Johnston v. Pedersen

28 A.3d 1079, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 135, 2011 WL 4435806
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 23, 2011
DocketC.A. 6567-VCL
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 A.3d 1079 (Johnston v. Pedersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Pedersen, 28 A.3d 1079, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 135, 2011 WL 4435806 (Del. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

LASTER, Vice Chancellor.

In this action brought pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 225, the plaintiffs seek a determination that certain written consents validly removed the defendant directors and replaced them with a new slate. The defendant directors contend that they could not be removed or a new slate elected without the consent of a majority of the Series B Preferred Stock. Applying enhanced scrutiny, I hold that the defendant directors breached their fiduciary duties when issuing the Series B Preferred Stock. Although they honestly believed they were acting in the best interests of the company, they breached their duty of loyalty by structuring the stock issuance to prevent an insurgent group from waging a successful proxy contest. The class vote provision therefore cannot be given effect, and the written consents validly elected a new board.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

These are the facts as found after a two-day trial.

A. Xurex

Xurex is an early-stage company engaged in the development and sale of protective coatings derived from nano-technol-ogy invented by Bo Gimvang. Since its founding in March 2005, Xurex has struggled to commercialize Gimvang’s technology. Xurex’s coatings historically perform well in laboratory tests, but vaporize when exposed to hostile real-world environmental factors like sunlight and air. As Xurex reported in a 2011 letter to stockholders, “[ajctual field test[s] of [Xurex] products were pretty much all failures.” JX 159 at 3.

Only one company has been able to develop a functional product from Xurex’s technology: DuraSeal Pipe Coatings Company (“DuraSeal”), headed by plaintiff Joe Johnston. After Johnston’s investor group lost approximately $500,000 in a disastrous attempt to sell Xurex coatings intended for residential use, Johnston set out to identify airless and sunlight-free environments where Xurex’s volatile technology might succeed. It took approximately $600,000 and countless hours of research and testing, but Johnston and his team eventually discovered a unique method of using Xurex coatings to prevent corrosion, reduce abrasion, and extend the life of down-hole pumps and pipes in the oil and gas industry. Johnston formed DuraSeal to pursue this business. In October 2008, DuraSeal and Xurex entered into a letter agreement authorizing DuraSeal to distribute Xurex’s HabraCoat-SA and Pene-trAct-SA products.

In the ensuing three years, DuraSeal has grown its business steadily, and Dura-Seal now potentially sits on the cusp of a major expansion. Unfortunately for Xurex, DuraSeal’s success has been unique. Xurex has never developed a commercial product of its own, and no other distributor has been able to pene *1082 trate a commercial market. Today, Dura-Seal remains Xurex’s only customer and is responsible for 99% of Xurex’s sales. The company’s only non-DuraSeal revenue recently came from one drum of product sold for $20,000 to a distributor who wanted to research potential applications in the concrete industry.

B. A Winter Of Investor Discontent

After founding Xurex, Gimvang and an early CEO named Bob Bishop raised $10 million dollars from outside investors based on private placement memoranda that made expansive claims about Xurex’s technology and prospects. As a result of these private placements, prior to the issuance of the Series B Preferred challenged in this action, Xurex had outstanding 32,-046,313 shares of common stock and 15,-069,850 shares of Series A Preferred Stock. The Series A Preferred carried one vote per share and voted with the common stock on an as-converted basis. Gimvang and Bishop together controlled a majority of the company’s outstanding voting power.

Many of the investors who purchased the common stock and Series A Preferred were sophisticated backers of early-stage companies who expected “much better than average returns.” JX 12 at 1. Instead, they watched Bishop and Gimvang burn through their capital by spending $1.7 million on manufacturing equipment that Xurex has never used, entering into a long-term lease for an industrial facility outside of Albuquerque that Xurex only partially occupies as its headquarters, and approving large salaries and expense reimbursements for themselves and other members of management.

In 2009, Bishop and Gimvang faced a rising tide of stockholder discontent. They hired Rex Powers, an executive recruiter, who identified Bill Loven as a candidate for CEO. Bishop stepped down in favor of Loven. Soon after taking office, Loven began to investigate allegations that Gimvang and Bishop defrauded investors and misused company funds. After finding evidence to support the allegations, Loven pursued them vigorously.

Thus began a tumultuous season that witnessed three successive control contests. Gimvang and Bishop promptly reminded Loven that they controlled a majority of Xurex’s outstanding voting power. They gave proxies for their shares to Powers, who used the proxies to remove Loven and the rest of the Xurex board. In their place, Powers elected himself and defendant Robert Clifford. In October 2009, Powers added defendant Ken Pedersen as an additional director.

At the time, Xurex faced a financial crisis. It had perhaps $9,000 in the bank and was burdened by the long-term lease on its largely unused Albuquerque facility. To stabilize the company, Powers, Peder-sen, and Clifford offered DuraSeal a new licensing deal. In an agreement ultimately executed on January 13, 2010, DuraSeal received exclusive rights to market and sell all Xurex products (past, present, and future) to the North American oil and gas industry until October 1, 2018. In return, DuraSeal paid an up-front license fee of $200,000, made initial purchases of Xurex product totaling $100,000, and agreed to pay a monthly royalty calculated as a percentage of its revenues from Xurex products. DuraSeal also committed to minimum purchase requirements.

In December 2009, however, the licensing agreement was still in the works. At a meeting of stockholders held that month, Powers, Pedersen, and Clifford could do little more than present plans for addressing Xurex’s problems. Approximately 50-60 stockholders attended and vented their frustrations with the company. During *1083 the meeting, the board creatively offered to hold an election of directors by written ballot. Any stockholder would be permitted to nominate candidates, the company would prepare and distribute mail-in ballots, and the deadline for submitting votes would be February 5, 2010.

On January 11, 2010, the board distributed to stockholders the procedures for the mail-in election. ' On January 12, an investor named Richard Fox arrived at Xurex’s headquarters with proxies purportedly representing a majority of Xurex’s outstanding voting power. The critical proxy came from Gimvang, who alone controlled 43.5% of the company’s voting power through his ownership of common stock. Gimvang had revoked the proxy he previously granted to Powers, and the defendants suspect that Bishop orchestrated the insurgency after the Xurex board determined that he misused company funds. Clifford reviewed the proxies, concluded that they represented at most 49% of the company’s voting power, and accepted only 48% as valid.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A.3d 1079, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 135, 2011 WL 4435806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-pedersen-delch-2011.