LCT Captial, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP
Date Filed2022-12-22
DocketN15C-08-109 MAA CCLD
JudgeAdams J.
Cited0 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
LCT CAPITAL, LLC, )
)
Plaintiff, ) C.A. No. N15C-08-109 MAA CCLD
)
v. )
)
NGL ENERGY PARTNERS LP and )
NGL ENERGY HOLDINGS LLC )
)
Defendants. )
)
Submitted: December 21, 2022
Decided: December 22, 2022
Upon Plaintiff's Motion to Exclude Opinions and Testimony of Defendants' Rebuttal
Expert, Lori A. Lancaster:
DENIED.
Upon Defendants' Daubert Motion to Exclude the Opinions of Kevin D. McQuilkin:
GRANTED, in part.
Upon Plaintiff's Motion in Limine to Hold NGL to Judicial Admissions and Exclude
Evidence Suggesting the Value of LCT's Services Was Less Than $29 Million:
DENIED.
Upon Plaintiff's Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence of a "Typical" Investment
Banker Fee as Irrelevant to Quantum Meruit Damages:
DENIED.
Upon Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument Regarding
Any Alleged Agreement Between the Parties:
GRANTED.
Upon Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument Regarding
Alleged Fraud and-or Fraudulent Statements:
GRANTED.
Upon Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument Regarding
Value Creation:
GRANTED.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
John L. Reed, Esquire (Argued) and Daniel P. Klusman, Esquire, of DLA PIPER
LLP, Wilmington, DE, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Steven T. Margolin, Esquire (Argued) and Samuel L. Moultrie, Esquire, of
GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, Wilmington, DE, and Hal S. Shaftel, Esquire
(Argued) and Daniel Friedman of GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, New York, NY,
Attorneys for Defendants.
Adams, J.
2
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court are Plaintiffâs Daubert motion to exclude the opinions of
Defendantsâ rebuttal expert, Lori Lancaster (âLancasterâ), and Defendantsâ Daubert
motion to exclude the opinions of Plaintiffâs affirmative expert, Kevin D. McQuilkin
(âMcQuilkinâ). The parties have also collectively filed five motions in limine to
exclude or admit various evidence, testimony, and argument at trial. The Court
heard oral argument on the motions on November 9th and 15th, 2022. The Court
reserved decision on the motions except for a portion of Defendantsâ Daubert
motion.1 The Court assumes familiarity with the procedural history and facts of the
case and recites them only as necessary to conduct its analysis.2
ANALYSIS
The admissibility of expert testimony is governed by Delaware Rule of
Evidence 702. Rule 702 provides:
If scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge will assist the
trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a
witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training
or education may testify thereto in form of an opinion or otherwise, if
(1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony
is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness
has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
1
See infra n. 36.
2
The Court received and reviewed two letters from Plaintiffâs counsel dated December 16, 2022
and December 20, 2022, along with Defendantsâ response dated December 19, 2022 and December
21, 2022. (Transaction IDs 68604430, 68686763, 68666949, and 68716708). As indicated during
the conference with counsel about the letters, held on December 21, 2022, the Court has reviewed
and considered the letters prior to issuing this decision.
3
The Supreme Court of Delaware has adopted the United State Supreme
Courtâs holding in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals3 and its progeny when
interpreting a challenge to an expert report under Rule 702. The Supreme Court of
Delaware applies the five-part test to determine the admissibility of expert or
scientific testimony, which requires the trial judge to decide whether:
(1) The witness is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
training or education;
(2) The evidence is relevant and reliable;
(3) The expertâs opinion is based upon information reasonably relied upon
by experts in a particular field;
(4) The expert testimony will assist the trier of fact to understand the
evidence or to determine a fact in issue; and
(5) The expert testimony will not create unfair prejudice or confuse or
mislead the jury.4
Once expert testimony is challenged, the trial court must ensure that the
proffered testimony is both relevant and reliable.5 âFor expert opinion testimony to
be relevant under Daubert, it must relate to an âissue in the caseâ and âassist the trier
3
See Bowen v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Inc., 906 A.2d 787, 794(Del. 2006) (âThough the United States Supreme Courtâs interpretations of F.R.E. 702 in Daubert and Kumho are only binding upon federal courts, this Court has expressly adopted their holdings as correct interpretations of D.R.E. 702.â) (internal citations omitted). 4 Bowen,906 A.2d at 795
; Wong v. Broughton,204 A.3d 105
(Del. 2019). 5 Marydale Preservation Assocs., LLC v. Leon M. Weiner & Assocs., Inc.,2022 WL 4394375
, at *2 (Del. Super. Sept. 23, 2022) (citing Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,509 U.S. 579, 597
(1993)).
4
of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact issue.â6 Although the trial
courtâs Rule 702 inquiry is flexible, the inquiry must be based solely on principles
and methodology, not on the conclusions they generate.7 The party seeking to
introduce expert testimony bears the burden of establishing its admissibility by a
preponderance of the evidence.8 There is a âstrong preferenceâ for admitting expert
opinions âwhen they will assist the trier of fact in understanding the relevant facts
or the evidence.â9
I. Plaintiffâs Daubert Motion to Exclude the Opinions of Lori Lancaster Is
DENIED.
Plaintiff makes three main arguments in support of its motion to exclude
Lancaster from testifying:
A. Lancaster exceeds her scope as a rebuttal expert by:
1. Rebutting Plaintiffâs rebuttal expert, David Adler (âAdlerâ);
2. Rehabilitating Defendantsâ affirmative expert, Peter Keller
(âKellerâ); and
3. Presenting new opinions and data to supplement Kellerâs
opinions.
6
Tumilson v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 81 A.3d 1264, 1269(Del. 2013) (citing Daubert,509 U.S. at 591
). 7Id.
(internal quotations and citations omitted). 8 Bowen, 906 A.2d at795. 9 Norman v. All About Women, P.A.,193 A.3d 726, 730
(Del. 2018).
5
B. Lancasterâs opinion is unreliable because:
1. It ignores and rejects: the October 2014 Letter written by NGL
CEO Mike Krimbill (âKrimbillâ)10 and Krimbillâs trial
testimony; and
2. Lancaster never discussed Krimbillâs views on Plaintiffâs
services or compensation with Krimbill directly.
C. Lancaster makes a credibility determination of Krimbill and thereby
impermissibly invades the juryâs province to do so.11
A. Lancaster does not impermissibly exceed the scope of a rebuttal expert.
âRebuttal evidence is generally defined as evidence that explains, repels,
counteracts, or disproves testimony or facts introduced by the adverse party. But
purity of effect is not required. The fact that rebuttal evidence also tends to
corroborate the partyâs affirmative case does not require its exclusion.â12 A rebuttal
expert is permitted to use new methodologies âfor the purpose of rebutting or
critiquing the opinions of the [opposing partyâs] expert witness.â13
10
Ex. B to Pl. Mot. in limine to hold NGL to its judicial admissions and exclude evidence
suggesting that the value of LCTâs services was less than $29 million [hereinafter âOctober 2014
Letterâ].
11
Pl. Daubert Mot. at 23-27.
12
In re Oxbow Carbon, LLC Unitholder Litigation, 2017 WL 3207155, at *1 (Del. Ch. July 28, 2017). 13 Scott v. Chipotle Mexican Grille, Inc.,315 F.R.D. 33, 44
(S.D.N.Y. 2016) (quoting Park W. Radiology v. CareCore Natâl, LLC,675 F.Supp.2d 314, 326
(S.D.N.Y.2009).
