   IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ROBERT LENOIS, on behalf of                )
himself and all other similarly situated   )
stockholders of ERIN ENERGY                )
CORPORATION, and derivatively on           )
behalf    of      ERIN       ENERGY        )
CORPORATION,                               )
                                           )
             Plaintiff,                    )
                                           )
   v.                                      )     C.A. No. 11963-VCMR
                                           )
KASE LUKMAN LAWAL, LEE P.                  )
BROWN, WILLIAM J. CAMPBELL,                )
J. KENT FRIEDMAN, JOHN                     )
HOFMEISTER,    IRA   WAYNE                 )
McCONNELL,      HAZEL    R.                )
O’LEARY, and CAMAC ENERGY                  )
HOLDINGS, LIMITED,                         )
                                           )
             Defendants,                   )
                                           )
   and                                     )
                                           )
ERIN ENERGY CORPORATION,                   )
                                           )
             Nominal Defendant.            )


                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

                           Date Submitted: July 21, 2017
                          Date Decided: November 7, 2017

Stuart M. Grant and Michael J. Barry, GRANT & EISENHOFER P.A., Wilmington,
Delaware; Peter B. Andrews and Craig J. Springer, ANDREWS & SPRINGER
LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Jeremy Friedman, Spencer Oster, and David Tejtel,
FRIEDMAN OSTER & TEJTEL PLLC, New York, New York; Attorneys for
Plaintiff.
                                           1
Myron T. Steele, Arthur L. Dent, and Jaclyn C. Levy, POTTER ANDERSON &
CORROON LLP; David T. Moran and Christopher R. Bankler, JACKSON
WALKER L.L.P., Dallas, Texas; Attorneys for Defendants Kase Lukman Lawal
and CAMAC Energy Holdings, Limited.

Gregory V. Varallo, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington,
Delaware; J. Wiley George, ANDREWS KURTH LLP, Houston, Texas; Attorneys
for Defendants John Hofmeister, Ira Wayne McConnell, and Hazel R. O’Leary.

David J. Teklits and Kevin M. Coen, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL
LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Mark Oakes and Ryan Meltzer, NORTON ROSE
FULBRIGHT US LLP, Austin, Texas; John Byron, NORTON ROSE FULBRIGHT
US LLP, Houston, Texas; Attorneys for Defendants Lee P. Brown, William J.
Campbell, J. Kent Friedman and Nominal Defendant Erin Energy Corporation.

MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Vice Chancellor.




                                    2
      This case arises out of transactions between an oil and gas exploration

company (Erin Energy Corporation, “Erin” or the “Company”), its controller (Kase

Lukman Lawal),1 a controller-affiliated company (Allied Energy Plc, “Allied”), and

a third-party entity (Public Investment Corporation Limited, “PIC”).               In the

transactions at issue, PIC invested in Erin, and Erin transferred stock to PIC. Erin

then transferred to Allied the majority of the PIC cash, a convertible subordinated

note, Erin stock, and a promise of certain future payments related to the development

of a new oil discovery, in exchange for certain Allied oil mining rights. The other

stockholders in the Company also received additional shares in connection with the

transactions (the “Transactions”).

      One individual—Lawal—initiated the process and acted simultaneously as (1)

a controller of Erin, (2) a controller of and the sole negotiator for Allied, which was

counterparty to Erin, and (3) the effective sole negotiator between Erin and the other

counterparty in the transaction, PIC. Thus, the remaining board members relied on

the controller as the sole voice for—and, more importantly, information source

from—the two entities, Allied and PIC, despite a potential misalignment of

incentives for the controller. And the complaint is replete with allegations of bad

faith conduct against Lawal, including that he attempted to dominate the process,


1
      After being identified initially, individuals are referenced herein by their surnames
      without regard to formal titles such as “Dr.” No disrespect is intended.

                                            3
withheld material information from the board, and rushed the board into the unfair

Transactions.

      Yet at the same time, the Erin board formed an independent committee to

manage the process. That committee retained reputable, independent legal and

financial advisors, resisted attempts to rush the process, pushed back on numerous

deal terms, and obtained materially better terms, including an infusion of much-

needed cash into the troubled Company. Thereafter, a majority of the minority of

stockholders approved the issuance of shares required for the Transactions.

      Plaintiff brings derivative breach of fiduciary duty claims against the

controllers for presenting and the board of directors for approving the purportedly

unfair Transactions, in which the Company allegedly overpaid for the Allied assets

by between $86.2 million and $198.8 million. Plaintiff also asserts direct breach of

fiduciary duty claims against the board regarding the alleged disclosure violations

in the transaction proxy, and against Lawal for aiding and abetting the breach of the

duty of disclosure.

      Plaintiff did not make demand on the board under Court of Chancery Rule

23.1 before filing this action. Instead, Plaintiff argues that he has alleged sufficient

facts to raise a reason to doubt that the decision to enter into the Transactions was a

product of a valid exercise of business judgment. Plaintiff claims that the board

acted in bad faith by allowing Lawal to hijack the process and pressure the Company

                                           4
into a bad deal, making demand futile under the second prong of Aronson.2 And

even if this behavior does not amount to bad faith, Plaintiff alleges that demand is

futile because one person—Lawal—acted in bad faith and, alternatively, because the

board was inadequately informed and breached its duty of care.

      Defendants move to dismiss the derivative claims for failure to make demand

pursuant to Rule 23.1. Defendants argue that demand is not excused as futile

because the directors, other than Lawal, are independent and disinterested and the

Transactions were a valid exercise of business judgment. Defendants contend that

in assessing demand futility, the Court must look to the whole board’s culpability,

and in this case, Plaintiff fails to plead non-exculpated claims as to a majority of the

board in light of Erin’s exculpatory charter provision. Defendants also move to

dismiss the direct disclosure claims under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6), arguing

that the alleged damages from the disclosure claims flow to the Company and, thus,

must be dismissed.

      In this opinion, I follow what I believe to be the weight of authority in

Delaware. I hold that where directors are protected by an exculpatory charter

provision adopted pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 102(b)(7), a plaintiff must allege that a

majority of the board faces a substantial likelihood of liability for non-exculpated



2
      Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805 (Del. 1984).

                                           5
claims in order to raise a reason to doubt that the challenged decision was a valid

exercise of business judgment under the second prong of Aronson.3 Applying that

law in the instant case, I hold that demand is not excused as futile because Plaintiff

fails to plead non-exculpated claims against Erin’s director defendants (other than

Lawal). Further, Plaintiff’s direct disclosure claims fail because the alleged injury

is to the Company.

      Thus, I grant the Motion to Dismiss the action.

I.    BACKGROUND
      All facts derive from the Verified Class Action and Derivative Complaint (the

“Complaint”), Plaintiff’s Verified Supplement to the Verified Class Action and

Derivative Complaint (the “Supplement”), and the documents incorporated by

reference therein.4

      A.     Parties and Relevant Non-Parties
      Plaintiff Robert Lenois is a stockholder of Nominal Defendant Erin. Erin,

previously CAMAC Energy, Inc., is a Delaware corporation principally located in



3
      Id. at 815 (citations omitted) (explaining that demand may be excused as futile “in
      rare cases [where] a transaction . . . [is] so egregious on its face that board approval
      cannot meet the test of business judgment, and a substantial likelihood of director
      liability therefore exists”).
4
      On a motion to dismiss, the Court may consider documents outside the pleadings if
      “(1) the document is integral to a plaintiff’s claim and incorporated in the complaint
      or (2) the document is not being relied upon to prove the truth of its contents.” Allen
      v. Encore Energy P’rs, 72 A.3d 93, 96 n.2 (Del. 2013).

                                             6
Houston, Texas. Erin engages in oil and gas exploration with a focus on sub-Saharan

Africa.

      Defendant Lawal is the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Erin. As of

April 1, 2015, Lawal also owned 27.7%, and other members of his family owned

69.3%, of non-party CAMAC International Limited, which indirectly owns 100% of

defendant CAMAC Energy Holdings Limited (“CEHL”). CEHL is a Cayman

Islands limited liability company headquartered in Houston, Texas and is a holding

company for businesses in global oil and gas exploration and production. Lawal and

CEHL are the controlling stockholders of Erin. Before the Transactions at issue,

Lawal and CEHL owned 58.86% of the Company’s outstanding shares. CEHL also

has wholly-owned subsidiaries including non-parties Allied and CAMAC

International (Nigeria) Limited (“Camac International”).     Allied is a Nigerian

registered company that specializes in the upstream oil and gas business. Non-party

PIC is a South African quasi-public pension fund manager.

      Defendants Lee Patrick Brown, William J. Campbell, J. Kent Friedman, John

Hofmeister, Ira Wayne McConnell, and Hazel R. O’Leary are members of the Erin

board (“Director Defendants,” and collectively with Lawal, the “Board”).

Defendants O’Leary, McConnell, and Hofmeister served on the special committee

that considered the relevant Transactions (the “Special Committee”).




