   IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

                                )
MUTHU NARAYANAN,                )
                                )
                     Plaintiff, )
                                )
            v.                  )        C.A. No. 11757-VCMR
                                )
SUTHERLAND GLOBAL HOLDINGS )
INC., a Delaware corporation,   )
                                )
                     Defendant. )


                      MEMORANDUM OPINION

                      Date Submitted: March 8, 2016
                       Date Decided: July 5, 2016


Garrett B. Moritz, Nicholas D. Mozal and Benjamin Z. Grossberg, ROSS
ARONSTAM & MORITZ LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff
Muthu Narayanan.

Daniel A. Dreisbach and J. Scott Pritchard, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER,
P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Joseph B. Schmit, PHILLIPS LYTLE LLP, New
York, New York; Attorneys for Defendant Sutherland Global Holdings, Inc.


MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Vice Chancellor.
      This post-trial opinion grants a plaintiff-director’s demand for the

advancement of legal fees and expenses incurred defending against criminal

proceedings in India and civil proceedings in the United States. The plaintiff

served as a director and officer of the defendant-company’s India subsidiary for

many years, but this dispute arises from his service as a director of two additional

entities, one owned by the subsidiary and the other owned by the company’s

chairman, chief executive officer, and controlling stockholder. These additional

entities were formed as vehicles for acquiring and developing land in India.

Because of India’s property laws and real estate market conditions, the controlling

stockholder retained the services of two land aggregators to facilitate the land

development projects. The plaintiff-director oversaw the advancement of millions

of dollars to the aggregators for the purpose of acquiring contiguous land on behalf

of each entity. But the land development projects did not go as planned. After one

of those aggregators was imprisoned on conspiracy charges, the controlling

stockholder intervened and initiated an investigation.

      Two years later, the plaintiff-director sought to retire and exercise certain

stock options, but the controlling stockholder refused those requests because the

defendant-company had not recovered the money it had advanced to the land

aggregators.   After efforts to convince the defendant-company to pay proved

fruitless, the plaintiff-director sued the defendant-company in the United States

                                        1
District Court for the Western District of New York. The defendant-company

raised the affirmative defense that the plaintiff-director’s breaches of his fiduciary

duties regarding the land transactions led to damages purportedly in excess of the

amount the plaintiff-director was seeking and counterclaimed that the plaintiff-

director never provided his full cooperation to collect the missing funds.

Thereafter, the plaintiff-director sought advancement to fund his response to the

set-off defense and counterclaim; the defendant-company refused. The plaintiff-

director later commenced this action.

         After post-trial briefing, three issues remain.   First, the parties dispute

whether two sources of indemnification, the defendant-company’s bylaws and an

indemnification agreement, must be read together or separately.          Second, the

parties dispute whether the plaintiff-director served the entity owned by the

controller at the defendant-company’s request or for his own personal benefit.

Third, the parties dispute whether the Court should delay granting the plaintiff-

director’s fee requests, fees-on-fees, and pre-judgment interest claims until after

the Court determines the defendant-company is liable for those fees. For the

reasons that follow, the Court decides each issue in the plaintiff-director’s favor

and awards him the fees and expenses, fees-on-fees, and pre-judgment interest he

seeks.




                                         2
I.    BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

      The Court held a one-day trial on February 10, 2016. The parties submitted

a list of more than 200 joint exhibits, which were admitted into evidence by joint

pre-trial stipulation except as noted therein. Three fact witnesses testified at trial.

The pre-trial and post-trial briefing totaled 186 pages.

      Except where noted, the following facts are undisputed.           To the extent

certain facts are at issue, however, they are addressed specifically in the Analysis.2

Also, to the extent any of the following background facts are relevant to the merits

of the parties’ underlying disputes, they are not binding.

      A.     Facts
             1.      Parties and relevant non-parties
      Plaintiff Muthu Narayanan is a chartered accountant and fellow member of

the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, which is similar to a certified

public accountant (“CPA”) in the United States. Narayanan graduated from the

University of Madras with a degree in commerce and completed his chartered

accountancy course in 1979. For many years, Narayanan practiced with a firm that

provided accounting, taxation, auditing, and consultancy services.          The Lalah


1
      Citations to the testimony presented at trial are in the form “Tr. # (X)” with “X”
      representing the surname of the speaker, if not clear from the text. Exhibits are
      cited as “JX #.”
2
      See infra Part III.

                                         3
Spices company was one of the firm’s leading clients, and Narayanan came to

know the family that owned Lalah Spices well during that time.

      Non-party Dilip Vellodi is the controlling stockholder, Chairman, and Chief

Executive Officer (“CEO”) of Defendant Sutherland Global Holdings, Inc.

(“Sutherland” or the “Company”). Sutherland helps clients in the United States to

acquire and retain customers in the telecommunications and technology sectors.

Narayanan met Vellodi in 1986 through his relationship with the Lalah Spices

family.3

      Non-party D. Muthunarayanan & Co. (“DMNC”) is a firm Narayanan

started under his own name in 1994. In 1999 or 2000, both Vellodi and his wife

requested Narayanan’s consulting services in starting Sutherland’s operations in

India. Narayanan retired as a partner in DMNC in 20074 because he was devoting

most of his time to Sutherland and sensed that his partners were not pleased.5

Despite retiring, Narayanan allowed DMNC to continue using his name and

promoting itself with his credentials.6



3
      Tr. 7 (Narayanan).
4
      Compare JX 209 (reflecting a partnership interest as of January 1, 2007), with JX
      210 (reflecting no partnership interest as of January 1, 2008).
5
      Tr. 11 (Narayanan).
6
      Id; see also JX 134.

                                          4
      Sutherland Global Services Private Limited is Sutherland’s India subsidiary

(“India Operating Sub”).     Around 2004, Narayanan became an employee and

joined the boards of Sutherland and India Operating Sub at the request of

Sutherland’s then-Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”), some of Sutherland’s new

private equity investors, and Vellodi. When Narayanan became involved with

India Operating Sub, it employed five people, which Narayanan increased to about

14,000 by the time he retired in 2014. At all times relevant to this action, K.S.

Kumar was India Operating Sub’s Executive Vice President and Head of Global

Operations.

      K.R.V. Properties Private Limited (“KRV”) and Sutherland Development

Company Private Limited (“SDC”) are entities formed to develop real estate (the

“KRV” and “SDC Land Development Projects,” respectively).                   Kamalesh

Kumarseth (“Kamalesh”) and S. Venkataramanan (“Ramanan”) are two land

aggregators Vellodi retained to pursue the KRV and SDC Land Development

Projects.7 In addition, Kamalesh is Vellodi’s brother-in-law, and Ramanan is

Kamalesh’s business partner.




7
      See Tr. 17-18 (Narayanan) (“Q. And how was Ramanan selected as one of the land
      aggregators? A. Because Dilip, who selected them, Kamalesh Kumar—Kumar
      Kamalesh is the brother-in-law of Dilip. That is wife’s brother. And Ramanan is
      the partner of Kamalesh. Dilip brought them to the table to help aggregating land
      for K.R.V.”).

                                        5
      Mike Russo, who has a Bachelor of Science in accounting from Rochester

Institute of Technology and is a CPA in the State of New York, has long been

familiar with Sutherland’s affairs. Sutherland and Vellodi are both clients of

Russo’s firm, Freed Maxick CPAs, P.C. (“Freed Maxick”). Russo also works as

Sutherland’s legal coordinator.

