JED S. RAKOFF, U.S.D.J.
On December 23, 2019, the Court granted an
The parties have subsequently reached a settlement with respect to all claims related to this action, where the settlement contemplates that Taronis Fuels would, upon this Court's approval, issue its shares to YA to cover YA's short positions. Accordingly, now before the Court is YA's consent motion for approval of settlement and issuance of Taronis Fuels shares pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(10). As required by the statute, a fairness hearing on this motion was held on January 24,
The following facts are reproduced from the Court's memorandum order dated January 9, 2020,
On June 24, 2019, the Board of Directors of Taronis Tech approved a plan to separate its gas and welding supply retail business by spinning off its subsidiary, Taronis Fuels. Pursuant to the spin-off, Taronis Tech shareholders were entitled to receive dividends of five shares of Taronis Fuels common stock for each share of Taronis Tech common stock they held as of the record date of November 29, 2019, with a distribution date of December 5, 2019. Meanwhile, on December 2, 2019, pursuant to a Securities Settlement Agreement, Taronis Tech issued to YA 475,000 shares of Taronis Tech common stock in full payment of Taronis Tech's prior debt obligation to YA. Because YA received these 475,000 shares after the record date of November 29, these shares were not meant to include the dividend rights to receive Taronis Fuels shares.
Immediately after receiving the settlement shares, YA, on December 3, 2019, sold through its broker Lek Securities Corp. the entire 475,000 shares of Taronis Tech stock to numerous third-party purchasers. Contrary to the parties' expectation, a "due bill" designation
The instant action arose from the dispute over which party was responsible for the erroneous due bill designation. On December 23, 2019, YA filed a three-count complaint against defendants, claiming (1) negligence, (2) breach of contract (against Taronis Tech only), and (3) negligent misrepresentation. Complaint, ECF No. 1 ¶¶ 51-64. On December 23, 2019, the Court issued a temporary restraining order as discussed above. ECF No. 3. On January 9, 2020, the Court denied YA's motion for a preliminary injunction and the temporary restraining order was lifted. ECF No. 20.
The parties have since reached a settlement to resolve all claims related to this action. The instant motion seeks the Court's findings pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(10) that: (1) the terms and conditions of the settlement is fair, (2) the terms and conditions of Taronis Fuels' issuance of 2,375,000 shares to YA is fair, and (3) YA may resell the shares without registration and can thereby immediately cover its current short position. ECF No. 26. Defendants consent to this motion.
Generally, public companies are not permitted to issue their stock — and shareholders receiving those shares are not permitted to immediately resell them into public markets — without first filing a registration statement.
15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(10).
Under the terms of the Settlement Agreement, effective January 15, 2020 (the "Settlement Agreement"), Taronis Fuels will issue 2,375,000 freely tradeable unrestricted shares of its stock to YA, subject to the Court's approval, in exchange for mutual releases of all claims and YA's execution of a stipulation of dismissal of this action with prejudice; and no cash will be exchanged as part of the settlement. Mem. 3. The Court finds that the Settlement Agreement satisfies all of the requirements identified above.
First, YA, the only contemplated recipient of the Taronis Fuels shares, currently holds outstanding claims against defendants. Second, the Court held a fairness hearing on January 24, 2020, at which both sides appeared and had an opportunity to be heard.
The third requirement is satisfied as well.
The second factor also does not favor granting the motion because discovery has not started; yet this concern is outweighed by the third factor: the alternative to the settlement is litigating this case, where YA bears litigation risks. Indeed, the Court recognized in its prior holding that the likelihood of YA's success on the merits was indeterminable at this early stage. ECF No. 21, at 6. The fourth and fifth factors likewise favor granting the motion, as YA is the only contemplated recipient of the shares at issue, and YA participated at the hearing.
The last "value" factor also favors granting the motion. Issuing 2,375,000 shares of Taronis Fuels stock to YA would make YA fully whole as if the underlying erroneous designation never occurred; indeed, this was part of the remedy that YA sought in its motion for a preliminary injunction (
Accordingly, the Court finds that the statutory prerequisites for a Section 3(a)(10) exemption are satisfied,
SO ORDERED.