LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC v. Marschall

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedMay 7, 2024
Docket3:22-cv-01917
StatusUnknown

This text of LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC v. Marschall (LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC v. Marschall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC v. Marschall, (S.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 LIFEVOXEL VIRGINIA SPV, LLC; Case No.: 22-CV-01917-GPC-MMP SCOTT MARSCHALL; DEBBIE 12 GALLO; KEVIN SINAGRA; SCOTT ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ 13 POOLE; and PETER BERSHATSKY, MOTION TO DISMISS WITH LEAVE TO AMEND 14 Plaintiffs,

15 v. [ECF No. 73] 16 LIFEVOXEL.AI, INC., a Delaware Corporation; KOVEY KOVALAN, an 17 individual; and LINH LE, an individual, 18 Defendants. 19

20 INTRODUCTION 21 Before the Court is Defendant LifeVoxel.AI, Inc.; Kovey Kovalan; and Linh Le’s 22 (collectively “Defendants”) Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC 23 (“LifeVoxel Virginia”); Scott Marschall; Debbie Gallo; Kevin Sinagra; Scott Poole; and 24 Peter Bershatsky’s (collectively “Plaintiffs”) Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”). ECF 25 No. 73. For the reasons below, the motion to dismiss is GRANTED with leave to amend. 26 / / / 27 1 BACKGROUND 2 Defendants Kovey Kovalan (“Kovalan”) and Linh Le (“Le”) are spouses and 3 owners and officers of Defendant LifeVoxel.AI, Inc. (“LifeVoxel”). ECF No. 65 4 (“SAC”) ¶ 2. Plaintiffs allege that Kovalan and Le fraudulently induced them to invest 5 $3.5 million in LifeVoxel through Simple Agreements for Future Equity (“SAFE 6 Notes”). SAC ¶ 3. “SAFE Notes are a type of security which allow investors to 7 contribute capital to a business entity in exchange for the ability to purchase shares of the 8 company at a discounted rate upon a liquidity event.” SAC ¶ 3. They are not a stock or a 9 debt with a maturity date. SAC ¶ 80. SAFE Notes are classified as securities by the 10 United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“the SEC”). SAC ¶ 79. 11 I. Development of LifeVoxel 12 Kovalan has developed multiple patents relating to medical records and imaging 13 technology (the “Kovalan Patents”), and according to the SAC, he and his wife 14 Defendant Le have “formed multitudes of businesses, changed business names, changed 15 ownerships, operated under assumed business names, and facilitated transactions among 16 the business entities and themselves that did not maintain arms-length” in attempt to 17 monetize those patents. SAC ¶ 58-59. In 2007, Kovalan and Le organized “Voxcell 18 Cloud.” SAC ¶ 61. In 2016, Kovalan incorporated “AI Visualize” and assigned several 19 of the Kovalan Patents to it. SAC ¶¶ 62-63. At some point, Voxcell Cloud became a 20 wholly owned subsidiary of AI Visualize, and AI Visualize licensed the Kovalan Patents 21 to Voxcell Cloud, which contracted with third parties for services covered by the Kovalan 22 Patents. SAC ¶¶ 66, 69. Voxcell Cloud achieved “moderate success” and Plaintiffs 23 allege that Kovalan and Le “frequently paid for their personal expenses . . . with funds 24 from Voxcell Cloud but deliberately misclassified such payments as business expenses.” 25 26 27 1 SAC ¶ 70. In November 2019, Defendant LifeVoxel was incorporated in Delaware “as a 2 wholly owned subsidiary of AI Visualize.”1 SAC ¶ 71. 3 Kovalan met Sekhar Puli, “an experienced entrepreneur and investor,” in July 2021 4 and eventually hired Puli to be Co-Founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer 5 (“CEO”) of AI Visualize and CEO and President of LifeVoxel to “raise capital and grow 6 the business.” SAC ¶¶ 84, 88, 92. Puli and other advisors recommended an “Action 7 Plan” “to result in profitability and achievement of an eventual liquidity event” for 8 investors. SAC ¶¶ 93-94. The Action Plan included (1) assigning contracts and assets 9 from Voxcell Cloud to LifeVoxel; (2) licensing the Kovalan Patents to LifeVoxel; (3) 10 arranging a share buyback of minority shareholders of AI Visualize; (4) using the equity 11 freed up from the buyback “to raise capital or provide sweat equity to key stakeholders 12 like Puli and then spin off LifeVoxel so that it is a separate entity”; (5) winding up 13 operation of Voxcell Cloud; and (6) raising capital for LifeVoxel. SAC ¶ 94. The SAC 14 alleges that Kovalan and Le agreed to implement the Action Plan. See SAC ¶¶ 95, 98. 15 They signed a special resolution agreeing to spin LifeVoxel off as a separate entity and 16 license the Kovalan Patents to it, SAC at 48-49 (Exhibit B), and also told Puli that 17 Voxcell Cloud would transfer its business to LifeVoxel and cease operations, SAC ¶ 96. 18 II. Plaintiffs Invest in LifeVoxel SAFE Notes 19 Soon after starting as CEO and President of both LifeVoxel and AI Visualize in 20 September 2021, Puli began to solicit investment. SAC ¶¶ 100-01. As part of this effort, 21 Kovalan, “or someone at his direction,” created a series of very similar presentation 22 decks with marketing information about LifeVoxel. SAC ¶¶ 103, 109-10. Plaintiffs 23

