   IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

RCS CREDITOR TRUST,                    )
                                       )
                 Plaintiff,            )
                                       )
      v.                               ) C.A. No. 2017-0178-SG
                                       )
NICHOLAS S. SCHORSCH, EDWARD           )
M. WEIL, JR., WILLIAM KAHANE,          )
PETER M. BUDKO, BRIAN S.               )
BLOCK, LOUISA QUARTO, RCAP             )
HOLDINGS LLC, AR CAPITAL, LLC,         )
AR GLOBAL INVESTMENTS, LLC,            )
AMERICAN REALTY CAPITAL                )
RETAIL ADVISOR, LLC, AMERICAN          )
FINANCE ADVISORS, LLC,                 )
AMERICAN REALTY CAPITAL                )
HEALTHCARE III ADVISORS, LLC,          )
AMERICAN REALTY CAPITAL                )
HOSPITALITY ADVISORS, LLC,             )
NEW YORK CITY ADVISORS, LLC,           )
GLOBAL NET LEASE ADVISORS,             )
LLC, AMERICAN REALTY CAPITAL           )
HEALTHCARE II ADVISORS, LLC,           )
NEW YORK RECOVERY ADVISORS,            )
LLC, and BDCA ADVISER, LLC,            )
                                       )
                 Defendants.           )

                       MEMORANDUM OPINION

                    Date Submitted: December 17, 2019
                      Date Decided: March 20, 2020

Philip Trainer, Jr. and Marie M. Degnan, of ASHBY & GEDDES, Wilmington,
Delaware; OF COUNSEL: John P. Coffey, Gregory A. Horowitz, and Anna K.
Ostrom, of KRAMER LEVIN NAFTALIS & FRANKEL, New York, New York,
Attorneys for Plaintiff RCS Creditor Trust.
Daniel A. Mason, of PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON LLP,
Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Allan J. Arffa, Gregory F. Laufer, and
Jeremy A. Benjamin, of PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON
LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Defendants Nicholas S. Schorsch, Edward
M. Weil, Jr., William Kahane, Peter M. Budko, Louisa Quarto, RCAP Holdings LLC,
AR Capital, LLC, AR Global Investments, LLC, American Realty Capital Retail
Advisor, LLC, American Finance Advisors, LLC, American Realty Capital
Healthcare III Advisors, LLC, American Realty Capital Hospitality Advisors, LLC,
New York City Advisors, LLC, Global Net Lease Advisors, LLC, American Realty
Capital Healthcare II Advisors, LLC, New York Recovery Advisors, LLC, and BDCA
Adviser, LLC.

Elizabeth A. Sloan and Brittany M. Giusini, of BALLARD SPAHR LLP,
Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Michael C. Miller, Evan Glassman, and
Michael G. Scavelli, of STEPTOE & JOHNSON LLP, New York, New York; Mark
Murphy, of STEPTOE & JOHNSON LLP, Washington, DC, Attorneys for Defendant
Brian S. Block.




GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
       This litigation concerns the Plaintiff’s contention that the Defendants

breached fiduciary duties in regard to a controlled entity, the stakeholders of which

Plaintiff represents via proceedings in bankruptcy. The issue before me in this

Memorandum Opinion concerns whether communication between the Plaintiff’s

counsel and a third-party stakeholder are protected by the Plaintiff’s attorney-client

privilege, notwithstanding the dissemination to the third party just mentioned. For

reasons described below, I conclude that the communications are privileged. My

reasoning follows.