      S. Gopinath (“Gopi”) is Narayanan’s personal assistant.

            2.     KRV and SDC Land Development Projects

      As a director of Sutherland, Narayanan became involved in the KRV and

SDC Land Development Projects at Vellodi’s request or on behalf of Sutherland.8

In 2006, Vellodi hired DMNC to form KRV and asked Narayanan to serve as a

director of the entity.9 To comply with India law, which requires corporations to

have at least two stockholders, Narayanan took shares that later amounted to about

0.1% of KRV; Vellodi owns the remaining 99.9%.10 Narayanan neither was paid


8
      Tr. 13 (Narayanan) (“I was requested to be a director and form [KRV].”); Tr. 21
      (“Q. . . . [D]id there come a time when Mr. Vellodi asked you to acquire land for a
      Sutherland Global subsidiary? A. Correct.”).
9
      Id. at 12-13. Sutherland does not contest seriously whether Narayanan served as a
      director of KRV at Vellodi’s request. Instead, it argues that Narayanan’s activities
      relating to KRV were outside business interests unrelated to his service as a
      director of Sutherland. In any event, Narayanan’s motivation to serve KRV—both
      as a director and otherwise—is a central issue in this case and is discussed in
      greater detail below.
10
      Id. at 13 (“Dilip had injected a lot of money, and he has a lot of shares from time
      to time. And that’s how he ends up owning 99.9%. And that 5,000 shares that I
      owned is now .1 percent. There’s no longer 50/50 as it shows [in JX 1].”).
                                          6
by KRV nor received distributions from the entity but served the entity solely at

Vellodi’s request.11 Vellodi also retained Kamalesh and Ramanan to act as land

aggregators for the KRV and SDC Land Development Projects.               Kamalesh,

Ramanan, and Vellodi engaged in KRV’s business together, and Vellodi “was very

much involved [in] the nitty-gritty level.”12 By 2010, KRV had purchased a

majority of the land sought. Of the nineteen-and-a-half acres acquired, nearly

fourteen were contiguous, which Narayanan described as “successful.”13

      In June 2009, Kumar proposed acquiring and developing land for India

Operating Sub’s business campus in the Perumbakkam region of India.            At

Vellodi’s instruction, India Operating Sub created SDC to acquire land and asked

Narayanan to be a director of this entity. The local government had allotted

Sutherland certain lands on a ninety-year leasehold basis for Sutherland’s campus,

but Vellodi decided it was better to own the land on a freehold basis without the

lease restriction.14 Vellodi directed Narayanan to continue to use Ramanan as a

land aggregator.15 On March 11, 2010, SDC authorized Narayanan to negotiate the



11
      Id. at 14-15.
12
      Id. at 19-20 (Narayanan); JX 7.
13
      Tr. 20.
14
      Id. at 22 (Narayanan).
15
      Id. at 24 (Narayanan).

                                        7
purchase of lands on its behalf.16

      The land registration process proceeded smoothly until a new registrar in the

area doubled a government-levied stamp duty from 9% to 18% on the theory that

the aggregators’ participation as KRV’s and SDC’s intermediaries made the land

aggregation two transactions. An attorney, Udayakumar, recommended appealing

to the Inspector General of Registration, which the attorney advised would take

approximately two months.17 The appeal ultimately took four months, during

which time SDC suspended registration of lands to avoid incurring unnecessary

stamp duty. During the delay in registration, the price of land in the region

increased, which harmed SDC’s efforts in registering certain lands as owners

refused to proceed with transactions at prices to which they already had agreed.18




16
      Id. at 28 (Narayanan); JX 18.
17
      Id. at 31-32 (Narayanan).
18
      Id. at 43-45 (Narayanan). To protect SDC, Narayanan instructed the financial
      controller and finance team to account for the advances for which lands were not
      registered within three to four weeks and, at the end of each month, aggregate and
      secure those advances by taking promissory notes and undated checks from
      Ramanan. Id. at 32-33. The promissory notes were valid for three years unless
      renewed, and if the checks, once dated, were dishonored, a criminal action could
      be instituted against Ramanan under the Indian Negotiable Instruments Act. Id. at
      33 (Narayanan). When Narayanan left Sutherland, all of the promissory notes
      were valid. Id. at 34.

                                         8
             3.     Freed Maxick’s internal investigation
      In July 2013, the parties realized that the SDC Land Acquisition Project was

not going as planned when they learned that Ramanan was imprisoned for work

done in a similar capacity. This raised red flags at Sutherland,19 and Sutherland

engaged Russo and Freed Maxick to investigate and report on its findings.20

Sutherland and Freed Maxick memorialized this engagement in a letter dated

August 20, 2013 (the “Engagement Letter”).21

      Russo traveled to India to investigate Ramanan’s dealings with SDC. When

he spoke with Narayanan, however, Russo learned that Ramanan had been

aggregating land for SDC and KRV. Russo began investigating KRV while his

team, which arrived some time later, investigated SDC. The team detailed their

findings in separate letters to Vellodi dated September 12, 2013 (the “KRV

Report” and the “SDC Report”).22 Narayanan and Gopi provided information to

Russo regarding KRV.23       Russo spoke with Narayanan, Vellodi, and SDC’s




19
      Id. at 177 (Russo).
20
      Id. at 176-77 (Russo); JX 310.
21
      JX 310.
22
      JX 45 (KRV Report); JX 41 (SDC Report).
23
      Tr. 185 (Russo).

                                       9
financial controller, Prasad, regarding SDC.24 Although Russo thought Narayanan

was helpful in providing information, he reached conclusions independently that

differed from Narayanan’s statements. In Russo’s opinion, Narayanan’s “logic

didn’t seem to hold itself together,” and his “story just wasn’t overly credible.”25

Nonetheless, Sutherland chose not to enforce the undated checks and promissory

notes against Ramanan or to initiate criminal prosecution.26 Instead, Sutherland

purportedly relied on Narayanan’s representations that doing so would hurt the

chances of getting Ramanan to either deliver the land or return the advances. 27 On

November 13, 2013, Vellodi, Kumar, and Narayanan signed a memorandum

relating to the land issues that authorized Kumar “to deal with the matter” related

to Ramanan and the advances made on the land.28           These efforts apparently

continued, but none of the parties were able to recover the advances or the land.

               4.   New York Action and India Criminal Proceedings
      By 2014, Narayanan was sixty-two years old and had worked at Sutherland

for over fifteen years. Narayanan communicated his desire to retire to Vellodi,



24
      Id. at 196, 198-99.
25
      Id. at 186.
26
      Id. at 189 (Russo).
27
      Id. at 188 (Russo).
28
      JX 55.

                                       10
who requested that Narayanan stay on until a pending, unrelated transaction closed

that fall.29 In September 2014, Sutherland allowed its stock option holders to

exercise their options on a net basis with the requirement that they sell back to

Sutherland 30% of the shares received.30 In October, Narayanan requested the

option to sell back to Sutherland 100% of the shares he would receive, which

Sutherland purportedly accepted.31       By the end of that month, the pending,

unrelated transaction had closed. Narayanan retired shortly thereafter,32 but he was

not paid for his shares.

      Narayanan spoke with Russo about getting paid, but learned that Vellodi

was conditioning payment on completion of the SDC and KRV Land Development

Projects.33     A short time later, Vellodi contacted Narayanan to find out why

Narayanan was not coming into the office. Narayanan explained that he had

retired and wanted to be paid for his shares, but Vellodi both insisted that


29
      Tr. 59 (Narayanan).
30
      Id. at 60 (Narayanan) (explaining that “the stock option holders were given an
      option to exercise on a net basis and any cash 30 percent”); see also JX 109, Ex. B
      (“New York Action Complaint”) ¶4(b) (alleging Narayanan was required to “agree
      to sell 30% of the Net Settlement Shares received by [Narayanan] via his Net
      Exercise back to [Sutherland]”).
31
      Tr. 60.
32
      JX 76 (“Sutherland acknowledges that your employment with the Company
      ceased effective October 23, 2014 . . . .”).
33
      Tr. 61.