24 11 Just a few months earlier, Voxcell Cloud filed an application to operate under the 25 assumed business name of “LifeVoxel.AI,” SAC ¶ 68, but it is a distinct entity from 26 Defendant LifeVoxel.AI, Inc., which the Court refers to throughout this order as “LifeVoxel.” 27 1 allege that the presentations included multiple misrepresentations. First, the presentations 2 listed financial information for LifeVoxel for the years 2018, 2019, and 2020 which was 3 actually the financial information of Voxcell Cloud. SAC ¶¶ 105, 109-10. Second, the 4 presentations stated that investment funds would be used: 60% to enrich intellectual 5 property through research and development, 20% on market outreach, and 20% on 6 “growth development,” i.e. business development and sales and marketing.2 SAC ¶¶ 7 106, 109-10. Third and finally, the presentations represented that “previous capital 8 contributed to LifeVoxel was non-dilutive.” SAC ¶¶ 108-10. 9 In September 2021, Puli conveyed this information to some of the Plaintiffs either 10 by emailing them the presentations or in oral conversations. See SAC ¶¶ 112-13 11 (Plaintiff Peter Bershatsky); ¶ 118 (Plaintiff Scott Poole); ¶ 119 (Plaintiffs Debbie Gallo 12 and Scott Marschall), ¶¶ 124, 119 (Plaintiff Kevin Sinagra). Puli also arranged for 13 Kovalan to meet with his network of friends and family, the shareholders of Plaintiff 14 LifeVoxel Virginia, at his home in Virginia on September 10, 2021. SAC ¶ 114. During 15 the meeting Kovalan showed a presentation including the alleged misrepresentations and 16 conveyed some of them orally as well. SAC ¶¶ 116-17. Defendants and Puli provided 17 each Plaintiff with a SAFE Note agreement and a capitalization table (“cap 18 table”)⸺which breaks down who or what owns a company’s equity and in what 19 form⸺showing that AI Visualize owned 100% of LifeVoxel’s equity. SAC ¶ 8. 20 Together the Plaintiffs purchased $3.5 million in LifeVoxel SAFE Notes. SAC ¶¶ 21 126, 3, 174. The agreement for these SAFE Notes proscribes that the conversion events 22 triggering the option to purchase equity are a private buyout, an initial public offering, or 23 24 25 2 The SAC indicates that one of the presentations did not include this slide, but it is not 26 clear to Court which of the presentations this was. SAC ¶ 110; ECF No. 67 at 18 (sealed); ECF No. 67-1 at 11 (sealed). 27 1 a direct listing under the Securities Act. SAC ¶¶ 22-23. In total, LifeVoxel received over 2 $5 million in SAFE Notes, including investment from individuals or entities who are not 3 part of this suit. SAC ¶ 3. 4 III. Alleged Fraud 5 Not long after, in October 2021, after an outside accounting firm notified Puli that 6 Voxcell Cloud was still invoicing customers for contracts, Puli spoke with Le who 7 eventually told him that “she and [Kovalan] were running their personal expenses 8 through Voxcell Cloud and would continue to do so using proceeds from the non- 9 transferred contracts.” SAC ¶ 143. The SAC alleges that LifeVoxel was therefore 10 “collecting only 80% of the revenue due to it.” SAC ¶ 150. 11 In November 2021, Defendants and Puli used about $500,000 of the SAFE Notes 12 invested in LifeVoxel to buy out minority shareholders in AI Visualize.

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LifeVoxel Virginia SPV, LLC v. Marschall, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lifevoxel-virginia-spv-llc-v-marschall-casd-2024.