Access Cardiosystems, Inc. v. Fincke (In Re Access Cardiosystems, Inc.)

460 B.R. 67, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3986, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 158, 2011 WL 4900041
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 14, 2011
Docket19-10876
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 460 B.R. 67 (Access Cardiosystems, Inc. v. Fincke (In Re Access Cardiosystems, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Access Cardiosystems, Inc. v. Fincke (In Re Access Cardiosystems, Inc.), 460 B.R. 67, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3986, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 158, 2011 WL 4900041 (Mass. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

HENRY J. BOROFF, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter at hand requires this Court to visit, once again, the protracted contest between Access Cardiosystems, Inc. (“Access”), together with certain of Access’s individual investors (the “Investors”), and Access’s founder and former shareholder, officer, and director, Randall Fincke. Through their complaint, as amended (the “Complaint”), Access and the Investors sought damages for, inter alia, Fincke’s alleged violation of Massachusetts securities law and breaches of his fiduciary duty owed to the Investors and to Access. The Court has earlier ruled that Fincke did breach certain of his fiduciary duties to Access and, in one instance, violated Massachusetts General Laws ch. 110A, § 410(a)(2) (“§ 410(a)(2)”). Fincke has waived any further contest to the entry of judgment on account of the fiduciary duty breaches in an amount which the Court has earlier determined. But the Court still must determine what, if any, damages are recoverable by the Investors on account of Fincke’s violation of § 410(a)(2).

I. FACTS AND TRAVEL OF THE CASE 2

Access Cardiosystems, Inc., the debtor in the underlying Chapter 11 case, was *70 formed in 2000 by Randall Fincke (with the assistance of others) to develop, market, and sell a portable automated external defibrillator (the “Access AED”). Initially, Access’s start-up costs were funded by advances made by Fincke and Gregory Baletsa, 3 but these early investments soon proved insufficient. In the spring of 2001, Access received its first outside investment, 4 in the amount of $50,000, from John J. Moriarty, one of Fincke’s close personal friends. Moriarty then made two additional investments in 2001: $1,000,000 in July and $500,000 in December. 5

Fincke also reached out to another personal acquaintance, Richard F. Connolly, Jr., who invested $500,000 in Access in November 2001. 6 And in April 2002, both Moriarty and Connolly each invested $300,000 in Access, 7 followed by additional investments in May and June. 8 In the spring of 2002, Connolly began discussing Access with his close Mend, James Rad-ley, who agreed to meet with Fincke regarding a potential investment. Following that meeting, Radley invested $2 million in Access on June 14, 2002. 9

Despite these substantial investments made in late 2001 and early 2002, working capital constraints plagued Access, which continued to struggle with paying past-due vendor accounts and securing the raw materials necessary to manufacture the Access AED. With an eye toward obtaining additional investments in Access, Fincke, together with Access’s management team and its corporate counsel, Michael Ele-fante, prepared an investor letter and a business plan dated October 2002 (the “Business Plan”). Each of the then extant *71 investors — Connolly, Moriarty, and Rad-ley-received a copy of the Business Plan.

Joseph Zimmel, a potential investor introduced to Access by a company manager, also received a copy of the Business Plan in the fall of 2002, when he met with Fincke to discuss a possible investment in Access. Following that meeting, Zimmel invested $2 million in Access in three tranches: a $1,000,000 stock purchase in October 2002, a $500,000 stock purchase in November 2002, and a $500,000 loan in December 2002. See Access Cardiosys-tems Loan/Equity Investment Summary, Def.’s Ex. 1.

But notwithstanding these new cash infusions, things were still not going well, and in March 2003, Moriarty invested an additional $250,000 in Access while Ele-fante and Fincke began negotiations with the Investors to secure additional financing for the company. In connection with these negotiations, the Investors received a new document titled “Access CardioSys-tems Company Overview” (the “Company Overview”). In a March 2003 email to the Investors, Fincke outlined several financing options (including financing from other sources), and the Investors responded with a proposal to invest an additional $2 million in Access, contingent upon changes in the company’s governance and conversion of some of the Investors’ outstanding debt to equity. Various email exchanges ensued between Elefante, Fincke, and the Investors, as confusion arose regarding the terms of the additional financing. After some tense correspondence regarding the Investors’ insistence on conversion of debt to equity and Fincke’s initial reluctance to accept the Investors’ proposed terms, a consensus was ultimately reached.

The additional financing from the Investors closed on April 25, 2003 (the “April 2003 Transaction”). Through the April 2003 Transaction, certain of the Investors’ original notes were converted to stock and the Investors purchased additional stock as follows:

Radley: $2 million previous investment plus interest converted to stock; $500,000 in new shares purchased;
Moriarty: $250,000 in new shares purchased;
Connolly: $875,000 previous investment plus interest converted to stock; $500,000 in new shares purchased;
Zimmel: $500,000 previous investment converted to stock; $500,000 in new shares purchased.

See April 2003 Transaction Closing Documents, Pl.’s Ex. 110.

As a result of the conversion of much of the Investors’ debt to equity and their purchase of additional Access stock, Fincke ceded his majority ownership of Access to the Investors. Coincident with the April 2003 Transaction, a formal Board of Directors (the “Board”) was established, comprised of Radley, Moriarty, Zimmel, and Fincke. Following the establishment of the Board, the Investors began to suspect Fincke of various misrepresentations and mismanagement of Access. And in November 2003, the Board voted to relieve Fincke of his executive and managerial positions. 10

Some months later, on July 6, 2004, the Investors and Access (together, the “Plaintiffs”) filed suit against Fincke in the Massachusetts Superior Court in response to Fincke’s assertion that he owned the intellectual property related to the Access *72 AED (the “Intellectual Property”). With regard to the Intellectual Property, the Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that Access, and not Fincke, owned the Intellectual Property underlying the Access AED. They also asserted several claims against Fincke for alleged breaches of fiduciary duty, fraud, negligent misrepresentations, and securities fraud. Fincke counterclaimed, seeking declaratory determinations that he owned the Intellectual Property and that the purported repurchase of his Access stock was invalid. Fincke also sought damages on various breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and wrongful discharge theories.

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460 B.R. 67, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3986, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 158, 2011 WL 4900041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/access-cardiosystems-inc-v-fincke-in-re-access-cardiosystems-inc-mab-2011.