                                         11
Narayanan continue working for Sutherland and conditioned Narayanan’s receipt

of payment for his shares on completion of the land transactions.34 According to

Narayanan, Vellodi then accused him of stealing money from the company and

threatened that if Narayanan continued seeking payment, he and his family would

suffer.35 Narayanan continued to pursue payment for his shares by contacting

Russo’s firm, Vellodi, and the Board. No one responded.36 In February 2015,

Narayanan decided to take legal action.

      On March 25, 2015, Narayanan filed an action in the United States District

Court for the Western District of New York (the “New York Action”).37 The

complaint in the New York Action included claims for breach of contract and

unjust enrichment arising from two agreements and sought nearly $2 million in

damages. Sutherland filed its answer, defenses, counterclaims and jury demand on

June 15, 2015.38      As a defense, Sutherland alleged that Narayanan breached

fiduciary duties to Sutherland in connection with the land transactions and, as a




34
      Id. at 62-63.
35
      Id. at 63 (Narayanan) (“Then [Vellodi] shouted and said, ‘Hey, if you continue to
      do this, you and your family will suffer.’”).
36
      Id. at 64.
37
      New York Action Complaint.
38
      JX 92.

                                        12
result, owes Sutherland more money than Sutherland owes him for his shares.39

Additionally, Sutherland alleged as a counterclaim that Narayanan never provided

his full cooperation in good faith to collect missing funds that he improperly had

exchanged for unenforceable promissory notes.40

      On August 1, 2015, Vellodi instructed Kumar to file on behalf of KRV a

criminal complaint against Narayanan in Chennai, India, for allegedly breaching

his duties to KRV (the “KRV Criminal Proceedings”).41 That same day, the

commissioner of police registered the first information report against Narayanan

and sought his arrest.42       Narayanan was denied anticipatory bail and was

imprisoned for about twenty days.43 Then, on August 12, 2015, Kiran Verghese

Thomas, again authorized by Vellodi, filed a similar criminal complaint against

Narayanan on behalf of SDC (the “SDC Criminal Proceedings” and, together with

the KRV Criminal Proceedings, the “India Criminal Proceedings”).44        Shortly

thereafter, however, Narayanan won bail as to the SDC and KRV complaints on




39
      Tr. 67; JX 92.
40
      Tr. 70; JX 92.
41
      Tr. 57-58 (Narayanan).
42
      Id. at 72-73 (Narayanan); JX 98.
43
      Tr. 73.
44
      Id. at 76-77 (Narayanan); JX 103.
                                          13
September 28, 201545 and September 30, 2015,46 respectively. Both judges who

granted Narayanan bail reasoned generally that there was no material evidence

linking Narayanan to the alleged criminal activities.47

      B.     Delaware Action
      Currently, Narayanan is subject to the India Criminal Proceedings and is

defending against Sutherland’s set-off defense and counterclaim in the New York

Action (together, the “Underlying Proceedings”).            The parties’ substantive

arguments in the Underlying Proceedings, however, are not at issue here. Instead,

this action (the “Delaware Action”) relates to whether and to what extent

Narayanan has the right to demand that Sutherland advance his legal fees and

expenses to defend himself in the Underlying Proceedings.48

      Three instruments bear on Narayanan’s disputed right to advancement.

First, Sutherland’s certificate of incorporation authorizes Sutherland, to the fullest

extent permitted by applicable law, “to provide indemnification of (and

advancement of expenses to) [Narayanan] . . . through bylaw provisions,

agreements . . . , vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or otherwise, in

45
      Tr. 79; JX 104.
46
      Tr. 73-74; JX 105.
47
      Tr. 74; JX 104-05.
48
      Narayanan does not seek advancement for fees relating to the pursuit of his claims
      in the New York Action. See infra notes 98-102 and accompanying text.

                                        14
excess of the indemnification and advancement otherwise permitted by Section

145” of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”), subject to certain

limitations created by the DGCL or other state laws, “with respect to actions for

breach of duty to a company, its stockholders, and others.”49 Sutherland expressly

provided such expanded rights by adopting bylaws and entering into an agreement

with Narayanan to provide mandatory advancement.

      Second, Sutherland’s bylaws, effective March 5, 2013 (the “Bylaws”),

include the following relevant provisions:

            Section 1.      RIGHT TO INDEMNIFICATION OF
            DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS. The Corporation shall
            indemnify and hold harmless, to the fullest extent
            permitted by applicable law as it presently exists or may
            hereafter be amended, any person (a “Covered Person”)
            who was or is made or is threatened to be made a party or
            is otherwise involved in any action, suit or proceeding,
            whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (a
            “proceeding”), by reason of the fact that such person, or a
            person for whom such person is the legal representative,
            is or was a director or officer of the Corporation or, while
            a director or officer of the Corporation, is or was serving
            at the request of the Corporation as a director, officer,
            employee or agent of another corporation or of a
            partnership, joint venture, trust, enterprise or nonprofit
            entity, including service with respect to employee benefit
            plans, against all liability and loss suffered and expenses
            (including attorneys’ fees) reasonably incurred by such
            Covered Person in such proceeding. Notwithstanding the
            preceding sentence, except as otherwise provided in


49
      JX 29 (“Certificate”) Article NINTH.2.

                                       15
Section 3 of Article VII of these Bylaws, the Corporation
shall be required to indemnify a Covered Person in
connection with a proceeding (or part thereof)
commenced by such Covered Person only if the
commencement of such proceeding (or part thereof) by
the Covered Person was authorized in advance by the
Board of Directors.

Section 2.      PREPAYMENT OF EXPENSES OF
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS. The Corporation shall
pay the expenses (including attorneys’ fees) incurred by a
Covered Person in defending any proceeding in advance
of its final disposition, provided, however, that, to the
extent required by law, such payment of expenses in
advance of the final disposition of the proceeding shall be
made only upon receipt of an undertaking by the Covered
Person to repay all amounts advanced if it should be
ultimately determined that the Covered Person is not
entitled to be indemnified under this Article VII or
otherwise.

Section 3.        CLAIMS BY DIRECTORS AND
OFFICERS.        If a claim for indemnification or
advancement of expenses under this Article VII is not
paid in full within 30 days after a written claim therefor
by the Covered Person has been received by the
Corporation, the Covered Person may file suit to recover
the unpaid amount of such claim and, if successful in
whole or in part, shall be entitled to be paid the expense
of prosecuting such claim. In any such action the
Corporation shall have the burden of proving that the
Covered Person is not entitled to the requested
indemnification or advancement of expenses under
applicable law.

....

Section 6. NON-EXCLUSIVITY OF RIGHTS. The
rights conferred on any person by this Article VII shall
not be exclusive of any other rights which such person
                          16
            may have or hereafter acquire under any statute,
            provision of the Certificate of Incorporation, these
            Bylaws, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested
            directors or otherwise.50

      Third, “to attract and retain the involvement of highly qualified persons,

such as [Narayanan], to serve and be associated with the Company,” Sutherland

also entered into an indemnification agreement with Narayanan, effective March 5,

2013 (the “Indemnification Agreement”).51           The Indemnification Agreement

includes the following relevant provisions:

            2. Indemnification.

            (a) Indemnification of Expenses.            Subject to the
            provisions of Section 2(b) below, the Company shall
            indemnify, exonerate or hold harmless [Narayanan] for
            Expenses to the fullest extent permitted by law if
            [Narayanan] was or is or becomes a party to or witness or
            other participant in, or is threatened to be made a party to
            or witness or other participant in, any Claim (whether by
            reason of or arising in part out of a Covered Event),
            including all interest, assessments and other charges
            incurred in connection with or in respect of such
            Expenses.52


50
      JX 31 (“Bylaws”) art. VII §§ 1-3, 6.
51
      JX 30 (“Indemnification Agreement”), Recital D.
52
      Indemnification Agreement § 2. “Claim” means,

            with respect to a Covered Event (as defined below) any
            threatened, asserted, pending or completed action, suit,
            proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism, or
            any hearing, inquiry or investigation that [Narayanan] in good
            faith believes might lead to the institution of any such action,
                                         17
           3. Expense Advances.