6
As an initial matter, the Court does not find that Lancaster rebuts Adler in any
meaningful way. In footnote one of the Lancaster Report, she indicates that she
would be responding to Adlerâs report to the extent Adler opines on the value of
Plaintiffâs services.14 On pages 15-16 of the Lancaster Report, she states that
McQuilkin opines that publicly available fee data is âhighly variableâ and states in
a footnote that Adler makes a similar claim.15 Lancaster clarified during her
deposition that, although she was rebutting a portion of Adlerâs report that is similar
to McQuilkinâs, Adler and McQuilkin âgave fairly similar views on how they think
fee runs are or are not used in determining market-level investment banking fees.â16
A review of McQuilkinâs and Adlerâs reports show that they do in fact provide very
similar opinions on this issue. The Court cannot contemplate how Lancaster would
be able to rebut those opinions of McQuilkin that are similar to Adlerâs without also
rebutting Adlerâs opinions. For these reasons, the Court does not find that the
Lancaster Report or anticipated testimony amounts to an impermissible sur-rebuttal.
Plaintiff also claims Lancaster exceeds her scope as a rebuttal expert because
her opinions are duplicativeof Kellerâs. A comprehensive review of the Lancaster
14
Expert Report of Lori Lancaster, at 1[hereinafter âLancaster Reportâ].
15
Id. at 16, n. 47.
16
Dep. of Lori Lancaster at 71-72. âSo, Iâm not rebutting only Mr. Adlerâs view versus Mr.
McQuilkinâs, âcause theyâre basically the same â theyâre basically the same view in my reading.
I am rebutting that idea, which is contained in both of their reports. . . . they both criticize
investment banking fee precedence obtained via fee runs, as non-comprehensive. . . . There is not
a separate section of my report that solely discusses Mr. Adler.â Id. at 72-74.
7
Report shows that it rebuts McQuilkinâs opinions with the following assertions:
Plaintiffâs services were customary investment banking services and were not
unusually extensive; Plaintiffâs services warranted a standard investment banking
fee; and âinvestment banking services, unlike private equity investment, are not
valued by or compensated through value-creation calculationsâ.17 The fact that
Lancasterâs rebuttal happens to corroborate Kellerâs affirmative opinions does not
mandate its exclusion.18
The Court also does not find that Defendants are impermissibly stacking
duplicative experts by their intention to present one affirmative and one rebuttal
expert who share some opinions. The purpose of excluding duplicative experts is to
prevent undue prejudice to the opposing party from having to depose and rebut
several experts âon the same subject matter where one expert witness would be
sufficient to make the point.â19 The Court does not find that Plaintiff would be
unfairly prejudiced from the presentation of two experts, especially considering that
Plaintiff has deposed Lancaster.
Finally, the Court does not find that Lancaster is categorically barred from
analyzing âentirely new dataâ by virtue of her role as a rebuttal expert.20 McQuilkin
17
Lancaster Report at 1-2.
18
In re Oxbow Carbon LLC Unitholder Litigation, 2017 WL 3207155, at *1 (Del. Ch. July 28, 2017). 19 Bingham v. Adobe Equipment Holdings, Ltd.,2008 WL 11379993
, at *4 (D. Wyo. 2008).
20
Pl. Daubert Mot. at 21.
8
asserts in his report that there is no typical investment banking fee in the industry.21
Lancaster directly rebuts McQuilkinâs claim by presenting publicly available fee run
data showing a range of fees based on a percentage of the transaction price.22
Nothing in Rule 702 or the Daubert standard prevents this method of rebuttal. If an
affirmative expert claims that there is an absence of data, a rebuttal expert is
permitted to attempt to rebut that claim by proving the existence and reliability of
such data.
B. Lancasterâs opinion is reliable.
Plaintiff argues that Lancasterâs decision to not consider and assign greater
weight to the October 2014 Letter and Krimbillâs trial testimony equates to âcherry
pickingâ evidence to support a foregone conclusion.23 Even if it were true that
Lancaster failed to account for this information, Plaintiff has not provided sufficient
evidence that neglecting to do so makes her opinion unreliable. Plaintiff has
provided no support that an expert must consider a rejected post-transaction fee
proposal to properly opine on an investment bankerâs fee.
More importantly, Plaintiffâs allegations that Lancaster failed to consider this
information is demonstrably false. Lancaster dedicates a separate section of her
report to McQuilkinâs analysis of the partiesâ negotiations and references the
21
Expert Report of Kevin D. McQuilkin at 5. [hereinafter âMcQuilkin Reportâ].
22
Lancaster Report at 17.
23
Pl. Daubert Mot. at 23.
9
October 2014 Letter in 5 discrete instances.24 Plaintiff also takes issue with the fact
that Lancaster disregards the section of the October 2014 Letter in which Krimbill
purports that âLCT was able to get [Morgan Stanley] to deal directly with
Defendants outside of an auction process.â25 This portion of the October 2014 Letter
is inconsistent with the Wall Street Journal Article on which it is based, which
reported bids from Defendants and Buckeye Partners LP among others.26
Lancasterâs opinion is not unreliable for electing to not blindly adopt inaccuracies in
the October 2014 Letter. To the contrary, Lancasterâs decision is illustrative of her
thorough review of the record and additional documents salient to the transaction.
Plaintiffâs contention that the Lancaster Report is unreliable because she did
not conduct a separate interview with Krimbill is without merit.27 There is no
requirement that an expert conduct a separate interview with relevant witnesses. The
Court finds that Lancaster sufficiently familiarized herself with Krimbillâs position
by reviewing his 500-page deposition transcript.28
Finally, Plaintiff contends Lancasterâs opinions on a proper damage award are
unreliable because they are based on terms the parties never discussed, specifically
24
Lancaster Report at 20-22, 26-27.
25
Id. at 25.
26
Justin Baer, Christian Berthelsen, & Ryan Dezember, Morgan Stanley Moves Closer to Oil-
Business Sale, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (May 23, 2014),
https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303749904579580573288840450; see
Lancaster Report at 15, n. 44.
27
See Pl. Daubert Mot. at 23.
28
Ex. B to Lancaster Report.
10
fee run data.29 This argument is also without merit. The question is whether the
bases for Lancasterâs opinions are in line with the proper measure of quantum meruit
damages, not whether they are in line with the partiesâ negotiations. Quantum meruit
damages is the sole issue that remains in this case. The partiesâ motion practice
makes evident that a discussion of the proper measure of quantum meruit damages
is imperative.
Quantum meruit is a restitutionary theory of recovery available in a quasi-
contractual relationship.30 A quasi-contract is âone where the law will infer the
existence of a contractual relationship without regard to the actual intention of the
parties where circumstances are such that justice warrants a recovery as though there
had been a promise or contract.â31 Quantum meruit damages are based on an
objective reasonable valuation of the services provided by reference to the fair
market value of those services.32 A reasonable valuation is âthe amount for which
29
Pl. Daubert Mot. at 3.
30
Middle States Drywall, Inc. v. DMS Properties-First, Inc., 1996 WL 453418, at *10 (Del. Super. May 28, 1996) (stating quantum meruit is a quasi-contractual remedy); Caldera Properties- Lewis/Rehoboth VII, LLC, v. Ridings Development, LLC,2009 WL 2231716
, at *31 ([Q]uantum meruit is a principle of restitution arising from a cause of action in quasi-contract.â). 31 Caldera Properties-Lewis/Rehoboth VII, LLC,2009 WL 2231716
, at *31; United Health Alliance, LLC v. United Medical, LLC,2014 WL 6488659
. at *7 (Del. Ch. Nov. 20, 2014) (internal citations omitted); Bellanca Corp. v. Bellanca,169 A.2d 620, 623
(Del. 1961) (âQuasi-contractual relationships are imposed by law in order to work justice and without reference to the actual intention of the parties.â). 32 Middle States Drywall, Inc.,1996 WL 453418
, at *10-11 (quantum meruit damages is the âreasonable value of the material or services [Plaintiff] rendered. . . .â as measured by âthe amount for which such services could have been purchased from one in the plaintiffâs position at the time and place the services were rendered.â); Cheeseman v. Grover,490 A.2d 175, 177
(Del. Super.
