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Global Capital Partners LLC v. Green Sapphire Holdings, Inc.

2026-06-23No. C.A. No. 2024-0877

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GLOBAL CAPITAL PARTNERS, LLC

and ACCESS MANAGEMENT, S.A.S.,

INC.,

Plaintiffs,

v. C.A. No. 2024-0877-JTL

GREEN SAPPHIRE HOLDINGS INC.,

Defendant.

ALPHA CARTA, LTD.,

Third-Party Plaintiff,

v.

GREEN SAPPHIRE HOLDINGS INC.,

and GLOBAL CAPITAL PARTNERS

LLC,

Third-Party Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION ADDRESSING CONTEMPT

Date Submitted: June 15, 2026

Date Decided: June 23, 2026

Philip Trainer, Jr., Samuel M. Gross, ASHBY & GEDDES, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Kenneth J. Pfaehler, Nicholas W. Petts, DENTONS US LLP, Washington, District of Columbia; Attorneys for Global Capital Partners, LLC and Access Management, S.A.S., Inc.

Andrew S. Dupre, Brian R. Lemon, AKERMAN LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Sean J. Bellew, BELLEW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Green Sapphire Holdings, Inc.

LASTER, V.C.

Plaintiffs Global Capital Partners, LLC (the “Lender”) and Access

Management, S.A.S., Inc. (“Access Florida”) ask the court to hold Green Sapphire

Holdings, Inc. (the “Borrower”) in contempt for violating the final order and judgment

entered in this action (the “Judgment”). The Lender and Access Florida also seek to

hold in contempt the individuals who control the Borrower and have caused it to act:

non-parties A.R. Thane Ritchie, Paul Wolfe, and Garrett Vail.

The Judgment mandated that the Borrower take specified actions. The

Judgment also permanently enjoined the Borrower from taking contradictory actions.

Rather than complying with the Judgment, the Borrower filed a motion in a

pending bankruptcy proceeding that challenged its validity. The motion reported that

the Borrower and Vue Mer Signature Holdings (“Vue Mer”), an entity that the

Judgment determined was identical to Access Florida, had filed four new proceedings

in foreign courts. Like the bankruptcy motion, the foreign proceedings sought to

relitigate issues addressed by the Judgment.

The court issued an order to show cause why the Borrower, Ritchie, Wolfe, and

Vail should not be held in contempt. The Borrower retained additional Delaware

counsel and responded.

The Borrower discharged the order to show cause as to the bankruptcy motion.

The Borrower could legitimately seek a determination from that court as to whether

the Judgment exceeded the remit that the bankruptcy judge gave this court by lifting

the automatic stay so this litigation could proceed.

The Borrower failed to discharge the order as to the four foreign actions. An

action that the Borrower filed in Paris, France, collaterally attacks the Judgment.

Although the Borrower asserted that filing that action was necessary under French

law, the Borrower did not adequately support that claim. The filing of the Paris action

contravened the Judgment and was contumacious.

The Borrower’s Delaware counsel represented that the Borrower did not

actually file the other three actions, creating a conflict with what the Borrower’s nonDelaware counsel told the bankruptcy court. The Borrower’s efforts to proceed with

the three other foreign actions violated the Judgment and were contumacious.

Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail failed to discharge the order to show cause. The

Borrower responded on behalf of Wolfe and Vail but offered no separate defense of

their conduct. Ritchie did not appear in response to the order to show cause. Wolfe

and Vail serve as the Borrower’s directors. Ritchie is the Borrower’s ultimate human

controller. They are responsible for the Borrower’s contumacious acts.

The Borrower, Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail are enjoined from proceeding with the

Paris action, except to inform the Paris court of this court’s ruling and to take steps

to dismiss the action without prejudice. The Borrower, Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail are

enjoined from proceeding with the three other foreign actions. The Borrower cannot

take any action through Vue Mer without Access Florida’s consent or leave of court.