           (a) Obligation to Make Expense Advances.            The
           Company shall make Expense Advances to [Narayanan]
           upon receipt of a written undertaking by or on behalf of
           [Narayanan] to repay such amounts if it shall ultimately
           be determined that [Narayanan] is not entitled to be
           indemnified, exonerated or held harmless therefor by the
           Company.

           (b) Form of Undertaking. Any written undertaking by
           [Narayanan] to repay any Expense Advances hereunder
           shall be unsecured and no interest shall be charged
           thereon.53




           suit, proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism,
           whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or other.

     Indemnification Agreement § 1(b). Further, “Covered Event” means,

           any event or occurrence related to the fact that [Narayanan] is
           or was a director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary of the
           Company, or any subsidiary of the Company, direct or
           indirect, or is or was serving at the request of the Company as
           a director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary of another
           corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other
           enterprise, or by reason of any action or inaction on the part
           of [Narayanan] while serving in such capacity.

     Indemnification Agreement § 1(d).
53
     Indemnification Agreement § 3. “Expense Advance” means “a payment to
     [Narayanan] for Expenses pursuant to Section 3 hereof, in advance of the
     settlement of or final judgment in any action, suit, proceeding or alternative
     dispute resolution mechanism, hearing, inquiry or investigation, which constitutes
     a Claim.” Indemnification Agreement § 1(e).

                                         18
            4. Procedures for Indemnification and Expense
            Advances.

            ....

            (b) Notice/Cooperation by [Narayanan]. [Narayanan]
            shall, as a condition precedent to [his] right to be
            indemnified, exonerated or held harmless or [his] right to
            receive Expense Advances under this Agreement, give
            the Company notice in writing as soon as practicable of
            any Claim made against [him] for which indemnification,
            exoneration or hold harmless right will or could be
            sought under this Agreement. Notice to the Company
            shall be directed to the President and the Secretary of the
            Company at the address shown on the signature page of
            this Agreement . . . . In addition, [Narayanan] shall give
            the Company such information and cooperation as it may
            reasonably require and as shall be within [his] power.54

            5. Additional Indemnification Rights; Nonexclusivity.

            ....

            (b) Nonexclusivity. The indemnification, exoneration or
            hold harmless rights and the payment of Expense
            Advances provided by this Agreement shall be in
            addition to any rights to which [Narayanan] may be
            entitled under the Company’s Certificate of
            Incorporation, its bylaws, any other agreement, any vote
            of stockholders or disinterested directors, the DGCL, or
            otherwise.55

Notably, Section 4(b) of the Indemnification Agreement (the “Cooperation

Provision”) does not appear in the Bylaws.

54
      Indemnification Agreement § 4.
55
      Indemnification Agreement § 5.

                                       19
      On October 19, 2015, Narayanan sought to perfect his advancement rights

by mailing to Sutherland his Notice of Claim and Demand for Indemnification and

Payment of Expense Advances (the “Initial Notice”).56 Narayanan described the

claims made against him in the Underlying Proceedings for which he requested

indemnification and advancement. Narayanan also attached an undertaking to

repay the advancement should it be determined later that he is not entitled to

indemnification. After Sutherland failed to pay advancement to Narayanan, he

filed a complaint on November 30, 2015 asserting two causes of action (the

“Complaint”). Count I seeks advancement for Narayanan’s fees and expenses,

along with pre-judgment interest, arising from Sutherland’s set-off defense and

counterclaim in the New York Action and the India Criminal Proceedings. Count

II seeks advancement for Narayanan’s fees and expenses arising from his pursuit

of this Delaware Action (“fees-on-fees”).

      On December 14, 2015, Narayanan mailed to Sutherland his Supplemental

Notice of Claim and Demand for Indemnification and Payment of Expense

Advances reflecting fees and expenses incurred in commencing this action (the

“Supplemental Notice”).57 The Supplemental Notice mirrored the Initial Notice,

but added a demand for advancement with respect to this action. Sutherland never

56
      Tr. 87; JX 109.
57
      Tr. 88; JX 122.

                                      20
responded to either demand.

       On December 15, 2015, the Court granted a stipulated order governing the

case schedule. The parties submitted simultaneous opening and answering briefs

on January 26 and February 1, 2016, respectively, and the Court held a one-day

trial on February 10, 2016. Thereafter, the parties submitted post-trial briefs, and

post-trial oral arguments were held on March 8, 2016.

      C.    Contentions
      Post-trial briefing revealed that the following three issues remain: (1)

whether the Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement must be read

conjunctively or disjunctively; (2) whether Narayanan served KRV at the request

of Sutherland; and (3) whether the Court should delay deciding the reasonableness

of Narayanan’s fee requests to date, fees-on-fees, and pre-judgment interest claims

until after the Court resolves Sutherland’s liability for those fees. This opinion

concludes as follows: (1) the Bylaws are a separate and independent source of

indemnification and advancement rights that do not condition Narayanan’s receipt

of advancement on his “cooperation”; (2) Vellodi’s request that Narayanan serve

as a director of the KRV and SDC entities satisfies the advancement provisions,

and Sutherland is thereby liable to Narayanan for the advancement he seeks

(including fees-on-fees and pre-judgment interest) with respect to each of the

Underlying Proceedings; and (3) there is no reason to further delay vindicating


                                       21
Narayanan’s right to advancement.

II.   ANALYSIS
      A.    Legal Standard
      Ordinarily, a plaintiff has the burden of proving each element of each of its

causes of action against each defendant by a preponderance of the evidence,58

where proof by a preponderance of the evidence means proof that something is

more likely than not.59 Here, however, the parties agree that, under either’s theory

of the case, the Bylaws require Sutherland to prove that Narayanan is not entitled

to advancement.60

      B.    The Bylaws and Indemnification Agreement Are Disjunctive
      Sutherland argues that Narayanan is not entitled to advancement because he

failed to satisfy the condition precedent that he cooperate with Sutherland, which,

here, means that Narayanan failed to cooperate adequately with Freed Maxick’s

investigation and Sutherland’s attempts to recover funds advanced to Ramanan.



58
      Revolution Retail Sys., LLC v. Sentinel Techs., Inc., 2015 WL 6611601, at *9 (Del.
      Ch. Oct. 30, 2015); In re Genelux Corp., 2015 WL 6393840, at *19 (Del. Ch. Oct.
      22, 2015).
59
      Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 2010 WL 610725, at *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 2010)
      (quoting Del. Express Shuttle, Inc. v. Older, 2002 WL 31458243, at *17 (Del. Ch.
      Oct. 23, 2002)).
60
      Bylaws art. VI § 3 (“In any such action the Corporation shall have the burden of
      proving that [Narayanan] is not entitled to the requested indemnification or
      advancement of expenses under applicable law.”).

                                        22
Although Sutherland admits that the Cooperation Provision only appears in the

Indemnification Agreement, Sutherland argues that, because the parties entered

into the agreements contemporaneously and thereby intended the Bylaws and the

Indemnification Agreement to be read conjunctively, the Court should enforce the

Cooperation Provision as a condition precedent to Narayanan’s right to receive

advancement under either source. Sutherland further argues that the proper scope

of the Cooperation Provision is broad and that Narayanan failed to satisfy the

Cooperation Provision.61

      Narayanan contends that the Court need not reach the factual issue, however,

because the Bylaws, which are a separate and independent source of advancement

rights, include no cooperation requirement. Next, Narayanan argues that, even if

the Court reads the Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement conjunctively, the

Cooperation Provision cannot be read as broadly as Sutherland contends, since the

facts upon which Sutherland relies constitute the substance and merits of the

Underlying Proceedings and, as such, should not be decided here.           In the

alternative, Narayanan maintains that, at every turn, he actually provided

Sutherland as much cooperation as was within his power and as Sutherland could

reasonably require. Although the evidence supports each of Narayanan’s three



61
      Oral Arg. Tr. 33-34.

                                      23
arguments, the Court reaches only whether the Bylaws and Indemnification

Agreement are disjunctive.