Feb. 1, 1985) (holding a party may recover under quantum meruit for the âreasonable value of the
11
such services could have been purchased from one in the plaintiffâs position at the
time and place the services were rendered.â33
Lancaster is not required to base her opinions on the partiesâ negotiations, and
her opinions are not unreliable because they rely more heavily on fee run data.
Experts opining on quantum meruit damages are obligated to base their analysis on
an objective valuation of the services provided by reference to data as well as their
own specialized knowledge and experiences in the field. The Court also notes that
there is evidence demonstrating the parties did consult fee run data during
negotiations.34 Plaintiffâs claim that the parties never discussed fee run data is
inconsistent with the record in this case.
C. Lancaster does not make a credibility determination of Krimbill.
Lancaster disagrees with some of Krimbillâs characterizations and assertions
in the October 2014 Letter. Lancaster disagrees with Krimbillâs characterization of
his proposed compensation as a â$29 million success fee,â his characterization that
Defendants purchased TransMontaigne outside of an auction process, and his
services rendered, as opposed to the sum agreed to be paid therefor. . . . The alleged agreement for
plaintiffs to receive the [decedentâs] estate may be relied upon only to show that plaintiffs did not
act gratuitously.â); DAN B. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES 388 (2d ed. 1993)(âA recovery under
quantum meruit usually appears to mean a recovery for the value of the services, measuring value
in the labor market where the service itself was sought by the Defendants.â).
33
Middle States Drywall, Inc., 1996 WL 453418, at *10. See also Hynansky v. 1492 Hospitality Group, Inc.,2007 WL 2319191
, at *1 (Del. Super. Aug. 15, 2007); Caldera Properties- Lewis/Rehoboth VII, LLC,2009 WL 2231716
, at *31.
34
JX056; LCT002806.
12
assertion that Defendants would have never had the opportunity to purchase
TransMontaigne at the price it did without Plaintiff.35
As an initial matter, Krimbillâs assessment of Plaintiffâs services is his
subjective opinion and Lancaster is at liberty to disagree with it; it is not an assertion
of fact to be proven true or false. In disagreeing with Krimbillâs valuation of his
services, Lancaster is not making an accusation that Krimbill is being untruthful.
Rather, Lancaster is asserting that her analysis of Plaintiffâs services, the context of
the transaction, and publicly available fee data lead her to a contrary conclusion.
A thorough review of the Lancaster Report and deposition shows that she
critically analyzed Plaintiffâs services and assessed their value by a thorough
application of sound principles and methods. Lancaster is well within her province
as an expert to assess claims in the October 2014 Letter against other evidence on
the nature and value of Plaintiffâs services. The fact that Lancasterâs perspective
does not support Plaintiffâs claim of damages is irrelevant to her qualifications under
Rule 702 or the Daubert standard. Lancasterâs contrary opinion also does not
deprive the jury of its opportunity to weigh Krimbillâs testimony. For these reasons,
Plaintiffâs Daubert motion to exclude Lancasterâs opinions is DENIED.
35
Pl. Daubert Mot. at 25.
13
II. Defendantsâ Daubert Motion to Exclude the Opinions of Kevin D.
McQuilkin Is GRANTED IN PART and Defendantsâ Motion in Limine
to Exclude Evidence of Value Creation Is GRANTED.
Defendants seek to exclude McQuilkinâs testimony on the following grounds:
(1) McQuilkin does not use reliable methodology in forming his
opinions because he impermissibly engages in ipse dixit.36
(2) McQuilkinâs opinions violate the law of the case.
(3) McQuilkin impermissibly relies on the rejected âvalue creationâ
theory of damages.
Defendants have also filed a separate motion in limine to exclude evidence of
value creation. Because this motion in limine overlaps with the section of
Defendantsâ Daubert motion related to value creation evidence, the Court will
address these value creation arguments together.
A. McQuilkinâs opinions that amount to ipse dixit are excluded.
The Court finds that a portion of the McQuilkin Report is unreliable because
it equates to ipse dixit. Ipse dixit is Latin for âhe himself said itâ and stands for the
general prohibition of opinions supported only by the qualifications of the expert
36
Defendantsâ Daubert motion also alleges that McQuilkin impermissibly relies on undisclosed
information. Def. Daubert Mot. at 13. On November 9, 2022, after the parties presented argument
on this motion, the Court ordered Plaintiff to disclose McQuilkinâs undisclosed deal information
to Defendantsâ attorneys only, and permitted Defendants to take McQuilkinâs deposition to
examine him about these transactions. LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, Del. Super.,
C.A. No. N15C-08-109, Adams, J. (Nov. 9, 2022), Judicial Action Form. Information gathered
from the deposition shall be for attorneysâ eyes only as well. Id. As of the issuance of this order,
the Court understands that the discovery is proceeding in compliance with the Courtâs ruling.
14
that cannot be reasonably traced to other authority or proof.37 A court is under no
obligation âto admit opinion evidence that is connected to existing data only by the
ipse dixit of the expert. A court may conclude that there is simply too great an
analytical gap between the data and the opinion proffered.â38
Defendants provide five examples of McQuilkinâs opinions that Defendants
argue are ipse dixit.39 The Court addresses each in turn. In examples one and two,
McQuilkin opines that 22-30% of the deal price, or a floor of $43.8 million, is a
reasonable compensation for Plaintiffâs services. The Court finds that these two
examples qualify as ipse dixit. McQuilkinâs deposition confirms that he could not
tie this opinion to anything in his prior experience. The closest example McQuilkin
could provide was a fee that was 10% of the deal price.40 There is little doubt that
McQuilkinâs calculation of damages as shown in the above examples is derived from
the proposed fee arrangement rather than his 35 years of experience as an investment
banker.
The fact that McQuilkinâs opinions, as contained in the first two examples of
ipse dixit, are derived from the proposed fee arrangement in the October 2014 Letter
provides a separate basis for their exclusion.41 As shown in Section VII.B. of the
37
Blackâs Law Dictionary 847 (8th ed. 2004).
38
General Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 146 (1997).
39
Def. Daubert Mot. at 10-11.
40
Dep. of McQuilkin at 98-99.
41
McQuilkin Report at Section VII.B.3. In Section VII of the McQuilkin Report, titled âValue of
LCTâs Services Based on the Negotiations/Alleged Oral Agreementâ McQuilkin calculates the
15
McQuilkin Report, the range of compensation of $43.8-$60 million is a direct
derivation of the equity buy-in transaction proposed in the October 2014 Letter,
based on McQuilkinâs valuation of the NGL GP.42 As the Court discusses in detail
below, benefit-of-the bargain damages are an impermissible measure of quantum
meruit damages. McQuilkin is not permitted to testify to damages based on
Plaintiffâs expectation interests in the agreement it purports to have reached with
Defendants.
With respect to the third example in Defendantsâ motion, McQuilkin is
permitted to testify to the general proposition that the nature and extent of services
justifies higher compensation. The Court appreciates the inherent difficulties in
distilling investment banker services into a purely mathematical calculation and
understands that there is not a perfect linear relationship between the type, extent,
and combination of services on the one hand, and compensation on the other. Both
partiesâ experts appear to agree that there is a great degree of variability in
investment banking advisory fees.43 McQuilkin testified in his deposition that it is
difficult to quantify how certain variables impact the feeâwhen the advisor
generates the idea to the client, for exampleâin part because it is typically only one
value of the allegedly promised compensation (VII.B.) from the value of the NGL GP, which
equates to 22%-30% of the $200 million transaction price.