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The Lender and Access Florida are awarded the expenses 1 they have incurred and

may incur in the foreign actions, as well as the expenses they have incurred and may

incur in connection with these contempt proceedings.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The Lender loaned $10 million to the Borrower, secured by the Borrower’s

equity interest in a subsidiary—now Access Florida—that owned real estate (the

“Properties”). The Borrower defaulted, and the Lender demanded repayment. To

settle the dispute, the Borrower agreed that the Lender owned Access Florida’s

equity. But the Borrower never recognized that the Lender had gained control of

Access Florida and, through it, the Properties. After the Borrower interfered with the

Lender’s ability to access the Properties, the Lender and Access Florida filed suit

seeking equitable relief to secure their rights.

1 Section 145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”) uses

“expenses” as a broad concept that includes both attorneys’ fees and amounts paid out of pocket that might be referred to more traditionally and colloquially as expenses. See, e.g., 8 Del. C. § 145(a) (authorizing a corporation in a proceeding other than one brought by or in the right of the corporation to provide indemnification “against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred”); id. § 145(b) (authorizing a corporation in a proceeding brought by or in the right of the corporation to provide indemnification “against expenses (including attorneys’ fees) actually and reasonably incurred”). The out-of-pocket expenses encompassed by Section 145 are broader than the restricted concept of “costs” in the statute that authorizes the recovery of court costs in the Court of Chancery. See 10 Del. C. § 5106; Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC v. ASB Allegiance Real Est. Fund, 68 A.3d 665, 686–88 (Del. 2013). This decision uses the term “expenses” as it appears in Section 145.

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After trial, the court entered the Judgment. The Judgment directed the

Borrower to “take all actions necessary, in the reasonable judgment of [the Lender],

to (i) remove any uncertainty about the domestication of [Access Florida] to Florida;

(ii) remove any uncertainty about [the Lender’s] title to the shares of [Access Florida];

(iii) ensure that [Access Florida] is the sole owner of the Properties, free of any liens

and encumbrances, including if necessary any transfer of title; and (iv) ensure that

[the Lender] can access the Properties.”2

The Judgment entered permanent injunctive relief in favor of the Lender and

Access Florida providing as follows: “[The Borrower], Alpha Carta, their associates

and affiliates, and anyone acting in concert with them, are permanently enjoined

from: (i) asserting any rights to ownership or control over the shares of [Access

Florida] or to ownership or control of the Properties; and (ii) interfering in any way

with [the Lender’s] ownership and control over the shares of [Access Florida] or

ownership and control of the Properties.”3

After entry of the Judgment, the Borrower filed a “Motion for Entry of a Rule

to Show Cause, to Enjoin and Void Delaware Final Order and Shorten Notice” (the

2 Order and Final Judgment, Dkt. 312, at 2–3.

3 Id. at 3–4.

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“Bankruptcy Motion”) in a pending bankruptcy proceeding in Chicago, Illinois.4 The

bankruptcy court previously lifted the automatic stay to permit this action to proceed.

The Bankruptcy Motion represented that the Borrower and Vue Mer had filed

four foreign proceedings:

• An action in Paris Judicial Court (the “Paris Action”),5 where the Borrower

sought the following relief:

o An order prohibiting “any attempt to recognize or enforce, against Vue

Mer (or indirectly against Vue Mer by ordering [the Borrower], its 100%

shareholder), any order issued by a US court, including in Delaware,

present or future, concerning any asset of Vue Mer of any nature.”

o An order prohibiting the Lender and Access Florida “from taking any

action in France, and to the extent possible in the United States, to

‘domesticate’ Vue Mer into any other jurisdiction including notably

Florida and the Cayman Islands, through any act to be carried out in

France.”

o An order prohibiting Access Florida “from taking any action before any

authority or court in France, and to the extent possible in the United

States, to access lots AI 220 and AE 314, to take possession thereof, to

apply for a building permit or any other authorization, to lease, sell,

assign, encumber, or enforce any building permit of [Access Florida] or

any entity controlled by, affiliated with, or a shareholder of [the Lender]

on the land belonging to Vue Mer.”

