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In re Geneius Biotechnology, Inc.
2017-0297-TMR
Del. Ch.
Dec 8, 2017
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Background

  • Geneius Biotechnology, Inc. is an early‑stage Delaware biotech (T‑cell therapy) with one pending U.S. patent application, limited cash, and roughly $500–$600k in accounts payable as of the petition.
  • Founder/CEO Dr. Alfred Slanetz (majority controller) opposes minority stockholder Empery Asset Master Ltd., which invested earlier and seeks a receiver under 8 Del. C. § 291.
  • Procedural posture: Empery filed a verified petition for a receiver alleging insolvency; expedited trial occurred and the Court issued this post‑trial opinion denying the petition.
  • Key factual points: Geneius received ~$10M in 2015 (including Empery), has little operating revenue, reduced payroll and operating expenses, and Slanetz made an interest‑free $78k loan and pledged to continue funding as needed.
  • Disputed asset valuation: Respondent presented a schedule valuing assets at roughly $892,547 (cash, equipment, and Karolinska‑related assets); petitioner presented no independent asset valuation and challenged portions of respondent’s evidence.
  • Disputed liabilities: Parties agreed on about $185k undisputed non‑legal payables and legal fees of roughly $419,913; the Court treated total liabilities as about $605k for insolvency analysis.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Empery) Defendant's Argument (Slanetz/Geneius) Held
Whether Geneius was insolvent under balance‑sheet (assets < liabilities) test Liabilities exceed assets; company has no meaningful assets beyond IP and Karolinska funds Respondent put forward asset valuations (equipment, Karolinska funds); petitioner produced no competent valuation of IP Court: Petitioner failed to prove insolvency by clear and convincing evidence; assets shown likely exceed liabilities or are at least not proven deficient
Whether Geneius was cash‑flow insolvent (cannot meet maturing obligations) Company lacks cash to pay outstanding invoices and is selecting which invoices to pay Company pays necessary operational invoices, has arrangements/disputes with some vendors, and CEO committed continued personal funding Court: Petitioner did not meet burden; credible evidence CEO funds operations and company is meeting critical payments
Whether appointment of a receiver is necessary under "insolvency plus" standard Control by Slanetz without independent oversight risks destruction of value; receiver needed to protect creditors/shareholders Dispute is essentially a business disagreement; no demonstrated exigent harm or hopeless insolvency warranting receiver Court: Because insolvency not established, § 291 does not apply; even on facts, petitioner failed to show the additional "plus" justification
Evidentiary burden on valuation and proof Empery contends respondent’s asset valuations are speculative and some items should be disregarded Respondent presented business records, testimony, and corroboration; petitioner offered no independent valuation of IP Court: Burden rests on petitioner to prove insolvency by clear and convincing evidence; petitioner failed to present sufficient competent valuation evidence and thus lost on proof

Key Cases Cited

  • Prod. Res. Group, L.L.C. v. NCT Group, Inc., 863 A.2d 772 (Del. Ch. 2004) (describes the “insolvency plus” standard and definitions of insolvency in receivership context)
  • Quadrant Structured Prods. Co. v. Vertin, 115 A.3d 535 (Del. Ch. 2015) (discusses application of balance‑sheet/irretrievable insolvency test in receivership proceedings)
  • Banks v. Cristina Copper Mines, Inc., 99 A.2d 504 (Del. 1953) (board loans to company insufficient alone to require appointment of receiver)
  • Freeman v. Hare & Chase, 142 A. 793 (Del. Ch. 1928) (early articulation of cash‑flow and balance‑sheet concepts of insolvency)
  • Kenny v. Allerton Corp., 151 A. 257 (Del. Ch. 1930) (instructs receivership is inappropriate if insolvency has been removed)
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Case Details

Case Name: In re Geneius Biotechnology, Inc.
Court Name: Court of Chancery of Delaware
Date Published: Dec 8, 2017
Docket Number: 2017-0297-TMR
Court Abbreviation: Del. Ch.