                                        7
      B.     Facts
      CEHL began oil operations in sub-Saharan Africa in the early 1990s. The

Nigerian government awarded Oil Mining Leases 120 and 121 (the “Oil Mining

Leases”) for twenty year terms to Allied and Camac International in 2002. Oyo

Field, located off the coast of Nigeria, is included in these Oil Mining Leases. In

2005, Allied and Camac International conveyed a 40% interest in the Oil Mining

Leases to Nigerian AGIP Exploration Limited (“NAE”), and the three entities

entered into a production sharing contract governing their relationship with the Oil

Mining Leases (the “Production Sharing Contract”).5

      In 2010, Erin (then known as Pacific Asia Petroleum, Inc.) acquired a portion

of Allied’s and Camac International’s rights in the Production Sharing Contract

relating to the Oyo Field in exchange for giving CEHL $32 million, 62.7%

ownership in Erin, and an agreement to pay an additional $6.84 million within six

months of the consummation of the transaction (the “2010 Acquisition”). CEHL

also gave Erin a right of first refusal for a period of five years as to any licenses,

leases, or other contract rights for exploration or production of oil or gas owned by

CEHL. After the 2010 Acquisition, the Erin board was expanded from five members




5
      Compl. ¶¶ 21-23.

                                          8
to seven members, and CEHL nominated four new directors, including Lawal, who

was appointed non-executive Chairman.6

      In February 2011, Erin purchased all of Allied’s and Camac International’s

Production Sharing Contract rights not related to Oyo Field. In June 2012, Allied

entered into a contract to purchase the remainder of NAE’s interests in the Oil

Mining Leases and the Production Sharing Contract in exchange for $250 million of

cash consideration plus certain adjustments, leaving Allied and Erin as the only

owners of the Oil Mining Leases and the only entities subject to the Production

Sharing Contract.7

             1.       Lawal negotiates with PIC and the Board forms the Special
                      Committee
      In January 2013, Allied, through Lawal, proposed to Erin a transaction in

which Erin would re-domicile as an English company listed on the London Stock

Exchange, raise funds through a public offering of newly issued shares, and acquire

the remaining interests in Oyo Field from Allied. Erin formed a special committee

consisting of Hofmeister, Campbell, and Friedman to consider this offer. In April




6
      Id. ¶¶ 26-28.
7
      Id. ¶¶ 30-31.

                                         9
2013, this committee was disbanded because Allied began exploring a transaction

with PIC and a third party.8

      In June 2013, PIC and Lawal, on behalf of Allied, negotiated a transaction in

which PIC would invest $300 million in Erin for a 30% ownership interest in Erin,

and Erin would transfer all of the money, along with additional Erin stock, to Allied

in exchange for Allied’s remaining Oil Mining Lease interests. Director Defendants

were not aware of these negotiations. On June 14, 2013, Allied and PIC presented

the proposed transactions to the Board.9

      On June 17, 2013, the Board formed the Special Committee to consider the

proposal. The Special Committee included Hofmeister, the former President of

Shell Oil, as Chairman, O’Leary, the former United States Secretary of Energy, and

McConnell, the managing partner of a Texas-based accounting firm. The Special

Committee first convened on June 26, 2013 and retained Andrews Kurth LLP

(“Andrews Kurth”) as its legal advisor and Canaccord Genuity Limited

(“Canaccord”) as its financial advisor. At a subsequent meeting on June 28, the

Special Committee decided to meet with and rely on the guidance of the Company’s

Chief Financial Officer Earl McNeil and General Counsel Nicholas Evanoff.10


8
      Id. ¶¶ 32-34.
9
      Id. ¶¶ 35-36.
10
      Id. ¶¶ 37-39.

                                           10
      On July 8, 2013, The Special Committee met to discuss a timeline of the

proposed transactions that they had received from Allied. At the meeting,

             [Hofmeister] expressed his concern that certain steps
             noted for previous times in the draft timeline had
             seemingly been completed without the Special
             Committee’s review and comment, even though the
             Special Committee is the party that should be responsible
             for making these decisions and driving the transaction. He
             also expressed his concern that the draft timeline should
             have been labeled as work product of Allied.11

At the same July 8 meeting, the Special Committee asked McNeil to prepare an

outline of material terms to be negotiated with Allied and the most favorable possible

outcome for Erin on each term.

             2.    The Special Committee begins negotiations
      At the July 12, 2013 Special Committee meeting, Evanoff “requested that the

Special Committee allow him to send a draft agreement to Allied ‘in order to meet

Allied’s timing expectations and maintain a working relationship with Allied,’”12

and the Special Committee agreed. Also at that meeting, McNeil purportedly gave

a summary of management’s analysis of the material terms for the draft agreement

(the “Transfer Agreement”).       This included McNeil’s explanation that “the




11
      Id. ¶ 40.
12
      Id. ¶ 42.

                                         11
ownership interests and split” in the Oil Mining Leases were very complicated.13

McNeil also allegedly “distributed a valuation exercise that he had prepared

regarding the proposed transaction.”14 On July 19, the Special Committee met again

and considered revisions to the draft Transfer Agreement with McNeil and Evanoff.

But at a July 26, 2013 Special Committee meeting, O’Leary expressed her “concern

that the Committee still did not have enough information on the working capital and

capital expenditure requirements that could be expected with regard to the

Company’s future operation of Oil Mining Lease 120/121.”15

      On August 5, 2013, the Special Committee met to discuss the proposed

transactions and the “problems that Nigerian oil operators were experiencing with

respect to theft of production.”16 On August 6, Allied sent Evanoff its markup of the

draft Transfer Agreement, and the Special Committee met in mid-August to discuss

Allied’s proposed changes.

      On August 13, 2013, the Company filed its Form 10-Q for the six months

ended June 30, 2013.

             [I]t disclosed that although it had a net working capital
             deficit of $12 million, including cash and cash equivalents

13
      Id. ¶ 43.
14
      Id. ¶ 44.
15
      Id. ¶ 46.
16
      Id. ¶ 47.

                                         12
             of $2 million, management believed that the Company
             would have sufficient capital resources to meet projected
             cash flow requirements for the next twelve months,
             assuming no additional participation in Oyo Field
             operating and development costs through such date.
             Although the Company’s consolidated financial
             statements were prepared assuming the Company would
             continue as a going concern, it was necessary for the
             Company to describe in the Form 10-Q certain factors that
             could raise substantial doubt about the Company’s long-
             term financial viability.17

      On August 30, 2013, the Special Committee met with McNeil and Andrews

Kurth to discuss the draft technical report of Gaffney, Cline & Associates, an

independent reserve engineer hired by the Special Committee. McNeil represented

that Canaccord also had received a copy, and that he and Canaccord were

incorporating the results into their valuation analyses.    Canaccord’s financial

analysis addressed the “future capital and operational expenditures” for the Oil

Mining Leases,18 topics on which O’Leary noted at the July 26, 2013 meeting that

“the Committee . . . did not have enough information.”19 The Special Committee

did not meet in September 2013; however, “Allied, Lawal, and certain Company

executives worked extensively on the proposed transaction,” and “Lawal continued




17
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. A, at 25.
18
      Id. at 26.
19
      Compl. ¶ 92.

                                        13
to communicate with . . . PIC regarding their potential investment in the

Company.”20

             3.    The Special Committee feels pressure to finalize the deal
      On October 9, 2013, PIC sent Erin a commitment letter (the “Commitment

Letter”) outlining its proposal to invest $270 million in Erin in exchange for 30%

ownership of the Company’s stock after Erin completed the proposed transaction

with Allied. This was based on a $900 million valuation of the total assets the

Company would hold after the Allied transaction. Lawal informed Evanoff that the

investment was conditioned on PIC’s ability to nominate a director to the board if it

retained more than 20% ownership of Erin. Evanoff and the Company’s outside

counsel, Sidley Austin LLP (“Sidley Austin”), drafted a revised share purchase

agreement, and on October 11, Evanoff sent this draft to PIC (the “Share Purchase

Agreement”) without the Special Committee’s knowledge or approval.

      The Special Committee met again on October 14, 2013 to discuss the

Commitment Letter. O’Leary expressed “concern over the fact that the Committee

was not able to deal directly with PIC.”21 McNeil also presented the Special

Committee with his valuation framework for evaluating and negotiating the

transaction and his view of the Company’s possible strategic alternatives.


20
      Id. ¶ 49.
21
      Id. ¶ 54.

                                         14
      On October 17, 2013, Canaccord presented an “early draft” of its analyses to

the Special Committee. The Special Committee then told McNeil to “seek a formal

proposal from Allied and to draft a list of the issues and elements of a potential

transaction.”22 Allied sent a revised proposal on October 21. Under this proposal,

Allied would transfer its remaining interests in the Oil Mining Leases and the

Production Sharing Contract in exchange for $270 million in cash and enough Erin

shares such that Allied and CEHL would own 63.6% (the “October 21 Proposal”).

PIC also gave the Company an executed copy of the Share Purchase Agreement

listing the exact number of shares to be issued to PIC: 376,884,422.

      The Board met on October 21, 2013, and Lawal purportedly told the Board

that “if a deal could not be reached between the Special Committee and Allied in the

near term, then . . . PIC might abandon its commitment to make the $270 million

investment in the Company.”23 This allegedly was backgrounded by the “substantial

doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern” without the

investment from PIC.24

      The Special Committee met on October 24, 2013 to consider the October 21

Proposal. At the meeting, Hofmeister purportedly “expressed his concern that the


22
      Id. ¶ 56.
23
      Id. ¶ 59.
24
      Id.

                                        15
audited financial statements for Oil Mining Leases 120/121 had not been received

by the Committee, and that part of the evaluation of the Proposed Transaction would

revolve around the Committee and its advisors’ ability to perform diligence on the

assets to be acquired.”25 In response, a representative from Canaccord noted that

while the Special Committee “would need audited financial information for

diligence purposes, . . . the valuation would hinge on the future prospects of the

Company, not the historical results.”26        The Canaccord representative further

“explained that as a practical matter, audited financials would have to be delivered

in connection with the Company’s proposed listing on the Johannesburg Stock

Exchange.”27

      On October 25, 2013, the Special Committee met again to craft a

counterproposal to Allied and PIC (the “October 25 Counterproposal”). The Special

Committee decided that the Company should keep $100 million of the cash proceeds

from the PIC investment and offer Allied $170 million in cash and a number of

shares that would leave Allied and CEHL as owners of 58.6% of Erin’s stock. The

Special Committee also decided to make a counterproposal to PIC via Lawal. In

exchange for the $270 million investment, the Special Committee would provide


25
      Id. ¶ 60.
26
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. D, at 2.
27
      Id.

                                        16
176,473,091 shares of Company stock to PIC. At that same meeting, the Special

Committee expressed concerns that it had not engaged directly with PIC about the

investment, decided it would need to contact Lawal about “the background of his

contacts with . . . PIC,” and “questioned whether an introduction to . . . PIC was

desirable or feasible.”28 Hofmeister purportedly had a telephone conversation with

Lawal later that day to discuss the October 25 Counterproposal.29 Hofmeister also

requested that Lawal meet with members of the Special Committee to “discuss the

background and status of PIC’s investment.”30

      The following day, on October 26, 2013, Hofmeister and Lawal discussed the

number of Erin shares to be issued to PIC.        Lawal purportedly “threatened

Hofmeister that any change in the number of shares provided to . . . PIC could

jeopardize the potential transaction.”31 On October 28, Lawal met with the Special

Committee and expressed his negative view of the proposed reduction in cash

consideration paid to Allied, the pro forma ownership of Allied/CEHL, and the

number of shares to be issued to PIC. Lawal also reiterated that PIC might abandon

the $270 million investment if an agreement could not be reached in the “near


28
      Compl. ¶ 63.
29
      Id. ¶ 64.
30
      Id.
31
      Id. ¶ 65.

                                       17
term.”32    Subsequently, the Special Committee withdrew its October 25

Counterproposal.

