Portnoy v. Cryo-Cell International, Inc.

940 A.2d 43, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 15, 2008
DocketC.A. 3142-VCS
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 940 A.2d 43 (Portnoy v. Cryo-Cell International, Inc.) 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
Portnoy v. Cryo-Cell International, Inc., 940 A.2d 43, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6 (Del. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

This case involves a challenge to the results of a contested corporate election. *46 Cryo-Cell International, Inc. (“Cryo-Cell” or the “Company”) is a small public company that has struggled to succeed. By early 2007, several of its large stockholders were considering mounting a proxy contest to replace the board.

One of those stockholders, Andrew Fili-powski, used management’s fear of replacement to strike a deal for himself to be included in the management slate for the 2007 annual meeting. Another stockholder, plaintiff David Portnoy, filed a dissident slate (the “Portnoy Slate”).

Going into the week of the annual meeting, Cryo-Cell’s chief executive officer, defendant Mercedes Walton, was desperate because, in her words, “the current board and management [were] losing by huge margins.” 1 Aside from actually asking the FBI to intervene in the proxy contest on the side of management, Walton ginned up a plan with Filipowski to win the proxy contest. That plan involved Walton acting as a “matchmaker” by finding stockholders willing to sell their shares to Filipowski. In exchange for this alliance, Walton promised Filipowski that if their “Management Slate” prevailed, Cryo-Cell’s board would, using their power as corporate directors, expand the board to add another seat that Filipowski’s designee would fill. That designee was a subordinate who had within the recent past resolved an SEC insider trading investigation by agreeing to disgorge trading profits and to be jointly liable for trading profits made by his tippees. This plan was not disclosed to the Cryo-Cell stockholders, who did not realize that if they voted for management, they would in fact be electing a seven, not six member board, with two, not one, Fili-powski representatives.

In an effort to secure another key bloc of votes, Walton used a combination of threats (the ending of cooperation on key projects) and inducements (the long-sought but never before granted removal of a restrictive legend) to secure the vote of Saneron CCEL Therapeutics Inc. That leverage was enhanced by the fact that Cryo-Cell owned 38% of Saneron’s shares and that Saneron depended on Cryo-Cell’s laboratory space to conduct many of its own operations. Notwithstanding that, Saneron had gone into the week before the meeting undecided about how to vote. Walton “locked up” Saneron only after employing these persuasive strategies involving the threatened withholding and actual granting of concessions on the part of Cryo-Cell as a corporation. 2

Even after employing these methods, Walton and her board went into the day of the annual meeting fearing defeat. They had rented the meeting room from the 11 a.m. start time only until 1 p.m. But Walton did not want to close the polls and count the vote when the scheduled presentations at the meeting were over. So she had members of her management team make long, unscheduled presentations to give her side more time to gather votes and ensure that they had locked in two key blocs. She overruled motions to close the polls.

Even after the filibusters, Walton still harbored doubt that the Management Slate would prevail if the vote was counted and the meeting was concluded. So, at around 2 p.m., Walton declared a very late lunch break, supposedly in response to a request made much earlier.

In fact, Walton desired the break so that she would have more time to seek votes and so that she could confirm that the *47 major blockholders had switched their votes to favor the Management Slate. Only after confirming the switches did Walton resume the meeting at approximately 4:45 p.m., declare the polls closed, and have the vote counted.

The post-meeting vote count resulted in the Management Slate squeaking out a victory by an extremely small margin. Immediately after that, Walton began preparing to add Filipowski’s designee to the Cryo-Cell board. Only after this challenge was brought to the election by Port-noy did that process slow down, and only for the obvious reason that the litigation was brought.

In this opinion, I decline Portnoy’s request to declare his side the victor in the election process. But I do agree with him that the election results were tainted by inequitable behavior by Walton and her allies and must be set aside. In particular, I conclude that the Cryo-Cell stockholders cast their votes in ignorance of material facts regarding the promise made to Fili-powski regarding a second board seat and the pressure that Walton was exerting on Saneron — both of which involved the use by Walton of corporate resources and fiduciary authority motivated by the desire to protect herself from the risk of losing her corporate offices.

Rather than seating a board for the Cryo-Cell stockholders, I believe the more appropriate remedy to be a requirement that Cryo-Cell have another election at a special meeting to be held promptly. Because the stockholders should not be required to bear extra expense because of management’s misconduct, the Management Slate will be required to fund their own re-election campaign and to pay any costs incurred by the Company to hold the special meeting, including the cost of a special master to preside over the meeting.

I. Factual Background

A. Cryo-Cell’s Business

Cryo-Cell is a Delaware corporation with its primary business being the eryo-preservation of umbilical cord stem cells of its clients for possible later medical use by their family members. Cryo-Cell was founded in 1989 by Dan Richard. Richard’s resignation from his positions as CEO and Chairman of Cryo-Cell in 2002 signaled the beginning of a troublesome period for the Company. In 2003, Cryo-Cell incurred a net loss of $7.5 million on $7.5 million in revenues, the Company’s stock was delisted from NASDAQ, the Company went through three different audit firms, and the Company was the defendant in several lawsuits. 3 During that same time period, Mercedes Walton, who had served as a Cryo-Cell director since 2000, began to play a dominant role at the Company. She replaced Richard as Chairman after he left in 2002 and was later appointed as Cryo-Cell’s interim CEO in 2003 after the CEO who succeeded Richard resigned. In 2005, Walton was appointed as CEO on a non-interim basis.

Although Cryo-Cell’s current situation is not as dim as it was in 2003, it continues to struggle as a company. In 2006, Cryo-Cell incurred a net loss of $2.8 million on $17 million in revenue. It again lost money in 2007. Moreover, Cryo-Cell, which was the first company to enter the now fragmented cord blood industry, is losing market share to its competitors. According to the Company, however, its future prospects look brighter, at least in part based on the launch of a new product fine, C’elle. C’elle, which was launched on November 1, 2007, is Cryo-Cell’s proprietary *48 menstrual stem cell collection and storage service.

Before the 2007 annual meeting, Cryo-Cell’s board of directors had five directors. Those directors join Cryo-Cell as the defendants in this action.

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Bluebook (online)
940 A.2d 43, 2008 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portnoy-v-cryo-cell-international-inc-delch-2008.