• An action in the Tribunal de Proximité of Saint-Martin & Saint Barthélemy

(the “Borrower’s Saint-Martin Action”),6 where the Borrower sought release of

liens and €120,000 in damages;

4 See Motion for Order to Show Cause, Dkt. 314, Ex. 1.

5 See Bankruptcy Motion, Ex. D-1.

6 See id. Ex. C-1.

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• An action in the Tribunal de Proximité of Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe (the

“Basse-Terre Action”),7 where Vue Mer sought substantially similar relief as

in the Paris Action; and

• An action in the Tribunal de Proximité of Saint-Martin & Saint Barthélemy

(the “Vue Mer Saint-Martin Action”),8 where Vue Mer sought substantially the

same relief as in the Borrower’s Saint-Martin Action.

Each of the four foreign proceedings collaterally attacked both the relief

granted in the Judgment and the findings of fact and rulings of law in the underlying

post-trial opinion (the “Opinion”).9 The court held in the Opinion that Vue Mer is the

same entity as Access Florida. In addition to attacking the Judgment and Opinion

collaterally, the Borrower sought relief contrary to the Judgment and Opinion by

purporting to cause Vue Mer to file the Basse-Terre Action and the Vue Mer SaintMartin Action.

By order dated April 30, 2026, the Court directed the Borrower to show cause

why it should not be held in contempt (the “Order to Show Cause”).10 An order that

applies to an entity extends to the entity’s directors, officers, and employees who act

on its behalf or cause it to act. The Order to Show Cause therefore also directed

Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail to show cause why they should not be held in contempt.

7 See id. Ex. F-1.

8 See id. Ex. E-1.

9 See Dkt. 303.

10 See Dkt. 316.

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The Borrower, Wolfe, and Vail responded to the Order to Show Cause. Ritchie

did not.

In its response, the Borrower made two representations that contradicted what

the Borrower said in the Bankruptcy Motion. First, the Borrower represented that it

only filed the Paris Action and did not file the Borrower’s Saint-Martin Action, the

Basse-Terre Action, or the Vue Mer Saint-Martin Action (together, the “Island

Actions”).11 Second, the Borrower represented in its response that it only filed the

Paris Action to preserve a claim under French law to avoid a statute of limitations

expiring, not to seek broader relief contesting the Judgment.12

11 Compare Bankruptcy Motion at 3, 11, 20 (describing “French courts” that

are “concurrently exercising jurisdiction” over the same property); id. at 4, 13, 15, 17, 19, 23 (referencing “parallel French proceedings”); id. Exs. C-1–F-1 (attaching the four foreign filings) with Opposition of Defendant Green Sapphire Holdings Inc. and Non-Parties Garrett Vail and Paul Wolfe to Plaintiff’s Rule to Show Cause (“Opposition”), Dkt. 333, ¶ 10 (describing the four foreign filings attached as exhibits to the Bankruptcy Motion as “draft papers for later filing in France and its overseas departments/collectives” and stating that only the Paris Action had been filed).

12 Compare Opposition ¶ 10 (describing the Paris Action as “relate[d] to the

registre challenge itself which is . . . a statutory claim over which France holds exclusive jurisdiction”) with Bankruptcy Motion, Ex. D-1 at 15–16 (requesting, among other things, relief prohibiting “any attempt to recognize or enforce . . . any order issued by a US Court, including in Delaware, present or future” and “any publicity measure . . . to confirm the provisional judicial mortgages” or any action to “take possession thereof” or “to access, use, assign, or exploit” the Properties).

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II. LEGAL ANALYSIS

“If an order entitles a party to performance of an act or possession of property,

the court may hold a disobedient party in contempt.”13 The Lender asks the court to

hold the Borrower, Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail in contempt for filing the Bankruptcy

Motion and the four foreign actions.