      On October 28 and 29, 2013, Lawal, Evanoff, and McNeil met with Allied to

discuss the terms of a revised offer. Lawal stated in an email to the Special

Committee that a “PIC representative had expressed concern that the Share Purchase

Agreement had not yet been executed, and suggested that . . . PIC would surely

withdraw its offer if the Share Purchase Agreement were not executed by October

31, 2013.”33 Lawal informed McNeil and Evanoff of the deadline and expressed his

view that PIC might withdraw if the Special Committee attempted to negotiate the

number of shares to be issued by Erin.

      On October 29, 2013, Allied provided the Special Committee with a revised

offer, in which Erin would pay Allied $270 million and issue enough shares to bring

Allied and CEHL’s ownership to 61.25%. Simultaneously, PIC would invest $270

million in exchange for 30% of the outstanding equity of Erin (376,884,422 shares).

      The Special Committee met on October 30, 2013 to discuss the Allied

proposal. At the meeting,

             the [Special] Committee considered that Dr. Lawal had not
             proceeded in a manner consistent with the goals of the
             Committee when he promised PIC a fixed number of

32
      Id. ¶ 66.
33
      Id. ¶ 68.

                                         18
            shares and collected PIC’s signature page to the SPA. The
            Committee also considered that Dr. Lawal had been
            continually pressuring the Committee to speed up its
            process in evaluating the Proposed Transaction. Ms.
            O’Leary noted the board meeting that was convened on
            October 21, 2013, in which the Committee defended the
            speed at which it was proceeding despite the urgings of Dr.
            Lawal and certain other members of the board to come to
            a decision more quickly. The Committee also considered
            that it did not fully understand why the SPA needed to be
            executed by October 31, 2013, and questioned the
            immediacy on which Dr. Lawal had insisted. During
            executive session, the Committee members expressed
            their concerns regarding the Committee’s lack of
            information relating to the issuance of shares to . . . PIC.
            Mr. McConnell expressed his concern that this made it
            very difficult for the Committee to make informed
            decisions relating to the Proposed Transaction.34

      Lawal and the Special Committee met on October 31, 2013, and Lawal echoed

his earlier statements that PIC would rescind its offer if Erin did not respond by

10:00 a.m. the next day, November 1. Immediately following that meeting, the

Special Committee discussed a term sheet, which included a fixed number of shares,

376,884,422, to be issued to PIC, conditioned on (1) a satisfactory financial

evaluation from Canaccord and (2) negotiation of documentation.            The Special

Committee also discussed retaining a portion of PIC’s cash investment by

structuring the payment to Allied as a subordinated note, rather than cash. McNeil

“advised that such a subordinated note issued to Allied would allow the Company


34
      Id. ¶ 70 (quoting Special Committee minutes from the October 30, 2013 meeting).

                                         19
to retain funds for liquidity purposes and should not interfere with the Company’s

future ability to raise additional liquidity through a senior notes offering.”35

      After the October 31, 2013 meeting, the Special Committee sent a

counterproposal to Allied (the “October 31 Counterproposal”), conditioned on

receiving a fairness opinion from Canaccord, with the following terms: (1) a $270

million cash investment by PIC in Erin in return for 376,884,422 shares; (2) $170

million cash paid to Allied; (3) a $100 million convertible subordinated note from

Erin to Allied for a five-year term with an interest rate of the one month LIBOR plus

1% and a conversion rate equal to PIC’s investment price per share; (4) issuance of

622,835,270 shares of Erin stock to Allied, making Allied and CEHL own a

combined 61.25%, with other stockholders owning 8.75%; (5) a stock dividend to

current Erin stockholders, paid prior to any issuances, to achieve post-closing

ownership percentages of PIC at 30%, Allied/CEHL at 61.25%, and other

stockholders at 8.75%; (6) Allied funding the drilling costs of the Oyo-7 well and

Erin bearing the completion costs; and (7) an extension and expansion of the existing

2010 right of first refusal agreement with Allied to include “corporate opportunities”

without reference to a term or expiration date.36




35
      Id. ¶ 73.
36
      Id. ¶ 74.

                                          20
      On November 1, 2013, the Board held a special meeting. Lawal updated the

Board on the status of negotiations with PIC, and Hofmeister summarized the status

of the Special Committee’s negotiations. On November 6, the Special Committee

met with Evanoff, McNeil, Andrews Kurth, and Sidley Austin to discuss the status

of the negotiations and documentation. McNeil represented that Canaccord was

“continuing with its financial analysis and would soon be seeking the guidance of

its fairness opinion committee.”37

             4.    Canaccord gives its fairness opinion and Allied gives its “best
                   and final” offer
      On November 13, 2013, the Company filed its Form 10-Q for the nine months

ended September 30, 2013.

             [I]t disclosed that its net working capital deficit had
             increased from $12 million to $13 million, and cash and
             cash equivalents had declined to $435,000. As a result,
             management no longer believed that the Company would
             have sufficient capital resources to meet projected cash
             flow requirements for the next twelve months, and the
             Company stated there was substantial doubt about the
             Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.38
      On November 13, 2013, Canaccord told the Special Committee that it could

not conclude the October 31 Counterproposal terms were fair. Out of a range of

scenarios examined by Canaccord, the “base case” scenario valued Allied’s net


37
      Id. ¶ 76.
38
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. A, at 35.

                                        21
economic interest in the Oyo Field at $217.3 million. Canaccord calculated that the

“base case” value of the proposed consideration was $647 million under a “market

value” analysis and $425.6 million under a discounted cash flow analysis. Thus, the

October 31 Counterproposal represented a 96% to 198% premium. Canaccord also

performed an accretion/dilution analysis and determined that the transactions would

be 65.23% accretive to Allied/CEHL but 14.97% dilutive to Erin’s public

stockholders.

      On November 14 and 15, 2013, Hofmeister and Lawal discussed potential

changes to the deal structure, such as Allied relinquishing the $100 million note to

Erin or reducing the post-closing Allied/CEHL ownership from above 61% to 51%.

Lawal then counterproposed the following to Hofmeister: Allied would reduce the

convertible subordinated note to $50 million and accept a reduced share issuance

such that it would result in a 56.97% post-closing ownership in the Company;

ownership of other stockholders would increase to a total of 13.03% post-

transaction. Plaintiff contends that at the end of these discussions, “Lawal strong-

armed Hofmeister by threatening that any pushback or further negotiations that

would enhance the deal conditions for the Company would be rejected by Allied,

and Lawal stated that these terms represented Allied’s ‘best and final’ offer.”39



39
      Compl. ¶ 84.

                                         22
      The final material terms after the discussion (the “Final Proposal”) were as

follows: (1) $270 million in cash invested in Erin by PIC to acquire 376,885,422

shares; (2) $170 million in cash consideration paid by Erin to Allied; (3) a $50

million convertible subordinated note from Erin to Allied with a five-year term and

an interest rate of LIBOR +5% and a conversion price equal to PIC’s investment

price per share; (4) issuance of 497,454,857 shares of Erin stock such that Allied and

CEHL would collectively own 56.97%, and the other stockholders would own

13.03%; (5) a stock dividend of 255,077,157 shares of Erin stock to existing

stockholders paid prior to the new issuances to achieve post-closing ownership of

30% for PIC, 56.97% for Allied/CEHL, and 13.03% for other stockholders; (6)

Allied funding the drilling costs of the Oyo-7 well, and Erin bearing costs of

completion; and (7) the termination of existing Non-Oyo Contract Rights in

exchange for Erin’s agreement to make two payments of $25 million to Allied.40

Regarding the two $25 million payments in exchange for the termination of the Non-

Oyo Contract Rights,

             the Company [would] pay $25 million to Allied after
             approval of a development plan for a new discovery in the
             Oil Mining Leases outside of the Oyo Field and $25
             million after commencement of production from such new
             discovery, with Allied having the right to elect to receive
             each of the $25 million payments in cash or in shares of
             the Company’s common stock with an equivalent value

40
      Id. ¶ 85.

                                         23
            instead of in cash, but with payment in stock being
            mandated if a cash payment by the Company would
            materially adversely affect its working capital position or
            its ability to carry out its capital or then established regular
            cash dividend programs.41
      On November 18, 2013, Canaccord gave the Special Committee their

presentation on the Final Proposal and determined it was fair to Erin and its

stockholders. Based on this information, on November 18, the Special Committee

approved the terms and recommended the Transactions to the Board, and in turn, the

Board approved the Transactions and recommended that the stockholders approve

as well. On November 20, the parties issued a press release announcing the terms

and disclosing the transaction-related documents.

            5.     Erin stockholders approve the stock issuances required for
                   the Transactions
      On January 15, 2014, Erin filed the transaction proxy with the SEC (the

“Proxy”). On February 13, 2014, Erin held a special meeting of the stockholders to

vote on certain proposals, including the approval of (1) the Transfer Agreement, (2)

the Share Purchase Agreement, and (3) an amendment to the Company charter to

increase the number of outstanding shares of common stock for use as consideration.

The stockholders approved the proposals, with approximately 64% of the total




41
      Id.

                                          24
outstanding minority shares and 99.5% of the voted shares cast in approval. The

Transactions closed about a week later.

             6.    A non-party’s disclosures reveal Allied only paid $100
                   million of the $250 million contract price to acquire the Oil
                   Mining Leases
      In 2012, Allied acquired the Oil Mining Leases in the current challenged

Transactions from Nigerian AGIP Exploration Limited, whose parent company is

Eni S.p.A. (“Eni”), a multinational oil and gas company. In the minutes of Eni’s

2016 annual meeting, Eni revealed that while the sale price in that contract was $250

million—which would have become $304 million after various accounting

adjustments—“[o]nly $100 million of the total consideration . . . has been paid. The

remainder is the subject of recovery by means of a legal action.”42 Plaintiff has been

unable to confirm, and Defendants do not identify, “the existence of any legal action

relating to the rest of the purported $250 million purchase price.”43

      C.     Procedural History
      On February 5, 2016, Lenois filed the Complaint. Defendants moved to

dismiss the Complaint on March 3, 2016. Thereafter, the parties briefed motions to

dismiss, and the Court held oral argument on January 18, 2017.




42
      Supplement Ex. B, at 191.
43
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. to Mot. to Dismiss Supplement 15 n.20.