             1.    Controlling law
      Section 145 of the DGCL governs indemnification and advancement.

Subject to certain limitations, a corporation has discretionary authority to provide

indemnification under subsections (a) and (b) and advancement under subsection

(e), but must provide indemnification in certain circumstances pursuant to

subsection (c).     As relevant here, Section 145(f) makes clear that the

indemnification and advancement rights under the DGCL are not exclusive of any

additional indemnification and advancement rights a corporation chooses to

provide through a separate instrument. To that end, the first sentence of Section

145(f) (the “Non-Exclusivity Clause”) states, in relevant part:

             The indemnification and advancement of expenses
             provided by, or granted pursuant to, the other subsections
             of this section shall not be deemed exclusive of any other
             rights to which those seeking indemnification or
             advancement of expenses may be entitled under any
             bylaw, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested
             directors or otherwise, both as to action in such person’s
             official capacity and as to action in another capacity
             while holding such office.62




62
      8 Del. C. § 145(f) (emphasis added).

                                        24
      Vice Chancellor Laster reviewed Section 145’s legislative history recently in

Marino v. Patriot Rail Company.63 In short, during the three years before the

DGCL was overhauled in 1967, “no subject was more discussed among members

of the corporate bar than the subject of indemnification of officers and directors.”64

Although Section 145 was modernized at that time, the language of the Non-

Exclusivity Clause largely was unchanged from the pre-1967 version. “Both the

old and new indemnification statute declare that their provisions are not exclusive

of other rights under any ‘by-law, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested

directors or otherwise.’”65 The drafting committee said the power to indemnify

was “non-exclusive so that other rights to indemnification may still exist by

contract, by-law or charter within such limits of public policy as the courts may

establish.”66 “Thus, one may become entitled to indemnification outside the terms

of the statute by virtue of an express contract awarding indemnity, such as an




63
      131 A.3d 325, 332-43 (Del. Ch. 2016).
64
      S. Samuel Arsht & Walter K. Stapleton, Delaware’s New General Corporation
      Law: Substantive Changes, 28 BUS. LAW. 75, 77-78 (1967).
65
      ERNEST L. FOLK, III, THE DELAWARE GENERAL CORPORATION LAW: A
      COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS 101 (1972) (quoting 8 Del. C. § 145(f)).
66
      Arsht & Stapleton, supra note 64.

                                          25
agreement between a corporation and an executive to terminate employment.”67

“[T]o secure indemnity outside the specific statutory standards, ‘an independent

legal ground for such claim must be shown in every case.’”68

      The Court applied these principles recently in Charney v. American Apparel,

Inc.69 There, the founder and former Chairman and CEO of American Apparel,

Inc. sought advancement for legal fees he incurred defending litigation that arose

after he ceased holding those positions.70         Chancellor Bouchard considered

whether the director’s advancement rights appeared in three instruments—a

standstill agreement, the company’s charter, and the director’s indemnification

agreement.     When analyzing the indemnification agreement, the Chancellor

determined that, “separate from and in addition to the [c]harter . . . , the Company

agreed to indemnify and to advance certain of [the director’s] expenses under his

Indemnification Agreement, which is governed by Delaware law.”71 Thus, the

Court recognized that the company validly had exercised its authority under

Section 145(f) to grant the director multiple sources of separate and independent

67
      FOLK, supra note 65 (citing Mooney v. Willys-Overland Motors, Inc., 204 F.2d
      888, 899 (3d Cir. 1953)).
68
      FOLK, supra note 65, at 102 (citing Mooney, 204 F.2d at 896).
69
      2015 WL 5313769 (Del. Ch. Sept. 11, 2015).
70
      Id. at *1.
71
      Id. at *9 (citing 8 Del. C. § 145(f)).

                                           26
advancement rights. In other words, Charney stands for the proposition that the

unavailability of advancement under one source of rights does not foreclose the

possibility of advancement under another. Sutherland not only failed to address

Charney in its brief, but also failed to distinguish Charney at argument on any

meaningful basis.

      Sutherland relies exclusively on Levy v. Hayes Lemmerz International, Inc.72

to sustain its argument that construing the Bylaws and the Indemnification

Agreement separately is “plainly contradicted by our cases.”73             Sutherland’s

argument does not turn on the holding of Levy. Levy interpreted the operative

agreements in that case and rejected the company’s argument that it had a

contractually-mandated thirty-day period to consider a written demand for

indemnification, which the former directors breached by filing suit prematurely.74

Instead, Sutherland focuses on a footnote that states as follows:

             In reaching this conclusion, however, the court rejects the
             plaintiffs’ argument that the Old Hayes bylaws and the
             indemnification agreements provide two entirely
             independent sources of indemnification, and that
             therefore      any    procedural     requirements       for
             indemnification under the agreements are irrelevant to
             indemnification under the bylaws. Not only does such a


72
      2006 WL 985361, at *7 n.24 (Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2006).
73
      Def.’s Post-Trial Answering Br. 12-14 (citing Levy, 2006 WL 985361, at *7 n.24).
74
      Levy, 2006 WL 985361, at *6-7.

                                        27
             construction of the two documents make nonsense of the
             indemnification agreements, but it is plainly contradicted
             by our cases. Most obviously, the Supreme Court was
             confronted with a similar situation in Citadel Holding
             Corp. v. Roven, 603 A.2d 818 (Del. 1992), where a
             bylaw provided indemnitees with the full range of
             indemnification rights available under Delaware law, and
             the accompanying indemnification agreement contained
             certain other rights. The court there assumed that the two
             documents would be read together, and firmly rejected
             the defendant’s position that the indemnification
             agreement somehow left the advancement provision, at
             issue in that case, entirely unchanged. The court sees no
             reason to read the plainly conjunctive documents in this
             case any differently than the Supreme Court construed
             them in Citadel.75

      First, the Levy Court’s rejection of one of the former directors’ other

arguments as “plainly contradicted by our cases” is dicta and not controlling.

      Second, I interpret Citadel differently than Levy did.        In Citadel, the

Supreme Court determined that, although the directors there were not entitled to

mandatory advancement under the DGCL or the company’s bylaws, the directors

were entitled to mandatory advancement under an indemnification agreement.76

The Supreme Court’s recognition of a contract that provides unique advancement

rights not provided elsewhere—like a statute, certificate, or bylaws—supports the

proposition that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, contractual


75
      Id. at *7 n.24.
76
      Citadel, 603 A.2d at 823-24.

                                       28
advancement rights are separate and independent from those found in other

sources.   Accordingly, the Supreme Court’s conclusion in Citadel that the

director’s indemnification agreement provided broader rights than the company’s

bylaws suggests it read those instruments separately.