       This matter is currently before me on the Defendant ARC Parties’1 Motion to

Compel production of communications from the Plaintiff, RCS Creditor Trust (the

“Trust”). The Trust was established under the plan of reorganization of RCS Capital

Corporation (“RCAP”) and certain of its affiliates as confirmed by the United States

Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware on May 19, 2016 (the “Plan”).2 The

Trust was assigned certain claims and causes of action pursuant to the Plan.3 Non-

party Luxor Capital Partners, LP (“Luxor”) was RCAP’s largest unsecured creditor

and is the largest stakeholder in the Trust.4 The ARC Parties seek, among other



1
  “ARC Parties” is the term the parties to this Action have used to refer to all Defendants other
than Brian Block.
2
  Pl.’s Verified Compl., D.I. 1 (“Compl.”), ¶ 14.
3
  Id.
4
  The ARC Parties Mot. to Compel, D.I. 336 (“ARC Parties Mot.”), ¶ 8; Non-Parties Luxor Capital
Partners, LP and Michael Conboy’s Joinder to Pl.’s Opp’n to ARC Mot. to Compel, D.I. 358
(“Joinder to Trust Opp’n”), ¶ 3.
                                               1
communications, emails between the Trust’s counsel, Kramer Levin Naftalis &

Frankel LLP (“Kramer Levin”) and Luxor (and/or its counsel, Skadden, Arps, Slate,

Meagher & Flom LLP (“Skadden”))—the Trust has withheld such emails on

attorney-client privilege and common interest grounds.               The Trust has also—

ostensibly under the same theories—instructed a Luxor witness not to testify at his

deposition about his discussions with Kramer Levin in preparation for his deposition

or otherwise.5

       The ARC Parties have moved to compel, arguing that privilege does not attach

to communications between Kramer Levin and Luxor/Skadden and that such

communications are not shielded by the common interest doctrine. The ARC Parties

urge that because Kramer Levin is not Luxor’s counsel in this litigation, their

communications cannot be privileged. Furthermore, the ARC Parties contend that

the common interest doctrine does not protect such communications because that

doctrine requires a common legal interest whereas, in the ARC Parties’ view, the

Trust and Luxor have, at most, a common financial interest in the outcome of this

litigation.




5
  The deponent, Michael Conboy, is a partner at Luxor, was directly involved in Luxor’s
investment in RCAP, and was designated as the Trust’s Rule 30(b)(6) witness in this litigation.
Joinder to Trust Opp’n, ¶¶ 3–4.
                                              2
       The attorney-client privilege is a creature of common law and has been

codified in Delaware Rule of Evidence 502.6 The attorney-client privilege protects

“communications made for the purpose of facilitating the rendition of professional

legal services to the client,” where “communications are intended to be confidential,

and the confidentiality is not waived.”7 The attorney-client privilege represents a

recognition that free lawyer-to-client communication—beyond the reach of

discovery—is a higher good than the general search for truth in litigation. Since the

ability to preserve the confidentiality of the attorney-client communication is the

overriding interest protected, the privilege generally ceases to apply where the

communication is shared with a third party.8            Thus, ordinarily, disclosure of

privileged information by a client or an attorney with the client’s permission operates

as a waiver of privilege.9 However, the general principle of waiver-by-disclosure

does not obtain where the communication is shared only with a third party to

facilitate the client’s interest in advancing her legal case, and where the third party

shares that same legal interest. In such an instance, the utility of the privilege and

its supremacy to the search for truth remain intact. Therefore, among exceptions to




6
  D.R.E. 502.
7
  D.R.E. 502(b); Riggs Nat’l Bank of Washington, D.C. v. Zimmer, 355 A.2d 709, 713 (Del. Ch.
1976).
8
  See D.R.E. 510.
9
  Texaco, Inc. v. Phoenix Steel Corp., 264 A.2d 523, 525 (Del. Ch. Mar. 24, 1970).
                                             3
waiver-by-disclosure is the common interest doctrine, upon which the current

dispute turns.10

       The common interest doctrine “allows separately represented clients sharing

a common legal interest to communicate directly with one another regarding that

shared interest.”11 Because the application of the common interest doctrine impedes

the search for truth, it must apply narrowly to retain its social utility; the shared

interest must be both strategic and legal, and mere common financial or partisan

shared interest is insufficient to invoke the doctrine. Here, the communications were

between legal representatives of the Trust (who possesses the privilege) and a third

party, Luxor (and/or their legal represenatives), and thus the privilege enjoyed by

the Trust is waived absent an exception to the general waiver rule; the Trust and

