Epstein Files

EFTA01077375.pdf

dataset_9 pdf 2.9 MB Feb 3, 2026 25 pages
PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON LLP MATTHEW W ABBOTT ALAN W. KORNIIERG DANIEL J. KRAMER ROBERT AVID K. LAKHDHIR 1283 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS UNIT 3601. FORTUNE PLAZA OFFICE TOWER A JOHN . A.AOTLKNS LYNN B. 1SAAR RA IIHAN ° WHIN P LAMB* JENA . Latin DANIEL4 kgr•ELL NEW YORK, NEW YORK lOOIS-6064 NO. 7 oats **NAOMI ZHONCLu DANIEL J. X1AO'YU • LIU CHAO YANG DISTRICT CRAIG A SENSON• JEFFREY D. MARELL MITCHELL LAMM MARCO V MASOTTI TELEPHONE 1112) 272.2000 MEDIAS '00020 MARK . ERGHAN EDWIN 5. MAYNARD Binefu E DAVID W. MAYO PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC Of CHINA Is/ RR Hen DOEHNING ELIZABETH K Ma3OLM LLOYD K. GARRISON 111146.1•9 II TELEPHONE 030-101502D6500 A ELO NVINO MARK I F. MENDELSOHN RANDOLPH [.PAUL 110416.19SCH HENgsBRRNINI T SY S. MYERSON J MN E NATHAN SIMON H. RIFKIND (1950-15“051 AVIL01% J. rant IN NE NYARADY 12TH FLOOR. HONG KONG CLUB BUILDING OATID W. BROWN JOHN J O'NEIL LOUIS S. WEISS 11/17.10501 3A GHAT."' ROAD. CENTRAL ALM:MUONE. K. OH JOHN F. WHARTON (1927.11177) Wren ...allYntiSS SHAD R KUN HONG KONG JEANETTE 6. CHAN KELLEY 0. PARKER YVONNE V. • CHAN ROBERT P PARKER• NONE (6321 2546-0300 LEWIS a CLAYTON MARC E. aRMUTTER JAY COHEN MARK • MELRANTZ /CELLE •CORNISH VALERIE E. RADWANER CmusTOPHERCORNIJ CARL L REISNER ALDER CASTLE CHARLES E DAVIDOW WALTER G. RICCIAR1N IC APPLE WALTER RIEMAN 17ICaMG.try. ROFtvo.3AsTIDE III RICHARD A. ROI1N WRITER'S DIRECT DIAL NUMBER LONDON EC1V 7JU. Y.K ARIEL J DECKELBAUM JAME; M DuipiN ANDREW N AO NEITIG TELEPHONE /44 2017267 1500 ALICE State EATON J ROTHEN•ARG ANDREW J EHRLICH JACQUELINE P AU•IN RAPHAEL. M RySSO ttyG OACWI l geGeGENEN JE D. SA EPSTEIN FIJKOKU SEINE; BUILDING eMARL ALCONE FFFFF B SAM uiLLS WRITER'S DIRECT FACSIMILE UCNISAIWAIC140 ZCHOME C CCCEV SARA° ?ALLA! CHITODA.KU, TOKYO 1000011. JAPAN TELEPHONE 0111O1 3•97-1,101 ARApO PETBERTO ER I FISCH N KINNECCL seHlrotEIDER ROBERT •. SCHumEn JAMES H. SCHWAB raw ialtIllum ANDREW J. FOLEY JOHN M. SCOTT sTEPHr J. •HIMSHAK WRITER'S DIRECT DMAIL ADDRESS 2001 K STREET. NW HARM FASIDUS DAVID . ISICULAR MANY L S. FREY MOSES •ILVERMAN WASHINGTON, DC 100041047 KENNETH{A GALLO III4VEN SIMSIMON TELEPHONE 12021 113.7300 _ ONS 114207-Ai LOTNUNAMAN MARILYNJLon- NAy 500 DELAWARE AVENUE. SUITE 200 ADAM N. OrvIATZ Arlin? GOLINIAUM TAR RA J. UN M. STEWART ERIC ALAN STONE 1. 61.t S. OrIMEIN AIDAN SYNNOTT POST OFFICE BOX 32 ROBYN P TARNOISAY WILMINGTON. DE 1••99.0031 gITACRM ° itSP UOGE MONICA K. THURMOND ANDREW G. 001100Na DANIEL J. TOA TELEPHONE 130210SO-4AM NICHIc;i AS OFROMBRIDGE HARK A. UNDER L SEA° GA= A OuTENPLAN ZA M. .vELAzglUEZ GAJNE OWATHMET. III LIARIA M T VULLD ALAN S. IN 0. WEE g THEODORE V WELLS. JR July 21, 2011 CLAUDIAet"NrANCTAN •RIAN B. BE 14 A. WILKINSON EVEN J. WILLIAMS ROBERT N.HERHIRS MAH NN LAWRENCE I. WITDORCHIC MICHELE HiltIAAN MARK f i4WLAZLO JOYCE 5 HUANO OATH) S HUNTINGTON 1.41AN e. YAREIT 4ER KAY N. TOSHINO BY HAND DELIVERY :1g:IA T AHAj. /Irani4-5M BRAD S KARP TO YU TRACEY A. ZACCONE JOHN C KENNEDY T. ROBERT ZOCHOWSKI. JR. •HoTsownto TO THE NEW Tam BAR The Honorable Anthony J. Carpinello (Ret.) Arbitrator, JAMS 620 Eighth Avenue, 34th Floor New York, NY 10019 Reference No. 1425006537: In the Matter of the Arbitration Between Fortress VRF I LLC, Claimants, and Jeepers, Inc., Respondent Dear Judge Carpinello: Attached you should find: (1) a hard copy of Claimants' Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Financial Trust Company, Inc.'s and Jeepers, Inc.'s Motion In Limine "To Exclude Extrinsic Evidence"; (2) a binder of exhibits cited in the memorandum; and (3) a binder of cases cited in the memorandum. Re Iectfullysubmitted, Attachments cc: Harry Susman (counsel for Financial Trust Company, Inc. and Jeepers, Inc.) John Siffert and Daniel Reynolds (counsel for Daniel B. Zwini) William Schwartz and William O'Brien (counsel for D.B. Zwim Partners, LLC; D.B. Zwim & Co., L.P.; DBZ GP, LLC; and Zwim Holdings, LLC) EFTA01077375 JUDICIAL ARBITRATION AND MEDIATION SERVICE NEW YORK, NEW YORK IN THE MATTER OF JAMS Reference No. 1425006537 FORTRESS VRF I LLC and. FORTRESS Arbitrator: Hon. Anthony J. Carpinello (Ret.) VALUE RECOVERY FUND I LLC, Claimants v. JEEPERS, INC., Respondent CLAIMANTS' MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN OPPOSITION