JENNIFER A. DORSEY, District Judge.
This is a multi-faceted dispute regarding the corporate governance of Plaintiff HPEV, Inc. The primary dispute relates to whether HPEV's board resolutions relating to executive compensation and raising capital through the sale of equity were properly adopted. HPEV claims that the resolutions were proper and Defendant Spirit Bear Limited has taken actions to prevent their implementation. Conversely, Spirit Bear contends that the resolutions do not authorize the investment solicitation and executive compensation currently taking place.
One week after filing its Amended Complaint,
I find this motion is appropriate for disposition without oral argument under Local Rule 78-2. Because questions of material fact exist with respect to the resolutions, the alleged rescission, and the scope of the Settlement Agreement, I deny HPEV's request for summary judgment.
The following facts are undisputed. On December 14, 2012, Spirit Bear and HPEV entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement (the "SPA") in which Spirit Bear acquired 200 preferred shares of HPEV stock along with various warrant rights.
HPEV adopted a board resolution on February 20, 2013, amending the bylaws and appointing two Spirit Bear-selected directors.
The February 20, 2013, resolution contained two additional provisions pertinent to this dispute. First, the resolution adjusted the compensation and compensation benchmarks for HPEV management.
Spirit Bear disputed the validity of the resolutions and eventually the parties entered into a Settlement Agreement.
Despite the settlement, the dispute continued. On August 16, 2013, Spirit Bear sent a ceaseand-desist letter to HPEV demanding the company stop issuing securities and paying executives above certain levels.
HPEV filed this lawsuit on August 27, 2013, amended its complaint
The purpose of summary judgment is to avoid unnecessary trials when there is no dispute as to the facts before the court.
The moving party bears the burden of informing the court of the basis for its motion, together with evidence demonstrating the absence of any genuine issue of material fact.
HPEV asserts that the February 20, 2013, board resolution properly provided the authorization to pay the prescribed executive compensation and raise capital through the sale of equity. It further contends that any claims Spirit Bear may have had resulting from the implementation of the resolutions were eliminated through its release of liability in the Settlement Agreement. Spirit Bear responds that the authorization to raise capital only applied to one particular investor and that the compensation provisions in the resolution were later rescinded. Spirit Bear also argues that the Settlement Agreement only covers its claims arising under the SPA, and its present arguments are outside that agreement. HPEV's motion presents three main issues to be decided: (1) whether both, or only one, of the nearly identical resolutions passed February 20, 2013, are valid and of effect; (2) whether the compensation provisions in the February 20, 2013, resolutions were rescinded; and (3) if Spirit Bear would have a valid claim based on the answers to the previous questions, whether Spirit Bear waived that claim by its release of liability contained it the Settlement Agreement.
The dispute about the sale of equity hinges on the existence and effect of two different versions of a document entitled "Unanimous Written Consent of the Directors of HPEV, Inc., A Nevada Corporation." The documents are nearly identical and both purport to have been passed on February 20, 2013. The one difference between the documents is that one's authorization of investment solicitation states:
while the other provides:
HPEV asserts that both resolutions are valid and in full force and effect because the more general grant of authority was approved first, but at the behest of a specific investor to explicitly include authorization to sell him securities in the board resolution, the board passed a second resolution to include the language "an accredited investor in California."
Also belying HPEV's claim that the more general language was included in the first resolution is the fact that both documents are replete with the use of definitive articles. Both versions of the resolution reference "the investment," "the agreement with the investor" and "the aforementioned investor."
As further evidence to support is version of events, Spirit Bear offers the minutes of a board meeting in March 2013 in which HPEV's board recognized that it needed to approve any additional investment.
Viewed in the light most favorable to non-movant Spirit Bear, this evidence is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to the validity of these documents and their effect. It prevents this court from definitively adopting HPEV's version of these facts and granting summary judgment in its favor on this theory.
Questions of material fact also preclude a determination that the executive compensation provisions of the February 20, 2013, resolutions are still in effect. Although both versions of the resolution contain identical language on executive compensation, Spirit Bear does not claim that the provisions were unauthorized; rather, it alleges that HPEV's board later rescinded the compensation provision but its management continued to receive compensation under the rescinded structure. In support of its contention, Spirit Bear produces: (1) an email from Tim Hassett, HPEV's CEO and a board member, stating an intention to revoke the stock options and reverse the salary increases of the February 20, 2013, resolutions; (2) HPEV's April 15, 2013, Form 10K filed with the SEC stating that "the Company rescinded the change in the president's milestone prices of his options and the cashless exercise thereof, the granting of options to its vice-president and the compensation levels established by the Board on February 20, 2013;" (3) a draft of a "Unanimous Written Consent of the Directors of HPEV, Inc., a Nevada Corporation" (the "UWC") dated May 2, 2013, resolving to reduce the salaries to the levels established in the January 18, 2013, Form S-1/A, together with the sworn declarations of all the Spirit Bear-designated directors that they signed the UWC and returned it to HPEV's counsel; and (4) HPEV's May 21, 2013, Form 10K/A#2, which contains the same statement as the April 15, 2013, Form 10K.
HPEV argues that this evidence is insufficient to create a question of material fact about the rescission of the executive-compensation provisions. It asserts that the email from Mr. Hassett only expresses an intention of one board member to change the compensation; it is not an action of the board. HPEV then attacks both statements in the Form 10Ks by pointing out the specific information following the quoted statement only details changes to stock options granted to some of HPEV's management in the February 20, 2013, resolutions; no specific description of salary adjustment is contained in either of the Form 10Ks. Finally, HPEV argues that the unexecuted version of the UWC is not board action and does not demonstrate the change in compensation structure Spirit Bear avers.
However, viewing these facts collectively and in the light most favorable to Spirit Bear, they raise a genuine question of material fact as to whether the executive compensation provisions of the February 20, 2013, resolution were rescinded. This issue provides yet another barrier to summary judgment because it prevents the court from concluding as a matter of law that HPEV had authority to continue payment to its management under that resolution.
Finally, I consider whether Spirit Bear's claims are barred by its Settlement Agreement release language. The pertinent language of the Settlement Agreement is:
The Settlement Agreement defines "Allegations" as Spirit Bear's contentions that:
Thus, by its terms, the release only covers Spirit Bear's claims arising under the SPA. Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Spirit Bear, the claims
Accordingly,