Luxor concede that the communications are discoverable unless those

communications are shielded from disclosure based on the common interest

doctrine.12

       In order to discern whether, under the common interest doctrine,

communication with a third party is privileged, the court must ask “whether the

common interest invoked by the party asserting the privilege is sufficiently legal



10
   See D.R.E. 502(b).
11
   Glassman v. Crossfit, Inc., 2012 WL 4859125, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 12, 2012).
12
   The Trust and Luxor do not dispute the ARC Parties’ contention that Kramer Levin does not
represent Luxor and that communications between Kramer Levin and Luxor are not privileged as
such.
                                             4
rather than commercial.”13           Furthermore, as a general rule, application of the

common interest doctrine is appropriate “where it is clear that the parties were

collaborating and sharing information in furtherance of a joint legal strategy or

objective, rather than simply seeking legal advice with regard to a commercial

transaction.”14 The communicating parties’ interests must be “substantially similar,

not adverse.”15 Communications between Kramer Levin and Luxor, in the Trust’s

view, fall under D.R.E. 502 because they are confidential communications made by

Kramer Levin for the purpose of facilitating the rendition of professional legal

services to the Trust.16 The Trust maintains that it and Luxor have a sufficiently

common legal (rather than commercial) interest to shield such communications from

disclosure.




13
   Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortg. Corp., 2011 WL 532011, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb.
2, 2011). The dispute here as regards common interest is solely whether the Trust and Luxor have
a sufficient common legal, rather than commercial, interest; accordingly, I do not discuss the
remainder of the elements of the common interest doctrine. Common interest protection is
embodied in the Delaware Rules of Evidence: “[a] client has a privilege to refuse to disclose and
to prevent any other person from disclosing confidential communications made for the purpose of
facilitating the rendition of professional legal services to the client . . . (3) by the client or the
client’s representative or the client’s lawyer or a representative of the lawyer to a lawyer or a
representative of a lawyer representing another in a matter of common interest.” D.R.E. 502(b).
The ARC Parties do argue that the common interest doctrine cannot apply because “the underlying
material is not privileged to begin with,” however, I find that the Trust has met its burden to show
that the communications concerned legal advice—keeping in mind that a privilege log must
describe documents without revealing the privileged or protected information itself.
14
   Titan, 2011 WL 532011, at *4.
15
   Glassman, 2012 WL 4859125, at *3 (citing D.R.E. 502(b)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
16
   See D.R.E. 502(b).
                                                  5
       The parties have presented dueling case-law applying the common interest

doctrine. The ARC Parties contend that under the reasoning of In re Simplexity LLC,

the common interest doctrine fails to preserve the privilege with respect to

communications between Kramer Levin and Luxor/Skadden.17 In Simplexity, a

trustee in bankruptcy18 (the “Trustee”) brought an adversary proceeding against the

manager of two investment funds that indirectly owned the debtors—the defendants

served a document request on the Trustee and a subpoena on its attorneys, Hunton

& Williams (“H&W”) seeking communications between them and debtor’s largest

creditor, Fifth Third Bank (“FTB”).19 FTB had previously been the subject of claims

by the creditors’ committee of the bankruptcy estate (represented by H&W) based

on FTB’s having “swept”—seized—the funds in the debtors’ bank accounts,

allegedly destroying the debtors’ $40–$100 million in going concern value and

subjecting the debtors to more than $5 million in WARN Act liability.20 The claims

against FTB were subsequently settled and the settlement provided that future

distributions from any recoveries were to be split 65% to FTB and 35% to the

bankruptcy estate.21       In Simplexity, the Trustee’s claims against the defendants

