FS Photo, Inc. v. PictureVision, Inc.

61 F. Supp. 2d 473, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14743, 1999 WL 759969
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 24, 1999
DocketCIV. A. 99-592-A
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 61 F. Supp. 2d 473 (FS Photo, Inc. v. PictureVision, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FS Photo, Inc. v. PictureVision, Inc., 61 F. Supp. 2d 473, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14743, 1999 WL 759969 (E.D. Va. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

In this federal and state securities fraud case, plaintiffs claim that defendants’ fraudulent acts caused plaintiffs to exchange certain shares of Preferred Stock for shares of Common Stock at an artificially low ratio. The matter is now before the Court on defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R.CivJP.

I. 1

Plaintiff FS Photo, Inc. is a Delaware corporation in dissolution. Plaintiff Larry *476 G. Settle is the Chairman, Vice President and Secretary of FS Photo.' Plaintiff David G. Settle is the President and Treasurer of FS Photo. Both men are also directors of the corporation. Defendant PictureVision, Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Herndon, Va. PictureVision’s business is the design, development and sale of software that enables consumers to store and share photographs through the use of digital technology. At all relevant times, defendants Garfinkle, Ben-Yaacov, Glass-meyer and Kagle were directors of Pictu-reVision; Garfinkle and Ben-Yaacov were also officers of the corporation.

Under an Asset Purchase Agreement and other related agreements dated October 22, 1996, plaintiffs were issued a total of 13,125 shares of PictureVision Series B Preferred Stock in exchange for the rights to digital film imaging software and other assets developed by FS Photo. These shares were placed in escrow pending the transfer of FS Photo’s assets to PictureVision. Certain creditors and investors of FS Photo were also issued Series B Preferred Stock, bringing the total stock issued for the assets to 28,500 shares. 2

Because PictureVision was a young company, and the value of its Common Stock not readily ascertainable, the Series B Preferred Stock carried a liquidation preference of $100 per share plus 6% interest, which holders were entitled to receive upon redemption, and which, in effect, set a floor for the security’s value. Holders of these securities had the option to convert their shares of Series B Preferred stock into Common Stock at any time according to a conversion formula specified in Article 4(b)(5)(a) of the Restated Second Certificate of Incorporation (“Second Certificate”). The conversion ratio in the Second Certificate was initially set at 1.00153 shares of Common Stock per 1 share of Series B Preferred Stock, but was subject to adjustment based on the net proceeds PictureVision might receive in subsequent equity financing. Significantly, the ratio would be frozen at 1,00153 to 1 in the event PictureVision were to consummate a Common Stock offering to a bona fide third party not affiliated with PictureVision in which the aggregate net proceeds exceeded $2,850,000, and the net proceeds per common share exceeded the initial conversion price of $84.96.

On November 7, 1996, two weeks after the execution of the Asset Purchase Agreement, PictureVision entered into a joint venture with Plaza Create, a Japanese photo finisher. Thereafter, Picture-Vision issued Common Stock to Plaza Create in a transaction deceptively structured to appear to satisfy the requirements for the freezing of the conversion ratio for Series B Preferred Stock to Common Stock when, in fact, it did not. First, Plaza Create was not a bona fide third party, but was instead a related party. Second, the transaction did not generate proceeds greater than the conversion price because the number of shares issued to Plaza Create was not fixed, but instead was subject to adjustment based on the value placed on the Common Stock in a subsequent equity financing.

Less than two months after the execution of the Asset Purchase Agreement, plaintiffs and defendants became embroiled in a lawsuit with Commix SP, Inc., a creditor of FS Photo, which challenged as fraudulent the transfer of FS Photo’s assets to PictureVision. As a result of the Commix lawsuit, plaintiffs’ shares of Series B Preferred Stock remained in escrow. The Asset Purchase Agreement required the unencumbered transfer of assets and *477 the lawsuit constituted an encumbrance that precluded the release of the shares from escrow.

In January and early February 1998, David Settle (for FS Photo) and Garfinkle (for PictureVision) negotiated a settlement of the disputes between plaintiffs and defendants relating to FS Photo’s inability to transfer its unencumbered assets to PictureVision as required by the Asset Purchase Agreement. In the course of negotiating the settlement agreement, Garfinkle asked plaintiffs to convert their Series B Preferred Stock into Common Stock at the 1 to 1.00153 ratio he claimed had become frozen as a result of the Plaza Create Transaction. On February 6, 1999, plaintiffs’ counsel requested an opportunity to conduct due diligence to determine the value of the Common Stock and to assess whether the conversion of the Preferred Stock into Common Stock at the allegedly frozen ratio made economic sense. Garfinkle refused the request. Over the weekend of February 7-8, 1998, Garfinkle represented to plaintiffs (i) that if PictureVision were to obtain venture capital, it could do so based on a valuation of the company at $60-70 million, (ii) that in the event of a strategic financing, Pietu-reVision’s valuation would be closer to $100 million, but (in) that no such transactions were about to take place. Indeed, Garfinkle told plaintiffs that “nothing was going on” at PictureVision, that the company was “clean as a whistle,” and that a financing might be undertaken “down the road.” Relying on these representations, plaintiffs, on February 9, 1998, entered into a Settlement Agreement with the defendants under which (i) defendants agreed not to sue plaintiffs for their failure to comply with the terms of the Asset Purchase Agreement, and (ii) plaintiffs agreed to convert all of their shares of Series B Preferred Stock into Common Stock at the ratio of 1.00153 shares of Common Stock for 1 share of Preferred Stock.

In the Settlement Agreement, plaintiffs also agreed to release defendants “from any and all claims ... including but not limited to any Claims relating to or arising out of the Asset Purchase Agreement ... and the Escrow Agreements,” except for an express “carve out” provision, which stated that the release was not intended to limit the rights of plaintiffs with respect to any of their Preferred Stock and/or Common Stock, nor was it to limit any of defendants’ duties relating to plaintiffs’ Preferred Stock and/or Common Stock. 3 The Agreement also contained a merger clause stating that the Settlement Agreement “contains the entire understanding between the parties .... Except as otherwise provided herein, this Settlement Agreement supersedes any and all prior or contemporaneous agreements, representations and understandings ....” 4

Unbeknownst to plaintiffs, on the same day the Settlement Agreement was signed, February 9, 1998, PictureVision entered into the “Kodak Strategic Alliance,” a $50 million transaction with Eastman Kodak Company in which Kodak agreed to purchase 51% of PietureVision’s equity and conduct the business of a consumer imaging network exclusively through PictureVision for a minimum of four years.

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Bluebook (online)
61 F. Supp. 2d 473, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14743, 1999 WL 759969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fs-photo-inc-v-picturevision-inc-vaed-1999.