42
Id.
43
Id.; Dep. of Kevin D. McQuilkin at 96-97; see also Lancaster Report at 17.
16
variable among a host of others.44 The Court finds that McQuilkin has a reasonable
basis for making this assertion based on his 35 years of experience in the field. The
question of whether McQuilkin can testify to specific examples of particular services
resulting in higher fees can be properly addressed on cross-examination.
The Court does not find that Defendantsâ fourth example, McQuilkinâs
statement in his report and deposition testimony that value creation is an important
factor in negotiating fees, is ipse dixit, but limits the extent to which McQuilkin can
testify about value creation.45 McQuilkin, however, is permitted to testify about
whether he or former colleagues discussed with clients speculative value created by
a proposed transaction. McQuilkin is precluded from testifying to his mathematical
calculation of the value created to NGL by the transaction or the cash equivalent of
the proposed equity buy-in arrangement that is derived from that post-acquisition
valuation.46
During McQuilkinâs deposition, he provided sufficient testimony
demonstrating that, in his experience, value creation is a relevant factor in fee
negotiations.47 Although McQuilkin could not quantify how value creation
increased the fee or recall examples of when speculative value creation increased the
44
Dep. of McQuilkin at 98-101.
45
Def. Daubert Mot. at 11. See infra at Section II.B.-C. for the Courtâs discussion of applying
value creation methodology to the proposed equity buy-in transaction as memorialized in the
October 2014 Letter.
46
McQuilkin Report at Section VII.
47
Dep. of McQuilkin at 147-49.
17
fee, he testified at his deposition that there were multiple instances where the
negotiation involved a discussion of the value the proposed transaction could create
as one factor among many.48 McQuilkin affirmed that, in his experience, clients
were willing to pay higher fees based on speculative value creation.49 McQuilkin
testified to the practical difficulties in determining what proportion of a fee was a
result of speculative value creation as opposed to other components.50
Plaintiff has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that McQuilkin is
sufficiently qualified as an expert on investment banker fees to testify about
discussing value creation with clients. The Court is not in a position to find that
investment bankers do not discuss value creation with their clients or that valuation
creation has no influence in fee negotiations. Whether McQuilkin can testify to
concrete examples and provide a mathematical description of the relationship
between value creation and an investment bankerâs fee should be determined
through cross-examination.
With respect to the fifth example in Defendantsâ motion, to the extent
McQuilkin was aware of other investment bankers in the field receiving equity
compensation as financial advisory fees, he is permitted to testify to this.51 The basis
48
Id. at 148. 49Id. at 147-48
. 50Id. at 148-49
.
51
Def. Daubert Mot. at 11.
18
for this opinion can be addressed through cross-examination. The Court reiterates
that McQuilkin cannot base his opinion of quantum meruit damages on the proposed
equity buy-in transaction contained in the October 2014 Letter.
B. McQuilkinâs Reliance on the Partiesâ Alleged Promised Compensation as
Contained in the October 2014 Letter Violates the Law of the Case and
Case Law on Quantum Meruit Damages
In his report, McQuilkin provides opinions based on the partiesâ negotiations,
alleged oral agreement, and the proposed fee agreement in the October 2014 Letter.52
The extent to which McQuilkinâs opinions, based on the proposed fee arrangement
in the October 2014 Letter, are admissible at trial can be informed by a review of
quantum meruit damagesâthe one issue remaining in the caseâas well as those
claims that are no longer in the case.53 In the context of quantum meruit, evidence
of an alleged agreement is only permitted to rebut an allegation that the plaintiff
provided the services gratuitously.54 Here, Defendants have conceded that Plaintiff
provided services and that it was on notice that Plaintiff expected to be paid for those
services.55 This concession obviates Plaintiffâs need to present evidence of an
alleged agreement.
52
McQuilkin Report at Section VII-VIII.
53
See supra Section I.B. n. 30-33 and accompanying text for the proper measure of quantum meruit
damages.
54
Cheeseman v. Grover, 490 A.2d 175, 177(Del. Super. Feb. 1, 1985) (âThe alleged agreement for plaintiffs to receive the [decedentâs] estate may be relied upon only to show that plaintiffs did not act gratuitouslyâ). 55 See Hynansky v. 1492 Hospitality Group, Inc.,2007 WL 2319191
, at *1 (Del. Super. Aug. 15,
2007) (holding to prevail on quasi-contract theory plaintiff must show he provided services with
the expectation of payment and that Defendants was on notice of this expectation).
19
There is no longer a contract claim or fraud claim left in the case. In its breach
of contract claim, Plaintiff âalleged that [Plaintiff] and [Defendants] formed an oral
contract based on the fee that Krimbill purportedly offered to Louis C. Talarico, III,
the principal of Plaintiff LCT Capital, LLC, in May 2014.â56 In July 2018, the
Superior Court granted Defendantsâ motion for summary judgment and dismissed
Plaintiffâs breach of contract claim finding that âneither party manifested objective
assent . . . .â and that âthe essential terms were not sufficiently definite . . . .
[s]pecifically [Plaintiffâs] finderâs fee.â57
With respect to Plaintiffâs fraud claim, the Supreme Court reasoned that
Plaintiff âpresented a unitary theory of damagesâ which âfocused exclusively on the
value of the services that it providedâ and did not include evidence of damages
independently caused by Defendantsâ alleged fraudulent conduct.58 The Supreme
Court held that âwhere the defendantâs fraud did not induce the plaintiff to form a
contract, out-of-pocket damages typically measure the full scope of plaintiffâs
injuries.â59 Because Plaintiffâs contract claim was dismissed, the Supreme Court
found that Plaintiff was limited to seeking out-of-pocket damages for the fair value
of services that it provided, not benefit-of-the-bargain damages.60 The Supreme
56
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 249 A.3d 77, 85 (Del. 2021); Compl. Âś 152-160.
57
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, Del. Super., C.A. No. N15C-08-109, at *21-22,
Carpenter, J. (July 19, 2018) ( Mem. Op.).
58
LCT Capital, LLC, 249 A.3d at 95.
59
Id. at 94.
60
Id. at 98.
20
Court found that out-of-pocket damages were âidentical to the compensation that
LCT [was] entitled to receive for its quantum meruit claim.â61 The Supreme Court
therefore held that the Superior Court abused its discretion in ordering another trial
on fraud damages and struck the juryâs fraud verdict because Plaintiff could not
recover for the same loss twice. 62
It appeared to the Supreme Court that Plaintiff sought âbenefit-of-the-bargain
damages solely to protect its expectation interests in the bargain that Krimbill
proposed but the parties never formed because they could not agree on all of the
material terms.â63 The Supreme Court held that this was a remedy Plaintiff could
not receive and acknowledged the inherent challenges in fairly and accurately
valuing the benefit of a bargain the parties never formed.64 The Court noted that:
â[e]ven if the details of Krimbillâs offer are ascertainable,
we do not know what terms the parties would have agreed
to because the parties never agreed to all of the material
terms of [Plaintiffâs] fee . . . . This uncertainty also creates
a risk that benefit-of-the-bargain damages would provide
[Plaintiff] with a windfall by awarding [Plaintiff] with the
benefit of a generous bargain to which [Defendants] would
not have agreed. Such a windfall would be contrary to
Delaware law.â65
61
Id.
62
Id. at 97-98. â[Plaintiff's] fraud claim failed because it was not supported by damages
independent from the quantum meruit claim.â Id. at 98.
63
Id. at 95.
64
Id. at 95-96.
65
Id. (internal citations omitted).