asserted that the defendants knew or should have known that FTB was going to



17
   584 B.R. 495 (Bankr. D. Del. 2018).
18
   In the Bankruptcy Court of the District of Delaware.
19
   Simplexity, 584 B.R. at 497–498.
20
   Id. at 497.
21
   Id.
                                                6
sweep the debtors’ accounts.22                The defendants sought post-settlement

communications between the Trustee (and H&W) and FTB; the Trustee asserted a

right to withhold the communications on common interest grounds.23

       The defendants in Simplexity argued that after the settlement with the Trustee,

FTB’s interest in the adversary proceeding was “financial or commercial, not legal”

and the court noted that FTB would “receive a percentage of the proceeds from this

litigation” and was a “secured creditor of the bankruptcy estate which the Trustee is

administering.”24 The court held that “FTB has no legal exposure to the Trustee or

Defendants” and instead “sits on the sidelines and hopes that the Trustee, with

H&W’s help, will achieve success, collect on a judgment, and pay FTB its share of

the proceeds. Surely, that is a financial interest, not a legal one.”25 The ARC Parties

note that Luxor, like FTB, was the subject of potential claims by the Trust that it

appears, per the ARC Parties, were subsequently settled, and Luxor is not a party to

this litigation nor does it assert legal claims against the Defendants here.26 The ARC

Parties urge me to conclude that Luxor, as the largest beneficiary of any recovery

the Trust could obtain, has “only a commercial, rooting interest in the outcome of



22
   Id.
23
   Id. at 497–98.
24
   Id. at 499.
25
   Id. at 501.
26
   Affidavit of Gregory F. Laufer in Support of the ARC Parties’ Mot. to Compel, D.I. 337 (“Laufer
Aff.”), ¶ 16 (“The Trust and Luxor Capital Group, LP appear to have entered into a settlement
agreement on April 4, 2017.”); see Laufer Aff., Ex. L.
                                                7
this litigation.”27 The Trust, for its part, argues that Simplexity presented a factually

distinguishable situation where there had been direct adversity between the

communicating parties that the court found relevant because FTB “was at one time

‘the bad guy’ the target of [the debtors’] lawsuit, and the communications sought

were potentially relevant for understanding what happened to flip the case from

[FTB] to Defendants as being responsible for Debtors’ misfortune.”28

       Rejecting the application of Simplexity to this matter, the Trust argues that I

should find a common interest exists here under the rationale of In re Leslie Controls,

Inc.29 That case, also in the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, involved

a discovery dispute between insurers and the debtor over whether a legal

memorandum shared by the debtor pre-petition with an ad hoc committee of asbestos

plaintiffs (the “Ad Hoc Committee”) and the debtor’s proposed future claimants’

representative (the “Pre-Petition FCR”) was protected from discovery by the insurers

under the common interest doctrine.30 The legal memorandum was prepared by

insurance coverage counsel for the debtor providing advice with respect to the effect

of the insurers’ likely position on insurance recoveries in bankruptcy.31 The debtor

ultimately determined that a bankruptcy filing was necessary to deal with mounting


27
   ARC Parties Mot., ¶ 31 (citing Simplexity, 584 B.R. at 499) (internal quotation marks omitted).
28
   Pl.’s Opp’n to ARC Parties’ Mot. to Compel, D.I. 355 (“Trust Opp’n”), ¶ 12 (citing Simplexity,
584 B.R. at 495, 497, 501) (internal quotation marks omitted).
29
   437 B.R. 493 (Bankr. D. Del. 2010).
30
   Id. at 495.
31
   Id.
                                                8
liabilities from asbestos personal injury lawsuits and, pre-filing, began negotiations

with the Ad Hoc Committee and the Pre-Petition FCR to develop a consensual plan

of reorganization—those negotiations were successful and the plan of

reorganization, which the insurers objected to, was then pending before the court.32