                                          25
       On April 17, 2017, following the release of the minutes from the 2016 Eni

Annual Shareholder Meeting, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Supplement the Complaint

on the alleged underpayment issue. Defendants opposed, and on May 23, 2017, I

granted Plaintiff leave to supplement the Complaint. On June 7, 2017, Defendants

moved to dismiss the Supplement. The parties fully briefed the supplemented

motions to dismiss on July 21, 2017.

II.    ANALYSIS
       Plaintiff brings this action derivatively on behalf of Erin to redress alleged

breaches of fiduciary duty in connection with the approval of the purportedly unfair

Transactions.     Plaintiff also seeks to recover directly for alleged disclosure

violations. Defendants move to dismiss under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 for

failure to make pre-suit demand on the board and Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6)

for failure to state a claim.

       A.     Demand Futility Standard
       Under 8 Del. C. § 141(a), “directors, rather than shareholders, manage the

business and affairs of the corporation.”44 This “managerial decision making power

. . . encompasses decisions whether to initiate, or refrain from entering, litigation.”45


44
       Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 811 (Del. 1984).
45
       Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d 779, 782 (Del. 1981) (citation omitted); see
       also Levine v. Smith, 591 A.2d 194, 200 (Del. 1991); Spiegel v. Buntrock, 571 A.2d
       767, 772-73 (Del. 1990); Aronson, 473 A.2d at 811-12.

                                           26
In order for a stockholder to divest the directors of their authority to control the

litigation asset and bring a derivative action on behalf of the corporation, the

stockholder must allege with particularity either that (1) she has made a demand on

the company or (2) her demand would be futile.46 The demand requirement is a

threshold inquiry that “insure[s] that a stockholder exhausts his intracorporate

remedies,”47 “provide[s] a safeguard against strike suits,”48 and “assure[s] that the

stockholder affords the corporation the opportunity to address an alleged wrong

without litigation and to control any litigation which does occur.”49

      The Supreme Court of Delaware articulated the tests for demand futility in

two seminal cases. Under Rales v. Blasband,50 a derivative plaintiff must allege

particularized facts raising a reasonable doubt that “the board of directors could have

properly exercised its independent and disinterested business judgment in

responding to a demand.”51 To successfully plead demand futility under Aronson v.

Lewis, a plaintiff must allege particularized facts sufficient to raise a reasonable


46
      Ct. Ch. R. 23.1(a); Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 540 A.2d 726, 730
      (Del. 1988).
47
      Aronson, 473 A.2d at 811.
48
      Id. at 812.
49
      Kaplan, 540 A.2d at 730 (citing Aronson, 473 A.2d at 811-12).
50
      634 A.2d 927, 934 (Del. 1993).
51
      Id.

                                          27
doubt that “(1) the directors are disinterested and independent [or] (2) the challenged

transaction was otherwise the product of a valid exercise of business judgment.” 52

Aronson applies when the plaintiff challenges an action taken by the board that

would consider demand.53 Fundamentally, Aronson and Rales both “address the

same question of whether the board can exercise its business judgment on the

corporate behalf” in considering demand.54 The “[d]emand futility analysis is

conducted on a claim-by-claim basis.”55          The Court must accept Plaintiff’s

particularized allegations of fact as true and draw all reasonable inferences that

logically flow from such allegations in Plaintiff’s favor.56

      Plaintiff and Defendants agree that this case falls under the second prong of

Aronson.57 The second prong of Aronson fulfills “two important integrity-assuring




52
      473 A.2d at 814.
53
      Rales, 634 A.2d at 933-34.
54
      In re Duke Energy Corp. Deriv. Litig., 2016 WL 4543788, at *14 (Del. Ch. Aug.
      31, 2016); see also In re China Agritech, Inc. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 2013 WL
      2181514, at *16 (Del. Ch. May 21, 2013) (explaining the Aronson and Rales tests
      are “complementary versions of the same inquiry”); Kandell v. Niv, 2017 WL
      4334149, at *11 (Del. Ch. Sept. 29, 2017) (same).
55
      Beam v. Stewart, 833 A.2d 961, 977 n.48 (Del. Ch. 2003), aff’d, 845 A.2d 1040
      (Del. 2003).
56
      White v. Panic, 783 A.2d 543, 549 (Del. 2001).
57
      Erin Opening Br. 11; Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 27.

                                          28
functions.”58 First, it “addresses concerns regarding the inherent ‘structural bias’ of

corporate boards” and allows suits to continue “even over a putatively independent

board’s objection if the plaintiff can meet a heightened pleading standard that

provides confidence that there is a substantial basis for the suit.”59 Second, it

“responds to the related concern that a derivative suit demand asks directors . . . to

take an act against their personal interests” and “balances the conflicting policy

interests at stake by articulating a safety valve” that allows suit to go forward where

the pleading alleges with particularity that “the threat of liability to the directors

required to act on the demand is sufficiently substantial to cast a reasonable doubt

over their impartiality.”60

      Under the second prong of Aronson, the “plaintiff[] must plead particularized

facts sufficient to raise (1) a reason to doubt that the action was taken honestly and

in good faith or (2) a reason to doubt that the board was adequately informed in

making the decision.”61 In order to raise a reason to doubt good faith, “the plaintiff




58
      Guttman v. Huang, 823 A.2d 492, 500 (Del. Ch. 2003).
59
      Id. (citing Aronson, 473 A.2d at 815 n.8).
60
      Id. (citing Aronson, 473 A.2d at 815; Ash v. McCall, 2000 WL 1370341, at *10
      (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2000); Kohls v. Duthie, 791 A.2d 772, 782 (Del. Ch. 2000)).
61
      In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 906 A.2d 808, 824 (Del. Ch. 2005)
      (“J.P. Morgan I”) (quoting In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 825 A.2d 275, 286
      (Del. Ch. 2003) (“Disney I”)).

                                           29
must overcome the general presumption of good faith by showing that the board’s

decision was so egregious or irrational that it could not have been based on a valid

assessment of the corporation’s best interests”62 and was “essentially inexplicable

on any ground other than bad faith.”63 This requires a pleading of “particularized

facts that demonstrate that the directors acted with scienter; i.e., there was an

‘intentional dereliction of duty’ or a ‘conscious disregard’ for their

responsibilities.”64 This is a high burden, requiring an “extreme set of facts.”65 The

most salient examples include (1) “where the fiduciary intentionally breaks the law”;

(2) “where the fiduciary intentionally acts with a purpose other than that of

advancing the best interests of the corporation”; or (3) “where the fiduciary

intentionally fails to act in the face of a known duty to act.”66 While “aspirational

goals of ideal corporate governance practices” may be “highly desirable,” to the



62
      White, 783 A.2d at 554 n.36.
63
      In re BJ’s Wholesale Club, Inc. S’holder Litig., 2013 WL 396202, at *7 (Del. Ch.
      Jan. 31, 2013) (quoting In re Alloy, Inc. S’holder Litig., 2011 WL 4863716, at *7
      (Del. Ch. Oct. 13, 2011)).
64
      In re Goldman Sachs Gp., Inc. S’holder Litig., 2011 WL 4826104, at *12 (Del. Ch.
      Oct. 12, 2011) (quoting In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 907 A.2d 693, 755 (Del.
      Ch. 2005) (“Disney II”)).
65
      Lyondell Chem. Co. v. Ryan, 970 A.2d 235, 243 (Del. 2009) (quoting In re Lear
      Corp. S’holder Litig., 967 A.2d 640, 654 (Del. Ch. 2008)).
66
      In re Goldman Sachs, 2011 WL 4826104, at *12 (quoting In re Walt Disney Co.
      Deriv. Litig., 906 A.2d 27, 67 (Del. 2006) (“Disney III”)).

                                           30
extent they “go beyond the minimal legal requirements of the corporation law,” they

“do not define standards of liability.”67

      There is another, perhaps less onerous, method to prove demand futility under

the second prong of Aronson. “Pre-suit demand will be excused in a derivative suit

only if the . . . particularized facts in the complaint create a reasonable doubt that the

informational component of the directors’ decisionmaking process, measured by

concepts of gross negligence, included consideration of all material information

reasonably available.”68 “The business judgment rule, however, only requires the

board to reasonably inform itself; it does not require perfection or the consideration

of every conceivable alternative.”69 In the context of a motion to dismiss under Rule

23.1, where a board has relied on an expert opinion,

             the complaint must allege particularized facts (not
             conclusions) that, if proved would show, for example, that:
             (a) the directors did not in fact rely on the expert; (b) their
             reliance was not in good faith; (c) they did not reasonably
             believe that the expert’s advice was within the expert’s
             professional competence; (d) the expert was not selected
             with reasonable care by or on behalf of the corporation,
             and the faulty selection process was attributable to the
             directors; (e) the subject matter (in this case the cost

67
      Brehm v. Eisner, 746 A.2d 244, 256 (Del. 2000) (citing Lewis v. Vogelstein, 699
      A.2d 327, 338 (Del. Ch. 1997); E. Norman Veasey, An Economic Rationale for
      Judicial Decisionmaking in Corporate Law, 53 Bus.Law. 681, 699-700 (1998)).
68
      In re Goldman Sachs, 2011 WL 4826104, at *15 (alteration in original) (quoting
      Brehm, 746 A.2d at 259).
69
      Id. at *16.

                                            31
               calculation) that was material and reasonably available
               was so obvious that the board’s failure to consider it was
               grossly negligent regardless of the expert’s advice or lack
               of advice; or (f) that the decision of the Board was so
               unconscionable as to constitute waste or fraud.70
      The question then becomes how the second prong of Aronson, which analyzes

both care and loyalty issues, interacts with a charter provision that exculpates

directors from breaches of the duty of care. The parties disagree on the nature of the

interaction.    Defendants contend that the existence of an exculpatory charter

provision requires Plaintiff to plead particularized facts raising a reasonable doubt

that a majority of the board acted honestly and in good faith in order to survive a

motion to dismiss for failure to make demand. Plaintiff counters that demand is also

futile under the second prong of Aronson, despite the existence of an exculpatory

charter provision, where the Complaint creates a reason to doubt that any individual

director acted in good faith71 or the board met its duty of care as measured by

concepts of gross negligence.72       Regardless, Plaintiff argues that he has pled

particularized facts showing that demand is futile under all three scenarios.