21
The Supreme Courtâs decision makes clear that the benefit Plaintiff asserts it
would have received from the unconsummated contract should not factor into
quantum meruit damages. McQuilkinâs opinions stemming from Sections VII-VIII
of his report which value Plaintiffâs services based on the partiesâ alleged promised
compensation, and portions of Section IX that make reference to the October 2014
Letter, are therefore excluded.66 McQuilkin is not permitted to testify to the
estimated cash value of the equity buy-in proposal based on his calculation of the
value created from the transaction of the NGL GP.67
With respect to Section VIII (âThe October 24, 2014 Letterâ), McQuilkinâs
opinions derived from those portions of the October 2014 Letter that relate to the fee
proposal are excluded.68 Opinions derived from those portions of the October 2014
Letter that speak only to the nature and quality of the services provided are permitted.
For clarity, below are the excerpts from the October 2014 Letter that the partiesâ
experts are precluded from testifying to:
⢠âWe are proposing that LCT acquire 5% for our NGL General Partner
for a $21 million purchase price. We would like to have the NGL
General Partner purchase this 5% for $50 million so there is no dilution
($1 billion enterprise value), and then sell it to LCT. This equates to a
$29 million success fee which appears high compared to a typical 1%-
2% investment banker success fee. We are looking at the fee from the
perspective of the value created to the NGL General Partner. . . .â
66
McQuilkin Report at Sections VII-IX.
67
Id. at Section VII.
68
Id. at Section VIII.
22
⢠Paragraphs 1, 3, and 7 of the October 2014 Letter are excluded, except
for the following excerpt in paragraph 7: âwe never would have had this
opportunity at our price without LCT bringing it to us.â69
McQuilkin is permitted to testify to his specialized knowledge and experience
of how investment banker fees are determined (Section VI), with the exception that
he is not permitted to testify based on the following sentence: âIn my judgment,
[Plaintiffâs] approach of seeking equity as compensation rather than cash is the
purest form of alignment of interests with a client.â70 McQuilkin is also permitted
to testify to his assessment of the nature, quality, and scope of the services Plaintiff
provided as indicated in the first four paragraphs of Section IX of his report.71
McQuilkin is not permitted to testify to the remainder of Section IX that relates to
his opinions on value created to Defendants from the transaction and its relation to
Plaintiffâs damages.72
C. McQuilkinâs Mathematical Calculation of Quantum Meruit Damages
Derived from a Value Creation Theory of Damages are excluded
Defendants contend that damages under quantum meruit are calculated
without reference to the value created or benefit received from the services
provided.73 In addition to the reasons stated in the preceding section, McQuilkin is
precluded from testifying to his calculations of damages that are based on value
69
Ex. C to Def. Daubert Mot.
70
McQuilkin Report at Section VI.
71
Id. at Section IX.
72
Id.
73
Def. Daubert Mot. at 20.
23
created to Defendants from the transaction because this methodology is contrary to
the law of the case and relevant case law.74
This Court has already ruled that Plaintiff was not permitted to introduce
evidence or testimony based on a value creation theory of quantum meruit
damages.75 After Plaintiff made reference to the value created by the transaction
during its opening argument at the first trial, the Court emphasized that it was not
going to permit any expert to testify to calculations of quantum meruit damages
based on value created to Defendants.76 The jury instructions also stated that the
value of services under quantum meruit âis not measured by reference to any value
created after [Defendantsâ] acquisition of TransMontaigne.â77 Plaintiff did not
object to this instruction and the Supreme Court found on appeal that Plaintiff had
waived this issue.78 In addition to the law of this case, as a general matter, Delaware
case law holds that recovery under quantum meruit damages is the value of the
services provided, not the value of the benefit received.79 There has been no change
in the facts of this case or relevant case law to merit a change in course now.
74
McQuilkin Report at Sections VII-IX.
75
See infra n. 75-77 and accompanying text.
76
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, C.A. No. N15C-08-109 (WCC) (July 24, 2018)
(TRANSCRIPT at 17).
77
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 2018 WL 4600489(2018) (Jury Instructions). 78 LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP,249 A.3d 77
, 102 (Del. 2021). 79 Hynansky v. 1492 Hospitality Group, Inc.,2007 WL 2319191
, at *1 (Del. Super. Aug. 15, 2007) (the value of services under quantum meruit is ânot the value of the benefit receivedâ but the âamount for which such services could have been purchased from one in the plaintiffâs position at the time and place the services were rendered.â); Marta v. Nepa,385 A.2d 727, 730
(Del. 1978)
24
This Court also notes that admitting value creation evidence would likely
confuse and mislead the jury. Admitting such evidence would require the parties to
present a multitude of additional evidence and testimony for the jury to distinguish
between the value created from Plaintiffâs services and value created independent of
its involvement. The value created by the acquisition was a result of the complex
interplay of myriad factors beyond the control of Plaintiff. The introduction of such
evidence would most likely present intractable causation issues for the jury which is
likely to result in their confusion and a windfall for Plaintiff that quantum meruit
damages does not permit.
III. Plaintiffâs Motion in Limine to Hold Defendants to Judicial Admissions
and Exclude Evidence Suggesting That the Value of Plaintiffâs Services
Was Less Than $29 Million is DENIED.
The Courtâs analysis of this motion begins with a brief review of the claims
remaining in this case and the testimony provided by Krimbill at the first trial. The
Superior Court dismissed Plaintiffâs breach of contract claim in 2018.80 On appeal,
the Supreme Court struck the juryâs fraud verdict and held that Plaintiffâs fraud claim
failed.81 The one claim remaining in this case is quantum meruit damages.82
(holding that evidence on remand should include testimony by expert witnesses âas to the worth
of the specific services rendered to [Defendant] by [Plaintiff] and the reasonable compensation
which [plaintiff] deserves therefor.â). See also supra n. 30-33 and accompanying text.
80
See supra Section II.B., n. 56-57 and accompanying text.
81
For a detailed discussion of the outcome of Plaintiffâs fraud claim see supra Section II.B., n. 58-
62 and accompanying text.
82
See supra I.B., n. 30-33 and accompanying text for the proper measure of quantum meruit
damages.
25
At trial, on direct examination, Krimbill testified that âwe certainly had 5%
for $21 million.â83 Again on direct, when examined about whether Krimbillâs fee
recommendation in the October 2014 Letter which âequates to a $29 million success
fee,â was an accurate statement when he wrote it, Krimbill responded âyes.â84
Krimbill confirmed through his testimony that the following statement in the
October 2014 Letter was true: âI feel this is a fair arrangement, although seemingly
expensive, as we would never have had this opportunity at our price without LCT
bringing it to us.â85
In this motion in limine, Plaintiff asserts that Krimbillâs testimony regarding
his views on Plaintiffâs compensation is a judicial admission. In essence, Plaintiff
asserts that $29 million should constitute the floor for quantum meruit damages and
that Defendants should not be permitted to submit evidence or elicit testimony that
anything less than that amount is an appropriate damage award.86
The Supreme Court of Delaware defines judicial admissions as â[v]oluntary
and knowing concessions of fact made by a party during judicial proceedingsâ which
include statements contained in testimony.87 Judicial admissions, which âare
83
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, C.A. No. N15C-08-109, (WCC) (July 27, 2018)
(TRANSCRIPT at 55).
84
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, C.A. No. N15C-08-109, (WCC) (July 26, 2018)
(TRANSCRIPT at 30).
85
Id.
86
Pl. Mot. to Hold Defendants to its Judicial Admissions, at 6, 9.
87
Merritt v. United Parcel Service, 956 A.2d 1196, 1201 (Del. 2008).