TO FINANCIAL TRUST and COMPANY, INC.'S AND JEEPERS INC.'S FINANCIAL TRUST COMPANY, INC. MOTION IN LIMINE "TO EXCLUDE and JEEPERS, INC., EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE" Counter-Claimants and Third-Party Claimants v. FORTRESS VALUE RECOVERY FUND I LLC, Counter-Respondent and D.B. ZWIRN PARTNERS, LLC, D.B. ZWIRN & CO., LP, DBZ GP, LLC, ZWIRN HOLDINGS, LLC, and DANIEL ZWIRN, Third-Party Respondents Claimants Fortress VRF I LLC ("VRF I LLC") and Fortress Value Recovery Fund I LLC (f/lcia the D.B. Zwim Special Opportunities Fund L.P.) (the "Fund") (and together with VRF I LLC, "Claimants") respectfully submit this memorandum of law in opposition to Respondent Jeepers, Inc. and Counter-Claimant Financial Trust Company, Inc.'s ("FTC's") (together, "Jeepers's") motion in limine "to exclude extrinsic evidence EFTA01077376 related to the breach of contract claims against D.B. Zwim Special Opportunities Fund, L.P. k/n/a Fortress Value Recovery Fund I LLC ((the) "Fund"), [and] D.B. Zwim Partners, LLC, D.B. Zwim & Co. L.P., DBZ GP LLC, Zwirn Holdings LLC, and Daniel Zwirn [together, the "Zwim Parties")." (Financial Trust Company, Inc.'s and Jeepers Inc.'s Motion In Limine to Exclude Extrinsic Evidence at 1.) Preliminary Statement At the outset, we should note that Jeepers's description of its own motion is inaccurate. To begin with, Jeepers has not asserted any claim for breach of contract against the Zwim Parties. As to the Fund, Jeepers has asserted two contract claims, one of which is for breach of an alleged "oral contract." Jeepers's motion clearly cannot apply to the "oral contract" claim, as the parol evidence rule only operates to exclude evidence where there is an integrated, written agreement, and does not apply to an alleged "oral contract." Husband (P. J. 0.) v. Wife (L. 0.), 418 A.2d 994, 996 (Del. 1980) ("The parol evidence rule excludes evidence of additional terms to a written contract, when that contract is a complete integration of the agreement of the parties.") (emphasis added). Even as to its remaining written contract claim, Jeepers's motion is misdescribed. As Jeepers has made clear in its Pre-Trial Brief (p. 12), Jeepers is alleging that the Fund breached a January 1, 2005 side letter agreement with Jeepers relating to Jeepers's fifth (January 1, 2005) investment in the Fund (the "Side Letter"). As Jeepers appears to concede, that Side Letter cannot possibly be interpreted on its own. Even Jeepers concedes that the Side Letter expressly refers to the Fund's 2003 Restated Limited Partnership Agreement (the "LPA"), thereby allowing consideration of evidence extrinsic to the Side Letter "right off the bat." To give Jeepers the benefit of the doubt, therefore, its motion would need to be construed as a motion for the exclusion, in considering its claim 2 EFTA01077377 for breach of the Side Letter, of all evidence other than the LPA. Even as so interpreted, the motion should fail.' According to Jeepers, all of the evidence (other than the LPA) should be excluded on the breach of written contract claim because: (I) the terms of the relevant contract (again, really contracts, as Jeepers would allow the Arbitrator to consider the LPA in addition to the Side Letter) are unambiguous; (2) if those agreement(s) are in fact ambiguous, the doctrine of contra projerentem applies and, not only does it apply, but it requires that no extrinsic evidence be considered; and (3) the extrinsic evidence Jeepers anticipates the other parties will use, if they are allowed to introduce extrinsic evidence, is inadmissible. Jeepers makes these arguments on a motion in limine despite multiple opportunities to raise the issue previously, including in a motion for judgment on the pleadings, or for summary judgment. If Jeepers truly believed this was a winning argument, presumably it would have brought it earlier and saved all the parties a great deal of time and expense. The truth, of course, is that it is not a winning argument. As argued in their Pre-Hearing Brief, Claimants' (and the Zwim Parties') reading of the two agreements at issue—that (a) under the LPA, each investment in the Fund was subject to its own, two- year "lock-up" and (b) the Side Letter was merely intended to allow Jeepers's fifth, We also note that Jeepers's motion ignores the fact that the extrinsic evidence it purportedly seeks to exclude may well be admissible as to a variety of other issues in the arbitration, including the breach of the "oral contract" claim and Claimants' claim for a declaration of Jeepers's rights with respect to the Fund. Additionally, we understand that the Zwirn Parties contend that the extrinsic evidence is, in any event, relevant to their "exculpatory clause" defense to Jeepers's fraud and breach of fiduciary duty claims. 