70
      Cal. Pub. Empls. Ret. Sys. v. Coulter, 2002 WL 31888343, at *12 (Del. Ch. Dec.
      18, 2002) (quoting Brehm, 746 A.2d at 262). This Court does not consider
      “substantive due care” in this context. Brehm, 746 A.2d at 264. “Due care in the
      decisionmaking context is process due care only. Irrationality is the outer limit of
      the business judgment rule.” Id. (internal citations omitted).
71
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 28.
72
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. to Mot. to Dismiss Supplement 22.

                                           32
      The disagreement between the parties stems from three lines of case law,

which I discuss below.

             1.       Single director bad faith actions
      Plaintiff argues that he may show demand futility under the second prong of

Aronson by asserting “particularized allegations that create a reason to doubt that a

company director honored his or her duty of loyalty to the company.” 73 Plaintiff

primarily relies on a transcript decision in In re Barnes & Noble74 to support this

theory. Barnes & Noble concerned the acquisition of Barnes & Noble College by

Barnes & Noble.75 In a colloquy with counsel regarding whether demand futility

under the second prong of Aronson requires a showing that a majority of the directors

who would consider the demand face a substantial likelihood of liability, then-Vice

Chancellor Strine said that “if you state that’s a breach of fiduciary duty and you

have a nonexculpated claim against someone, it goes forward.”76 To hold otherwise

would create “a safe harbor for people like [the director in question], where it may




73
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 28 (citation omitted).
74
      In re Barnes & Noble S’holder Deriv. Litig., C.A. No. 4813-VCS (Del. Ch. Oct. 21,
      2010) (TRANSCRIPT).
75
      Id. at 5:2-4.
76
      Id. at 35:13-15.

                                           33
be, for example, that directors are exculpated because they only screwed up in terms

of their duty of care.”77 Then-Vice Chancellor Strine added:

             But that if—that the second prong only has teeth if you
             have a claim against a majority of the board that is pled
             with particularity and that is nonexculpated. It doesn’t
             seem like much of a safety valve, because how does it act
             as a safety valve? It’s basically a reduplication of the same
             analysis with this overlay that, frankly, if they can’t be
             held liable—a majority can’t be held liable—the fact that
             someone else could, in particular the interested party, that
             doesn’t matter. They just sue him.78
      But this Court did not rule demand was futile on this basis. Instead, after a

lengthy back-and-forth with the attorneys at the hearing over the culpability of the

individual directors in that case, then-Vice Chancellor Strine declined to dismiss the

case under the first prong of Aronson because the complaint sufficiently pled a

reason to doubt that five of the seven board members were disinterested or

independent.79

      Nonetheless, Plaintiff points to the colloquy between counsel and then-Vice

Chancellor Strine as support for the proposition that demand is futile under the




77
      Id. at 36:12-15.
78
      Id. at 38:8-18.
79
      Id. at 155:14-156:23. In that case, then-Vice Chancellor Strine also voiced, “I don’t
      want this cited back to me that Strine held that you’re necessarily not an independent
      director.” Id. at 157:22-24.

                                            34
second prong of Aronson if there is a non-exculpated claim against at least one

director.

             2.      Duty of care violations of the board
      Plaintiff also argues that “a lack of adequate information excuses demand

under Aronson’s second prong” even where an exculpatory charter provision

exists.80 Plaintiff cites to McPadden v. Sidhu,81 which concerned the sale of a

subsidiary to a company of a former officer who was not a director.82 In McPadden,

the plaintiff alleged that the directors caused the company to sell its wholly-owned

subsidiary to members of the subsidiary’s management for a fraction of the

subsidiary’s fair market value.83 The parties agreed that the question of demand

futility should be considered under the second prong of Aronson.84 Despite the

existence of an exculpatory charter provision, this Court found that demand was

futile because “plaintiff ha[d] pleaded a duty of care violation with particularity




80
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. to Mot. to Dismiss Supplement 21.
81
      964 A.2d 1262 (Del. Ch. 2008).
82
      Id. at 1263.
83
      Id. at 1263-64.
84
      Id. at 1270.

                                         35
sufficient to create a reasonable doubt that the transaction at issue was the product

of a valid exercise of business judgment.”85 Specifically, this Court held:

             [T]he board ha[d] no shortage of information that was both
             material—because it affected the process and ultimate
             result of the sale—and reasonably available (or, even,
             actually known as evidenced by the discussions at the
             board meetings): Dubreville’s interest in leading a
             management buyout of [the subsidiary]; Dubreville’s
             limited efforts in soliciting offers for [the subsidiary],
             including his failure to contact . . . competitors, including
             one he knew had previously expressed concrete interest in
             purchasing [the subsidiary]; the circumstances under
             which the January and February projections were
             produced; the use of those projections in [the] preliminary
             valuations of [the subsidiary]; and that [the management
             group] was a group led by Dubreville. That the board
             would want to consider this information seems, to me, so
             obvious that it is equally obvious that the Director
             Defendants’ failure to do so was grossly negligent.86

Having concluded that the directors’ actions were grossly negligent, this Court

determined that demand was futile under the second prong of Aronson.87 This Court

then dismissed the claims as to the directors under Rule 12(b)(6) because they were

protected from claims of gross negligence by the company’s exculpatory charter

provision, but it allowed the case to continue only as to the officer.88


85
      Id.
86
      Id. at 1272-73.
87
      Id. at 1273.
88
      Id. at 1274-75. Some cases do not address the effects of an exculpatory charter
      provision when analyzing the second prong of Aronson. In In re Citigroup
                                          36
      This case law suggests that demand is futile under the second prong of

Aronson if the directors breached their fiduciary duty of either care or loyalty, even

where an exculpatory charter provision exists. In a separate step, the Court will then

conduct a Rule 12(b)(6) analysis to determine which claims survive, dismissing

those that do not.

             3.      Non-exculpated bad faith violations by the board
      To end the demand futility analysis under the second prong of Aronson with

the authority briefed by Plaintiff ignores the many cases cited by Defendants that

support a different inquiry. Defendants argue that demand is futile under the second

prong of Aronson where plaintiff alleges non-exculpated claims against a majority

of the board members who would consider the demand. Defendants’ briefing cites

numerous cases for this proposition, but it relies heavily on two: Guttman v. Huang89

and Teamsters Union 25 Health Services & Insurance Plan v. Baiera.90




      Shareholder Derivative Litigation, for instance, this Court discussed the effects of
      an exculpatory charter provision on the claims analyzed under Rales, but dealt with
      the claim analyzed under the second prong of Aronson without reference to whether
      the board faced a substantial likelihood of liability for non-exculpated claims. 964
      A.2d 106, 136 (Del. Ch. 2009); see also MCG Capital Corp. v. Maginn, 2010 WL
      1782271, at *16-17 (Del. Ch. May 5, 2010); Ash v. McCall, 2000 WL 1370341, at
      *7-10 (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2000).
89
      823 A.2d 492 (Del. Ch. 2003).
90
      119 A.3d 44 (Del. Ch. 2015).

                                           37
      Guttman concerned derivative claims that board members and certain

corporate officers engaged in insider trading and failed to prevent accounting

irregularities.91 The defendants in the case were the seven members of the board of

directors and three corporate officers. This Court noted that demand is excused as

futile under the second prong of Aronson where “the threat of liability to the directors

required to act on the demand is sufficiently substantial to cast a reasonable doubt

over their impartiality.”92 Although the parties agreed that the Rales test should

apply to the demand futility analysis, this Court stated:

             [The] singular inquiry [outlined in Rales] makes germane
             all of the concerns relevant to both the first and second
             prongs of Aronson. For example, in a situation when a
             breach of fiduciary duty suit targets acts of self-dealing
             committed, for example, by the two key managers of a
             company who are also on a nine-member board, and the
             other seven board members are not alleged to have directly
             participated or even approved the wrongdoing[,] . . . the
             Rales inquiry will concentrate on whether five of the
             remaining board members can act independently of the
             two interested manager-directors. This looks like a first
             prong Aronson inquiry. When, however, there are
             allegations that a majority of the board that must consider
             a demand acted wrongfully, the Rales test sensibly
             addresses concerns similar to the second prong of
             Aronson. To wit, if the directors face a “substantial
             likelihood” of personal liability, their ability to consider a




91
      823 A.2d at 493.
92
      Id. at 500.

                                          38
             demand impartially is compromised under Rales, excusing
             demand.93

      This Court added that where an exculpatory charter provision exists, “a

serious threat of liability may only be found to exist if the plaintiff pleads a non-

exculpated claim against the directors based on particularized facts.”94 Importantly,

this Court then determined that it was required to analyze (1) whether a majority of

the board lacked independence or was interested in the challenged transaction or (2)

“whether the complaint sets forth particularized facts that plead a non-exculpated

claim of breach of fiduciary duty against a majority of the board, thereby stripping

away their first-blush veneer of impartiality.”95 Applying that test, this Court

dismissed the complaint under Rule 23.1 for failure to make demand after finding

that (1) a majority of directors were independent and disinterested and (2) a majority

of directors, who were covered by an exculpatory charter provision, did not face a

substantial likelihood of liability for a non-exculpated breach of fiduciary duty.96

      The plaintiff in Baiera sought to pursue derivative claims challenging the

fairness of a services agreement between the company and its controlling




93
      Id. at 501 (citations omitted).
94
      Id.
95
      Id. at 502.
96
      Id. at 507.

                                          39
stockholder that was approved by a committee of the board.97 The plaintiff argued

that demand was “excused as futile under the second prong of Aronson because [the

agreement] was a conflicted transaction in which [the] controlling stockholder . . .

stood on both sides.”98 This Court held that the second prong of Aronson was not

automatically “satisfied whenever entire fairness review might be triggered,

irrespective of the circumstances triggering such review or the nature of the claims

to which such review might apply.”99 “Regardless of [whether] the applicable test”

is Aronson or Rales, “the demand futility analysis focuses on whether there is a

reason to doubt the impartiality of the directors, who hold the authority under 8 Del.

C. § 141(a) to decide ‘whether to initiate, or refrain from entering, litigation.’”100

Thus, “neither the presence of a controlling stockholder nor allegations of self-

dealing by a controlling stockholder changes the director-based focus of the demand

futility inquiry.”101 This Court noted that the “focus instead, as explained in Aronson

and repeated in Beam, is on whether Plaintiff’s allegations raise a reasonable doubt

as to the impartiality of a majority of the Demand Board to have considered such a



97
      119 A.3d at 47.
98
      Id. at 65.
99
      Id. at 65 n.121.
100
      Id. at 67 (quoting Zapata, 430 A.2d at 782).
101
      Id.