26
traditionally considered conclusive and binding both upon the party against whom
they operate, and upon the courtâ88 are distinct from evidentiary admissions, which
may be controverted or explained by the adverse party.89 The court may, in its sound
discretion, relieve a party from the conclusiveness of its judicial admission.90
The definition of a judicial admission and the law of the case dictate that
Plaintiffâs motion be denied. The Court finds Krimbillâs testimony that âwe
certainly had 5% for $21 millionâ and his testimony confirming the statements in
the October 2014 Letter are not judicial admissions because they are not concessions
of fact as to the minimal monetary value of Plaintiffâs services.
The Court finds the testimony, âwe certainly had 5% for $21 million,â is a
subjective perception regarding the partiesâ negotiations about an appropriate fee
and nothing more. Krimbillâs testimony confirming the statement in the Letter that
âI feel this is a fair arrangement . . .â91 is evidence of the subjective nature of his
views. While it may be a fact that Krimbill believed the parties had reached such an
agreement and that he believed the arrangement was fair, it does not necessarily
follow that the parties did reach an agreement or that the alleged agreement is in fact
fair. Plaintiff here conflates beliefs and facts. A belief may or may not be an
88
Id. at 1201-02. 89 Keller v. United States,58 F.3d 1194
, 1198 n. 8 (7th Cir. 1995). 90 Merritt,956 A.2d at 1202
.
91
October 2014 Letter. (emphasis added).
27
expression of fact. The very purpose of this trial is for the jury to determine the fair
monetary value of Plaintiffâs services based on competing expert testimony and the
partiesâ conflicting beliefs and opinions. The Court declines Plaintiffâs request to
end this trial before it begins.92
Through this motion, Plaintiff essentially seeks to controvert this Courtâs
dismissal of its breach of contract claim by asking this Court to enter as a judicial
admission an alleged agreement on Plaintiffâs fee. The Court cannot allow this.
The Court also finds that qualifying Krimbillâs testimony as a judicial
admission would directly conflict with the Supreme Courtâs holding in this case. If
the Supreme Court intended to anchor the jury to a floor of $29 million, it would
92
Even if the testimony that âwe certainly had 5% for $21 million,â was a concession of fact,
entering this testimony as a judicial admission would convert it into at least a mixed finding of fact
and law, and in so doing contradict the definition of a judicial admission. Eagle Force Holdings,
LLC v. Campbell, 187 A.3d 1209, 1213(Del. 2018) (âwhether the contractâs terms are sufficiently definite, is largely a question of law.â); AT&T Corp. v. Lillis,953 A.2d 241, 248
(Del. 2008) quoting Lillis v. AT&T Corp.,896 A.2d 871
, 877 n. 10 (Del. Ch. 2005) (âjudicial admissions apply only to admissions of fact, not to theories of law, such as contract interpretationâ); Twin Willows, LLC v. Pritzkur,2022 WL 3039775
, at *6 (Del. Ch. 2022) (âJudicial admissions which are binding on the tendering party are limited to factual matters in issue and not to statements of legal theories or conceptions.â) (internal citations omitted). Under Delaware law, whether terms are sufficiently definite to form a contract is largely a question of law. Eagle Force Holdings, LLC v. Campbell,235 A.3d 727
, 732 (Del. 2020) (affirming its reasoning in Eagle Force Holdings, LLC v. Campbell,187 A.3d 1209, 1213
(Del. 2018) that âwhether the contractâs terms are sufficiently definite, is largely a question of law.â) Converting Krimbillâs testimony that âwe certainly had 5% for $21 millionâ to a judicial admission would be converting it to a concession of a theory of law, namely that there was an express agreement regarding a particular term of compensation. Such a conversion would be in direct violation of the definition of a judicial admission. Admitting Krimbillâs testimony as evidence of a definite agreement on minimum compensation would in effect reverse the settled law of the case: there was no contract. LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, Del. Super., C.A. No. N15C-08-109, Carpenter, J. (July 19, 2018) ( Mem. Op.). The law of the case dictates that Plaintiffâs finderâs fee was not sufficiently defined.Id.
28
have taken the opportunity to do so. To the contrary, the Supreme Court found that
the jury may have determined $4 million was the fair value of Plaintiffâs services
under quantum meruit.93 Binding the jury in the upcoming trial to $29 million would
prohibit its ability to make a decision based on the evidence presented.94
IV. Plaintiffâs Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence of a âTypicalâ
Investment Banker Fee As Irrelevant to Quantum Meruit Damages Is
DENIED.
Plaintiff argues that evidence of a typical fee should be excluded because the
parties never discussed typical investment banker fees during their negotiations over
Plaintiffâs compensation.95 Plaintiff also argues that the inclusion of such evidence
is contrary to case law on quantum meruit damages.96
Pursuant to the Delaware Rules of Evidence, evidence is admissible if it is
relevant unless it is otherwise excluded by a statute, the rules of evidence, or other
rules applicable to the courts in this state.97 Evidence is relevant if it has any
tendency to make the existence of any fact of consequence to the determination of
the action more or less probable than it would be without the evidence.98 Even if the
evidence is relevant, the Court has discretion to exclude it if its probative value is
93
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 249 A.3d 77, 101 (Del. 2021).
94
The Court is not ruling that Krimbillâs testimony from the prior trial is completely excluded.
The Court only rules that the testimony is not a judicial admission.
95
Pl. Mot. to Exclude Evidence of a Typical Investment Banker Fee as Irrelevant to Quantum
Meruit Damages, at 2 [hereinafter âPl. Mot. to Exclude Typical Fee Evidenceâ]. See supra Section
I.B. for the Courtâs disposition of this argument.
96
Id. at 6.
97
D.R.E. 402.
98
D.R.E. 401.
29
substantially outweighed by a danger of one or more of the factors listed in D.R.E.
403.99 Considering the low evidentiary threshold for relevance and the proper
measure of quantum meruit damages, the Court finds that expert testimony on
typical investment banker fees is relevant to determining the reasonable value of the
services Plaintiff provided in this case.100
The Court does not find that the risk of unfair prejudice to Plaintiff from
presenting evidence of a typical fee will substantially outweigh the probative value
of that evidence.101 Although the Court recognizes the shortcoming of fee run data,
the jury can assess the reliability of this evidence through Plaintiffâs cross-
examination of Defendantsâ experts. It is within the juryâs province and ability to
consider the differing valuations of Plaintiffâs services as provided by the partiesâ
experts. Excluding this evidence would do more to unfairly prejudice Defendants.
Both parties will have ample opportunity to present evidence regarding the nature
and extent of the specific services and the appropriate compensation for these
services.
99
âThe court may exclude relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by
a danger of one or more of the following: unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading the
jury, undue delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.â D.R.E. 403.
100
See supra I.B., n. 30-33 and accompanying text for the proper measure of quantum meruit
damages.
101
D.R.E. 403.
30
The case law also does not require the exclusion of this evidence. Plaintiff
relies heavily on Marta v. Nepa102 in support of its argument that a standard
commission is not relevant to quantum meruit damages. The Supreme Court in
Marta reversed the Superior Courtâs award of a 4% commission to the plaintiff-real
estate broker and remanded for an evidentiary hearing on the issue of damages.103
The court reasoned that a standard commission was âneither equivalent to nor
commensurate with the evidence required for determining a recovery based on
quantum meruitâ and âmay or may notâ reflect the value of the services provided.104
The Supreme Court instructed that the evidence offered on remand âshould include
opinion testimony by expert witnesses, in response to hypothetical questions based
upon the particular facts of this case, as to the worth of the specific services rendered.
. . .â105 The Supreme Court ordered the Superior Court to consider evidence in the
form of expert testimony in addition to, not to the exclusion of, evidence of a
standard commission.106
The Court here also finds that there is less of a risk that the jury here will make
an erroneous decision from this type of evidence than in Marta. As indicated by the
102
385 A.2d 727 (Del. 1978).
103
Id. at 730.
104
Id.
105
Id.