3 EFTA01077378 January 1, 2005 investment in the Fund to be subject to a two-year, and not a three-year lock-up—is the far more sensible one. At the very least, because Claimants' and the Zwim Parties' reading of these two agreements is certainly reasonable, the documents on their face do not unambiguously favor Jeepers's position. The law is absolutely clear that, in the event the Arbitrator finds that both Claimants'/Zwirn Parties' and Jeepers's interpretations of the documents are reasonable, the Arbitrator may consider extrinsic evidence to determine the meaning of those documents. Jeepers's remaining arguments are easily disposed of. Because the Side Letter was the product of bilateral negotiations between the Fund and Jeepers, the doctrine of contra proferentem, which is applied in the insurance or similar contexts where one party with superior bargaining position imposes a contract of adhesion on another party (or other parties), has no application here. Indeed, the fact that Jeepers was able to negotiate the Side Letter demonstrates that the LPA itself was not a mere contract of adhesion that Jeepers was required to accept, but rather a document Jeepers felt perfectly free to negotiate over and to amend. The doctrine simply does not apply to either the Side Letter or the LPA. Finally, Jeepers's claim that Claimants' extrinsic evidence is, in any event, inadmissible lacks any merit. As to the Side Letter, there were documents exchanged between the parties leading up to it that make clear the Side Letter only involved Jeepers's fifth investment. Such documents are clearly admissible under any standard. As to the LPA, there is a substantial body of evidence as to how the Fund not only understood the LPA's withdrawal provisions but in fact construed them when other investors withdrew their money, not to mention evidence of well-settled customs and practices in the hedge 4 EFTA01077379 fund industry that would clearly indicate that the two-year "rolling" lock-ups in the LPA applied on an "investment by investment" basis. Such evidence is also clearly admissible. Backaround2 Jeepers is an investor in the Fund, a hedge fund that has dissolved and is currently winding up under the supervision of VRF I LLC. Jeepers made five investments in the Fund: (1) $10 million on May 1, 2002; (2) $10 million on September 1, 2002; (3) $30 million on December 1, 2002; (4) $10 million on June 1, 2003; and (5) $20 million on January 1, 2005. Each time Jeepers invested in the Fund, it was required to execute a subscription agreement and to execute the Fund's LPA. Each time, it was "admitted" as a limited partner in the Fund. Section 9.1 of the LPA states: Complete Withdrawals of Capital Account. Complete withdrawals of a Limited Partner's Capital Account may be made as of the last Business Day of the calendar quarter ending at least two years after the Limited Partner initially purchases Interests and as of the second anniversary of that date thereafter (each, a "Withdrawal Date") upon not less than 120 days' prior written Notice to the General Partner. Distributions in connection with complete withdrawals will be payable in the manner provided by Section 9.4(a), 9.7 and 9.8 and will be equal to such Limited Partner's Capital Account on the effective date of withdrawal. Withdrawals may also be made at such other times with the consent of, and upon such terms of payment as may be approved by, the General Partner in its sole discretion. The withdrawal of a Limited Partner shall not dissolve or terminate the Partnership. (LPA, Ex. A.) There is a similar provision (Section 9.2) with respect to partial withdrawals of a Capital Account. 2 Claimants summarize the relevant facts here. For a more detailed recitation, Claimants respectfully refer the Arbitrator to pages 4 to 27 of their Pre-Hearing Brief. 