A. Is The Borrower In Contempt?

“To establish civil contempt, [the movant] must demonstrate that the [putative

contemnor] violated an order of the court of which they had notice and by which they

were bound.”14 “The standard of proof required in a civil contempt proceeding is a

preponderance of the evidence.”15

A trial court has discretion when determining whether to hold a party in

contempt.16 The violation “must not be a mere technical one, but must constitute a

failure to obey the Court in a meaningful way.” 17 “Even where there has been a

13 Ct. Ch. R. 70(e).

14 Handels AG v. Johnston, 1997 WL 589030, at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 17, 1997).

15 In re Hurley, 257 A.3d 1012, 1018 (Del. 2021); accord TransPerfect Glob., Inc.

v. Pincus, 278 A.3d 630, 649 (Del. 2022).

16 Dickerson v. Castle, 1991 WL 208467, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 15, 1991).

17 Id. at *4 (cleaned up).

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violation, the Court will consider good faith efforts to comply with the order or to

remedy the consequences of non-compliance.”18

The Borrower knew about the Judgment and was bound by it. The Borrower

did not comply with the Judgment.

Instead, the Borrower launched collateral attacks on the Judgment. By

opening five new litigation fronts, the Borrower did not comply with this court’s

affirmative injunction to take all actions necessary to (i) remove any uncertainty

about the domestication of Access Florida to Florida; (ii) remove any uncertainty

about the Lender’s title to the shares of Access Florida, (iii) ensure that Access Florida

is the sole owner of the Properties, free of any liens and encumbrances, or (iv) ensure

the Lender can access the Properties. The Borrower did the opposite. A prima facie

case of contempt exists.

In response to the Order to Show Cause, the Borrower made no effort to

demonstrate compliance with the Judgment. The Borrower also did not suggest any

misunderstanding about what the Judgment required.

Instead, the Borrower effectively seeks to defend its non-compliance by

asserting a litigation privilege. According to the Borrower, it was not contumacious

to file the Bankruptcy Motion, file the Paris Action, or prepare and claim to have filed

the Island Actions.

18 Aveta, Inc. v. Bengoa, 986 A.2d 1166, 1181 (Del. Ch. 2009).

9

The Borrower’s response demonstrates that filing the Bankruptcy Motion was

not contumacious. Filing the Paris Action, preparing to file the Island Actions, and

telling the bankruptcy court that the Borrower and Vue Mer had filed the Island

Actions were contumacious.

1. The Bankruptcy Motion

To justify the Bankruptcy Motion, the Borrower argues that this court

exceeded its remit when adjudicating the merits of this case. The Borrower contends

that the bankruptcy court only lifted the automatic stay for a limited purpose, that

the Opinion and Judgment went beyond what the order lifting the stay allowed, and

that the Borrower properly returned to the bankruptcy court to have that court

interpret its order lifting the stay. The Borrower argues that such a course of action

could not be contumacious.

In terms of law, the Borrower offers little support for its position. The Borrower

references a ruling in a bankruptcy case involving Stream TV Networks, Inc. but

without providing either the decision or a citation. The court cannot rely on authority

that a party simply claims to exist.

Other authority suggests that state courts retain the power to hold contempt

proceedings and impose sanctions, even when a bankruptcy proceeding is ongoing.

State court judges certainly strive to defer to their bankruptcy brethren and respect

both the Supremacy Clause and the automatic stay. Nevertheless, “there is an

exception to the operation of the automatic stay; it does not bar orders to show cause

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or findings of contempt when necessary to uphold the dignity of a court order.”19 Were

this not so, a party could “blatantly violate direct orders of [a] court and then seek

shelter from a bankruptcy judge.”20

On the facts, the Borrower’s claim that this court exceeded its remit seems

implausible. Nevertheless, it is conceivable that a court in an action that a

bankruptcy judge allowed to proceed could exceed its remit. If a party thought that

had happened, there would be two logical places for the party to seek relief. One would

be to appeal to a higher state court. The other would be to return to the bankruptcy

court.