      Third, at argument Sutherland appeared to rely on the rule that contracts

entered into by the same parties in one transaction or at the same time should be

construed together77 when it urged the Court to read the Bylaws and




77
      See, e.g., Ashall Homes, Ltd. v. ROK Entm’t Gp., Inc., 992 A.2d 1239, 1250 n.56
      (Del. Ch. 2010) (citing Crown Books Corp. v. Bookstop Inc., 1990 WL 26166, at
      *1 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 1990) (“[I]n construing the legal obligations created by [a]
      document, it is appropriate for the court to consider not only the language of that
      document but also the language of contracts among the same parties executed or
      amended as of the same date that deal with related matters.”); 17A C.J.S.
      Contracts § 315 (1999); 11 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 30:26 (4th ed. 1999)
      (“Apart from the explicit incorporation by reference of one document into another,
      the principle that all writings which are part of the same transaction are interpreted
      together also finds application in the situation where incorporation by reference of
      another document may be inferred from the context in which the documents in
      question were executed. Thus, in the absence of anything to indicate a contrary
      intention, instruments executed at the same time, by the same contracting parties,
      for the same purpose, and in the course of the same transaction will be considered
      and construed together as one contract or instrument, even though they do not in
      terms refer to each other.”); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 202(2)
      (1981) (“A writing is interpreted as a whole, and all writings that are part of the
      same transaction are interpreted together.”)). The revised edition of Corpus Juris
      Secondum states, “[i]n the absence of anything to indicate a contrary intention,
      writings executed at the same time and relating to the same transaction are
      construed together as a single contract.” 17A C.J.S. Contracts § 401 (2011).

                                          29
Indemnification Agreement together and “come to a natural result.”78

Conspicuously absent from Sutherland’s recitation, however, is the rule’s

qualifying condition, “in the absence of evidence to the contrary.”79 As discussed

below, the operative contractual provisions in this case present ample evidence to

the contrary. Thus, the rule is not applicable here.

             2.    Interpreting the Bylaws and Indemnification Agreement
      Delaware follows an objective theory of contracts, “which requires a court to

interpret a particular contractual term to mean ‘what a reasonable person in the

position of the parties would have thought it meant.’”80 When a contract is clear

and unambiguous, Delaware courts interpret its terms according to their plain

meaning.81 A term in a contract that is reasonably susceptible to more than one

interpretation is ambiguous, but “[t]he parties’ steadfast disagreement over

interpretation will not, alone, render the contract ambiguous.”82       Neither will


78
      Oral Arg. Tr. 38 (“We have two parties together, same rights, same day, same
      subject matter. We should do everything we can to read them together and come
      to a natural result.”).
79
      See supra note 77.
80
      Charney, 2015 WL 5313769, at *10 (citing Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v.
      Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A.2d 1192, 1196 (Del. 1992)).
81
      Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1195.
82
      See Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1160 (Del. 2010) (citing Twin City Fire Ins.
      Co. v. Del. Racing Ass’n, 840 A.2d 624, 628 (Del. 2003); Rhone-Poulenc, 616
      A.2d at 1195).

                                         30
“extrinsic, parol evidence . . . be used to manufacture an ambiguity in a contract

that facially has only one reasonable meaning.”83 Because the relevant provisions

here are unambiguous, extrinsic evidence is not considered.

      Here, Sutherland’s Certificate authorized it to grant Narayanan the

advancement rights set forth in its Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement.

Furthermore, the Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement adopt language

substantially similar to the Non-Exclusivity Clause in Section 145 and declare that

those instruments are not exclusive of any other source of rights. Moreover,

Sutherland’s argument that nothing in the Bylaws precludes the parties from

negotiating the Indemnification Agreement misses the point. That the Bylaws do

not preclude negotiation of the Indemnification Agreement does nothing to counter

Narayanan’s argument, or the instruments’ plain language, that the two exist

separately and independently of each other.

      Additionally, although the Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement were

both effective as of March 5, 2013, the non-exclusivity provision in each manifests

the parties’ express intent for each instrument to provide rights and obligations




83
      United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Hldgs., Inc., 937 A.2d 810, 830 (Del. Ch. 2007)
      (citing Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232
      (Del. 1997) (“If a contract is unambiguous, extrinsic evidence may not be used to
      interpret the intent of the parties, to vary the terms of the contract or to create an
      ambiguity.”)).

                                          31
independent of the other.84 That Narayanan is a beneficiary of both instruments

does not negate the parties’ express intent that the Bylaws provide certain rights

and obligations to a group of individuals and the Indemnification Agreement

provide certain different or additional rights and obligations to a single individual.

Had the parties intended the instruments to operate conjunctively, they only needed

to replace the non-exclusivity provisions with language to that effect.

      In sum, Sutherland has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence

that the Bylaws and the Indemnification Agreement are conjunctive. Instead,

under the circumstances present and for the reasons discussed above, the Court

holds that the Bylaws and Indemnification Agreement are separate and

independent sources of advancement rights.          The Bylaws do not contain or

incorporate the Cooperation Provision Sutherland seeks to enforce, and Sutherland

fails to prove that the parties intended otherwise. Accordingly, the Court does not

reach the parties’ alternative arguments regarding cooperation.            In addition,



84
      Bylaws art. VII § 6 (“The rights conferred on any person by this Article VII shall
      not be exclusive of any other rights which such person may have or hereafter
      acquire under any statute, provision of the Certificate of Incorporation, these
      Bylaws, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or otherwise.”);
      Indemnification Agreement § 5(b) (“The indemnification, exoneration or hold
      harmless rights and the payment of Expense Advances provided by this
      Agreement shall be in addition to any rights to which [Narayanan] may be entitled
      under the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation, its bylaws, any other
      agreement, any vote of stockholders or disinterested directors, the DGCL, or
      otherwise.”).

                                         32
Sutherland concedes that, to the extent the Court rules against Sutherland on

cooperation, it is obligated to advance Narayanan’s fees and expenses incurred in

defending Sutherland’s set-off defense and counterclaim in the New York Action

and the SDC Criminal Proceedings.85            This opinion rejects Sutherland’s

cooperation argument. Therefore, there is no dispute that Narayanan is entitled to

advancement generally with respect to the New York Action and the SDC

Criminal Proceedings.

      C.     Narayanan Served KRV at the Request of Sutherland
      Sutherland contends that the Court should deny Narayanan advancement for

the KRV Criminal Proceedings. To this end, Sutherland argues, and spent a great

deal of time at trial trying to prove, that KRV is not a subsidiary or affiliate of

Sutherland and that Narayanan’s activities relating to KRV were motivated by his

own business interests.    Thus, Sutherland reasons, Narayanan’s KRV-related

activities are outside the scope of his Sutherland-related advancement rights. Both

of these arguments fail.




85
      Id. at 34 (“THE COURT: You do agree, though, . . . to the extent I ruled against
      you on cooperation, then there wouldn’t be a dispute about whether or not Mr.
      Narayanan is entitled to advancement for the defense of the counterclaims in the
      New York action and the SDC proceedings? [COUNSEL]: That’s correct, Your
      Honor.”).

                                       33
      As an initial matter, that KRV is not a subsidiary or affiliate of Sutherland is

irrelevant to whether Narayanan is entitled to advancement of fees and costs

related to the KRV Criminal Proceedings. The Bylaws obligate Sutherland to

advance Narayanan’s legal fees and expenses incurred “by reason of the fact that

[he], . . . while a director or officer of the Corporation, is or was serving at the

request of the Corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another

corporation or of a partnership, joint venture, trust, enterprise or nonprofit

entity . . . .”86 Thus, Narayanan argues correctly that the relevant inquiry under the

Bylaws is whether Narayanan, while a director or officer of Sutherland, served as a

director, officer, or employee of KRV at Sutherland’s request.

      At trial, Narayanan testified repeatedly that he worked for and served as a

director of KRV because Vellodi, the Chairman, CEO, and controlling stockholder

of Sutherland, instructed him to do so.87 Narayanan also testified credibly that at

Sutherland, Vellodi’s requests were the equivalent of instructions from the

Company. It was not unusual for Narayanan or other Sutherland employees to

receive instructions for acting on behalf of Sutherland from Vellodi. For example,

Sutherland employees doing KRV work at Vellodi’s request and without



86
      See Bylaws art. VII § 1; see also Indemnification Agreement § 1(b) (requiring the
      same inquiry).
87
      Tr. 12, 13, 14-15, 19-20, 23.

