A law firm as creative as you are.
image001
You have the ambition. We can help you get there.

E-commerce Expands Personal Jurisdiction for Businesses

Posted on Dec 3rd, 2013

A recent Massachusetts Appeals Court decision impacts businesses that deal with out of state companies, an issue that is much more common today thanks to the advent of e-commerce. Diamond Group, Inc. v. Selective Distribution International, Inc. expands personal jurisdiction and allows a Massachusetts business lawsuit to move forward against a Long Island company. The finding is based on the orders placed over emails between the two businesses.

Diamond, a Massachusetts company, sued Selective Distribution in a Massachusetts court for 45 unpaid invoices. Selective Distribution, a Long Island business, filed a motion to dismiss based on a lack of personal jurisdiction. The argument Selective made was the standard “minimum contacts” argument from the 1945 International Shoe case: the business had no presence in Massachusetts, and all deliveries it received came to its warehouses in New York and New Jersey.

The Court examined the International Shoe criteria and based its decision within them, albeit expanding them. First, the Court found that the series of email orders itself constitutes “purposeful availment” of Massachusetts commercial activity. Distinguishing this case from others in which personal jurisdiction was found absent based on the International Shoe standards, the Court explained that this ongoing pattern was far different than cases where single purchases or isolated transactions were involved. In contrast, Selective was a regular and active participant in Massachusetts commercial circles and this deliberate and routine involvement signaled that “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice” would not be offended by the assertion of personal jurisdiction over the business.

Whether or not the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court will accept further appellate review is up in the air. For now, the clear take away is that doing business online with out of state companies can open your business up to liability in other states if this expanded understanding of personal jurisdiction holds up. This case is an important reminder of the benefits of including a governing law and dispute resolution clause in your contract forms to provide for a favorable locale as the exclusive forum for any proceedings to take place.

If you have any questions about this topic, please feel free to email us.


Delaware Court of Chancery Holds that a Reverse Triangular Merger is not a Transfer or Assignment by Operation of Law

Posted on Mar 13th, 2013

 

Last month the Delaware Chancery Court allayed the concerns of corporate transactional lawyers by ruling under Delaware law that a reverse triangular merger (RTM) does not constitute a transfer or assignment by operation of law. The decision, Meso Scale Diagnostics, v. Roche Diagnostics, C.A. No. 5589-VCP (Del. Ch. 2013), involved a restriction on assignments and transfers in a license agreement, which the Court held as a matter of law was not triggered by the RTM.

In brief, a reverse triangular merger structure involves a merger of a selling company (Target) with a subsidiary of the buyer company (Buyer), which is often a special purpose entity created just for the transaction. The transaction is referred to as a “reverse” type of merger because the acquired entity here ends up being the surviving entity in the merger and becomes a subsidiary of the Buyer. This structure is desirable because it resembles a stock acquisition in its final result, but has the added advantages of (1) requiring less than unanimous approval from the Target’s stockholders and (2) allows for more flexibility than a stock swap under the tax laws relating to what are called “tax free” reorganizations.

For years, corporate lawyers have taken the position that a RTM does not trigger anti-assignment provisions in contracts. That’s because in this structure, just like in a stock acquisition, no contracts are being assigned or transferred per se. The acquired entity remains in place and the only change is that its stockholders before the deal have been replaced with a single stockholder, which is either the Buyer or one of its subsidiaries. However, starting with a somewhat obscure 1991 California court decision involving Oracle, there has been a growing national trend of courts calling this line of reasoning into question. The Oracle court reasoned that a change of stock ownership in a target was a change of its legal form, which resulted in an impermissible transfer of intellectual property rights. Most recently, an earlier Chancery Court decision in 2011 in this same case created ambiguity under Delaware law – previously thought to be safe territory by most Delaware practitioners – by refusing to dismiss the case based on the stock acquisition cases cited by the defendants.

The recent Meso Scale holdings resolve these issues. The Chancery Court rejected the Oracle decision as persuasive authority on this issue. The Court reasoned that the California court’s holding that a RTM constitutes an assignment by operation of law conflicts with Delaware’s jurisprudence regarding stock acquisitions. This is because Delaware courts have consistently found over time that when a corporation lawfully acquires the ownership of another corporation and with it the corporation’s stock, this change of ownership does not imply any assignment of the contractual rights of the corporation whose securities the buying corporation purchased. Therefore, the Court of Chancery held that because both stock acquisitions and RTMs are changes in legal ownership, and not in the underlying interest of that entity, they should produce parallel legal results.

The lessons from this case are two-fold:

1.   For contracts governed by Delaware law, parties can continue to rely on stock acquisitions and RTMs as a structure where third party consents should not be required to a “transfer” or “assignment” type of contractual clause. For contracts governed outside Delaware, such as in California, the doubt still remains, so it may be prudent to get the third party consent for those contracts just in case.

2.   For Delaware-governed contracts, parties that want the right to consent to a RTM (or other similar transaction) should include a “change of control” provision in their contracts. While this is common in more complex agreements, such as financing agreements and real estate leases, commercial agreements such as software license agreements and customer and vendor contracts generally do not go to this level of drafting.

If you have any questions about this topic, please feel free to email us.