The right answer in that setting is not self-evident. Pursuing an appeal in state

court would allow the state court process to play out and enable the appellate court

to correct any error, without bothering the bankruptcy court. At the same time,

returning to the bankruptcy court would enable the judge who issued the original

order lifting the stay to address whether the proceeding exceeded its scope. That

judge seems best suited to that task. But returning to the bankruptcy court also

potentially opens a parallel appellate track. After the bankruptcy court rules on the

19 Am. Online, Inc. v. CN Prods., Inc., 272 B.R. 879, 881 (E.D. Va. 2002).

20 U.S. Sprint Commc’ns Co. v. Buscher, 89 B.R. 154, 156 (D. Kan. 1988); accord

Summit Fin. Res., L.P. v. Walthers Oil Co., 2008 WL 183380, at *2 (D. Utah Jan. 18, 2008).

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scope of its order, the aggrieved party could pursue an appeal in the federal court

system while an appellate process unfolded in the state court system.

I tend to think that the proper route would be to allow the state court

proceeding to play out before returning to the bankruptcy court, but that outcome is

not obvious. It was not sufficiently clear that the Borrower could not return to the

bankruptcy court by filing the Bankruptcy Motion for that act to be contumacious.

Since the issuance of the Order to Show Cause, the bankruptcy court has

denied the Bankruptcy Motion and held that this court had authority to proceed. That

still does not mean that the act of filing the Bankruptcy Motion was contumacious. If

the Borrower lacked a good faith basis for filing the Bankruptcy Motion, then that

would be contumacious, but it also would violate the rules of the bankruptcy court.

The bankruptcy court, rather than this court, is the proper tribunal for assessing

whether a motion in that court was filed in bad faith.

The Borrower has discharged the Order to Show Cause for purposes of the

Bankruptcy Motion. The Borrower has therefore also discharged the Order to Show

Cause for purposes of Wolfe and Vail. Although Ritchie did not respond to the Order

to Show Cause, the same reasoning applies to him.

2. The Paris Action

To justify the Paris Action, the Borrower contends that the Opinion and

Judgment went too far by addressing issues of French law and French procedure that

this court could not address. The Borrower tries to spin the Paris Action as

comparable to the Bankruptcy Motion, but the two are different. The Bankruptcy

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Motion sought to determine whether this court exceeded the scope of the bankruptcy

court’s order lifting the automatic stay. The Paris Action openly attacks the

Judgment and seeks to re-litigate issues that this court decided in the Opinion.

“A collateral attack is an attempt to avoid, defeat, evade, or deny the force and

effect of a final . . . judgment in an incidental proceeding other than by appeal, writ

of error, certiorari, or motion for new trial.”21 In the Paris Action, the Borrower not

only asks the court to prohibit the Lender and Access Florida from obtaining the relief

granted in the Judgment but also seeks different relief that conflicts with the

Judgment. The Paris Action is therefore a two-pronged collateral attack on the

Judgment.

By filing the Paris Action, the Borrower asserted rights to ownership or control

over the shares of Access Florida and to ownership or control of the Properties. The

Borrower also interfered with the Lender’s ownership and control over the shares of

Access Florida and its ownership and control of the Properties. In fact, the mere

existence of the Paris Action creates uncertainty about issues that the Opinion and

Judgment adjudicated, including the validity of the domestication of Access Florida,

the Lender’s title to the shares of Access Florida, Access Florida’s status as sole owner

of the Properties, and the Lender’s ability to access the Properties.

21 In re Tr. FBO duPont Under Tr. Agreement Dated Aug. 4, 1936, 2018 WL

4610766, at *10 (Del. Ch. Sept. 25, 2018) (citation omitted).

