LAW.coLAW.co

Nikita Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corporation

2026-07-02

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

majority opinion

COURT OF CHANCERY

OF THE

STATE OF DELAWARE

DAVID HUME, IV COURT OF CHANCERY COURTHOUSE MAGISTRATE IN CHANCERY 34 THE CIRCLE

GEORGETOWN, DE 19947

Report: July 02, 2026

Date Submitted: June 16, 2026

Thad Bracegirdle Scott B Czerwonka

Abraham C. Schneider Andrea S. Brooks

BAYARD P.A. WILKS LAW LLC

600 N. King Street, Suite 400 4250 Lancaster Pike, Suite 200

Wilmington, Delaware 19801 Wilmington, Delaware 19805

Attorneys for Plaintiff Nikita Bernstein Attorneys for Defendant MyJoVE

Corporation

RE: Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corporation,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

Dear Counsel:

This is my post-trial report on the parties’ Title 8 Section 220 books and

records action. Plaintiff is a former director and current stockholder of Defendant

who seeks information about the nomination, selection, and independence of

Defendant’s directors. Before I can assess that claim, I must determine whether a

release that Plaintiff signed as part of a stock repurchase by Defendant bars this

action. Because I find that the release is valid and prevents Plaintiff from bringing

this action, I find in favor of Defendant.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 2 of 17

I. BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from the factual stipulations in the parties’ pre-trial order

and forty-nine joint trial exhibits. 1 Plaintiff Nikita Bernstein founded Defendant

MyJoVE, a Delaware corporation, with Moshe Pritsker (“Pritsker”) and Klaus Korak

(“Korak”) in 2007. 2 MyJoVE is a multi-national company that presents and

maintains videos that assist scientific and biomedical researchers with methods and

procedures.3

Plaintiff initially served as Chief Technology Officer, as well as on

Defendant’s board of directors (“Board”) with Pritsker and Korak.4 Plaintiff

resigned from Defendant in June 2011, but remained on the Board.5 In November

2011, Pritsker and Korak voted to remove Plaintiff from the Board over Plaintiff’s

1

Unless otherwise noted, pleadings are cited by reference to items docketed in C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH (“D.I.”). Factual citations are to: the Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order, D.I. 22 (“PTO”); the Draft Trial Transcript (“Draft Tr.”); and Joint Trial Exhibits (cited by “JX” number). Additional citations are to Plaintiff’s Pre-Trial Opening Brief (“POB”), Defendant’s Pre-Trial Opening Brief (“DOB”), Plaintiff’s Pre-Trial Answering Brief (“PAB”), and Defendant’s Pre-Trial Answering Brief (“DAB”). At the time of this ruling, only the draft transcript has been prepared and citations to it refer to the rough copy of the transcript.

2

PTO ¶¶ 11,13.

3

Id., ¶¶ 14–15.

4

Id., ¶¶ 18, 19, 24.

5

Id., ¶ 25.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 3 of 17

objection. 6 Pritsker and Korak served thereafter as the sole directors. Plaintiff

continues to hold Defendant’s common stock despite his separation from

Defendant.7

Plaintiff has filed four books and records actions, including this one, over the

years. 8 In December 2024, this Court ruled in Plaintiff’s favor in the third books

and records action (“the Third Action”), subject to a confidentiality order. 9 The

Third Action’s production on December 27, 2024 revealed an asset listed as “Notes

receivable from stockholders” (“Notes Receivable”) valued at over $18 million.10

Directors Pritsker and Korak received $2 million and $5.135 million, respectively,

as loans recorded as Notes Receivable, between 2021 and 2024.11

On April 18, 2025 Plaintiff requested additional books and records about the

Notes Receivable loans to Pritsker and Korak. 12 Five days later, Pritsker and Korak

executed a Written Consent of the Majority Stockholders (“the First Written

6

Id., ¶ 26.

7

Id., ¶ 27.

8

Id., ¶¶ 30–32.

9

Id., ¶ 33.

10

Id., ¶ 37.

11

Id., ¶ 40.

