Home Blog

Delaware court trims claims in Keller Williams broker profit-sharing dispute


The case grew more tangled when a second deal involving DDTM also fell apart. In March 2023, Future Self Holdings entered into a letter of understanding with DE Beaches Regional Realty, LLC – an entity tied to John Clidy and Michele McBride – to sell 80% of its interest in DDTM for $300,000. DE Beaches paid the money but later alleged that Fetick failed to disclose key liabilities — including the agreement with Maggio. DE Beaches intervened in the lawsuit in 2024, bringing its own claims of fraud, misrepresentation, and breach of contract. 

In a parallel move, Fetick and his business partner filed a separate federal lawsuit in Pennsylvania alleging that individuals associated with Keller Williams engaged in a racketeering scheme to pressure local realty centers into selling to KWRI. That federal case has been stayed pending arbitration. 

In its April 29, 2026, memorandum opinion, the Delaware court dismissed Maggio’s fraud claim, finding it was not adequately pleaded, and dismissed the unjust enrichment claim on the basis that the agreement comprehensively governed the parties’ relationship. However, the court allowed a claim tied to the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing to move forward, noting unresolved questions about how DDTM’s net profit was calculated and whether agent restructuring affected Maggio’s compensation. The court also stayed DE Beaches’ intervention claims pending the outcome of arbitration proceedings in Texas tied to the Keller Williams franchise agreement. 

No final determination has been made on the merits of the case. 

For real estate professionals, this case is a sharp reminder that profit-sharing agreements and brokerage ownership transfers demand precise, airtight language – and that franchise arbitration clauses can pull even internal ownership disputes into forums far removed from the original deal. 

IHG One Rewards Traveler Credit Card Review (2026.4 Update: 125k Offer)