5 EFTA01077380 The term "Capital Account" is defined in Section 6.1 of the LPA: 6.1. Capital Accounts. A "Capital Account" shall be maintained for each Partner. For the Fiscal Period during which a Partner is admitted to the Partnership, the Partner's capital Account will initially equal the Partner's Initial Capital Contribution. For each Fiscal Period after the Fiscal Period in which a Partner is admitted to the Partnership, the Partner's Capital Account will equal the sum of the amount of the Partner's Capital Account as finally adjusted for [profits or losses at the Fund], increased by the amount of any Additional Capital Contribution made by the Partner as of the first day of the Fiscal Period. The term "Additional Capital Contribution" is defined separately in Section 5.3, which states that "[t]he General Partner . . . in its sole discretion, may permit Limited Partners to make Additional Capital Contributions as of the first Business Day of each month or at such other times and subject to such conditions and minimum amounts as the General Partner shall determine." Mr. Epstein concedes he did not read the LPA prior to investing in the Fund. Prior to Jeepers's fifth investment in the Fund, the Fund switched from a two-year lock-up on investments in the Fund, to a three-year lock-up system. Learning of this, Mr. Epstein requested that his new investment have only a two-year lock-up, not a three-year lock-up. The parties agreed to that, and the Fund prepared the Side Letter, which was transmitted to Jeepers with a note saying, "Attached please find the side note relating to [FTC's] January 1, 2005 investment [in the Fund]." (Side Letter, Ex. B at 1.) The Side Letter itself states (in its entirety): Re: January 1 Investment in D.B. Zwirn Special Opportunities Fund, L.P. (the "Fund") Dear Mr. Epstein, 6 EFTA01077381 In accordance with Section 9.1 of the Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement, dated as of May I, 2003 (as amended to the date hereof, the "Agreement") of the Fund, the General Partner hereby agrees that Financial Trust Company, Inc. (the "Company") shall be permitted to withdraw its Capital Account as of the last Business Day of the calendar quarter ending at least two years after the Company initially purchases this Interest and as of the second anniversary of that date thereafter upon not less than 120 days' prior written Notice to the General Partner. Capitalized terms used herein but not defined shall have the meanings ascribed to them in the Agreement. Yours truly, /s/ Daniel B. Zwim Daniel B. Zwim Managing Principal (Side Letter, Ex. B at 2.) All parties agree that the "Interest" referred to in the Side Letter is Jeepers's January I, 2005 investment in the Fund. All parties agree that the Side Letter permitted Jeepers to withdraw its fifth investment on a two-year rolling cycle based off the date of that investment. There is, however, a vigorous debate as to the withdrawal dates on Epstein's first four investments, and whether the Side Letter had any effect on those dates. According to Jeepers, its investments had always had a single withdrawal schedule, set by the date of its very first investment in the Fund on May 2, 2002. It reads Sections 6.1 and 9.1 of the LPA to provide that each investor was assigned a single Capital Account into which all of its investments were placed, and all of the investments could be withdrawn on the single two-year rolling lock-up schedule set by the investor's first investment in the Fund. Jeepers further argues that the Side Letter was thus intended and should be read to 7 EFTA01077382 change all of the withdrawal dates for all of its investments to a rolling two-year cycle based on the date of the fifth investment (January 1, 2005). The Fund strongly disagreed with this position at the time the issue first arose, and Claimants now believe the Fund was correct on this issue. As to the LPA, Claimants believe that the LPA did not set any single withdrawal schedule for each investor, no matter how many subsequent investments it made or when it made those investments. Rather, under Sections 9.1 and 9.2 of the LPA, which refer to the anniversary dates of the investor's "Interests" in the Fund, each investment (or "Interest") received its own two-year lock-up. While admittedly, Section 6.1 of the LPA permitted the General Partner to exercise its discretion to allow further investments to be included in the same "Capital Account" as an initial investment, there