The Delaware Supreme Court issued an opinion Wednesday afternoon generally finding the custodian in the TransPerfect Global Inc. case wasn’t wrong in how he petitioned the Court of Chancery for fees.

The court did partially reverse one of the Chancery orders challenged by TransPerfect and CEO Philip Shawe, finding Shawe couldn’t be held in contempt for the Nevada lawsuit that spurred a Delaware contempt motion against him and the company because Shawe wasn’t a named plaintiff in that suit and because the Court of Chancery didn’t specifically determine in its contempt finding that he had been responsible for TransPerfect filing the case.