Zimmerman v. Crothall

62 A.3d 676, 2013 WL 1092609, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 31, 2013
DocketC.A. No. 6001-VCP
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 62 A.3d 676 (Zimmerman v. Crothall) 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
Zimmerman v. Crothall, 62 A.3d 676, 2013 WL 1092609, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 34 (Del. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor.

This case addresses the allegations of a minority unitholder in a privately held medical device company. The unitholder is the co-founder and former CEO of the company. He became a minority stakeholder after accepting investments in the company in exchange for units and after he sold some of his own units. The company is managed by a board of directors under its limited liability company operating agreement. The board of directors caused the company to enter into several financing transactions. The unitholder alleges that these transactions were in breach of the company’s operating agreement and that, by undertaking the transactions, the directors also breached their fiduciary duties. He further alleges that certain unitholders breached fiduciary duties and that they and their affiliates aided and abetted the directors’ breach of fiduciary duties.

A three-day trial was held on the unit-holder’s claims. After careful review of the evidence presented at trial and the parties’ post-trial briefs and oral arguments, I conclude that the directors acted outside of their authority under the company’s operating agreement, but that they did not breach the fiduciary duties they owed thereunder when they engaged in the financing transactions. Apart from entering a declaratory judgment that the directors exceeded their authority in engaging in the financing transactions, I deny the unitholder’s requested relief, including his request that the defendants reimburse the company for its advancement of their attorneys’ fees in this matter. I hold instead that the directors’ breach caused no damage and that all defendants were entitled to indemnification notwithstanding the directors’ breach of the company’s operating agreement.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

Plaintiff, Robert Zimmerman, is the co-founder, former CEO, and a former director of Adhezion Biomedical LLC (“Adhezion” or the “Company”). Zimmerman currently owns 86,900 Class A Common units and 40,000 Class B Common units in Adhezion.

Nominal Defendant, Adhezion, is a privately held Delaware limited liability company with its principal place of business in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania. Adhezion is a medical device company that develops and commercializes surgical, wound management, and infection-prevention technologies.

The defendants in this action include the five members of Adhezion’s board of directors (the “Board”) and entities that have invested in, or are affiliated with an entity that invested in, Adhezion (collectively, “Defendants”).

Defendants Katherine D. Crothall, Michael J. Gausling, Peter Molinaro, Robert Toni, and Steven R. Bryant are Adhezion’s Board members (the “Director Defendants”). Molinaro is Adhezion’s CEO and the Board Chairman.

Defendant Liberty Advisors, Inc. invested in Adhezion through its subsidiary, Defendant Liberty Ventures II, L.P. (collectively, “Liberty”). Defendant Thomas R. Morse is the co-founder and principal of Liberty Advisors, Inc. Crothall serves as Liberty’s Board designee.

Defendant Originate Ventures, LLC is a venture capital firm that has invested in Adhezion through Defendants Originate [682]*682Adhezion A Fund, Inc. and Originate Adhezion Q Fund, Inc. (collectively, “Originate”). Gausling is one of three managing partners of Originate Ventures, LLC and serves as Originate’s Board designee.

B. Facts

Adhezion makes three main products: SurgiSeal, DermaSeal, and FloraSeal. The product that is the focus of the events leading up to this litigation is SurgiSeal, a medical adhesive used to close both accident-caused wounds and surgical incisions. SurgiSeal received approval from the United States Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) in December 2008. Surgi-Seal competes with a Johnson & Johnson (“J & J”) product called Dermabond. Dermabond holds approximately 85% of the domestic market for high-strength medical adhesives.1 Molinaro estimates that the global market for high-strength medical adhesives was $500 million in 2008 and over $600 million in 2010.2 Adhezioris SurgiSeal shows promise as a competitor to Dermabond. It allegedly has performance advantages over Dermabond3 and is cheaper to produce.4 Dermabond, however, has advantages over SurgiSeal including its existing market share and the powerful backing of J & J.5 In 2010, the Cleveland Clinic placed SurgiSeal on its “primary vendor list.”6 In obtaining that business, Adhezion demonstrated that the Cleveland Clinic could save $300,000 annually if it converted 100% of its topical skin adhesive business to Adhezion.7 Due to stiff competition from J & J, however, the Clinic purchased only “4 or 5 percent of their annual purchase from [Adhezion] and they stayed with the J & J product.”8

1. Originate invests; Operating Agreement amended

Although the Company faced strong competition, it showed promise. Molinaro joined Adhezion as a consultant in 2007.9 Zimmerman and Molinaro attracted at least two potential investors between 2007 and 2008. In March 2008, Originate invested $3 million in Adhezion in return for 375,000 Series A Preferred units at $8.00 per unit.10 This transaction valued Adhez-ion at $8 million.11 In connection with this transaction, Adhezion adopted a new operating agreement (the “Amended Operating Agreement”).12 Under the Amended Op[683]*683erating Agreement, the Company had five directors on its Board.13 Its equity ownership was represented by Class A Common, Class B Common, and Series A Preferred units, the rights, preferences, and privileges of which were set forth in the Operating Agreement.

After the deal with Originate, Molinaro became Adhezion’s CEO and a director. Also on the Board in March 2008 were Gausling, an initial Series A Preferred Director, and Zimmerman, the initial Common Director under the Amended Operating Agreement. In June 2008, and at Molinaro’s suggestion, the Board elected Bryant to serve as Adhezion’s Industry Director.14 Bryant works at Angiotech, a customer of Adhezion. Bryant and Moli-naro have worked together in various engagements since the 1980s.15 They also have a personal friendship and have hunted together on several occasions and fished together once.16

2. Liberty invests; Second Amended Operating Agreement

In October 2008, while the Company was developing SurgiSeal and FloraSeal and attempting to secure FDA approvals, Moli-naro sought and obtained funding from several additional investors, including Liberty, Crothall, and non-parties William Graham and his wife (collectively, the “Liberty Investors”).17 These investors contributed $2 million in exchange for 281,-917 Series A Preferred units at approximately $7.05 per unit. This transaction effectively valued the Company at $10.5 million. As part of the transaction, the Amended Operating Agreement was amended again to create the Second Amended Operating Agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A.3d 676, 2013 WL 1092609, 2013 Del. Ch. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-crothall-delch-2013.