is no evidence the General Partner ever exercised such discretion with respect to Mr. Epstein or his entities. (Indeed, the reference to such discretion makes clear that the LPA cannot be interpreted without resort to extrinsic evidence in any event.) Claimants believe that support for this view is found not only in the language of the LPA, but also in the consistent practice of the Fund's treatment of each investment as subject to a two-year lock-up (even where multiple investments were made by a single investor). Evidence of this shared practice includes numerous internal Fund documents, (see, e.g., E-mail Correspondence between Mr. Zwim and Allyson Alimansky, Ex. C (Alimansky: "[Investor] asked one question I was not sure about — if they make one investment Sept 1 and then add to the investment Oct 1, do those investments have the same or different rolling lockup periods?" Zwim: "Each piece of capital has its own lock. No combo."), Internal Fund Spreadsheet of Redemption Schedules, Ex. D (listing separate 8 EFTA01077383 redemption dates for each investment)), as well as correspondence with other investors, (see, e.g., E-mail from Allyson Alimansky to Mr. Zwim, Ex. E ("[Investor] called today — she wants to redeem her entire LP investment asap so that her kid can use it to buy a house. I explained the lockup terms to her ($250k is redeemable in Aug 05 and $300k is redeemable in June 06) . . . .")). Indeed, when the Fund clearly explained its position to investors (including Jeepers) in memoranda to investors in 2004 and 2005, not one investor objected. (See Memorandum to Investors dated November 2004, Ex. F at 1 ("Any interest purchased by a limited partner on or after January 1, 2005 will be subject to a "rolling" three-year lock-up. . . . Any interest purchased prior to January 1, 2005 will indefinitely remain subject to its current lock-up." (emphasis added)); 2005 Confidential Memorandum, Ex. G at 8 ("For purposes of determining the withdrawal date (the "Withdrawal Date") with respect to Interests, a separate Capital Account will be established for each Interest purchased (i.e., each capital contribution made).").) Claimants believe it would therefore be grossly unfair to treat Jeepers in a manner differently than other investors were treated. Indeed, Claimants' expert will testify that no reasonable investor in the industry would invest in a hedge fund like the Fund and believe that withdrawal rights would operate the way Jeepers claims they operated here. And indeed the Fund's reading of the LPA is far more logical because Jeepers's reading would mean an investor could completely thwart the two-year lock-up scheme by investing a minimal amount of money "up front," and then investing the bulk of its funds a year (or more) later, in which case the two-year lock-up would be entirely defeated. 9 EFTA01077384 In addition, Jeepers's reading of the Side Letter makes no sense at all. As noted above, and as the transmittal document for the Side Letter made clear, the Side Letter dealt only with Jeepers's fifth, January 1, 2005 investment. That is certainly how the Fund understood and treated it. There is no evidence that, at the time of the Side Letter, Mr. Epstein wanted to change any of the lock-up dates on his prior investments. Indeed, under Jeepers's reading of the Side Letter, the Letter would have extended lock- ups on a number of Jeepers's prior investments when there would have been no reason to do so. That reading just does not work. Argument I. CLAIMANTS' INTERPRETATION OF THE AGREEMENTS IS THE MOST REASONABLE ONE As noted, Claimants (and the Zwim Parties) read the Side Letter to address only the withdrawal of Jeepers's January 1, 2005 investment. Indeed, just from reading the face(s) of the Side Letter and the LPA, Claimants' reading emerges as by far the most reasonable one. Where the contract terms "establish the parties' common meaning so that a reasonable person in the position of either party would have no expectations inconsistent with the contract language," then "[the] [c]ontract terms themselves will be controlling." Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del. 1997). A court determines whether an interpretation is "reasonable" from the perspective of a third party. Dittrick v. Chalfant, 948 A.2d 400, 406 (Del. Ch. 2007) ("[If] a reasonable third party would be unable to determine the meaning of certain contractual provisions, the agreement is considered ambiguous."). 