Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 29, 2017
DocketCA 2017-0087-JRS
StatusPublished

This text of Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation (Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation) 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
Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

417 S. State Street JOSEPH R. SLIGHTS III Dover, Delaware 19901 VICE CHANCELLOR Telephone: (302) 739-4397 Facsimile: (302) 739-6179

Date Submitted: August 2, 2017 Date Decided: September 29, 2017

Sidney S. Liebesman, Esquire Gerald J. Hager, Esquire Montgomery McCracken Margolis Edelstein Walker & Rhoads, LLP 300 Delaware Avenue, Suite 800 1105 North Market Street, Suite 1500 Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801

Re: Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS

Dear Counsel:

To follow is the Court’s post-trial decision in this matter. As you know, the

Plaintiff, Vikram Mehta, seeks to inspect certain books and records of Defendant,

Kaazing Corporation. For the reasons that follow, I have determined that Mehta is

entitled to inspect some, but not all, of the books and records he seeks.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

The following facts reflect my factual findings based on a preponderance of

the evidence as presented in the parties’ pre-trial stipulation and order, the thirty- Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS September 29, 2017 Page 2

four (34) joint documentary exhibits introduced at trial on August 2, 2017, and the

parties’ pre-trial briefing and post-trial status update.1

Kaazing Corporation (“Kaazing” or the “Company”) is a Delaware

corporation with its principal place of business in San Jose, California.2 It “offers

products that enable mobile users, applications, marketplaces and machines to

connect and communicate in real-time.”3

Mehta is a stockholder of Kaazing. He was Kaazing’s Chief Executive

Officer (“CEO”) from October 2013 to April 2015, when he was terminated from

that position by the Kaazing Board of Directors (the “Board”).4

In early 2013, prior to Mehta’s employment with the Company, the

Company raised $15 million in a Series B financing round led by Columbus Nova

Technology Partners (“CNTP”) and New Enterprises Associates (“NEA”).

Following their investments, both NEA and CNTP were represented on the

1 Citations to joint exhibits are to “JX #”; to the Joint Pretrial Stipulation are to “PSO ¶”; and to the trial transcript are to “Tr. #.” 2 PSO ¶ 2. 3 Def.’s Trial Br. 3. 4 PSO ¶¶ 1, 9. Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS September 29, 2017 Page 3

Company’s Board. 5 Soon after the Series B financing closed, Mehta led an

additional capital raise of $6.9 million through a Series C financing round, and then

arranged for a $3 million working capital line of credit with Comerica Bank.6

At the time of Mehta’s termination, a term sheet for a $1.5 million extension

to the Comerica Bank line of credit had been executed and Mehta was finalizing

discussions with Intel Capital as well as a syndicate of individual investors to invest

in the Series C financing round.7 These investments were calculated to provide an

additional $7 million investment into the Series C financing round.8 On April 17,

2015, when Mehta was informed of his termination, he was under the impression

that the Comerica Bank line of credit extension had been secured, that the

documents necessary to finalize the Intel Capital investment were being prepared

5 PSO ¶¶ 3–4. CNTP now has two representatives on the Board pursuant to the terms of the operative documents relating to the 2016 Series 1 Financing round. PSO ¶ 25. 6 Compl. ¶ 9; JX 6 at 32, 35–36; JX 7 at 74–75; JX 20. 7 JX 6 at 18, 29. The Intel Capital investment was conditioned on NEA’s and CNTP’s pro-rata participation in the Series C financing round to ensure that two years’ worth of operating capital would be available to the Company at the time of the closing. Id. at 18, 20. 8 Id. at 35–36. The syndicate of investors was contributing $1.5 million, Intel $4 million and the Comerica Bank line was to be extended by $1.5 million. Id. Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS September 29, 2017 Page 4

by attorneys and that around $1.25 million of the syndicate investor commitment

had already been wired to a Company escrow account.9 Despite Mehta’s efforts,

the Company ultimately failed to close on Intel Capital’s $4 million Series C

financing and did not receive the extension on the Comerica Bank line of credit.10

After Plaintiff’s termination, Mohsen Moazami, CNTP’s Managing

Director, became Executive Chairman of the Board. At that time, Kaazing also

named Robert Miller (“Miller”) as interim CEO and, in September 2015, appointed

Miller as permanent CEO.11 Miller, in turn, hired Michael Floyd (“Floyd”), whom

he knew from a prior business association, as Kaazing’s Chief Operating Officer

9 Id. at 35–36 (“So from where I was sitting, the company was—had six and a half million dollars in the bank, $1.25 million of a $1.5 million commitment sitting in an escrow, $4 million committed from Intel, which would have doubled, you know, another $1.5 million expansion to the working capital line.”). Mehta asserts that NEA’s and CNTP’s commitments, required by Intel Capital’s conditions on investing, were “just a case of kicking the ball through the goalposts,” and that while the documents had not been signed at the time, correspondence indicated that the commitments were certain. Id. at 37, 39–40. The Company asserts that the commitments were not certain and that the Company, under Mehta, was in fact short of the amount necessary for Intel Capital to commit its investment. The Company also maintains that Comerica Bank had expressed concern as to the financial standing of the Company in connection with its decision not to extend the line of credit. JX 7 at 77–78. 10 JX 6 at 35–36. 11 PSO ¶¶ 19–11. Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS September 29, 2017 Page 5

in August 2015.12 According to Mehta, both Miller and Floyd were able to obtain

unusually generous compensation packages, further harming the already

financially strained Company.13

Mehta also asserts that, in the summer of 2015, the Company inexplicably

terminated the employment of a number of Kaazing engineers who had been tasked

during Mehta’s time as CEO with developing an end-to-end messaging system that

would have greatly advanced the Company’s offerings.14 These employees were

subsequently hired by TIBCO to the further detriment of the Company. 15

12 PSO ¶ 13, JX 7 at 23, 25. Miller is the Founder and Chairman of Cloak Labs, a file transfer company, and Floyd is Cloak Labs’ CEO. PSO ¶¶ 12, 14. According to the parties’ stipulations, both still hold their respective positions at Cloak Labs. Id. 13 JX 6 at 80. Mehta further asserts that the Company as a whole, with only 40–45 employees “maintained a bloated and expensive management and governance structure” with six executive officers as well as seven voting Board members and two non-voting observers. Id. at 83. 14 App. to Def.’s Trial Br. Ex. A, at MEHTA_00668; JX 6 at 60, 62. The engineers were hired at Mehta’s direction to develop a product that would allow Kaazing to reduce its customer concentration and reliance on TIBCO, a company licensing Kaazing’s product. JX 6 at 43–45. Mehta asserts that TIBCO was positioning itself to compete with the Company and that, as Kaazing’s CEO, he engaged a team of engineers in Chicago to develop processes that would allow Kaazing to offer a “more holistic” product. Id. at 46. 15 Id. at 60, 62. Mehta v. Kaazing Corporation C.A. No. 2017-0087-JRS September 29, 2017 Page 6

Despite the failure to close on the investments Mehta had, in his eyes,

secured prior to his termination, Miller contacted shareholders on February 28,

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