106
Id.On remand, the Superior Court considered testimony from the plaintiffâs and the Defendantsâ experts regarding standard commissions and the Supreme Court affirmed. Nepa v. Marta,415 A.2d 470, 472
(Del. 1980).
31
Supreme Court in Marta, standard commissions for real estate brokers are
prospective in that they are determined before the services are provided and, for this
reason, may not be an accurate reflection of the work done.107 In contrast,
Defendantsâ experts opine in their reports that investment banking fees tend to be at
least partially retrospective.108 The experts on both sides in this action opine that
investment banking fees tend to be agreed upon midstream when some of the
services have already been provided and when the scope of future work is more
ascertainable.109 Typical investment banker fees are likely to be more closely
aligned to quantum meruit damages, which is a retrospective remedy, than standard
commissions for real estate brokers.110
Additionally, unlike real estate broker commissions that are selected from a
single standard, the Lancaster Report reflects a broad range of fees that vary based
on the level of services.111 It appears to the Court that applying data on typical
107
Marta, 385 A.2d at 730.
108
See Lancaster Report at 24 (âadvisors are primarily involved in a transaction prior to signing of
definitive agreements.â); Def. Opp. To Pl. Mot. to Exclude Typical Fee Evidence at 6-7.
109
Id. Dep. of McQuilkin at 45, 47 (â[Y]ou have to get an idea of whatâs going to happen before
you have a reasonable view of what the fees should be. . . . It is typical in the industry, especially
when working with financial sponsors, that they will say, weâll work it out later. And your leverage
as a banker, in a very competitive business where you are trying to win and work with important
clients that you just â you have to trust them.â).
110
See Middle States Drywall, Inc. v. DMS Properties-First, Inc., 1996 WL 453418, at *11 (Del.
Super. May 28, 1996) (âQuantum meruit is a retrospective remedy which looks at what was
actually received by the defendant, rather than a prospective remedy which looks at what the
defendant expected to receive.â) (emphasis in original).
111
See Lancaster Report at 17. The largest fee in Lancasterâs data set is 71 times greater than the
smallest fee. Id.
32
investment banker fees to this case has a greater potential to accurately value
Plaintiffâs services as compared to standard commissions in the real estate broker
context.
The Court further notes that the expected presentation of such evidence is not
novel to this case or within quantum meruit case law.112 Plaintiff has provided no
compelling reason why this Court should depart from prior evidentiary decisions in
this case. For these reasons, Plaintiffâs motion to exclude evidence of a typical fee
is hereby DENIED.
V. Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument
Regarding Any Alleged Agreement Between the Parties Is GRANTED.
In this motion, Defendants seek to preclude all evidence and testimony
regarding an alleged agreement or contract between the parties regarding
compensation for Plaintiffâs services. As discussed, the Superior Court has already
112
Plaintiff consulted fee run data during its negotiations with Defendants (JX056; see Dep. of
McQuilkin at 92-93), Plaintiffâs own expert at the first trial testified that investment banks
regularly use fee run data to negotiate the value of their services (JX056), and evidence of a typical
fee derived from fee run data was also presented at the first trial in this matter. For cases that have
admitted evidence of standard or typical fees to support quantum meruit damages, see Bellanca
Corp. v. Bellanca, 169 A.2d 620, 622(1961); Glissman v. Gross,2018 WL 3660357
, at *6 (S.D. Ga. Aug. 2, 2018) (holding âtypical charge for services is evidence of value conferred in a quantum meruit claim . . . .â); Sanjiv Goel, M.D., Inc. v. Regal Med. Grp., Inc.11 Cal. App. 5th 1054, 1063
(Cal. Ct. App. 2017) (holding trial court properly considered Defendants expertâs testimony concerning fees charged by other providers for similar services for plaintiffâs quantum meruit claim); Learning Annex Holdings v. Rich Global,2012 WL 2878124
, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. July 13,
2012) (holding plaintiff provided sufficient evidence for jury to find that compensation for
licensing agents is typically based on a percentage of royalty revenues).
33
dismissed Plaintiffâs breach of contract claim.113 The Supreme Court affirmed the
Superior Courtâs holding that Plaintiff was not entitled to benefit-of-the-bargain
damages because Defendantsâ alleged fraud did not induce Plaintiff to form a
contract.114 Quantum meruit damages is the one issue remaining in this case and is
to be calculated independent of any alleged agreement.â115
Plaintiff cites Pike Creek Professional Center v. Eastern Elec. & Heating,
Inc.116 and Bellanca Corp. v. Bellanca117 to support its position that the partiesâ
alleged agreement is admissible to show the value of its services. Neither Pike Creek
nor Bellanca stand for the proposition Plaintiff asserts. In Pike Creek, there was a
contract between the parties and the plaintiff was permitted to submit the contract
price as an admission of value.118 Similarly, in Bellanca, the plaintiff alleged a
breach of an express contract and, after presenting his case in chief, amended his
complaint to include recovery on a quantum meruit basis.119 Because the plaintiff in
113
LCT Capital, LLC v. Defendants Energy Partners LP, Del. Super., C.A. No. N15C-08-109, at
*21-22, Carpenter, J. (July 19, 2018) (Mem. Op.).
114
LCT Capital, LLC v. Defendants Energy Partners LP, 249 A.3d 77, 92-95 (Del. 2021).
115
See supra Section I.B., n. 30-33 and accompanying text for the definition of quantum meruit
damages. See also Pike Creek Professional Center v. Eastern Elec. & Heating, Inc., 540 A.2d
1088(TABLE),1998 WL 32028
, at *2 (Del. 1988) (affirming trial courtâs quantum meruit award
that excluded plaintiffâs bargained-for profits).
116
1987 WL 9610(Apr. 7, 1987), affâd540 A.2d 1088
.
117
169 A.2d 620 (Del. 1961).
118
1988 WL 32028, at *2 (âIn meeting its burden of establishing the reasonable value of the benefit conferred, [Plaintiff] was properly permitted to introduce the contract price âas evidence of an admission by the parties of [the] value of Plaintiffâs servicesââ) (quoting Emerson v. Universal Products Co.,162 A.2d 779
, 881 (Del. Super. Oct. 17, 1932).
119
Bellanca, 169 A.2d at 621-22.
34
Bellanca claimed the defendant breached an express contract, the plaintiff was
permitted to testify to the compensation allegedly agreed upon as evidence of the
value of his services.120 Unlike in Pike Creek and Bellanca, in the present case there
is no contract and thus no basis to submit evidence of compensation to which the
parties allegedly agreed.
For these reasons, the following terminology, or any substantially similar
word or phrase that a reasonable juror would equate with these terms, is
EXCLUDED:
⢠âan oral contractâ
⢠âverbal contractâ
⢠âagreementâ
⢠âverbal agreementâ
⢠âagreed toâ
⢠âthe fee agreementâ
⢠âour dealâ
⢠âthe contractâ
⢠âthe amount promisedâ
Neither party is permitted to frame, characterize or qualify any negotiations,
discussions, or proposals as culminating in a shared agreement, contract, promise or
resolution of the issue of compensation. The Court acknowledges the inherent
challenges in applying this ruling at trial. Considering the unique facts of this case,
the Court anticipates that the distinction between negotiations and an alleged
agreement may at times be difficult to discern. This concern should be adequately
120
Id.
35
addressed through timely objections and sidebar discussions between the Court and
counsel.