                                        34
compensation from KRV included Susan DeCann, Sheela Solomon, Sujeet

Oomen, Kiran Verghese Thomas, and Vasudeva Rao.88

      In the absence of testimony from Vellodi denying that he instructed

Narayanan to serve as a director of KRV,89 Sutherland attempts to prove that

Narayanan served as a director of KRV for personal reasons.                   Specifically,

Sutherland highlights Narayanan’s history and relationship with DMNC.

Ultimately, this evidence shows little more than the fact that such history and

relationship exist.90   Sutherland has failed to demonstrate that, during KRV’s




88
      JX 8 (DeCann & Solomon), 61 (Oomen & Thomas), 65 (Thomas), 66 (Rao), 68
      (Rao).
89
      Although Sutherland cites and references Vellodi’s deposition transcript in its
      post-trial brief (Def.’s Post-Trial Answering Br. 9 n.2), the parties’ Joint Pre-Trial
      Stipulation and Order (“PTO”) provides that “[d]eposition testimony is admissible
      to the extent permitted by the Delaware Uniform Rules of Evidence and the Court
      of Chancery Rules.” PTO ¶ VII.1-2. Narayanan objects to Sutherland’s reliance
      on Vellodi’s deposition transcript and argues that the transcript is hearsay under
      D.R.E. 801(c) and is not subject to any exception. Def.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 2-3
      n.1. Sutherland did not attempt to explain Vellodi’s last minute absence from the
      trial, despite the fact that he was on the witness list. Likewise, Sutherland fails to
      respond to Narayanan’s hearsay objection. I agree that the referenced Vellodi
      deposition is hearsay that is not subject to any exception. As such, I have not
      considered it in this ruling.
90
      Sutherland compiles the following evidence in its post-trial Answering Brief:
      Narayanan founded DMNC in 1994 (Tr. 94; JX 134); Vellodi retained DMNC to
      form KRV in 2006 (Tr. 120; JX 2); Narayanan and Vellodi used personal
      addresses when forming KRV (Tr. 116-19; JX 1, 309); KRV’s registered address
      is the same as DMNC’s (Tr. 126-28; JX 33); DMNC handled certain duties for
      KRV (Tr. 169-70); DMNC was compensated for its KRV work (Tr. 123-25, 126-
      29, 169-70; JX 33, 302); Narayanan remained a partner at DMNC through 2007
                                          35
existence, Narayanan had more than a nominal interest in KRV, received salary or

distributions from DMNC during DMNC’s relationship with KRV or after his

retirement from DMNC, or received material compensation of any kind from any

relevant entity other than Sutherland.91

      Nothing in the record calls into question or rebuts Narayanan’s testimony

that he served KRV at the request of Vellodi, and the Court finds Narayanan

competent and credible on this issue.           Accordingly, the Court concludes that

Narayanan served KRV at the request of Vellodi.              Vellodi, as Sutherland’s

Chairman, CEO, and controlling stockholder, has both actual and apparent

authority to direct employees and bind the Company. And he did just that. Based

on the evidence presented at trial, the Court concludes that, under the

circumstances, Vellodi’s instruction satisfies the Bylaws’ requirement that




      (Tr. 97-98); Narayanan was a signatory on KRV accounts (Tr. 130); there was no
      formal announcement of Narayanan’s retirement from DMNC in 2007 (Tr. 107-
      08); following his supposed retirement from DMNC, Narayanan continued
      receiving and sending emails from his DMNC email account (Tr. 111, 115, 116;
      JX 307, 308); Narayanan continues a personal consulting business despite retiring
      from DMNC because he was too busy with Sutherland (Tr. 104-05); at one point
      DMNC relocated across the street from Narayanan’s home (Tr. 109, 161); and
      DMNC’s website lists Narayanan as a founder and head of business setup services
      and advisory services (Tr. 105-06; JX 134). See Def.’s Post-Trial Answering Br.
      20-22.
91
      Tr. 166 (Narayanan) (“Q. Okay. And apart from your Sutherland salary, were
      you paid anything for the work that you did on the K.R.V. land transactions? A.
      No.”).

                                           36
Sutherland request Narayanan serve as a director of another company.

      Therefore, the Bylaws entitle Narayanan to recover from Sutherland the fees

and expenses he incurred in responding to Sutherland’s set-off defense and

counterclaim in the New York Action and both India Criminal Proceedings.

      D.     Sutherland Must Advance the Fees Narayanan Presented at Trial
      “The Court of Chancery may summarily determine a corporation’s

obligation to advance expenses (including attorneys’ fees).”92 In advancement

proceedings, the Court of Chancery often makes legal and factual determinations

concerning the scope of advancement obligations, but “the function of a § 145(k)

advancement case is not to inject this court as a monthly monitor of the precision

and integrity of advancement requests.”93 With respect to objections to specific fee

requests, this Court has followed Fasciana v. Electric Data Systems Corporation,

where then-Vice Chancellor Strine observed, “[u]nless some gross problem arises,

a balance of fairness and efficiency concerns would seem to counsel deferring

fights about details until a final indemnification proceeding . . . .”94



92
      8 Del. C. § 145(k).
93
      Fasciana v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp., 829 A.2d 160, 177 (Del. Ch. 2003).
94
      Id. See also Danenberg v. Fitricks, Inc., 58 A.3d 991, 998 (Del. Ch. 2012); Duthie
      v. CorSolutions Med., Inc., 2008 WL 4173850, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 10, 2008)
      (“Advancement is not the proper stage for a detailed analytical review of the fees .
      . . . In the absence of clear abuse, the fees should be advanced.”).

                                         37
      As explained above, Sutherland is obligated to advance Narayanan’s legal

fees in the Underlying Proceedings.           Narayanan presented evidence at trial

supporting the fees and expenses he requested until then, including an allocation of

fees between covered and uncovered claims in the New York Action. Sutherland

had every opportunity to submit rebutting evidence, but chose not to. Instead,

Sutherland urges the Court not to award Narayanan the fees and expenses he

requested at trial at this stage. As a matter of judicial efficiency, and because

advancement is meant to be a summary proceeding, the Court concludes there is no

reason to further delay vindicating Narayanan’s right to advancement.95

      With respect to the India Criminal Proceedings, Narayanan presented

evidence at trial on the expenses he incurred and illustrated aspects of India’s legal

system that differ from ours. In addition, having conceded that Sutherland is not

obligated to indemnify or advance Narayanan’s legal fees relating to his


95
      Two post-trial opinions support this approach. In Barrett, then-Vice Chancellor
      Strine refused to permit a corporation to delay litigation further with “nit-picking”
      over the costs directors had incurred to vindicate a clear legal right. 951 A.2d at
      747 n.40. Although Barrett is distinguishable on factual grounds, it is an example
      of the Court declining to postpone awarding fees requested at trial. In Blankenship
      v. Alpha Appalachia Holdings, Inc., Chancellor Bouchard determined a
      company’s obligation to pay advancement and awarded requested expenses to the
      plaintiff in the same post-trial opinion, even though “[t]he reasonableness of the
      invoices [the plaintiff] submitted for payment was not the subject of any inquiry at
      trial . . . .” 2015 WL 3408255, at *27 (Del. Ch. May 28, 2015). Citing Fasciana,
      the Chancellor observed that the defendants had no substantive objection that the
      withheld fees were unreasonable and raised no “gross problem” or legitimate
      reason requiring a “playground monitor” at that stage. Id. at 28.

                                         38
affirmative claims in the New York Action, Narayanan presented evidence on the

process his New York counsel utilized to segregate unrecoverable fees from those

to which Narayanan legally is entitled.