                                          40
demand.”102 This Court “conclude[d] that demand [was not] excused . . . because

plaintiff . . . failed to raise a reasonable doubt that at least half of the directors . . .

could have exercised impartial business judgment in responding to a demand.”103

       Read together, these cases suggest that where an exculpatory charter provision

protects the board, demand is futile under the second prong of Aronson if the plaintiff

pleads a substantial likelihood of liability for non-exculpated claims against a

majority of directors who would have considered demand. Other cases from this

Court support a similar conclusion:

             In Higher Education Management Group, Inc. v. Mathews, this Court
              noted that the result of the company’s exculpatory charter provision
              was that “there would be no recourse for Plaintiffs and no substantial
              likelihood of liability if the Directors Defendants’ only failing was that
              they had not become fully informed.”104 The Court dismissed the
              claims under Rule 23.1, finding that “Plaintiffs’ allegations do not

102
       Id. at 68.
103
       Id. at 47. Plaintiff cites to a transcript opinion in Montgomery v. Erickson Air-
       Crane, Inc., where this Court stated “[b]ecause the transaction involves a controller,
       entire fairness is the standard. Demand is futile under the second prong of Aronson.”
       C.A. No. 8784-VCL, 72:9-12 (Del. Ch. Apr. 15, 2014) (TRANSCRIPT). But in In
       re Ezcorp Inc. Consulting Agreement Deriv. Litig., that same author noted that in
       the time since Montgomery, “Chancellor Bouchard has trenchantly analyzed
       Aronson and concluded that to find demand excused because entire fairness applies
       ab initio would be inconsistent with how the Delaware Supreme Court approached
       the transactions between Fink and Meyers that were at issue in that decision. I agree,
       but this serves to highlight the tension between Aronson and other Delaware
       doctrines.” 2016 WL 301245, at *29 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2016) (citing Baiera, 2015
       WL 4192107). Thus, I do not find demand excused simply because the proper
       standard of review is entire fairness solely due to an interested transaction with a
       conflicted controller.
104
       2014 WL 5573325, at *11 n.63 (Del. Ch. Nov. 3, 2014) (emphasis added).

                                             41
            support an inference of bad faith conduct by a majority of the Director
            Defendants.”105

           In the demand futility analysis in Pfeiffer v. Leedle, this Court found
            “demand . . . excused under the second prong of Aronson due to conduct
            [by the board] that conceivably cannot be exculpated” by a charter
            provision, because such conduct constituted “breaches of the duty of
            loyalty.”106

           In In re Goldman Sachs, this Court noted that, in the presence of an
            exculpatory charter provision, survival of a Rule 23.1 motion requires
            plaintiff to “plead particularized facts that demonstrate that the
            directors acted with scienter; i.e., there was an ‘intentional dereliction
            of duty’ or ‘a conscious disregard’ for their responsibilities, amounting
            to bad faith.”107

           In In re Lear, this Court noted that where a company adopted an
            exculpatory charter provision, “the plaintiffs [must] plead
            particularized facts supporting an inference that the directors
            committed a breach of the fiduciary duty of loyalty” by “act[ing] in bad
            faith” to survive a Rule 23.1 motion to dismiss for failure to make
            demand.108

           In Disney I, this Court found that demand was futile because at the
            pleadings stage, the plaintiff had raised sufficient “doubt whether the
            board’s actions were taken honestly and in good faith,” which would
            fall outside the protection of the company’s exculpatory charter
            provision.109




105
      Id. at *11 (emphasis added).
106
      2013 WL 5988416, at *9 (Del. Ch. Nov. 8, 2013).
107
      2011 WL 4826104, at *12 (emphasis added) (quoting Disney II, 907 A.2d at 755).
108
      967 A.2d at 652 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
109
      825 A.2d at 286 (emphasis added).

                                          42
      I am inclined to follow the weight of this authority. The purpose of the

demand futility analysis, as I understand it, is to determine whether the board tasked

with considering demand could bring its business judgment to bear. The Court

removes the demand decision from the board where the complaint pleads facts as to

individual directors showing that a majority of them cannot consider demand

impartially. As the Supreme Court stated in Aronson, demand may be futile under

the second prong if “board approval [of the challenged transaction] cannot meet the

test of business judgment, and a substantial likelihood of director liability therefore

exists.”110 As expressed, the test is directed at the board’s ability to employ its

business judgment in light of potential liability; the inquiry does not focus simply on

whether a breach has occurred. Thus, I hold that where an exculpatory charter



110
      Aronson, 473 A.2d at 815 (emphasis added). See also Mathews, 2014 WL 5573325,
      at *10 (“To succeed on the second prong [of Aronson], Plaintiffs must show that the
      challenged transaction did not reflect the exercise of valid business judgment. This
      type of conduct is limited to the extreme case of directorial failure, such as one of
      the ‘rare cases [in which] a transaction may be so egregious on its face that board
      approval cannot meet the test of business judgment, and a substantial likelihood of
      director liability exists.’” (alterations in original) (quoting Aronson, 473 A.2d at
      815)); In re Goldman Sachs, 2011 WL 4826104, at *15 (“Goldman’s charter has a
      8 Del. C. § 102(b)(7) provision, so gross negligence, by itself, is insufficient basis
      upon which to impose liability [for the demand futility analysis under the second
      prong of Aronson]. The Plaintiffs must allege particularized facts creating a
      reasonable doubt that the directors acted in good faith.”); Guttman, 823 A.2d at 500
      (noting that for demand to be excused as futile under the “second prong of
      Aronson[,] . . . the threat of liability to the directors required to act on the demand
      [must be] sufficiently substantial to cast a reasonable doubt over their
      impartiality.”).

                                            43
provision exists, demand is excused as futile under the second prong of Aronson

with a showing that a majority of the board faces a substantial likelihood of liability

for non-exculpated claims. That a non-exculpated claim may be brought against less

than a majority of the board or some other individual at the company, or that the

board committed exculpated duty of care violations alone, will not affect the board’s

right to control a company’s litigation.

      B.     Plaintiff Fails to Satisfy the Second Prong of Aronson
      Plaintiff argues that the Complaint alleges particularized facts sufficient to

raise a reason to doubt that Director Defendants and the Special Committee acted in

good faith in the following five ways: (1) through the Special Committee’s

acceptance of Lawal’s domination of the transaction, (2) through improper reliance

on Erin’s financial advisors, (3) through the omissions in the Proxy, (4) through the

payment allegations in the Supplement, and (5) through a showing that the

Transactions constitute waste. Each fails. I conclude that demand is not excused as

futile because Plaintiff has not pled with particularity sufficient allegations to create

a reasonable doubt that the Board, protected by an exculpatory charter provision,

“act[ed] honestly and in good faith to advance corporate interests” when negotiating

and approving the Transactions at issue.111




111
      Disney I, 825 A.2d at 291.

                                           44
               1.    Good faith standard
        The Delaware Supreme Court explicated the spectrum of bad faith in Disney.

The Supreme Court identified “three different categories of fiduciary behavior” that

must be considered.112 The first “involves lack of due care—that is, fiduciary action

taken solely by reason of gross negligence and without any malevolent intent.”113

This type of behavior does not constitute bad faith. The second, an “intentional

dereliction of duty, a conscious disregard for one’s responsibilities,” rises to the level

of bad faith.114 The third, “so-called ‘subjective bad faith,’” exists on the far end of

the spectrum and refers to “fiduciary conduct motivated by an actual intent to do

harm.”115 Determining whether Director Defendants’ alleged behavior rises to the

level of bad faith requires an examination of where on the Disney spectrum—gross

negligence to intentional dereliction of duty to subjective bad faith—their actions

fall.

               2.    Director Defendants’ interactions with Lawal during the
                     process do not raise a reason to doubt good faith
        Plaintiff has pled with particularity that Lawal acted in bad faith. From an

information standpoint, Lawal appeared on all three sides of the transaction: as sole


112
        Disney III, 906 A.2d at 64.
113
        Id.
114
        Id. at 66.
115
        Id. at 64.

                                           45
point of contact for PIC, as controller of Allied, and as controller of Erin. In practice,

his behavior gave rise to a very real appearance that, by seeming to speak for all

three counterparties in the transactions,116 Lawal really was negotiating with himself

in shifting around assets for his own benefit. Citing to the minutes of Special

Committee meetings, the Complaint sufficiently alleges that Lawal knowingly and

purposefully created an information vacuum such that, by the end of the process,

Director Defendants lacked information regarding how and why the parties involved

were chosen,117 the timeline and the seeming need for speed for the transaction,118

the agreements surrounding stock issuances,119 PIC generally,120 the credibility of

PIC’s threat to withdraw,121 whose interests Lawal represented at each step,122 and



116
      For instance, Plaintiff alleges that Lawal “promised . . . PIC that exact number of
      shares” from Erin, appearing to act as a representative of Erin. Compl. ¶ 58. Later,
      when presented with the Special Committee’s counterproposal, “Lawal adversely
      reacted to several of the terms, including the proposed reduction in (a) the cash
      consideration payable to Allied, (b) the pro forma ownership of Allied/CEHL, and
      (c) the number of shares to be issued to . . . PIC.” Id. ¶ 66. In doing so, Lawal
      appeared to be acting as a representative to Allied and PIC.
117
      Id. ¶ 35.
118
      Id. ¶ 40
119
      Id. ¶ 58.
120
      Id. ¶ 54.
121
      See id. ¶¶ 65, 66, 68, 72.
122
      Id. ¶¶ 65, 66, 68, 72.

                                           46
perhaps even the reasons for and implications of the prior payment issue between

Allied and Eni.123 And Lawal himself clearly knew about the incomplete payment

for the initial acquisition of the oil field leases, a highly material fact.

       But this does not end the story. The question is whether Director Defendants’

behavior raises a reason to doubt their honesty and good faith. For the reasons

explained below, I find that their conduct answers that question in the negative.