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To justify filing the Paris Action, the Borrower cites a case in which this court

presided over one aspect of proceedings taking place in multiple jurisdictions,

including foreign courts. That often happens, but when an action reaches final

judgment, that judgment controls. Thus “when companion cases are pending in sister

courts . . . normally each case should proceed unimpeded until final judgment is

entered in one of them” such that it can be pled as res judicata against the other.22

Once the Judgment issued, the Borrower had to comply with it. The Borrower could

not attack it through the Paris Action.

In its papers and at oral argument, the Borrower contended that features of

French law meant that the Borrower risked losing its claims if it did not file the Paris

Action and engaged in hand-waiving about a potential statute of limitations problem.

The Borrower also claimed that French courts have exclusive jurisdiction over the

issues raised in the Paris Action.

A party who seeks to rely on an issue concerning the law of a foreign country

must give reasonable notice and adequately support its position so that the court can

make a ruling on the nature of the foreign law. 23 The Borrower provided no

22 Basic Rsch. & Inv. Corp. v. Energy Compounds, Inc., 1974 WL 479, at *1 (Del.

Ch. Mar. 29, 1974); see also Est. of Albart v. Lavastone Cap. LLC, 2021 WL 1063339, at *3 (D. Del. Mar. 18, 2021).

23 See D.R.E. 202(e) (“A party who intends to raise an issue concerning the law

of a foreign country must give notice in the pleadings or other reasonable written notice.”); Ct. Ch. R. 44.1 (same).

14

meaningful support for its contentions about French law or the Paris court’s

purportedly exclusive jurisdiction. 24 At oral argument, the Borrower’s Delaware

counsel candidly acknowledged that he was not in a position to address issues of

French law.

A party seeking to discharge an order to show cause must make a stronger

showing than that. If issues of French law were relevant to the Judgment, the

Borrower could have raised them, and the court would have considered them. Instead,

the Borrower is using the Paris Action to attack the Judgment while trying to cloak

its efforts in a fog of generalities.

The filing of the Paris Action was unjustified. It violates the Judgment and is

contumacious.

3. The Island Actions

To justify the Island Actions, the Borrower makes arguments similar to its

position on the Paris Action. According to the Borrower, the Opinion and Judgment

went too far by addressing issues of island law and island procedure that this court

could not address. The Borrower also stresses that it never filed the Island Actions,

despite what it told the bankruptcy court.

The Borrower self-evidently prepared the Island Actions and took steps to get

them ready to file. The Judgment required that the Borrower expend resources to

24 See Opposition ¶ 10. In the following paragraph, the Borrower concedes that

the Paris court may only have concurrent jurisdiction. Id. ¶ 11.

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implement the Judgment. Instead, the Borrower expended resources preparing drafts

of the Island Actions that would attack the Judgment.

The Borrower also violated the Judgment by attaching the drafts to the

Bankruptcy Motion. In doing so, the Borrower sought to gain an advantage in the

bankruptcy proceeding. That conduct in turn interfered with the Lender’s ownership

and control over the shares of Access Florida and its ownership and control of the

Properties. Indeed, the Borrower’s representation that the Island Actions had been

filed created uncertainty about those issues. While the filing of the Bankruptcy

Motion was not contumacious, claiming to have filed the Island Actions in that motion

was contumacious.

B. What Is The Appropriate Remedy?

The court has broad discretion when formulating a remedy for contempt.25 The

remedy can take the form of civil or criminal sanctions.26 If the primary purpose of

the remedy is to coerce compliance with the court’s order, then the remedy is civil in

25 Israel Disc. Bank of N.Y. v. First State Depository Co. LLC, 2012 WL 1021180, at *3 (Del. Ch. Mar. 19, 2012); Jagodzinski v. Silicon Valley Innovation Co., LLC, 2012 WL 593613, at *2 (Del. Ch. Feb. 14, 2012).