12

Id., ¶ 42.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 4 of 17

Consent”) to increase the number of directors from two to three and to elect James

Elgart (“Elgart”) and Evan Hackel (“Hackel”) as directors. 13 Korak resigned as a

director upon these elections.14 On April 25, two days after his election, Elgart

resigned from the Board. 15 That same day, Pritsker and Korak executed another

Written Consent of the Majority Stockholders (“the Second Written Consent”)

electing Larry Siff (“Siff”) to replace Elgart on the Board. 16

On May 6, Defendant sent notice, including the First and Second Written

Consents, to Plaintiff under 8 Del. C. Section 228 via certified mail at his

Massachusetts address.17 Plaintiff’s business counsel, Arsenio Lampiao

(“Lampiao”), notified Defendant on July 11 that Plaintiff changed his domicile.18

Six days later, Lampiao provided Defendant with Plainitiff’s updated Texas

address.19 On July 27, Plaintiff agreed to sell 889,679 of his shares back to

Defendant for $2.5 million under a redemption agreement (“the Redemption

13

Id., ¶¶ 43–45.

14

Id., ¶ 46.

15

Id., ¶ 47.

16

Id., ¶¶ 48–49.

17

Id., ¶ 50; JX-16.

18

JX-30 at MyJoVE000229.

19

Id., at MyJoVE000228-229.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 5 of 17

Agreement”) that included a release (“the Release”). 20 When the parties executed

the Redemption Agreement, a confidentiality dispute regarding the books and

records produced in the Third Action remained. The next day, Defendant’s counsel

contacted Plaintiff’s counsel to suggest that the pending confidentiality dispute could

be dismissed or withdrawn consistent with the terms of the Redemption

Agreement. 21 Plaintiff’s counsel initially disagreed, but ultimately withdrew the

confidentiality motion on August 13 without conceding breach of the Redemption

Agreement. 22 On July 29, Plaintiff emailed Lampaio telling him that he just received

the Section 228 information upon returning to Massachusetts.23

On September 30, Plaintiff’s counsel sent the Demand for this case to

Defendant’s registered agent.24 Defendant’s counsel responded on October 7,

objecting to three categories of requested documents. 25 On November 5, Defendant

produced documents related to five other categories of requests. 26 Defendant refused

20

PTO ¶ 53; JX-31.

21

PTO ¶ 54.

22

Id., ¶¶ 55–57.

23

JX-35.

24

PTO ¶ 58.

25

Id., ¶¶ 61–62.

26

Id., ¶ 64.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 6 of 17

to produce any other documents.27 Plaintiff filed the Complaint on March 4, 2026.28

Defendant filed its Answer on April 1.29 The Court held a one-day trial on June 16.30

II. ANALYSIS

The Parties stipulated that the Demand complied with the form and manner

requirements in Title 8 Section 220.31 Before I turn to the substantive provisions of

Section 220 to determine whether Plaintiff has stated a proper purpose and, if so,

whether he has met the enhanced burden imposed by Section 220(g) for records

falling under that subsection, I must consider the Release in the Redemption

Agreement. If the Release is valid and enforceable, then Plaintiff cannot sustain a

direct action.

27

Id., ¶ 66.

28

Id., ¶ 69.

29

Id., ¶ 70.

30

D.I. 37.

31

PTO ¶ 72.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 7 of 17

A. The Release Bars Plaintiff’s Demand and the 8 Del. C. Section 220

Action.

On July 27, 2025, Plaintiff sold 889,679 shares in the closely-held Defendant

back to the company in exchange for $2.5 million. 32 The Redemption Agreement

contained the following provision:

Release. With the sole exception of his right to enforce the terms of this

Agreement, the Seller, for himself and his heirs, successors, assigns,

advisors and affiliates (collectively, the “Seller Releasors”) hereby

fully, forever, irrevocably and unconditionally releases, remises and

discharges the Company and its affiliates, officers, directors,

stockholders, employees, attorneys and advisors (collectively the

“Company Released Parties”) from any and all claims, charges,

complaints, demands, actions, causes of action, suits, rights, debts,

sums of money, costs, accounts, reckonings, covenants, contracts,

agreements, promises, doings, omissions, damages, executions,

obligations, liabilities, and expenses (including attorneys’ fees and

costs), of every kind and nature which he ever had or now has against

the Company Released Parties, including without limitation a claims

related to the Seller’s ownership of the Redeemed Shares and amounts

payable with respect thereto.33

Our law defines a general release as “one which is intended to cover everything—

what the parties presently have in mind, as well as what they do not have in mind . .

. . Such general releases are in common use . . . . Their validity is unchallenged.”

