Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 30, 2019
DocketC.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG
StatusPublished

This text of Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation (Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology 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
Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE PATRICIA W. GRIFFIN CHANCERY COURTHOUSE MASTER IN CHANCERY 34 The Circle GEORGETOWN, DELAWARE 19947

Final Report: July 30, 2019 Date Submitted: June 11, 2019

Daniel A. O’Brien, Esquire Jamie L. Edmonson, Esquire Venable, LLP 1201 North Market Street, Suite 1400 Wilmington, DE 19801

Kenneth J. Nachbar, Esquire Morris Nichols Arsht & Tunnell, LLP 1201 North Market Street PO Box 1347 Wilmington, DE 19899

RE: Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG

Dear Counsel:

This case involves a demand to inspect the books and records of a closely

held company that develops artificial intelligence systems for medical visual

recognition tasks, specifically diagnostic radiology tasks. The plaintiff, a major

investor in the company, seeks to inspect the company’s books and records in

order to investigate potential corporate mismanagement and wrongdoing. The

defendant alleges the plaintiff is not entitled to inspection because it has not shown Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG July 30, 2019

a credible basis to infer wrongdoing or mismanagement, is a competitor with an

ulterior motive for the inspection, and the scope of the demand is overbroad.

I conclude the plaintiff has established a credible basis from which a court

can infer that mismanagement or wrongdoing may have occurred, and the

defendant has not shown that the plaintiff has an ulterior motive negating its proper

purpose. I condition inspection on the parties entering into a confidentiality

agreement. With regard to the scope of the inspection, the parties shall confer and

submit to the Court their considerations on specific documents or categories of

books and records that are necessary, sufficient and essential for the plaintiff’s

proper purpose, prior to the Court making further determinations. This is a final

report.

I. Background

A. Factual Background1

Plaintiff Senetas Corporation Limited (“Senetas”) is a publicly listed

Australian network encryption company.2 Senetas’ non-executive chairperson is

Francis W. Galbally.3 Defendant DeepRadiology (“DR”) is a Delaware

corporation involved in developing artificial intelligence systems for medical

1 I refer to deposition transcripts as “Dep. Tr.,” the trial transcript as “Trial Tr.,” and the parties’ joint exhibits submitted at trial as “JX.” 2 Galbally Dep. Tr. 12:12-13; 13:21-24. 3 Docket Item (“D.I.”) 46, at 1. 2 Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG July 30, 2019

visual recognition tasks.4 Kim Nguyen and Robert Lufkin founded DR on July 8,

2015.5 Nguyen is DR’s President, Secretary and Treasurer.6

In May of 2017, Senetas invested approximately $1 million of seed capital in

exchange for 397,219 shares of DR’s Series Seed-1 Preferred Stock, becoming a

major investor/shareholder.7 Senetas invested in DR because DR “had a leading

medical application for artificial intelligence and machine learning, and had

assembled a team of the most expert people around the world that were assisting in

developing the application.”8 Senetas understood that, at the time it invested, the

first iteration of DR’s technology was awaiting FDA approval, and that approval

was a key factor in Senetas’ decision to invest in DR.9 Senetas also expected that

DR would pursue additional rounds of capital investment, thereby positioning DR

as an acquisition target for other companies in the industry.10

4 D.I. 9, at 2. 5 Id.; Nguyen Dep. Tr. 7:12-14. 6 Nguyen Dep. Tr. 7:18-23. 7 D.I. 46, at 4-5. 8 Galbally Dep. Tr. 18:6-14. Senetas believed DR’s “technology will revolutionise [sic] the medical radiology industry by significantly reducing the error rate, cost and time to interpret medical images.” JX 175. 9 Galbally Dep. Tr. 56:20-22; 58:2-10 (“FDA approval to me was one of the most important aspects as to why I invested, and the fact that it was likely to be approved at some stage during 2017”); 98:7-9. 10 Galbally Dep. Tr. 20:11-24.

3 Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG July 30, 2019

Galbally was appointed to DR’s Board of Directors (“Board”) as Senetas’

designee, and served on the Board with Nguyen, Lufkin, and Robert Rankin, the

designee of another investor.11 The evidence shows that the Board held a meeting

in August of 2017 during which no minutes were taken.12 No further board

meetings were held during Galbally’s tenure on the board.13

In January of 2018, in an attempt to obtain additional funding and without

Board knowledge or approval, DR completed the preliminary steps of an Initial

Coin Offering (“ICO”).14 Galbally attempted to schedule a special meeting of the

Board to discuss the ICO as well as the company’s overall financial needs and

financing options.15 This special Board meeting was held on February 23, 2018

with Galbally as the only member in attendance.16 DR subsequently pulled the

ICO offering from its website and never finalized the offering.17 In a letter dated

11 Galbally Dep. Tr. 335:11-15. The Amended and Restated Investors’ Rights Agreement provides that Board composition will be five persons, with one vacant seat on the Board at the time the Agreement was executed. JX 30, ¶2.3. 12 Galbally Dep. Tr. 336:2-4; 337:2-6. 13 Galbally Dep. Tr. 335:22-336:1; 337:7-22. 14 Nguyen Dep. Tr. 162:7-16. 15 Galbally Dep. Tr. 348:17-22. Galbally testified that he had “grave concerns” about the ICO offering. Galbally Dep. Tr. 156:21-23. 16 Galbally Dep. Tr. 319:24-320:7; 320:20-23; 349:8-17; JX 89. 17 See JX 88.

4 Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG July 30, 2019

February 26, 2018, Galbally resigned from the Board and, shortly thereafter,

unsuccessfully attempted to inspect DR’s books and records at DR’s offices.18

The evidence shows that DR depleted all of its seed capital by February of

2018.19 Since that time Nguyen and Lufkin have been funding the Company

personally.20

In August of 2018, Senetas wrote the DR investment off its books.21 In

September of 2018, Nguyen told Galbally and other investors that DR was going to

stop seeking FDA approval and would deploy its technology in a manner that

would not require FDA approval.22 At that same meeting, she also promised

access to DR’s books and records.23 Later in September, Jack Dwyer (“Dwyer”), a

representative of another investor, inspected DR’s books and records covering

operations from December of 2016 through February of 2018, and requested

additional information that DR has not provided.24

B. Procedural Background

18 JX 122; Galbally Dep. Tr. 351:13-22. 19 JX 88. 20 Nguyen Dep. Tr. 34:13-35:4. 21 Galbally Dep. Tr. 52:23-53:21; JX 38. 22 Galbally Dep. Tr. 362:3-363:14; Trial Tr. 21:21-22:3. 23 Galbally Dep. Tr. 364:12-17. 24 See n. 49 infra.

5 Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG July 30, 2019

On February 12, 2019, Senetas sent a written demand (“Demand”) dated

February 6, to inspect DR’s books and records.25 The letter demanded the right

under 8 Del. C. § 220 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“Section 220”) to

inspect nine categories of books and records. DR failed to respond to the Demand

within the mandated five days.

On February 28, 2019, Senetas filed a complaint in which they argue that,

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Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senetas-corporation-ltd-v-deepradiology-corporation-delch-2019.