10 EFTA01077385 On its face, the Side Letter states the subject of the agreement in the very first line: "Re: January I Investment in D.B. Zwim Special Opportunities Fund, L.P." In no other year did Jeepers make an investment on January I st, and the letter itself is dated January II, 2005, just days after the January 1, 2005 investment. The Side Letter makes no references to other "Interests" or past investments. The most natural reading of the language, therefore, is that the letter grants Jeepers the option to withdraw the value of its January 1, 2005 investment at two-year intervals or, equivalently, according to its own two-year "lock-up." This reading is also the only reading that makes sense in light of the fact that, at the time the Side Letter was executed, the Fund had just switched from a two-year lock-up to a three-year lock-up for all new investments made on or after January 1, 2005. Because Jeepers made its last investment on January I, 2005, that investment would have been subject to a three-year lock-up had the Side Letter not expressly made that investment subject to a two-year lock-up. Given these undisputed circumstances surrounding its execution, the Side Letter is most naturally read to effect only this change. Again, Mr. Epstein would have no reason to change any lock-ups on any prior investments. In contrast, Jeepers's interpretation would essentially re-write the first line of the letter to read "Re: January 1 Investment in D.B. Zwim Special Opportunities Fund, L.P. and All Previous Investments." Given the absence of any reference to any investment besides the January 1, 2005 investment, there is absolutely no justification for such an interpretation. Further, Jeepers has no explanation for why either it or the Fund would modify the lock-up schedule for all of Jeepers's investments when only investments made 11 EFTA01077386 on or after January 1, 2005 would be affected by the Fund's switch from two-year to three- year lock-ups.3 While Jeepers argues that the Side Letter needs to be read in conjunction with the LPA, those provisions support Claimants' reading, not Jeepers's. Rather than providing that subsequent investments by a Fund investor are automatically added to a single investor Capital Account, the document requires the General Partner of the Fund to exercise its discretion to do so. There is no evidence the General Partner ever exercised this discretion for Jeepers. Indeed, as Claimants explained in their Pre-Hearing Brief, the language of the LPA is best read to mean that each investment created a separate "Capital Account" for purposes of withdrawals. At the end of the quarter following two-year anniversaries of each investment, the investor could withdraw the value of that investment. Section 9.1 states that an investor may withdraw its "Capital Account" at two-year intervals "after the Limited Partner initially purchases Interests." The use of the plural "Interests" indicates 3 In a 2004 memorandum to all investors, including Jeepers, the Fund was explicit that the switch to a three-year lock-up was not retroactive. (Memorandum dated November 17, 2004, Ex. F at 1 ("Any interest purchased by a limited partner on or after January 1, 2005 will be subject to a `rolling' three-year lock-up. To illustrate, an interest purchased on January 1, 2005 by a limited partner (including by an existing limited partner) may be withdrawn by such limited partner on December 31, 2007, December 31, 2010, December 31, 2013, and so on. Any interest purchased prior to January 1, 2005 will indefinitely remain subject to its current lock-up.").) In fact, the switch to three-year lock-ups makes clear that Jeepers's reading of the LPA cannot be correct. As even Jeepers would concede, investors who invested both prior to and following January 1, 2005 clearly had investments in the Fund with different lock-up dates. As a result, Jeepers's "single Capital Account"/"single lock-up" theory does not work. 12 EFTA01077387 that the two-year intervals were measured not from a single date but multiple dates, or, put another way, were measured from the purchase of each "Interest." Jeepers's reading of the LPA is unreasonable because it re-writes the language of the LPA. Jeepers would re-write Section 9.1 to read "after the