       From the inception of the transaction, Lawal tried to place Director

Defendants on the back foot by initiating discussions, selecting counterparties, and

negotiating the general deal terms and structure between and among Erin, Allied,

and PIC “without the Board’s knowledge.”124 In response, the Director Defendants

established a Special Committee,125 which hired an investment banker and retained

legal counsel.126 Lawal tried to control the timeline of events for the transaction.127

The Special Committee recognized the inherent problem128 and pushed back on the


123
       Special Comm. Reply Br. to Supplement 1; Erin Reply Br. to Supplement 22.
124
       Compl. ¶ 35.
125
       Id. ¶ 4.
126
       Id. ¶¶ 5, 38.
127
       Allied sent the Special Committee “a timeline of the proposed transaction that had
       been created by Allied.” Id. ¶ 40.
128
       “Special Committee Chairman Hofmeister ‘expressed his concern that certain steps
       noted for previous times in the draft timeline had seemingly been completed without
       the Special Committee’s review and comment, even though the Special Committee
                                            47
timeline and the steps in deliberations at numerous meetings.129 Lawal, controller

of Erin, used Company executives to negotiate with Erin,130 and the Special

Committee relied on these executives at various times during the process. But the

Special Committee sought out information directly from Lawal131 and relied on its

external financial and legal advisors. Lawal attempted to set terms with PIC, such

as the number of shares promised to PIC.132 In response, the Special Committee

approved a stock dividend to be issued at consummation of the Transactions in order

to “achieve the [desired] post-closing ownership percentages” regardless of Lawal’s

agreement.133




      is the party that should be responsible for making these decisions and driving the
      transaction.’” Id.
129
      See, e.g., id. ¶¶ 38-76.
130
      For instance, during negotiations PIC indicated that it wanted “30% of the
      outstanding stock . . . [and the] right to nominate one director to the Board.” Id. ¶¶
      50-51. Lawal chose to share this fact only with Evanoff, who “without the Special
      Committee’s knowledge or approval[,] . . . submitted [a] revised draft of the Share
      Purchase Agreement to . . . PIC.” Id. ¶¶ 51-52. The Special Committee did not
      learn any of this until five days after PIC’s demand and three days after Erin’s own
      general counsel had submitted a revised draft of the Share Purchase Agreement to
      PIC. Id. ¶¶ 52-54.
131
      Id. ¶ 64.
132
      Id. ¶ 58.
133
      Id. ¶ 85.

                                           48
      Plaintiff contends that Lawal attempted to dictate the terms of the deal with

Allied by coercive means. The Special Committee resisted, negotiating through

counterproposals134 and pushing back on deal terms.135      While Lawal’s initial

proposal left Erin with no cash from the Transactions, the Special Committee

obtained $100 million in cash for the cash-strapped Company on the edge of

insolvency.136 Lawal proposed that Erin issue a $100 million convertible note to

Allied, which the Special Committee bargained down to a $50 million note plus two

payments of $25 million due only upon certain milestones in a new development in

the Oil Mining Leases.137 Moreover, the Special Committee succeeded in reducing

the total payment due upon achievement of the milestones from $55 million to $50

million.138 Lawal proposed that the post-closing minority stockholder stake in Erin

be 4.3%; as a result of the Special Committee’s bargaining, minority stockholders

held 13.03% of the Company after the Transactions.139 The Special Committee also

succeeded in gaining numerous non-financial terms, including a non-waivable


134
      Id. ¶ 74.
135
      Id. ¶ 73.
136
      Id. ¶ 85.
137
      Id.
138
      Id.
139
      Id.

                                        49
majority-of-the-minority approval condition,140 an extension of the existing right of

first refusal agreement with Allied,141 the ability of the Special Committee or the

Board to change its recommendation that stockholders favor the Transactions,142 and

a fiduciary-out provision.143

      The Complaint alleges that Lawal deprived the Special Committee of

important information regarding the Transactions.144          In response, the Special

Committee recognized the information gaps145 and made a conscious decision to try

to plug the holes created by Lawal.146 Moreover, while Lawal was an important

source of information, he was not the only one. For instance, the Company relied




140
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. A, at 41.
141
      Id.
142
      Id.
143
      Id.
144
      See Section II.B.2, infra, for a detailed discussion of Lawal’s bad faith conduct.
145
      Upon realizing that it lacked important information to transact with PIC, the Special
      Committee “decided that it would need to discuss with Lawal the background of his
      contacts with . . . PIC and questioned whether an introduction to . . . PIC was
      desirable or feasible.” Compl. ¶ 63.
146
      In order to rectify information gaps surrounding the nature of the PIC investment,
      the Special Committee held a meeting at which “Lawal briefed . . . [the Special
      Committee] on the history of his interactions with representatives of PIC.” Special
      Comm. Opening Br. Ex. A, at 33.

                                           50
on its banker for a fairness opinion. 147 Indeed, reliance on the banker’s fairness

opinion seems especially weighty in light of the fact that the banker refused to bless

the first proposal,148 showing that obtaining the fairness opinion was not merely a

rubber stamp.

      Finally, the Special Committee sought approval from the entire Board other

than the controller and an admittedly conflicted director who abstained,149 issued a

proxy statement to stockholders,150 and received stockholder approval for the

increase in shares outstanding necessary to finance the Transactions.151

      The process of the Special Committee and Director Defendants does not

reflect an “intentional dereliction of duty . . . [or] a conscious disregard for one’s

responsibilities” on the Disney bad faith spectrum.152 A comparison of these

allegations to those in Disney supports this conclusion.




147
      Compl. ¶ 86.
148
      Id. ¶ 77.
149
      Id. ¶ 88.
150
      Id. ¶ 91.
151
      Id. ¶ 98.
152
      Disney III, 906 A.2d at 66.

                                         51
      In Disney, the directors allegedly engaged in “ostrich-like” behavior to avoid

assessing the challenged transaction.153 There, the chairman and CEO of the

company hired a “close friend” as president.154 The board approved the new

president’s compensation package based only on a “rough summary” of the terms, 155

leaving final negotiations to the two friends.156 Under those terms, the president

received a substantial payout after a non-fault termination, despite his rocky and

unsuccessful time at the company.157 In Disney, this Court noted that the board

“failed to ask why it had not been informed.”158 Here, the Special Committee

questioned Lawal after realizing that it lacked important information.159 In Disney,

the board “failed to inquire about the conditions and terms of the agreement.”160

Here, the Special Committee meaningfully negotiated on deal terms.161 In Disney,



153
      Disney I, 825 A.2d at 288.
154
      Id. at 279.
155
      Id. at 280.
156
      Id. at 281.
157
      Id. at 289.
158
      Id.
159
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. A, at 33.
160
      Disney I, 825 A.2d at 289.
161
      Special Comm. Opening Br. 10.

                                        52
the board “failed even to attempt to stop or delay . . . [the challenged actions] until

more information could be collected.”162 Here, the Special Committee pushed back

on the speed of the transaction.163 Simply put, the behavior of the Special Committee

in the instant case is not conscious and intentional disregard on the Disney spectrum

of bad faith.164


162
       Disney I, 825 A.2d at 289.
163
       Special Comm. Opening Br. 55.
164
       Though I do not find a reason to doubt that the Board members other than Lawal
       acted honestly and in good faith, for the sake of completeness I pause here to note
       that Defendants seek safe harbor from claims of a dominated process under an
       argument that “the interests of the Company and Lawal were perfectly aligned in
       connection with the PIC investment.” Id. at 46. Unfortunately, the facts as pled by
       Plaintiff belie their claims. There is reason to believe Lawal may have had
       incentives that were not fully aligned with those of other Erin stockholders. Though
       Lawal was a controller of both Allied and Erin, his economic exposure to each was
       different. Lawal and his family members owned a 97% interest in CAMAC
       International Limited, which in turn owned 100% of CEHL. Compl. ¶ 19. Lawal’s
       exposure to both Allied and Erin came through CEHL: CEHL owned 100% of
       Allied, id. ¶ 20, and 58.86% of Erin pre-transaction. Id. ¶ 19. With this differential
       exposure, any dollar of a theoretical overpayment from Erin to Allied would have
       represented a loss at the CEHL level of roughly $0.59 due to the Erin holding but a
       gain of $1.00 due to the Allied holding, resulting in a net gain to CEHL of roughly
       $0.41, which in turn would transfer up to Lawal through CAMAC International
       Limited. Thus, depending on the sources and uses of the funds Lawal may have had
       incentive to cause Erin to overpay for the assets. Additionally, the subject of
       Plaintiff’s Supplement may indicate another basis for divergent interests. In
       particular, Plaintiff alleges that Allied, of which Lawal is the controller and in which
       he has a greater economic stake than in Erin, has only paid “$100 million of the total
       consideration” of $250 million for its initial purchase of the assets, with “[t]he
       remainder . . . [being] the subject of recovery by means of a legal action.”
       Supplement Ex. B, at 191. Allied stood to receive a substantial amount of
       consideration from Erin immediately upon completion of the Transactions, and the
       fact that a substantial portion of the initial payment for the assets had yet to be
       completed may have made Lawal more eager than other Erin stockholders not just
                                             53
                3.   The Board’s reliance on Canaccord’s analysis does not raise
                     a reason to doubt good faith
      Plaintiff claims that the Board relied in bad faith on a fairness opinion that

allegedly confirmed overpayment for the assets.165 Plaintiff asserts that Canaccord’s

November 18, 2013 presentation shows the “value of the Assets . . . at approximately

$217.3 million, while the consideration the Company would pay was valued as

$416.1 million under a ‘market value’ analysis and $303.5 million under a ‘DCF’

analysis.”166

      Plaintiff overstates the information on the slide. Instead of “confirm[ing] that

the Company was grossly overpaying for the Assets,”167 the slide in question shows

a range of values for both the assets (between $35.1 million and $707.1 million) and

the consideration paid (between $259.7 million and $527.8 million on a discounted

cash flow basis and between $416.1 million and $654.6 million on a market value

basis). The financial advisor then used its expertise and judgment to determine that




      for a deal, but for a deal that closed quickly, perhaps with less sensitivity to the
      sufficiency of the consideration. And if the assets really were worth only $100
      million (or some other fraction of the Allied-NEA contract price), then Lawal may
      have wanted to transfer the assets from a controlled company in which his exposure
      was higher to a controlled company where he had less economic exposure.
165
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 34.
166
      Id. at 24.
167
      Id. at 34.

                                           54
in light of those ranges of valuation for the assets and the consideration, the

Transactions were fair to the Company.

       Plaintiff does not convince me that reliance on the financial advisor’s

expertise and judgment rises to the level of bad faith. For example, Plaintiff has not

adequately alleged that Director Defendants acted with knowledge that the financial

advisor’s opinion was false. Rule 23.1 requires pleading with particularity, and

Plaintiff fails to satisfy this standard.

