Heng Ren Investments LP v. Sinovac Biotech Ltd.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 3, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-11612
StatusUnknown

This text of Heng Ren Investments LP v. Sinovac Biotech Ltd. (Heng Ren Investments LP v. Sinovac Biotech Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heng Ren Investments LP v. Sinovac Biotech Ltd., (D. Mass. 2021).

Opinion

United States District Court District of Massachusetts

) Heng Ren Investments LP, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) Civil Action No. Sinovac Biotech Ltd., et al., ) 19-11612-NMG ) Defendants. ) ) )

MEMORANDUM & ORDER GORTON, J. This action arises out of a public investment in private equity transaction (“the PIPE transaction”) in which nearly 12 million new shares of Sinovac Biotech Ltd. (“Sinovac” or “defendant”) stock allegedly were issued and sold to two private investors affiliated with Sinovac’s founder and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), Weidong Yin (“Yin”), at below-market price. Sinovac contends that proper service has not been made with respect to Yin and that counsel for the company does not currently appear on his behalf. Plaintiff Heng Ren Investments LP (“Heng Ren” or “plaintiff”) submits that the PIPE transaction was intended to dilute the shares of minority shareholders and divest them of - 1 - their rights. Accordingly, in May, 2019, it filed this action in Massachusetts Superior Court for breach of fiduciary duty and wrongful equity dilution.

In July, 2019, defendant Sinovac removed the action to this Court based on diversity jurisdiction and designated it as related to another lawsuit that it had initiated in this Court: Sinovac Biotech Ltd. v. 1Globe Capital LLC et al. (“1Globe”), No. 18-cv-10421-NMG (D. Mass., filed Mar. 5, 2018). Pending before the Court is Sinovac’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, failure to state a claim and forum non conveniens. For the reasons that follow, that motion will be denied. I. Background A. The Parties Heng Ren is a Boston-based Massachusetts limited

partnership and a minority shareholder of Sinovac. Sinovac is a NASDAQ-listed, publicly-traded biopharmaceutical company that is incorporated in Antigua, West Indies and has its principal place of business in Beijing, China.1 The company researches, develops, manufactures and commercializes vaccines for a variety

1 Due to other litigation challenging the legality of the PIPE transaction in 2019, NASDAQ has halted all trading in Sinovac stock for more than two years. - 2 - of diseases, including polio, mumps and COVID-19. It was allegedly founded by Yin, who currently serves as Sinovac’s Chairman, President and CEO.

B. The Facts Plaintiff contends that, since at least 2016, Yin and a group of allied investors (“the Yin Group”) have “colluded” to “take complete control of Sinovac on the cheap”. Heng Ren asserts that, in January, 2016, the Yin Group submitted to the board of directors a bid to acquire all of Sinovac’s shares at below market value in a “going private” transaction. That bid was later rescinded, however, because other Sinovac investors, together with Sinobioway Group Co. Ltd. (“Sinobioway”), a large, publicly-traded Chinese company, had engineered a counter-offer at a higher price per share. In March, 2017, Yin purportedly caused Sinovac’s board of

directors to adopt a “Rights Agreement” which Heng Ren maintains was designed to ensure Yin’s control over the company. Specifically, Heng Ren claims that the Agreement included a “poison pill” provision whereby, if any group of stockholders holding 15% or more of Sinovac’s stock entered into an agreement to vote their shares in unison, the board would “massively dilute all such stockholders”. Plaintiff asserts that the provision was used as a shield to prevent other investors from - 3 - effectively mounting another competing bid against the Yin Group. In June, 2017, Sinovac announced that it had entered into a

definitive agreement with the Yin Group whereby the latter would acquire the company by purchasing all of Sinovac’s shares (purportedly at below market value). Two days later, Sinobioway submitted a revised counter-proposal to acquire all of the shares of Sinovac at a 14.9% premium over the purchase price offered by the Yin Group. In response, Sinovac once again retracted the agreement and apparently Yin rejected Sinobioway’s counter-offer. Heng Ren further alleges that, in or about April, 2018, Yin and Sinovac received positive clinical trial results with respect to a new polio vaccine which they concealed from the public in order to deflate the company’s stock price. At the

same time, the company had apprised two private investors, Vivo Capital, LLC (“Vivo”) and Advantech Capital Partners, Ltd. (“Advantech”), of the vaccine’s success. In July, 2018, Sinovac announced that it had issued nearly 12 million shares of its stock in a PIPE transaction with Vivo and Advantech. Heng Ren contends that the investors were members of the Yin Group who purchased the shares at a discounted price in a further attempt by Yin to gain control of the corporate defendant at below - 4 - market value and to dilute the voting interest of minority shareholders. Plaintiff avers that, since then: 1) a multitude of

domestic and international litigation has caused NASDAQ to halt the trading of Sinovac’s shares, 2) as a consequence, there is a “staggering amount of value locked up in Sinovac’s illiquid shares” and 3) Heng Ren has been unable to access its investment in the company, thereby causing the partnership to sustain losses and suffer direct damages. C. The “Related” Action In March, 2018, Sinovac filed in this Court a complaint against the Chiang Li family and 1Globe Capital LLC (“1Globe”), a company controlled by that family and one of Sinovac’s largest shareholders. Sinovac seeks to enjoin 1Globe from electing a new board of directors, acquiring additional Sinovac shares and

voting its existing Sinovac shares. In response, 1Globe filed counter-claims for securities fraud and abuse of process in May, 2018. It alleges, just as does Heng Ren, that, beginning in 2016, Yin and other members of the then-board of directors (“the Old Board”) have caused Sinovac to undertake a series of acts to maintain its control over the company. In addition to the failed attempts by Yin to acquire all of Sinovac’s shares at below market value, 1Globe - 5 - asserts that the Old Board refused to relinquish management and control of the corporation, although it had been voted out of office by a majority of the shareholders (including 1Globe) at

an annual meeting held in February, 2018 (“the February election”). Moreover, 1Globe maintains that Sinovac brought the underlying complaint for the ulterior purpose of entrenching the Old Board and furthering Yin’s illicit attempt to acquire control of the company. In August, 2018, one month after the PIPE transaction, 1Globe amended its counter-claims and also moved for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the Old Board from “illegally” issuing the stock it intended to issue to the private investors pursuant to the PIPE transaction. In support of that motion, 1Globe argues that the transaction violates federal securities law because it was done without the authorization of the

legitimate board of directors (i.e., the new board that was elected in February, 2018) and was part of a fraudulent scheme to “prop up” the Old Board. In October, 2018, this Court denied 1Globe’s motion for a preliminary injunction for lack of standing and failure to demonstrate irreparable harm. That case is currently stayed due to the interminably unresolved appeal of yet another related case in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court in the High Court of - 6 - Justice, Antigua and Barbuda (“the Antiguan Court”), 1Globe Capital, LLC, and Sinovac Biotech Ltd. (Claim No. ANUHCV 2018/0120).

II. Motion to Dismiss A. Lack of Personal Jurisdiction Defendant Sinovac asserts that it is not subject to personal jurisdiction in Massachusetts because it has no meaningful contacts with the Commonwealth and none of its business is conducted there.

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