Limited Partner initially purchased itsfirst Interest," requiring that the two-year lock-up always be measured from the date of the initial investment. But the provision simply does not say what Jeepers wants it to say. Again, the better reading is that (a) each investment created a separate Capital Account, and (b) the Side Letter meant that Jeepers could withdraw amounts attributable to Jeepers's January 1, 2005 investment on a rolling, two-year basis, not a three-year one. Ironically, should the Arbitrator agree with Claimants that theirs is the only reasonable interpretation of the Side Letter and the LPA, Jeepers is correct that extrinsic evidence should be excluded. In that case, judgment on Jeepers's written contract claim should be entered against Jeepers. II. AT THE LEAST, THE DOCUMENTS ARE AMBIGUOUS, AND THUS EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE IS ADMISSIBLE Jeepers argues that the Arbitrator must exclude extrinsic evidence related to the agreements) because the Side Letter and the LPA unambiguously support its position. Jeepers relies on the principle that where an integrated, written contract is unambiguous, "extrinsic evidence may not be used to interpret the intent of the parties." Eagle Indus., Inc., 702 A.2d at 1232. Because Jeepers has failed to demonstrate that the contract unambiguously supports its position, this argument fails. 13 EFTA01077388 Jeepers's argument that the agreements here could only reasonably be read unambiguously in its favor is essentially one for summary judgment on Jeepers's written contract claim. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A.2d 1192, 1196 (Del. 1992) ("The proper construction of any contract . . . is purely a question of law."). A contract is ambiguous "[w]hen the provisions in controversy are fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or more different meanings." Eagle Indus., Inc., 702 A.2d at 1232. Accordingly, for Jeepers to prevail on this point, it must demonstrate, as a matter of law, "that its construction of the . . . agreement is the only reasonable interpretation." United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Holdings, Inc., 937 A.2d 810, 830 (Del. Ch. 2007). But, if Claimants' interpretation is also reasonable, "consideration of extrinsic evidence is required to determine the meanings the parties intended." AT&T Corp. v. Lillis, 953 A.2d 241, 253 (Del. 2008); accord Jana Master Fund, Ltd. v. CNET Networks, Inc., 954 A.2d 335, 339 (Del. Ch. 2008). As discussed above, Jeepers's interpretation is not reasonable, let alone the only reasonable interpretation. Its interpretation re-writes both the Side Letter and the LPA and provides no explanation for why the Side Letter would modify the lock-up cycle for Jeepers's other investments, given that the Fund's switch from two to three-year lock-ups affected only investments made on or after January 1, 2005. Eagle Indus., Inc., 702 A.2d at 1232 n.7 (noting that it would not violate the bar on extrinsic evidence to "consider some undisputed background facts to place the contractual provision in its historical setting"). In contrast, Claimants' interpretation gives the relevant provisions their plain meaning and is entirely consistent with the context of the Side Letter and the LPA. At the 14 EFTA01077389 very least, Claimants' interpretation is reasonable, and there are thus two reasonable interpretations of the documents. Accordingly, Jeepers's argument fails. In that event, extrinsic evidence may be considered. Evidence is "extrinsic" if it is relevant to "determining the parties' reasonable intentions at the time of the contract" and includes "overt statements and acts of the parties, the business context [of the contract], prior dealings between the parties, business custom, and usage in the industry." Dittrick, 948 A.2d at 406. This is precisely the type of evidence Claimants (and the Zwirn Parties) believe should be heard—and will make clear that their interpretation is by far the more reasonable one. See United Rentals, Inc., 937 A.2d at 834. III. JEEPERS MISAPPLIES THE DOCTRINE OF CONTRA PROFERENTEM Jeepers also argues that, even if the Arbitrator were to find the documents ambiguous, the Arbitrator should nonetheless exclude extrinsic evidence because of the doctrine of contra proferentem (from the Latin, for "against the offeror"). The