Although the Court is prohibiting any evidence of an alleged agreement
regarding compensation, this does not bar the parties from submitting evidence or
eliciting testimony of fee negotiations, to the extent that they make no reference to
value created by the transaction or the equity buy-in proposal. Some or perhaps most
evidence relating to the partiesâ fee negotiations is subjective in nature insofar as it
conveys the partiesâ perceptions of value, as opposed to publicly available fee run
data on investment banker fees. The Court acknowledges that admitting evidence
of subjective perceptions of value is contrary to case law stating that quantum meruit
damages are to be based solely on objective measures of a plaintiffâs services.121
Considering, however, that the publicly available fee run data includes as little as
5% of all merger and acquisition transactions,122 the Court finds that the jury should
121
See supra Section I.B., n. 30-33 and accompanying text for a discussion of the measure of
quantum meruit damages.
122
See McQuilkin Report at Section VI (publicly available fee data âonly includes a very small
subset of actual negotiated fees because only publicly disclosed fees are used. Public fee disclosure
generally only results from the filing of a proxy statement (or other public disclosure) on a deal,
which happens infrequently to begin with and, when focused on buy-side fees [. . .] few proxies
(for example) will include such information as the audience tends to be the sellerâs shareholders,
not the buyerâs.â); When explaining the sample size in the Refinitiv Eikon data Lancaster analyzed
in the Report, which had a sample size of 50 deals between 2000-2016 with a transaction price of
$100million-$1 billion, she testified, âDoes it represent a material portion of the deals in that time
period? No, for the reason weâve talked about: These are publicly available fees.â Dep. of
Lancaster at 160, Lancaster Report at 17; Adler Report at 5 (â[I]n the United States, there are
thousands of M&A transactions each year as reported in publicly-available [sic] sources such as
the Wall Street Journal. Only a very small fraction of these transaction involved public companies
(typically less than 5% of all M&A transactions). As a result, the fees paid on the overwhelming
36
not be solely confined to hearing this evidence, but should have the opportunity to
weigh this evidence against the partiesâ discussions of the appropriate fee for
Plaintiffâs services. The Court finds that permitting the jury to consider testimony
and evidence on typical investment banker fees together with the partiesâ fee
negotiations (excluding discussions of value creation and the equity buy-in proposal)
will increase the likelihood of an appropriate damage award.
The Court notes that it is not breaking new ground in this case by permitting
evidence of the partiesâ fee negotiations. As stated in the Superior Courtâs 2018
Memorandum Opinion on Defendantsâ motion for summary judgement, this
evidence remains relevant to the partiesâ perceptions of the value of the services
provided.123 The Superior Court held that Plaintiff could submit this evidence as
probative of the appropriate damage award.124 It also appears to the Court that the
Supreme Court agreed that this evidence could support a quantum meruit damages
award.125 For the reasons discussed, while the parties may submit evidence and elicit
majority of M&A transactions are not publicly-available [sic]. Moreover, anyone who bases an
advisory fee solely on a fee run, is missing more than 95% of the market.â).
123
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, Del. Super., C.A. No. N15C-08-109, at *23-
24, Carpenter, J. (July 19, 2018) ( Mem. Op.) (â[T]he Court wants to be clear that it is in no way
implying conversations, discussions, communications and emails between the parties and their
representatives are no longer relevant. They are. If the CEO of NGL made representations that
he believed the compensation package suggested by LCT was fair and appropriate and was
working toward accomplishing it, those comments are relevant to the quantum meruit [sic]
claim.â).
124
Id.
125
LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 249 A.3d 77, 100-101 (Del. 2021). The
Supreme Court posited that the jury may have intended to award Plaintiff with more than $4
million in quantum meruit damages and split its award between the two damages lines for quantum
37
testimony on the partiesâ fee negotiations and discussions, Plaintiff is precluded from
submitting evidence or argument regarding an alleged agreement. Defendantsâ
motion in limine to exclude evidence or argument on an alleged agreement is
GRANTED.
VI. Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument
Regarding Alleged Fraud And-Or Fraudulent Statements Is GRANTED.
Plaintiff alleged fraudulent misrepresentation in Count III of its amended
complaint.126 On appeal, the Supreme Court struck the juryâs fraud verdict and held
that Plaintiffâs fraud claim failed.127 Evidence or argument of fraud is not probative
of the reasonable fair market value of the services. Whether Defendants were
dishonest toward Plaintiff during negotiations about compensation is distinct from
the nature and quality of the services Plaintiff provided. There is no evidentiary
basis to submit evidence of fraud, thus Defendantsâ motion to exclude this evidence
is granted.128 In an effort to provide the parties with concrete guidance and minimize
meruit and fraud. The Court reasoned that this was a possibility in light of the evidence the jury
received suggesting Plaintiff provided âunusually valuable servicesâ and then discussed the equity
buy-in proposal and description of services in the October 2014 Letter. Id.
126
Compl. Âś 168-73. Plaintiff alleged Defendants fraudulently misrepresented that as a fee for
Plaintiffâs services, it would receive a 2% ownership interest in NGL Holdings with an option to
purchase an additional 3% at a $700 million valuation, and with the taxes to be paid by Defendants.
Id. This claim as well as Plaintiffâs quantum meruit claim proceeded to trial and the jury awarded
Plaintiff $29 million in damages for the fraud claim. LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners
LP, Del. Super., C.A. No. N15C-08-109, Carpenter, J. (Aug. 1, 2018) (TRANSCRIPT OF
VERDICT at 4).
127
For a detailed discussion of the outcome of Plaintiffâs fraud claim see supra Section II.B., n.
58-62 and accompanying text.
128
The Court also finds that, considering the minimal probative value of this evidence, the risk of
unfair prejudice substantially outweighs its probative value. D.R.E. 403. There is a significant
likelihood that if the jury is presented with evidence suggesting that Defendants misled, falsely
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any ambiguity that may result from this order, the Court is providing a list of terms
and phrases that are excluded as fraud evidence. Plaintiff is not permitted to submit
evidence or argument that includes the following terminology or any substantially
similar word or phrase that a reasonable juror would equate with these terms:
Evidence or argument:
1. Of âpromisesâ or ârepresentationsâ by Defendants
2. That Defendants allowed or induced Plaintiff to believe a
fee agreement had been reached
3. Of false representations made by Defendants
4. Of allegations that Defendants âstrung Plaintiff alongâ
5. Of a âverbal agreementâ or âverbal contractâ
6. That Defendants âbacked away from their commitmentâ
7. That Defendants engaged in negligent conduct or were
negligent in its communications with Plaintiff
8. That Defendants concealed material facts from Plaintiff
9. Of justifiable or reasonable reliance by Plaintiff resulting
from Defendantsâ conduct or statements.
This list is not meant to be exhaustive. As the parties are in a greater command
of the evidence they intend to present, the Court expects that they are in a better
position to identify which evidence falls under the category of fraud.
represented or fraudulently induced Plaintiff into believing that a certain compensation
arrangement would result, that it will inflame the jurorsâ emotions and cause them to select a
damage amount predominantly on that basis instead of the value of Plaintiffâs services. Plaintiff
should not be awarded any damages on this basis because there is no longer a fraud claim.
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffâs Motion to Exclude Opinions and
Testimony of Defendantsâ Rebuttal Expert, Lori A. Lancaster is DENIED;
Defendantsâ Daubert Motion to Exclude the Opinions of Kevin D. McQuilkin is
GRANTED, in part; Plaintiffâs Motion in Limine to Hold NGL to Judicial
Admissions and Exclude Evidence Suggesting the Value of LCTâs Services Was Less
Than $29 Million is DENIED; Plaintiffâs Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence of
a âTypicalâ Investment Banker Fee as Irrelevant to Quantum Meruit Damages is
DENIED; Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument
Regarding Any Alleged Agreement Between the Parties is GRANTED; Defendantsâ
Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence or Argument Regarding Alleged Fraud and-
or Fraudulent Statements is GRANTED; and Defendantsâ Motion in Limine to
Preclude Evidence or Argument Regarding Value Creation is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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