Corp. Prop. Assocs. 6 v. Hallwood Gp. Inc., 817 A.2d 777, 779 (Del. 2003) (citations

32

Id., ¶ 53.

33

JX 31, § 5.2.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 8 of 17

omitted). Releases that use terms like “any and all claims” and “including, but not

limited to” are consistent with general releases. Koscho v. Merit Distrib. Gp., LLC,

2025 WL 2770543, at *2, *6 (Del. Super. Sep. 29, 2025). Similar terms are present

in this Release. A release that includes heirs, successors, assigns, and affiliates, like

the one before me, acts as a general release. Id. The Court looks to the intent of the

parties to construe a release and ascertains this intent “from the overall language of

the document.” Corp. Prop. Assocs. 6, 817 A.2d at 779. If that language is

ambiguous, then it will be construed against the drafter. Id.

I do not find the language ambiguous. The parties intended to release claims

in exchange for Plaintiff’s stock redemption. The Release was intended to disclaim

Plaintiff’s personal actions against the Defendant. 34 This is a comprehensive general

release encompassing not only claims but “charges, complaints, demands, actions,

causes of action, suits, rights, debts, sums of money, costs, accounts, reckonings,

covenants, contracts, agreements, promises, doings, omissions, damages,

executions, obligations, liabilities, and expenses.” In short, the parties agreed that

Plaintiff would not seek recourse for all manner of grievances, past or pending, in

exchange for the stock buyback.

34

Id., § 5.2 (“for himself and his heirs, successors, assigns, advisors and affiliates”). Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 9 of 17

B. Although The Release Bars Neither Derivative Actions Nor Prospective

Direct Actions, The Plaintiff’s Section 220 Action is Neither.

The Release does not prevent Plaintiff from bringing prospective actions against

the Defendant.35 Plaintiff remains a stockholder and could bring claims arising from

circumstances taking place after the Redemption Agreement’s execution. But

Plaintiff agreed that the investigation he seeks to conduct relates to actions before

the Release.36 All the same, he contends that had the parties intended to bar future

claims, they could have done so explicitly.37

But to read the Redemption Agreement and embedded Release as Plaintiff

needs me to and consider every action after execution as a “future” action would

lead to an absurd result. Plaintiff’s argument tries to make the best of the Release’s

disadvantageous language, but I cannot agree. Plaintiff’s contention would

undermine the entirety of the Release and the parties’ intentions. His construction

35

Id. (“of every kind and nature which he ever had or now has against the Company Released Parties”) (emphasis added). In Comparison, Defendant included a release of prospective claims in a draft agreement to buy back more of Plaintiff’s shares in February 2026. See JX-41 at NBERNSTEIN0000360-61 (“[T]he release set forth herein expressly includes . . . all derivative Claims, including any Claims that could be asserted on behalf of the Company or in the right of the Company under Delaware law, whether currently asserted or not, whether known or unknown”) (emphasis added); POB at 46–47. 36

Tr. 22:10–13. (“The investigation relates to the actions in April, 2025 so I will concede that.”)

37

Tr. 24:4–7 (“So I don’t think it eviscerates (the Release) or makes it toothless; I think if the parties wanted to encompass future actions, they needed language to say that.”) Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 10 of 17

would render the Release meaningless because any subsequent demand, claim, and

the like would be permitted, even if they related to conduct before the Release.

Under Plaintiff’s theory of the Release, he was only barred from continuing to assert

claims that he had already asserted prior to executing the Release. 38

The Release does not prevent the Plaintiff from bringing a derivative claim.

It is axiomatic that derivative actions are not personal to the stockholder-plaintiff.

California State Teachers’ Ret. Sys. v. Alvarez, 179 A.3d 824, 847 (Del. 2018) (“The

named plaintiff…only has standing to seek to bring an action by and in the right of

the corporation and never has an individual cause of action.”) (emphasis in original).

The Release specifically addresses direct claims that are personal to the Plaintiff, not

derivative claims.39 Furthermore, the import of derivative claims requires Court

oversight of their release. “Under Rule 23.1, the Court must expressly approve the

settlement and release of derivative claims.” Marchand v. Barnhill, 2025 WL

3540294, at *9 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2025). The Release in the Redemption Agreement

38

Tr. 23:14–22 (“And it doesn’t eviscerate the release or make it toothless; I think it’s important to note that at the time [Plaintiff] signed the release agreement in July 2025, the prior 220 action was still open. There was an active motion in that where [Plaintiff] was requesting let me give your confidential information to third parties. He was using that action to say hey, give me updated financials, this needs to keep coming.”). 39

“[T]he Seller, for himself and his heirs, successors, assigns, advisors and affiliates.” JX31, § 5.2.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 11 of 17

does not expressly release derivative claims and the parties did not seek or obtain

Court approval for a derivative claims release. Plaintiff may bring a derivative

action.