doctrine, which is traditionally applied to insurance contracts or other contracts of adhesion, holds that, where ambiguity in an agreement exists, it should be construed against the drafter. SI Mgmt. L.P. v. Wininger, 707 A.2d 37, 42 (Del. 1998) ("It has long been established that ambiguous provisions in contracts of insurance are to be construed against the insurer."). Relying largely on SI Management L.P. v. Wininger, Jeepers argues that the doctrine also applies to ambiguities found in limited partnership agreements and requires the exclusion of extrinsic evidence here. Jeepers is wrong on several counts. In SI Management, a limited partnership was formed for the purpose of acquiring all the stock of a company named Synthetic Industries, Inc. Approximately 1,850 investors contributed money to the partnership and became limited partners. At 15 EFTA01077390 some point, Synthetic Industries made a public offering and disagreements arose concerning how to maximize the value of the partnership. The partnership's general partner responded by proposing a plan of withdrawal and dissolution that would compensate investors. Certain investors, however, sued to block the plan, claiming that it violated the limited partnership agreement. In affirming the Chancery Court's ruling in favor of the suing investors/limited partners, the Delaware Supreme Court applied the doctrine of contra proferentem to construe ambiguities in the contract against the general partner in its dispute with the limited partners, and excluded extrinsic evidence. In so doing, the Court explained the purpose of the doctrine, relying principally on the analogy to insurance agreements: The policy behind this principle is that the insurer or the issuer, as the case may be, is the entity in control of the process of articulating the terms. The other party, whether it be the ordinary insured or the investor, usually has very little say about those terms except to take them or leave them or to select from limited options offered by the insurer or issuer. Therefore, it is incumbent upon the dominant party to make terms clear. Convoluted or confusing terms are the problem of the insurer or issuer—not the insured or investor. SI Mgmt L.P., 707 A.2d at 42. Reasoning from this policy, the Court noted that the limited partnership agreement at issue "was not a bilateral negotiated agreement." Id. at 43. Rather, it appeared that "the General Partner solicited and signed on 1,850 investors to the Agreement that those investors had no hand in drafting." Id. "Based on that premise, the principle of contra proferentem applies." Id. This case is clearly distinguishable from SI Management in numerous ways. To begin with, SI Management has nothing at all to do with the Side Letter, which is supposedly the foundation ofieepers's contract claim. The Side Letter was clearly a 16 EFTA01077391 "bilateral negotiated agreement." Id. Mr. Epstein himself has testified that he requested an exception be made for him regarding his January 1, 2005 investment because he did not want his money locked up for more than two years (Ex. H at 22:17-25, 26:1-19), and internal documents confirm that the Side Letter was drafted as an accommodation for Mr. Epstein.° Indeed, there is no question here that, although the Fund prepared the draft of the Letter, Jeepers had every opportunity to negotiate that document. The Side Letter was not a contract of adhesion. The law is clear that it is not material that it was the Fund's in-house lawyers who actually put the words of the Side Letter on paper. See L U. N. Am., Inc. v. A.LU. Ins. Co., 896 A.2d 880, 885 (Del. Super. 2006) ("Where all parties to a contract are knowledgeable, there is no reason for [construing ambiguities] against the party who drafted the final provision."). Both sides were represented by counsel, and there is no issue here of unequal bargaining power or of any unconscionability. See Wilmington Firefighters Assin, Local 1590 v. City of Wilmington, 02 Civ. 19035, 2002 WL 418032, at *10 (Del. Ch. Mar. 12, 2002) (rejecting application of contra proferentem when "parties of equal bargaining power . . . had more than ample opportunity to make amendments or otherwise modify [an agreement's] terms"). The fact that Jeepers did not specifically negotiate for a modification of the draft Side L

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