      Narayanan requests Sutherland advance 3,090,000 rupees—275,000 for fees

and expenses incurred in the SDC Criminal Proceeding and 2,815,000 for fees and

expenses incurred in the KRV Criminal Proceeding.96 Acknowledging that he had

hired several lawyers, Narayanan explained at trial that India has a solicitors and

barristers system similar to England and that it is not unusual in India to hire as

many lawyers as he did to handle proceedings in multiple courts. 97 Sutherland did

not present any evidence on this issue. Nothing in the record calls into question or

rebuts Narayanan’s testimony with respect to these fee requests, and the Court

finds Narayanan competent and credible on this issue. Thus, Sutherland shall

advance the 3,090,000 rupees Narayanan requested at trial.

      Narayanan requests $115,688 for fees and expenses incurred in the New

York Action. John Cuti, one of Narayanan’s lawyers in the New York Action,

testified at trial that the fees and expenses incurred in defending that action through




96
      Pl.’s Post-Trial Opening Br. 50; see also JX 116, 200, 202-05.
97
      Tr. 80.

                                          39
November 2015 are documented in a series of invoices.98 Because these invoices

include fees and expenses incurred in prosecuting affirmative claims for which

indemnification and advancement are not recoverable, Cuti utilized the following

process for segregating recoverable fees and expenses. First, Cuti reviewed the

invoices and allocated the individual entries based on whether the time was spent

either on the uncovered affirmative claims or the covered set-off defense and

counterclaim.99 Then, Cuti created two consolidated, color-coded itemizations of

the time entry-by-time entry allocations for both (1) the set-off defense and

counterclaim100 and (2) the efforts to force Sutherland to honor its indemnification

and advancement obligations, including New York counsel’s efforts related to this

action.101 Lastly, Cuti compiled the totals from those two itemizations into a chart

summarizing the breakdown, which reflects that Narayanan’s New York counsel

incurred $115,688 in fees in responding to Sutherland’s set-off defense and


98
      Tr. 225-28 (Cuti); see also JX 93, 96, 101, 106, 110, 114. In December 2015, Cuti
      also began separating his fees and expenses arising from this Delaware Action
      from those related to the New York Action. See JX 124 (New York Action), JX
      125 (Delaware Action).
99
      Tr. 230. This included reviewing “e-mail correspondence and other documents to
      help refresh [Cuti’s] recollection about how much time was spent on various
      matters.” Tr. 229-30.
100
      JX 118.
101
      JX 119. As Cuti explained at trial, individual line items on the color-coded
      itemizations found in JX 118 and 119 correspond and can be traced back to the
      allocated time entries found in JX 211, 212, 113, and 124. Tr. 229-34.

                                        40
counterclaim.102 Again, Sutherland neither presented evidence on this issue nor

submitted any substantive objection to the allocation procedure Cuti employed or

the fees Narayanan requested.        Thus, Sutherland shall advance the $115,688

Narayanan requested at trial.

      Narayanan also seeks the reasonable fees and expenses he incurred in

connection with this Delaware Action. Delaware law and the Bylaws mandate the

payment of fees-on-fees here.103        In particular, the Bylaws provide that, if

Narayanan is “successful in whole or in part” on “a claim for indemnification or

advancement of expenses,” he “shall be entitled to be paid the expense of

prosecuting [his] claim.”104      Narayanan has been “successful in whole” in

obtaining advancement of the fees and expenses he requested at trial. Accordingly,

the Bylaws entitle Narayanan to be paid the expense of prosecuting this Delaware

Action. Through February 10, 2016, Narayanan incurred legal fees and expenses

related to this action in the amount of $239,500.04 from his Delaware counsel and


102
      Tr. 234-35; JX 117.
103
      8 Del. C. § 145; see also Stifel Fin. Corp. v. Cochran, 809 A.2d 555, 561 (Del.
      2002) (“We hold that indemnification for expenses incurred in successfully
      prosecuting an indemnification suit are permissible under § 145(a), and therefore
      ‘authorized by law.’”); Barrett, 951 A.2d at 746 (noting “Supreme Court
      jurisprudence mandating ‘fees on fees’ in advancement actions” and awarding
      directors legal fees and costs associated with prosecuting action). Bylaws art. VII,
      § 3.
104
      Bylaws art. VII § 3.

                                         41
$60,348.00 from his out-of-state counsel.105      As before, Sutherland makes no

substantive objection to Narayanan’s request.         Sutherland shall advance the

$299,848.04 that Narayanan requested at trial.

      Next, “[a] party seeking advancement is entitled to interest from the date on

which the party ‘specified the amount of reimbursement demanded and produced

his written promise to pay.’”106 Narayanan’s request for pre-judgment interest is

unopposed. In Delaware, pre-judgment interest accrues at the legal rate set forth in

6 Del. C. § 2301(a) and is compounded quarterly.107 Narayanan submitted the

Initial Notice demanding advancement and providing an undertaking to Sutherland

on October 19, 2015 and the Supplemental Notice adding a demand for

advancement with respect to this action on December 14, 2015.108 Under the

Bylaws, Sutherland was required to pay these demands in full within thirty days of

receiving them.109 Thus, Narayanan is entitled to pre-judgment interest, accruing


105
      See Aff. of John R. Cuti in Connection with Count II of the Verified Compl.; Aff.
      of Garrett B. Moritz in Connection with Count II of the Verified Compl.; see also
      JX 81, 109, 114, 122, 124, 125, 135.
106
      Underbrink v. Warrior Energy Servs., Corp., 2008 WL 2262316, at *19 (Del. Ch.
      May 30, 2008); see also O’Brien v. IAC/Interactive Corp., 2010 WL 3385798, at
      *17 (Del. Ch. Aug. 27, 2010) (awarding pre-judgment interest), aff’d, 26 A.3d 174
      (Del. 2011).
107
      Underbrink, 2008 WL 2262316, at *19.
108
      JX 109, 122.
109
      Bylaws art. VII § 3.
                                        42
at the statutory rate and compounded quarterly, beginning thirty days after

Sutherland received each of Narayanan’s demands on the amounts requested

therein.110

       Finally, Narayanan requests that the Court enter an order providing for a

procedure for submission of further requests for advancement and the prompt

resolution of any disputes that arise regarding such requests.111           The Court

concludes that an order imposing the framework detailed by this Court in Fitracks

is appropriate for governing fee requests and objections going forward.112

III.   CONCLUSION
       For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that the Bylaws entitle

Narayanan to recover from Sutherland 275,000 rupees for fees and expenses

incurred in the SDC Criminal Proceedings; 2,815,000 rupees for fees and expenses

incurred in the KRV Criminal Proceedings; $115,688.00 for fees and expenses

incurred through December 31, 2015 in connection with defending Sutherland’s

second affirmative defense and counterclaim in the New York Action; and

$299,848.04 for fees and expenses incurred in this Delaware Action through the



110
       That is, the interest due on each demand shall be calculated separately using the
       relevant dates and amounts requested.
111
       Pl.’s Post-Trial Reply Br. 50.
112
       Fitracks, 58 A.3d at 1003-04.

                                         43
February 10, 2016 trial. Sutherland shall pay these fees and expenses, together

with pre-judgment interest, accruing at the statutory rate and compounded

quarterly, beginning thirty days after Sutherland received each of Narayanan’s

demands on the amounts requested therein, no later than ten days after the filing of

this opinion.

      The parties shall submit a stipulated form of order within ten days of this

opinion imposing the framework detailed by this Court in Danenberg v. Fitracks,

Inc.,113 which order shall govern the submission of further requests for

advancement and the prompt resolution of any disputes that arise regarding such

requests.

IT IS SO ORDERED.




113
      58 A.3d 991, 1003-04 (Del. Ch. 2012).

                                       44