But that does not entitle Plaintiff to the relief he seeks. This section 220 books

and records action is a direct claim, not a derivative one. Plaintiff’s counsel

admitted the direct nature of this action at trial.40 Plaintiff seeks refuge in an

argument that links this Section 220 action with future derivative litigation.

Summarizing Plaintiff’s position, since the Section 220 materials will be used in a

future derivative litigation not subject to the Release, the Section 220 is interwoven

with the derivative suit and is not subject to the Release. 41 But there is no authority

supporting intertwined Section 220 and derivative suits. It is undeniable that Section

220 books and records actions often precede derivative suits. Schoon v. Smith, 953

A.2d 196, 208 (Del. 2008) (citation omitted) (Describing Section 220 proceedings

as the “tools at hand” to obtain books and records information before a derivative

40

“THE COURT: Would you agree that a 220 is a direct action as opposed to derivative. PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL: I will agree to that, I will concede that and I won't fight on that point.” Tr. 16:15–19.

41

“PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL: I know obviously in derivative litigation, the Court is constantly telling derivative plaintiffs go get books and records because those two actions are so interwoven but I didn't see specific authority connecting the waiver of a derivative claim to the release of a books and records action that might be related to it.” Tr. 17:2–9. Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 12 of 17

suit). But a precursor is not a prerequisite. Derivative litigation can be had without

a prior Section 220 action. 42 Plaintiff has presented no authority that transforms a

Section 220 proceeding from a direct action to a derivative one simply because the

books and records may support a derivative case.

Furthermore, Plaintiff’s theory presents a nearly unworkable standard for the

Court. To the extent the Release only bars direct actions, not derivative ones, and

Section 220 suits filed in reasonable anticipation of a plenary derivative suit fall

within the “derivative category,” then the Court would need to “look through” the

Section 220 demand to ascertain whether it is a reasonable precursor to the derivative

suit. Additionally, such theory disregards the Procedural protections of Court of

Chancery Rule 23.1 for derivative actions. This revolutionary theory of Books and

Records finds no grounding in caselaw or statute.

42

And certainly, a Plaintiff may file a Section 220 suit without intending to ultimately pursue plenary derivative litigation, especially where the purpose for the books and records demand pertains to appraisal of the party’s stock in a closely-held entity. Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 13 of 17

C. The Release Includes Unknown Claims, and Plaintiff Had Notice of the

Board Actions.

Plaintiff argued that the Release did not include unknown claims because it did

not expressly encompass “claims both known and unknown.”43 Plaintiff further

alleged that the directors’ actions were unknown to him because the Section 228

notice was sent to his Massachusetts rather than Texas address, and Defendant had

knowledge of his address change. Plaintiff’s argument on the unknown claims is

unavailing. The Release discharged a multitude of potential activities “of every kind

and nature which he ever had or now has against the Company Released Parties.” 44

This type of language has been interpreted to include unknown claims. Rust v. Rust,

2023 WL 3120545, at *8 n.100 (Del. Ch. Apr. 27, 2023) (“a release of claims a party

‘had or now has’ does not exclude unknown claims”) (emphasis in original). The

Release that Plaintiff signed covered all his pending and past direct claims, known

and unknown.

43

PAB at 11. I have concluded that derivative claims were not included in the Release. I address the unknown claims argument here because the Defendant contends that “Plaintiff claims that ‘the books and records demand in this action concern corporate events that Plaintiff only discovered after entering into the Redemption Agreement containing the Release.’” DAB at 5 (quoting POB at 44).