The insurers sought to discover the memorandum and a number of email exchanges

regarding the memorandum—all of the exchanges occurred pre-petition and some

occurred prior to an agreement on the plan of reorganization.33

       Upon a survey of relevant cases, the court noted that “[b]roadly speaking,

these cases stand for the proposition that the party invoking the common interest

doctrine must present evidence that a legal interest is implicated. If such a legal

interest is established then the common interest doctrine will apply (assuming the

other elements of the test are met) even if there are separate or overlapping

commercial interests.”34 The insurers had argued that the debtor, the Ad Hoc

Committee, and the Pre-Petition FCR were adversaries on the issue of insurance

proceeds since the information was shared pre-petition and prior to those parties

reaching an agreement on the terms of a plan of reorganization. But the court noted



32
   Id.
33
   Id. at 496.
34
   Id. at 500. The test the court refers to is that the party invoking the protection of the common
interest doctrine must establish “(1) the communication was made by separate parties in the course
of a matter of common interest, (2) the communication was designed to further that effort, and (3)
the privilege has not otherwise been waived.” Id. at 497 (citing In re Mortgage & Realty Trust,
212 B.R. 649, 653 (Bankr. C.D. Cal.1997)).
                                                9
that “the common interest privilege does not require a complete unity of interests

among the participants, but it is limited by the scope of the parties’ common

interest.”35     Regardless of the ongoing negotiations at the time of the

communications, the court found the operative question was “whether the Debtor

shared information with the Ad Hoc Committee and the Pre-Petition FCR that was

related to the parties[sic] common legal interest against their ‘common enemy,’ the

Insurers.”36 The court held that while the debtor, the Ad Hoc Committee, and the

Pre-Petition FCR had conflicting interests in the sense that each desired to obtain the

largest share of the debtor’s assets possible, the parties “shared a common interest

in maximizing the asset pool, which would include insurance proceeds . . . the size

of the pie and the size of the pieces are two separate questions. The parties are in

accord as to the former and adversaries as to the latter.”37 Thus, because the

information contained in the documents went to the size of the asset pool—a matter

of common interest—a common legal interest existed and the communications were

shielded by the common interest doctrine.38

       The Trust argues that the facts here are on all fours with Leslie Controls. The

Trust equates Luxor to the Ad Hoc Committee because both hold an indirect interest




35
   Id. at 500–501.
36
   Id. at 502.
37
   Id.
38
   Id.
                                          10
in a financial recovery—Luxor as a stakeholder in the Trust and the asbestos

creditors as estate creditors. The Trust contends that the legal interest there, based

on “an analysis of the insurance documents, as well as contract, insurance and

bankruptcy law” is analogous to the interest expressed in the communications

between Kramer Levin and Luxor/Skadden which are logged in the RCS Creditor

Trust Privilege Log of Kramer Levin/Third Party Communications (the “Kramer

Levin Log”).39 The ARC Parties contend that Leslie Controls is distinguishable

because the legal memorandum there was “clearly privileged, unlike the

communications at issue here”40 and because the debtor and the Ad Hoc Committee

there had a joint legal interest regarding insurance coverage of the plaintiffs’ claims

against the debtor, while Luxor has not asserted any claims against the Defendants

here.41

       While Simplexity and Leslie Controls by no means represent the full field of

cases applicable to this Motion they are instructive. Also instructive is this Court’s

holding in Glassman v. Crossfit, Inc. that certain communications were not protected

by the common interest doctrine because the party claiming privilege there “failed


39
   Trust Opp’n, ¶ 11 (citing Leslie Controls, 437 B.R at 500). The Kramer Levin Log is attached
as an exhibit to an affidavit submitted by the ARC Parties’ counsel. Laufer Aff., Ex. A.
40
   The ARC Parties contend that the “Kramer Levin-Luxor communications . . . do not
communicate legal advice from a lawyer to a client, but rather concern non-privileged matters such
as ‘scheduling,’ ‘conference calls,’ and other litigation-related issues between two parties not in
an attorney-client relationship with respect to this action.” The ARC Parties’ Reply in Support of
their Mot. to Compel, D.I. 359, ¶ 9.
41
   ARC Parties Mot., ¶ 32 n.3.
                                                11
to show that the contents of these documents were created in furtherance of

developing a joint legal defense or strategy.”42 At issue here are communications

between the Trust, formed to pursue claims on behalf of its stakeholders, and Luxor,

its largest stakeholder (and/or their legal representatives).43 Decisions where this