              4.     The disclosures in the Proxy do not raise a reason to doubt
                     good faith
       Plaintiff claims that the Proxy’s “stark”168 lack of disclosure around the

concerns of the Special Committee and some of Canaccord’s analysis gives a reason

to doubt the honesty and good faith of Director Defendants. Plaintiff relies on In re

Tyson Foods169 and Flax v. Pet360170 to support the proposition that stark disclosure

can create an inference of bad faith and, thus, raise a reason to doubt that the board

can consider demand. At the outset, I note that none of the discussions from the




168
       Id. at 48.
169
       In re Tyson Foods, Inc. Consol. S’holder Litig., 919 A.2d 563 (Del. Ch. 2007).
170
       Flax v. Pet360, C.A. No. 10123-VCL (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2014) (TRANSCRIPT).

                                            55
cases cited by Plaintiff were in the demand futility context.171 Further, these cases

reflect extreme and intentional efforts to mislead stockholders.

      In re Tyson found bad faith allegations arising from disclosures in the annual

proxy statements only after an “SEC investigation revealed that Tyson’s proxy

statements were incomplete and misleading between 1997 to 2003, in that they

included under ‘travel and entertainment’ costs expenses that could not reasonably

be considered either travel or entertainment.”172 The SEC also entered an order—to

which Tyson consented—stating that “Tyson made misleading disclosure of

perquisites and personal benefits provided to Don Tyson in proxy statements filed

from 1997 to 2003.”173 Ruling on a motion to expedite, this Court in Flax found bad

faith implications from stark disclosures where the entirety of the disclosure “is

nothing other than a disclosure of what the final terms are and that the board of

directors voted in favor of it. That’s it, period.”174




171
      In re Tyson Foods, 919 A.2d at 597; Flax, C.A. No. 10123-VCL, at 24:17-24.
      Plaintiff also relies on Haverhill v. Kerley, C.A. No. 11149-VCL, at 11:7-11 (Del.
      Ch. Feb. 9, 2016) (TRANSCRIPT), but only counsel for one of the parties mentions
      bad faith in Haverhill, not this Court.
172
      In re Tyson, 919 A.2d at 579.
173
      Id.
174
      C.A. No. 10123-VCL, at 4:14-16.

                                           56
      Here, Plaintiff claims that “[n]one of the objectionable conduct and concerns

of the Special Committee emphasized [in Plaintiff’s brief] . . . were disclosed in the

Transaction Proxy.”175 Plaintiff also argues that the Proxy did not disclose that (1)

“Canaccord’s [initial] refusal to provide a fairness opinion . . . arose largely from the

value of the asset that the Company would receive . . . being far lower than the

consideration it would pay” or (2) “Canaccord’s slide presentation for the

Transactions comparing the value of the Assets . . . with the value of the

consideration that the Company paid for the Assets.”176 But Plaintiff does not

convince me that the absence of such disclosures renders the Proxy here comparably

stark or misleading to those disclosures in Tyson or Flex. Even assuming that these

additional disclosures would be material to an investor, Plaintiff also does not

explain why these omissions would give rise to bad faith claims against Director

Defendants. Thus, Plaintiff’s disclosure allegations fail to raise a reason to doubt

that Director Defendants acted in good faith.




175
      Compl. ¶ 71.
176
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 74.

                                           57
              5.    The Supplement does not raise a reason to doubt good faith
      Recently revealed facts suggest that Allied only paid $100 million in its initial

acquisition of the Oil Field Leases.177 As to the question of demand futility,178

namely, whether this Court will leave the decision of whether to pursue this litigation

with the Erin Board, Plaintiff argues that one of two “inferences must be true: either

(1) the Special Committee did not know that Lawal/Allied only paid $100 million of

the $250 million agreed price for the Assets, or (2) the Special Committee did know

that Lawal/Allied did not actually ‘pay $250 million in cash’ for the Assets and

intentionally misled stockholders in the Proxy.”179 I agree with Plaintiff that these

are the only two possibilities. I further note that, if the second scenario is true,

Plaintiff likely would have very serious claims of bad faith against Director

Defendants.

      The first situation, however, would only state a duty of care claim, for which

Director Defendants are exculpated under Erin’s exculpatory charter provision,180

allowing the Board to retain control over this litigation.          Plaintiff offers no



177
      Supplement ¶ 3.
178
      Because I find demand is not excused, I need not consider the other implications of
      Plaintiff’s rather startling Supplement; the decision to pursue the claims remains
      with the Board.
179
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. to Mot. to Dismiss Supplement 21 (citing Supplement ¶¶8-10).
180
      Special Comm. Opening Br. Ex. F, at Art. VIII.

                                          58
particularized facts whatsoever to determine under which of these two scenarios this

case falls.181 Even taking all inferences in favor of Plaintiff, I do not believe I am

allowed to imply a bad faith violation instead of a care violation when Plaintiff has

given me no way to choose between the two. As such, I am forced to conclude that

Plaintiff has failed to plead non-exculpated claims against a majority of the Erin

Board.

                6.     The Transactions do not constitute waste
         Plaintiff contends that the Transactions constitute waste.182 Other than the

issues raised in the Supplement, which I analyzed infra, Plaintiff does not raise with

particularity any reason to believe that the Board “with full knowledge . . . gift[ed]

to the Company’s controller” a great deal of money.183 Thus, Plaintiff fails to plead

waste.

                7.     Demand is not futile because Plaintiff fails to plead non-
                       exculpated claims against a majority of the Erin Board
         While the Complaint states a claim of bad faith against Lawal, Plaintiff has

failed to plead facts sufficient to raise a reason to doubt that Director Defendants



181
         Plaintiff examined Erin’s books and records pursuant to a Section 220 demand,
         which revealed other negative facts about the transaction process, but Plaintiff has
         not pointed the Court to any information that would allow the Court to infer
         knowledge to Director Defendants.
182
         Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 49.
183
         Id. at 50.

                                              59
acted honestly and in good faith. Without any substantial likelihood of liability, the

Board retains the right to manage this litigation under the second prong of Aronson.

Plaintiff failed to bring a demand on the Board. Thus, I dismiss the derivative claims

for failure to make demand.184

      C.     Plaintiff’s Disclosure Claims Fail
      In considering a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), “(i) all well-pleaded

factual allegations are accepted as true; (ii) even vague allegations are ‘well-pleaded’

if they give the opposing party notice of the claim; [and] (iii) the Court must draw

all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party.”185 While I must draw

all reasonable inferences in Plaintiff’s favor, I need not “accept as true conclusory

allegations ‘without specific supporting factual allegations.’”186 “[D]ismissal is

inappropriate unless the ‘plaintiff would not be entitled to recover under any

reasonably conceivable set of circumstances susceptible of proof.’” 187

      Plaintiff asserts a direct claim against Director Defendants for breach of the

duty of disclosure relating to alleged material omissions and misleading statements


184
      Because I dismiss the derivative claims for failure to make demand under Rule 23.1,
      I do not consider the related arguments under Rule 12(b)(6).
185
      In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 897 A.2d 162, 168 (Del. 2006) (quoting
      Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 812 A.2d 894, 896-97 (Del. 2002)).
186
      Id. (quoting In re Santa Fe Pac. Corp. S’holder Litig., 669 A.2d 59, 65-66 (Del.
      1995)).
187
      Id. (quoting Savor, 812 A.2d at 896-97).

                                          60
in the Proxy.188 Plaintiff alleges that stockholders were “induced to approve the

Transactions without having sufficient knowledge to make an informed vote.”189

“Plaintiff . . . seeks rescissory damages.”190

       Plaintiff correctly cites In re J.P. Morgan for the proposition that where “a

duty of disclosure violation impaired the stockholders’ right to cast an informed

vote, that claim is direct.”191 Plaintiff, however, fails to complete the analysis under

that case. There, the Delaware Supreme Court held that “compensatory damages . .

. from the [proxy] disclosure violation” are disallowed when those damages would

be “identical to the damages that would flow to [the company] as a consequence of

. . . [the] underlying derivative [ ] claim.”192

       Plaintiff contends that, because he has requested rescissory instead of

compensatory damages, J.P. Morgan does not apply.193 Plaintiff misses the point.



188
       Compl. ¶¶ 129-32. Plaintiff also initially argued that Lawal breached his fiduciary
       duties by aiding and abetting the disclosure violations. Id. at ¶¶ 134-39. Plaintiff
       has since abandoned the aiding and abetting claims against Lawal and CEHL,
       arguing that it is encompassed in the fiduciary duty violation. Oral Arg. Tr. 75-76.
189
       Compl. ¶¶ 132, 139.
190
       Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 81 n.34.
191
       In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 906 A.2d 766, 772 (Del. 2006)
       (“J.P. Morgan II”).
192
       Id. at 772.
193
       Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 81 n.34.

                                            61
The key question is whether the damages, rescissory or otherwise, “would flow only

to [the Company, and] not to the shareholder class.”194             Plaintiff offers no

explanation as to why rescissory damages ought to be owed to the stockholder and

not Erin. And I see no reason why rescissory damages should not accrue to the

Company.       As Plaintiff points out, “[r]escissory damages are ‘the monetary

equivalent of rescission’ and may be awarded where ‘the equitable remedy of

rescission is impractical.’”195 In other words, rescissory damages stand in where

rescission is not available. Were rescission reasonable and appropriate, I would

undo the Transactions and put the Company back together into its previous state.

That remedy seems quite obviously to belong to the Company. Rescissory damages,

then, would flow to the same party, namely the Company.

      As such, I find that the J.P. Morgan decision disallows Plaintiff’s direct

claims.   This prevents the perverse result that Defendants must pay identical

rescissory damages to both Erin and the stockholders for the same underlying

behavior.196

      For the reasons stated above, I dismiss Plaintiff’s direct claims.



194
      J.P. Morgan II., 906 A.2d at 772.
195
      Pl.’s Opp’n Br. 80 (quoting In re Orchard Enters., Inc. S’holder Litig., 88 A.3d 1,
      38 (Del. Ch. 2014)).
196
      J.P. Morgan II., 906 A.2d at 773 (citing J.P. Morgan I, 906 A.2d at 825-826).

                                          62
III.   CONCLUSION
       For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED as

to all claims.

       IT IS SO ORDERED.




                                     63