26 DiSabatino v. Salicete, 671 A.2d 1344, 1348 (Del. 1996).

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character.27 If the primary purpose of the remedy is to punish for non-compliance,

then the remedy is criminal in character.28

When selecting a contempt sanction or combination of sanctions, “a court is

obligated to use the least possible power adequate to the end proposed.” 29 The

sanctions imposed should be “just and reasonable.”30

1. An Anti-Suit Injunction Against The Paris Action

A court “has the inherent power to protect and enforce its judgments by

enjoining parties over whom it has jurisdiction from instituting or prosecuting

litigation elsewhere.” 31 That said, “[t]here are well-defined limits on anti-suit

injunctions against suits in foreign countries . . . . based largely on considerations of

international comity.” 32 But “[w]hen [an anti-suit] injunction is requested after a

previous judgment on the merits, there is little interference with the rule favoring

27 City of Wilm. v. Gen. Teamsters Loc. Union 326, 321 A.2d 123, 125 (Del. 1974).

28 Id.

29 TR Invs., LLC v. Genger, 2009 WL 4696062, at *18 n.74 (Del. Ch. Dec. 9,

2009) (quoting Am. Jur. 2d Contempt § 195).

30 Gallagher v. Long, 940 A.2d 945 (Del. 2007) (TABLE).

31 Examen, Inc. v. VantagePoint Venture P’rs 1996, 2005 WL 1653959, at*2 (Del.

Ch. July 7, 2005) (citations omitted).

32 In re Karaha Bodas Co., L.L.C. v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan

Bumi Negara, 465 F. Supp. 2d 283, 294 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).

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parallel proceedings in matters subject to concurrent jurisdiction.” 33 Thus, an

American court “has authority to enjoin a party before it from suing in a foreign

country where such suit is an abusive attempt to undermine that [court’s]

judgment.”34

Through the Paris Action, the Borrower seeks to attack and undermine the

Judgment. The bulk of the filing does not relate to a purported statutory cause of

action. Instead, it repeatedly asserts that the Judgment is flawed. Each form of relief

requested in the Paris Action targets a form of relief granted in the Judgment. The

Paris Action attacks the Judgment directly, such as by asking the Paris court to

indefinitely prohibit its enforcement in France and the United States. The Paris

Action also attacks the Judgment indirectly, such as by requesting the Paris court to

prohibit various actions related to the Properties themselves, including securing

mortgages, liens, or security interests.

The Paris Action is a vexatious attempt to relitigate the Judgment. Under

these circumstances, principles of international comity do not require deference. The

33 Laker Airways Ltd. v. Belgian World Airlines, 731 F.2d 909, 928 (D.C. Cir.

1984); see also TQ Delta, LLC v. ZyXEL Commc’ns, Inc., 2018 WL 2932728, at *2 (D. Del. June 12, 2018) (describing the Third Circuit’s “restrictive approach” to antisuit injunctions “at least until one [proceeding] has reached the stage where its ruling becomes res judicata”); Examen, 2005 WL 1653959, at *2 (“Equity will act to protect a party from repetitious and vexatious litigation that threatens irreparable harm.”).

34 Karaha Bodas Co., 465 F. Supp. 2d. at 294; accord Commercializadora Portimex, S.A. de CV v. Zen-Noh Grain Corp., 373 F. Supp. 2d 645, 652 (E.D. La. 2005) (collecting authorities).

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Borrower is enjoined from proceeding with the Paris Action except to (1) inform the

Paris court of this ruling and (2) take the steps necessary to dismiss the action

without prejudice. The Borrower is enjoined from filing a substantially similar action

without leave from this court.

2. An Injunction Against Filing The Island Actions

The analysis of the Paris Action applies equally to the Island Actions. If the

Borrower had filed the Island Actions, either itself or through Vue Mer, then the court

would enjoin the Borrower from proceeding with the Island Actions except to (1)

inform the courts of this ruling and (2) take the steps necessary to dismiss the actions

without prejudice.

The Borrower’s Delaware counsel has represented that the Borrower did not

file the Island Actions. The injunctive relief is therefore prospective. Without leave

from this court, the Borrower is enjoined from taking any further steps to initiate the

Island Actions.

