searchlight also makes much of the fact that the MidCap Term Sheet is
    less restrictive in terms of its lending conditions than the Credit Agreement, and that therefore
    entering a new credit facility with those terms would require its consent. But Section 3.10(a)(iii)
    only provides a yardstick for measuring the amount of indebtedness MediaMath is permitted to
    incur, and Subsection (A)(y) simply provides that the limitation of the (original) Credit Agreement
    is the yardstick unless a new facility at least as restrictive is entered, in which case the latter is the
    new yardstick. Section 3.10(a)(iii) does not restrict Media Math’s ability to obtain credit outside
    the Credit Agreement, so long as its maximum indebtedness is not exceeded.
    69
    MediaMath also notes that the term “such maximum permitted indebtedness amount” also
    appears in Subsection (B), and in that subsection clearly refers to $175 million. Using the maxim
    that “where the same word or phrase is used on more than one occasion in the same
    17
    To recapitulate, the parties disagree what maximum indebtedness yardstick is
    provided by Section 3.10(a)(iii)(A)(y) of the IRA. Searchlight proposes that the
    maximum is the amount available to MediaMath under the Credit Agreement at any
    given time, in light of the limitations implied by the Borrowing Base—that is, as of
    the execution of the MidCap Term Sheet, $63.4 million (of which only $1 million
    remained undrawn). MediaMath reckons the maximum allowed as $175 million,
    i.e., the amount of the loan commitment under the Credit Agreement.                    As
    MediaMath clarified at oral argument, the subsection also contains a downward
    ratchet; if a new credit facility is entered with more restrictive terms as to the
    maximum indebtedness permitted thereunder, that becomes the new maximum
    under Subsection (A)(y) as well. Therefore, if MediaMath enters the proposed term
    sheet, under its construction the maximum indebtedness under Subsection (A)(y)
    will be the $100 million provided for in that new facility.
    B. Section 3.10(a)(iii)(A)(y) unambiguously refers to the loan commitment of
    $175 million.
    “A contract is not rendered ambiguous simply because the parties do not agree
    upon its proper construction. Rather, an ambiguity exists [w]hen the provisions in
    controversy are fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or
    instrument . . . there is a presumption that the same meaning was intended throughout such
    instrument,” MediaMath argues that Subsection (A)(y)’s reference to the “maximum amount of
    indebtedness permitted” must also have meant $175 million. Summ. J. Opening Br. 19.
    18
    more different meanings.”70 Here, I find that only one meaning gives effect to all
    terms in Subsection (A)(y) as written.
    I emphasize that, notwithstanding the TRO request to enjoin entry of a debt
    facility, the contract language at issue simply defines the maximum amount of
    indebtedness MediaMath can incur absent consent from Searchlight. What is that
    amount? MediaMath’s interpretation is straightforward. It may borrow up to the
    “maximum amount” permitted by the Credit Agreement, $175 million, “assuming
    the Credit Facility could be fully drawn,” that is, absent those limitations which may
    exist at any given time—involving the Borrowing Base—restricting a full draw.
    This comports with the plain language of the IRA.
    Searchlight, for its part, asks me to interpret (A)(y) such that it sets maximum
    indebtedness at the amount MediaMath had the ability to borrow at any given time
    from the Lenders, given the limitations of the Credit Agreement. Under this
    interpretation, “the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted under the terms of
    the Credit Facility”—that is, the amount of debt that MediaMath would in total be
    able to assume from any source—would vary from time to time; it would be based
    on the amount the Credit Agreement at any given time allowed MediaMath to borrow
    70
    GMG Capital Investments, LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P., 
    36 A.3d 776
    , 780 (Del.
    2012) (quoting Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chemicals Co. v. American Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1195 (Del. 1992) and Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 
    702 A.2d 1228
    , 1232
    (Del. 1997)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    19
    from the Lenders, based on a formula applied to its accounts receivables, and absent
    the Lenders’ agreement to exceed this formulaic limitation ($64.3 million, as of the
    time of entry of the term sheet). The result of this construction would be a sliding
    maximum indebtedness that would be commercially difficult to enforce. But the
    flaw in this interpretation is in the language itself.
