Zero Stage Capital, Inc. v. Harvard Clinical Technology, Inc.

14 Mass. L. Rptr. 690
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 16, 2002
DocketNo. 976745G
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 690 (Zero Stage Capital, Inc. v. Harvard Clinical Technology, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zero Stage Capital, Inc. v. Harvard Clinical Technology, Inc., 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 690 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Sikora, J.

FINDINGS.

In accordance with Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a), the court finds each of the following facts to be established by a reasonable preponderance of the evidence introduced at the jury-waived trial of this action.

The Parties and Their Principals

1. The plaintiff Massachusetts Technical Development Corporation (“MTDC”) is a venture capital company. The Massachusetts Legislature originally created MTDC as a governmental agency designed to assist emerging technology companies with financing during the early stages of development.

2. Over time MTDC evolved into a private investment company. Aboard of directors governs MTDC. It maintains offices in Boston.

3. From 1990 to 1999 Robert Creeden served with MTDC as an associate, senior associate, and then vice president. He had earned a bachelor’s degree from Holy Cross College; a master’s of business administration from Suffolk University; and had accumulated substantial experience in the high technology venture capital culture. At the time of the events of this case he worked as a vice president. His responsibilities were to receive and to evaluate requests for investment; to investigate (or to perform “due diligence” upon) such requests; and to recommend to the board participation in suitable investment opportunities. During the 1990s MTDC received annually up to 500 requests or proposals from applicants for venture capital.

3. The plaintiff Zero Stage Capital, Inc. (“Zero Stage”) is a private venture capital company in the form of a partnership. It originated in 1980. It maintains offices in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania. Its Massachusetts location is Cambridge. Its avowed investment policy had been to identify, and to purchase ownership interests in socially useful start-up companies.

4. The founder and president of Zero Capital is Paul M. Kelly. Mr. Kelly earned a bachelor’s degree from Harvard College and a master’s degree in business administration from Northeastern University. He accumulated experience as a military officer, an employee at the Gillette Company, and then as the proprietor of a prior business (United Power Systems) which he sold. After a brief period of retirement, he founded Zero Stage.

5. The defendant, counterclaimant Harvard Clinical Technology, Inc. (“Harvard Clinical”) has evolved through several periods of business life. It began in 1904 as an enterprise owned by the Harvard Medical School. For decades it developed and manufactured equipment for physiology instruction and for the ad[691]*691ministration of drugs to animals. In 1980 Mr. Paul Grindle purchased the corporation then named the Harvard Apparatus Company. From 1980 to 1996 the company conducted a division focused upon research in animal medicine and a division devoted to the development of medical equipment. The medical equipment division in the 1980s and 1990s concentrated especially upon the development of a sophisticated pumping device for the injection of medication into human patients including the delivery of multiple medications during surgical procedures (“the pump”). The company is located in Natick.

6. Paul Grindle was an experienced entrepreneur born in 1920 and involved in multiple business activities and companies from 1943 onward. In particular he had purchased and run an optical equipment company in England from 1955 to 1975. From the time of his purchase of Harvard Apparatus in 1980 he had served as its chief executive officer. In 1996 he chose to sell the animal medicine division, and to retain the medical equipment division under the name of Harvard Clinical Technology, Inc.

7. (a) In 1988 Mr. Grindle had employed Diane Gargano as a product manager. Ms. Gargano held a 1984 bachelor’s of science degree from Princeton University in electrical engineering and computer science. From 1985 to 1988 she was employed at Massachusetts General Hospital as a member of a product and management design group. At Harvard Apparatus Gargano worked intensely upon the development of the pump and upon the refinement of its prototypes. The product became known as the “dual syringe pump.” It developed the capacity to compute and to administer multiple dosages of medication. From 1988 to 1996 Gargano introduced 51 novel improvements to the device and enabled the product to house an expansive medication library or memory. It developed the capacity to safeguard against drug injection errors.

(b)By early 1996 the pump had received approval from the Food and Drug Administration for marketing. Grindle had enlarged Gargano’s role from product development to market development as well. He reduced his role to that of treasurer; and established Gargano as the effective chief operating officer and president.

The Venture Capital Negotiations of 1996

8. By March of 1996 Harvard Clinical was eager to market the dual syringe pump. During 1995 and early 1996 Grindle and Gargano had visited 16 venture capital companies in search of investors, but without result.

They were seeking an investment of one million dollars for a marketing program. The search led Gargano to contact MTDC and Robert Creeden.

9. Creeden and Gargano negotiated during the period of March into May of 1996. Gargano made a presentation to the MTDC board of directors. The following terms developed.

(a) MTDC was seriously interested in an investment. However, its usual range of risk in a single venture did not exceed $250,000.

(b) For larger investments it typically sought out a companion venture capital company to participate. In this instance Creeden notified Zero Capital of the opportunity. The two' investors had collaborated in prior transactions. Both had a history of investment in high-tech start-ups, the role now occupied by Harvard Clinical in its new management structure and in its introduction of the dual syringe pump product.

(c) Zero Stage contacted Gargano most probably in April. Gargano made a presentation to its board. Zero Stage expressed a willingness to invest the remaining $750,000 necessary to achieve Harvard Clinical’s goal of one million dollars of equity financing.

(d) The venture capital companies wanted an aggregate ownership share of approximately 25% to 35% in the form of preferred class A stock.

(e) The investment would not become final until (i) the parties had executed an agreement upon the terms in the form of “term sheets” or “commitment letters”; (ii) the investors had completed exhaustive due diligence investigation of the venture requiring as much as four or five months; and (iii) all parties had completed a comprehensive “closing” transaction confirming all terms and commitments by means of purchase agreements and related legal documénts.

10. By letter of May 13, 1996, Creeden reported to Gargano a vote of approval of a $250,000 investment by the MTDC board of directors; he itemized remaining terms and a timetable for a closing by August 9; and he requested and received Gargano’s countersignature of general acceptance of MTDC’s expressed commitment. See Trial Exhibit 1.

11. The MTDC letter of May 13 contained one term of potential significance (paragraph 4) (emphasis supplied):

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Bluebook (online)
14 Mass. L. Rptr. 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zero-stage-capital-inc-v-harvard-clinical-technology-inc-masssuperct-2002.