3. An Injunction Against Vue Mer Purporting To Act

The Borrower planned for Vue Mer to be the plaintiff in the Vue Mer SaintMartin Action and the Basse-Terre Action. In the Opinion and Judgment, the court

held that Vue Mer does not exist as a separate entity. It is the same entity as Access

Florida. It may be that the parties must take some steps to implement that ruling

procedurally. The Judgment mandates that they take whatever action is necessary.

Vue Mer cannot act independently of Access Florida. Vue Mer is enjoined from

taking any action without either Access Florida’s consent or leave from this court.

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Vue Mer must follow Access Florida’s instructions for purposes of implementing the

Judgment.

4. Expenses

When a party has filed a contumacious action in another jurisdiction, the court

can award the injured party any expenses associated with the contumacious action

so as to make the injured party whole.35 The Lender and Access Florida can recover

the expenses they incurred and any future expenses they incur in connection with the

Paris Action and the Island Actions.

Likewise, when a party has been held in contempt, the party injured by the

contumacious conduct is entitled to an award of expenses for successfully bringing

the contempt motion.36 The Lender and Access Florida can recover the expenses they

incurred bringing this motion as well as all future expenses incurred in compelling

compliance with the Judgment.

35 See, e.g., In re TransPerfect Glob., Inc., 2019 WL 5260362, at *14–15 (Del. Ch. Oct. 17, 2019) (collecting authorities, holding party in contempt for instituting action in Nevada, issuing anti-suit injunction, and requiring that party to bear all expenses for Nevada proceeding); Aveta, 986 A.2d at 1189–90 (holding party in contempt for participating in proceeding in Puerto Rico, issuing anti-suit injunction, and requiring that party to bear all expenses for Puerto Rico proceeding).

36 Miller v. Steller Enters., Inc., 1980 WL 6432, at *4 (Del. Ch. Dec. 22, 1980);

accord Israel Disc. Bank of N.Y. v. First State Depository Co., LLC, 2013 WL 2326875, at *28–29 (Del. Ch. May 29, 2013); Aveta, 986 A.2d at 1188; Triton Constr. Co. v. E. Shore Elec. Servs., Inc., 2009 WL 1387115, at *7 (Del. Ch. May 18, 2009).

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C. The Remedy Against Ritchie, Wolfe, And Vail

An order generally binds not only the named parties, but also “those identified

with them in interest, in ‘privity’ with them, represented by them or subject to their

control.”37 This doctrine ensures that a party cannot nullify or evade an order “by

carrying out prohibited acts through aiders and abettors, although they were not

parties to the original proceeding.”38 The Court of Chancery Rules recognize that in

appropriate circumstances, an order can be enforced against non-parties.39

Under these principles, an order that applies to an entity extends to directors,

officers, and employees of the entity who are acting on behalf of the entity.40 Ritchie,

Wolfe, and Vail must ensure that the Borrower complies with the anti-suit injunction.

They are jointly and severally liable for the amounts awarded against the Borrower.

III. CONCLUSION

The Borrower, Ritchie, Wolfe, and Vail are in contempt. The Lender must

submit an order implementing this opinion, on notice to the contemnors. The parties

37 Regal Knitwear Co. v. NLRB, 324 U.S. 9, 14 (1945).

38 Id.

39 See Ct. Ch. R. 65(d) (recognizing that an order granting an injunction in

binding not only upon the parties but also upon “the parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys” and “other persons who are in active concert or participation” with a party subject to the order); Ct. Ch. R. 71 (“When an order grants relief for a nonparty or may be enforced against a nonparty, the procedure for enforcing the order is the same as for a party.”).

40 Deutsch v. ZST Digital Networks, Inc., 2018 WL 3005822, at *10 (Del. Ch.

June 14, 2018) (collecting authorities).

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must confer on the amount of the expense award. If the parties cannot agree on an

amount within ten days, then the Borrower and Access Florida may move to quantify

it.

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