    First, Searchlight’s construction requires me to insert language the parties
    themselves did not use in the IRA; the word “currently” is not included in (A)(y),
    nor is any other temporal word that would peg the calculation of the amount in (A)(y)
    to a particular time. Instead, Searchlight’s construction requires the temporal term
    be inferred from the word “permitted,” via a finding that that word means “entitled
    to be drawn at the time of the incurrence of indebtedness.” But this cannot be the
    case, because the contract language explicitly provides otherwise—it measures
    maximum indebtedness “assuming the Credit Facility could be fully drawn but not
    giving effect to any repayments and borrowings thereunder.” 71 This language
    excludes the limitations based on temporal considerations of the accounts receivable
    formula, and assumes that MediaMath is able to fully draw the credit limit that the
    Lenders committed to be prepared to lend. I find that Searchlight’s interpretation
    cannot be squared with the language “assuming the Credit Facility could be fully
    drawn.”
    71
    IRA, § 3.10(a)(iii)(A)(y) (emphasis added).
    20
    In addition, Searchlight’s construction also robs the term “maximum” in the
    phrase “the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted” under the Credit
    Agreement of any independent meaning—under Searchlight’s reading, the
    maximum amount permitted is simply the actual amount Searchlight may draw. I
    should avoid a construction that renders contractual language meaningless or
    surplusage.72
    I note that Searchlight itself makes a similar argument with respect to the same
    phrase, regarding the word “permitted”—it argues that unless “permitted” means
    “limited to the amount then currently available in light of the borrowing base,”
    “permitted” is a redundancy. I simply do not read it that way. Permitted here is a
    way of saying that the amount is to be defined by or read under the Credit
    Agreement; to my mind, it is not surplusage.
    Finally, MediaMath’s interpretation alone gives full effect to the last part of
    (A)(y): the phrase “assuming the Credit Facility could be fully drawn but not giving
    effect to any repayments and borrowings thereunder.” This phrase has two parts:
    the “fully drawn” part and the “not giving effect” part. The two parts are redundant
    under Searchlight’s interpretation, where “maximum amount of indebtedness
    permitted” is pegged to the effective amount borrowable at a discrete point in time.
    72
    Sunline Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 
    206 A.3d 836
    , 846 (Del. 2019)
    (“The contract must also be read as a whole, giving meaning to each term and avoiding an
    interpretation that would render any term ‘mere surplusage.’”).
    21
    That is because Searchlight’s interpretation incorporates the “Borrowing Base”
    limitation on borrowing directly into the phrase “maximum amount of indebtedness
    permitted” through the word “permitted.”         Then, once MediaMath’s existing
    borrowings are “not given any effect,” the “assuming the Credit facility could be
    fully drawn” part of the Subsection (A)(y) has no meaning, as all limitations on
    MediaMath’s borrowing have already been accounted for by the other two phrases.
    For instance, at the time of the signing of the term sheet, the amount that MediaMath
    could borrow based on the credit base calculation was roughly $64 million. That
    would, per Searchlight, be both the amount available “assuming the Credit Facility
    could be fully drawn” and also the amount permitted, disregarding any repayments
    and borrowing. The two parts mean the same thing.
    But when the phrase “the maximum amount of indebtedness permitted”
    means the commitment amount $175 million, this problem disappears.                   If
    “maximum amount of indebtedness permitted” means $175 million, the phrase still
    raises the question of whether that amount is subject to the Borrowing Base
    limitation, which would otherwise serve to limit the $175 million yardstick. The
    “fully drawn” assumption of Subsection (A)(y) serves to clarify that the Borrowing
    Base limitation does not apply; in essence, it instructs the parties that the yardstick
    is not limited by MediaMath’s accounts receivable and can therefore be “fully
    drawn.” And the “not giving effect” part serves a separate purpose—to clarify that
    22
    there is to be no deduction from the explicit limitations in the Credit Agreement; that
    is, MediaMath’s existing borrowings under the Credit Agreement do not limit the
    “maximum amount of indebtedness permitted.”
    Under MediaMath’s interpretation only, all three phrases—“maximum
    amount of indebtedness permitted,” “assuming the Credit Facility could be fully
    drawn,” and “not giving effect to any repayment and borrowings thereunder”—have
    independent meanings.       Only MediaMath’s interpretation comports with the
    language of the IRA without implying language not present in the text. Accordingly,
    I conclude that it is the only reasonable interpretation of Section 3.10(a)(iii)(A)(y)
    and grant MediaMath’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
    Because I have determined that Searchlight’s construction is untenable, its
    TRO request—meant to vindicate that construction—is moot.
    III. CONCLUSION
    MediaMath’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and
    Searchlight’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order is DENIED as moot. The
    parties should submit a form of order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CA No. 2020-0652-SG

Judges: Glasscock, V.C.

Filed Date: 9/28/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/28/2020