Speirs v. BlueFire Ethanol Fuels CA4/3

243 Cal. App. 4th 969
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2015
DocketG048698
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 243 Cal. App. 4th 969 (Speirs v. BlueFire Ethanol Fuels CA4/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speirs v. BlueFire Ethanol Fuels CA4/3, 243 Cal. App. 4th 969 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

IKOLA, J.-

— Plaintiffs held warrants (i.e., options to buy common stock from a corporation at a particular price by a particular date) issued by defendant BlueFire Ethanol Fuels, Inc. 1 The warrants included an anti-dilution provision, requiring BlueFire to adjust the exercise price set in the warrants “to equal the consideration paid” by a subsequent investor for equity interests in BlueFire. But the anti-dilution provision did not apply to certain issuances of securities, as specified in a list of five categories of exceptions.

*972 A few years after issuance of the warrants, BlueFire entered into an agreement with non-party Lincoln Park Capital Fund, LLC (Lincoln). The agreement created a corporate finance structure known to its aficionados as an “equity line of credit” or a “standby equity distribution agreement.” 2 Lincoln promised to make up to $10 million available to BlueFire (including $150,000 immediately upon execution of the agreement), to be accessed at the option of BlueFire over a set period of time. In exchange, BlueFire issued common stock and warrants to Lincoln at the time the agreement was executed, and promised to issue additional common stock in exchange for any future cash received from Lincoln.

Plaintiffs sued BlueFire for breach of contract and declaratory relief when BlueFire refused to apply the warrants’ anti-dilution provision to the Lincoln agreement. Plaintiffs also sued individual defendants Arnold R. Klann and Christopher D. Scott for breach of fiduciary duty. Conducting a bench trial, the court rejected the breach of fiduciary duty claim against Klann and Scott. But the court ruled the anti-dilution provision applied to the Lincoln transaction and that BlueFire had breached the warrants. The court also reduced the exercise price for the warrants from $2.90 per share to $0 per share, and authorized plaintiffs to immediately exercise the warrants. The court did not award monetary damages to plaintiffs. The parties appealed aspects of the judgment adverse to their respective interests.

We agree the breach of fiduciary duty cause of action was unmeritorious as a matter of law; a corporation’s officers do not have a fiduciary duty to warrant holders. We also agree with the court’s interpretation of plaintiffs’ warrants. The anti-dilution provision applies to the Lincoln agreement and stock issuances to Lincoln resulting from that agreement. But substantial evidence does not support the court’s decision to reduce plaintiffs’ exercise price to $0. We therefore reverse the judgment and remand for retrial solely on the proper remedy for BlueFire’s breach of contract.

FACTS

BlueFire was formed and registered as a publicly traded company in 2006. Its business is transforming organic materials into ethanol fuels. At all relevant times, defendant Klann was BlueFire’s chief executive officer, a member of BlueFire’s board of directors, and an owner of a substantial percentage of BlueFire (e.g., 47 percent as of Feb. 2011). Defendant Scott was chief financial officer of BlueFire at certain relevant time periods.

*973 Plaintiffs are a father-son duo of investors. Since 2006, plaintiffs have owned shares of BlueFire common stock. Before trial began, plaintiff James G. Speirs (Jamie) owned approximately 5 percent of BlueFire.

Plaintiffs’ Warrants

At the time of trial, plaintiffs held 5,740,741 warrants issued by BlueFire. 3 All of the warrants contained the same terms. The warrants entitled plaintiffs “to purchase up to” 5,740,741 shares of BlueFire’s common stock. The “Exercise Price” (i.e., the price at which the shares could be purchased) was $2.90 per share. The warrants could be “exercised in whole or in part” by December 14, 2012 (the Expiration Date).

Section 9 of the warrants, entitled “Adjustment of Exercise Price and Number of Shares,” included various protections for holders against subsequent events affecting the value of the warrants, including subsection 9.4 entitled “Anti-Dilution Protection.” 4 The first two sentences of the anti-dilution provision stated: “This Warrant is subject to ‘full-ratchet’ anti-dilution protection in relation to the issuance by [BlueFire] (other than Excluded Issuances) of any additional shares of stock, options, warrants or any securities exchangeable into any of the foregoing, (the ‘Additional Shares’). If [BlueFire] issues any Additional Shares in exchange for consideration in an amount per Additional Share less than the Exercise Price in effect immediately prior to such issuance or sale of such Additional Share, then the Exercise Price shall be adjusted to equal the consideration paid per Additional Share.”

But the next sentence of subsection 9.4 excluded five types of issuances from anti-dilution protection, including two exceptions defendants deemed applicable to the Lincoln transaction. “ ‘Excluded Issuances’ shall mean any equity securities (or options, warrants or securities convertible into equity securities) issued . . . (ii) to parties that are strategic partners investing in connection with a commercial relationship, or providing [BlueFire] with equipment leases, real property leases, loans, credit lines, guaranties or similar transactions approved by the Board, (iii) in connection with a merger or acquisition or in connection with a joint venture or other strategic or commercial relationship approved by the Board . . . .”

*974 Subsection 9.6 set forth the obligations of BlueFire upon an issuance of shares requiring an adjustment of the warrants’ exercise price: “Whenever the Exercise Price . . . shall be adjusted, [BlueFire] shall issue a certificate signed by [an officer] setting forth, in reasonable detail, the event requiring the adjustment, the amount of the adjustment, the method by which such adjustment was calculated and the Exercise Price . . . after giving effect to such adjustment, and shall cause a copy of such certificate to be mailed ... to the Holder.” Section 4 described the procedural mechanism whereby plaintiffs could exercise the warrants, including the submission of a “Warrant Exercise Form,” accompanied by payment of the “Exercise Price.”

The warrants chose New York law as applicable (though the parties freely cite California cases and make no contention that the resolution of the issues on appeal turns on the choice of law provision) and included an integration clause (“this Warrant . . . contains the entire agreement of the parties, and supersedes all existing negotiations, representations or agreements and other oral, written, or other communications between them concerning the subject matter of this Warrant”).

The Lincoln Agreement and Ensuing Issuances of Securities

In January 2011 (i.e., about two years before the warrants’ expiration date), BlueFire and Lincoln executed a document entitled “PURCHASE AGREEMENT,” which was approved by BlueFire’s board of directors.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Meta Platforms, Inc. v. Qibaa
N.D. California, 2025
Hernandez v. Nunez CA4/2
California Court of Appeal, 2025
PF1 v. Suba CA2/8
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Ctr. for Biological Diversity v. Dep't of Conservation
236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 729 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 Cal. App. 4th 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speirs-v-bluefire-ethanol-fuels-ca43-calctapp-2015.