44

JX-31, § 5.2.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 14 of 17

Concurrently, Plaintiff argues “the books and records demanded in this action

concern corporate events that Plaintiff only discovered after entering into the

Redemption Agreement containing the Release.”45 Not so. The timeline directly

refutes this assertion. The Defendant mailed the Section 228 notice to Plaintiff’s

Massachusetts address on May 6, 2025.46 On June 12, Lampiao sent an email to

Defendant’s counsel regarding receipt of a June 10 package sent to the

Massachusetts address. 47 Lampiao advised Defendant on July 11 that Plaintiff no

longer lived in Massachusetts.48 This is before Plaintiff signed the Redemption

Agreement and Release on July 17. 49 Lampiao provided Plaintiff’s Texas address

to Defendant on July 17, but gave no effective date for the move. 50

Plaintiff suggests that the June 12 Lampiao email put Defendant on notice

“that Plaintiff had moved and was not receiving physical mail in Boston.” 51 That

argument stretches the substance of the email to the breaking point. In that email,

45

POB at 44.

46

JX-16.

47

JX-24.

48

JX-30.

49

JX-31.

50

JX-30.

51

PAB at 14.

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 15 of 17

Lampiao wrote, “However, as my client is currently outside the Boston area and

unable to retrieve physical mail promptly, I would appreciate your courtesy in

forwarding the correspondence, along with any related documents, by email.”52

There is no mention of Plaintiff moving and the use of “currently” conveys a return

to Massachusetts. Defendant did not have notice of Plaintiff’s move until July.

Title 8 Section 232 addresses when stockholders are deemed to receive notice

from a corporation. It specifies that notice may be given to the stockholder’s mailing

address and is effective when deposited in the U.S. mail.53 As Plaintiff conceded,

this statutory version of the mailbox rule provides no rebuttable presumption.54

Plaintiff received notice. Plaintiff’s pre-trial briefs made no mention of the common

law mailbox rule. At trial, Plaintiff argued that the common law mailbox rule is a

rebuttable presumption.55 Plaintiff waived consideration of this argument when it

did not include it in the pre-trial briefing. Still, Plaintiff failed to rebut the

presumption. Defendant sent the Section 228 notice to Plaintiff’s address on May

52

JX-24 (emphasis added). The correspondence referenced is the June 10 stock buyback package, not the May 6 section 228 package.

53

8 Del. C. § 232(a)(1) (a codification of the common law mailbox rule). 54

Tr. 33:14-20.

55

Tr. 32:20-24. Plaintiff provided two cases discussing the mailbox rule and the rebuttable presumption for the first time at trial: Graham v. Com. Credit Co., 194 A.2d 863 (Del. Ch. 1963) and Windom v. Ungerer, 903 A.2d 276 (Del. 2006).

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 16 of 17

6. More than two months later, Lampiao told Defendants that Plaintiff no longer

resided in Massachusetts, and six days after that, Lampiao gave them Plaintiff’s

Texas address. 56 It is unreasonable to expect a party to search its files and resend

documents from weeks or months before on a speculative, unsubstantiated belief that

another party did not receive them. Compliance would be impossible. Defendant

had no reason to believe Plaintiff did not receive the Section 228 documents. This

is supported by Lampiao’s communications with Defendant. On July 11, Lampiao

notified Defendant that Plaintiff redomiciled, but did not provide a new address.57

Six days later, he provided Plaintiff’s Texas address with a request to “add Nikita’s

details as below.”58 It would be patently reasonable for Defendant to assume that

Plaintiff’s move was recent, for why else would Lampiao have not provided the

address on July 11? For certain, it did not give rise to a reasonable belief that

Plaintiff was redomiciled in Texas on May 6. Plaintiff would also fail at rebutting a

presumption because he received documents at the Massachusetts address in June,

56

JX-30.

57

JX-30.

58

JX-30

Bernstein v. MyJoVE Corp.,

C.A. No. 2026-0301-DH

July 02, 2026

Page 17 of 17

as evidenced by Lampiao’s June 12 response. 59 The June 10 document package

Lampiao referenced was sent over a month after the Section 228 notice.

D. The Valid Release Bars Substantive Determination of Plaintiffs Books and

Records Action.

Having found the Release valid against Plaintiff’s direct claims, I need not

consider substantive issues of whether Plaintiff (1) established a proper purpose, (2)

showed a reasonable relationship between the purpose and the records sought, and

(3) whether the records sought are necessary and essential to the proper purpose.

The Release renders these issues moot.

III. CONCLUSION

For the reasons explained above, I recommend that judgment be entered in

favor of the Defendant. This is a final report pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule

144.

Sincerely,

/s/ David Hume, IV

David Hume, IV

Magistrate in Chancery

cc: All counsel of record (by File & ServeXpress)

59

JX-24.