With no Merger Deal, Failed SPAC Faces Lawsuit Over Legal Fees

 Law firm White & Case has sued a SPAC for more than $8.2 million in legal fees, claiming it stiffed the firm after failing to consummate a planned $480 million merger and then announcing plans to wind down this month.

New York-founded White & Case sued former client Colonnade Acquisition II and its directors in New York state court late Monday, arguing the firm will be “irreparably harmed” if the blank-check company liquidates and dissolves before paying the fees it owes, Reuters reports.

Blank-check firm Colonnade, led by investors Joseph Sambuco and Remy Trafelet, raised $300 million in an IPO and started trading on the NYSE on March 10, 2021. In August 2022, payments provider Plastiq said it would go public through a merger with the firm, creating a company with a value of about $480 million.

The SPAC did not complete the combination by its March 12, 2023 deadline, however, and on March 9 issued a press release that it will cease operations, redeem the public shares and dissolve. Read more.

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