Court has denied the existence of a legally cognizable common interest because

communications center on commercial (rather than legal) objectives44 are of limited

utility here: the Trust conducts no business, other than the maximization of value of

the legal claims assigned to it in the Plan.45 Thus, in their nature practically all of

the Trust’s communications have a legal nexus.

       In this Action, Luxor is by no means Simplexity’s sideline observer rooting

for an outcome. Luxor, according to an affidavit submitted by the Trust’s counsel,

“worked diligently before and during the bankruptcy proceedings to identify

litigation claims that could maximize the value of the estate” and “took a major role

during the bankruptcy to ensure, over Defendants opposition, that such litigation

claims were preserved and could be pursued effectively by the Trust.”46 Luxor’s




42
   2012 WL 4859125, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 12, 2012).
43
   Luxor also has the right to appoint two of the three members of the Trust’s board. Aff. of
Gregory A. Horowitz in Opp’n to ARC Parties Mot. to Compel, D.I. 355 (“Horowitz Aff.”), ¶ 5.
44
   E.g. Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortg. Corp., 2011 WL 532011 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 2,
2011).
45
   The Trust is “a litigation trust, established for the sole and express purpose of investigating and
pursuing litigation claims.” Horowitz Aff., ¶ 10.
46
   Id., ¶ 4.
                                                 12
active role continues pursuant to its right to appoint a majority of the Trust’s board.47

Communications between the Trust and Luxor (and/or their respective counsel) have

been logged in the Kramer Levin Log and the description of every log item mentions

“RCS litigation.”48 As the largest beneficiary and controller of the Trust, Luxor has

a sufficient legal interest for communications with the Trust concerning litigation to

be cognizable under our State’s common interest doctrine. Like in Leslie Controls,

the Trust and Luxor “share[] a common interest in maximizing the asset pool” (or

defending against potential claims) and their communications appear to be in

furtherance of that goal.49 The Trust and Luxor, with counsel, were collaborating

and sharing information in furtherance of a joint legal strategy or objective. Such

communications invoke the central rationale of the attorney-client privilege. Thus,

the common interest doctrine applies to communications between the Trust and

Luxor.

       The parties’ briefing raised other issues besides the common interest under

which the Trust sought to withhold production. First, the Trust noted that it logged

purportedly privileged communications that occurred after the filing of the

complaint in this Action pursuant to its generous reading of my June 13, 2019 bench

ruling, but that the operative scheduling order does not require such communications


47
   Id., ¶ 5.
48
   Laufer Aff., Ex A.
49
   In re Leslie Controls, Inc., 437 B.R. 493, 502 (Bankr. D. Del. 2010).
                                                13
to be logged.50 It was not my intent in the bench ruling to order production of post-

complaint communications, and the parties may exclude such post-complaint

communications on their privilege logs.               Finally, the ARC Parties have also

contested the withholding of communications by the Trust between itself and third

parties other than Luxor. I ask that the Trust update its privilege log pursuant to this

Memorandum Opinion, and the ARC Parties may file a new motion to compel such

communications, as they find appropriate.               The updated privilege log should

“provide sufficient information to enable [the ARC Parties] to assess [its] privilege

claim.”51

          To the extent the foregoing requires an Order to take effect, IT IS SO

ORDERED.




50
     See Third Amended Scheduling Order, D.I. 373, ¶ 6.
51
     Klig v. Deloitte LLP, 2010 WL 3489735, at *6 (Del. Ch. Sept. 7, 2010).
                                                14
